I'm here in my personal capacity again. Adam curry, John C Dvorak, third, 2024,

this is your award winning give our nation media assassination episode 1700
This is no agenda

celebrating like Commodores and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country, here in FEMA Region, number six in the morning. Everybody. I'm Adam curry

and from Northern Silicon Valley, where we understand they're bulldozing the living of the dead in North Carolina to get to the lithium. I'm Justin vorac. It's Craig Vaughn and
buzzkill in the morning.

But before, before we get into that, may I congratulate you sir, on 1700 episodes of the best podcast in the universe. And May and May I congratulate all the producers who've contributed to this program over almost 17 years

it has been and may I congratulate you, sir.

Yes, please sir. Do so I feel like I need it. Whoever thought I remember after episode, 100

Yeah, one you quit? Yeah,

good run.

That was a great run. We did 100 shows. Let's quit. Let's

quit. We're good to go. What happened? I don't know. We just kept on chugging, kept on going on, going on, going on. Where

it's a public service, that's why, and you have a public service mentality,

well, then there's a good point. We do it. We do do it as a public service.

I think it's a public service in many ways. Well, calms people down. Yeah? It helps people, you know, doing rash things or thinking weirdly, oddly.

Yes, it keeps families together, not always or not, or it breaks the families up that really deserved it.

Yeah, probably it. Probably yeah. Sooner than later,

yeah, you'll test your your relationships with this show, that's for sure. Oh

yeah, if you're if your relationship involves one of the two people being something of a knee jerk lunatic,

and I feel super blessed today, because not only is it episode 1700 which we all share, we all share in this, because without the producers, we would be nowhere. I received two People's Choice Awards, yeah, the 19th.

Wait from, the way, let me guess two People's Choice Awards from, oh, don't get too org. I assume it's from two or different organizations. Oh, it's

from the same organization. It's the 19th annuals, people, People's Choice Podcast Awards, which is the, as far as I'm concerned, the original Podcast Awards that Todd Cochran does from blueberry, and you

win something from him some time ago,

oh, a Hall of Fame. Like 10 years ago, I was inducted into the into the first Hall of Fame
for, like, best producer, okay,

um, no, this is, uh, I receive both the listener and podcaster influencer of the Year award. I'm sorry, the influences are determined by the total number of write ins by listeners and podcasters. That's 800 podcasters and 5.1 million listeners who participated.

So 5.1 million people voted for you. Well, because you're influential. Well, they,

they, they voted. I don't know if all 5.1 but a majority did, I guess, or more than the others, I think it's as an independent second there's no second place. There's no second place. Oh, there's no winning. No, there's no winning. It's just holding hands and telling a secret. So, yes,

um. Well, congratulations on this. You get a big trophy, a big giant.

If I send Todd, $75 for each trophy, I get a trophy.

This is like the who's who book.

Well, you used to get a trophy, but then, you know, budget slash podcasting isn't what it used to be. You know, there's not no more big sponsors like, oh yeah, there's also so many award shows who can keep track. Anyway. Yes, it is a sad day or a sad week for the American government. And I will say it for several reasons. But first, it. When your people
don't trust you, conspiracy theories run rampant. Bless you and and it really is sad, because the people have so little distrust, so so little trust in in in the American government, in the federal government, for sure that they'll, you know, they will just get sucked into any conspiracy theory. And this one was going rampant, from people there, from people who I know it's all and I think there

is I told a guy who told a guy who told a guy, yeah,

I was there when it happened. Now there is So, okay, do you want? Do you don't have a clip of it? Do you didn't? You didn't actually clipped that nonsense.

I'm sure. What people being bulldozed? No living and dead. Well,

the bulldozing might actually be happening. I don't know about that. I've seen any

evidence of it, but the they can't even get cars in there. How they gonna get a bulldozer in? The big, okay, the

big conspiracy theory meme that was going around is that this was harp this. This was weather modification to flood the entire area where the lithium is, to declare eminent domain and take it. Now, there's a couple, a couple things with this, and

they're also going to take the courts, don't forget that well, the there's something,

well, there is something to be said for the courts minds. The courts minds are, they are important quartz minds. But when it comes to eminent domain, people should look up how eminent domain works. You

know, let's stop before you continue with the quartz mine thing, because I got some notes. Well, let's

stay with them. I

got to correct you about the importance of these quartz of mines. Okay? I called up a chip company. Oh, wait for operation. There you go. And talk to the one of the directors, and he says that he never even heard of this place. He says, then, really, this operate? There's courts all over the country, all over the world by the silica that they want, for the for the chips the quartz make. They use the quartz to
make crucibles and other things. It's not like it's part of the necessarily an aspect the quartz as a chip, the foundation, a big, giant wafer, which is a grown silicon crystal. They call it. They used to be called crystals. Now they're called ingots. They're not made from quartz.

Well, what is the quartz used for? It's

used for making all kinds of stuff. Quartz is a valuable product. I have a quartz beaker well,

but hold on a second. Just stick with. Stick with because the headlines are and this is important, and I'm glad you called someone up that. Okay, I even have a Wired article from 2018 that's

the key to the whole thing, wired the Wired article. In fact, somebody sent me the Wired article. I won't say who it is. It's a mutual friend. Well, let me

just read the let me just read the head, the sub graph, or the important graph, whatever you guys call it, the process the nut. Then let me read the nut. Let me fist this nut for you. The processor that makes your laptop or cell phone work was fabricated using quartz from this obscure Appalachian backwater, okay, debunk this bullcrap. Okay. And why is it both? It's just

the courts places. They were all over the world, these courts operations, but apparently

this is the cleanest courts ever. Oh, bull who cares

to get this stuff is refined, refined anyway. It's like a salt mine is all this salt has got less contaminants than the other salt, I read that article that the article is exaggerating everything it's and it's written by, as far as I'm concerned, like the some of these Atlantic writers, just a nudge character exaggerating the situation. It's an exaggeration. All right.

Well, good. I mean, I

know it was dramatized. A guy comes into the restaurant. He's got powder. It's fine as cocaine. I'm hoping nobody busts us, because I got this fine Look at this. This comes from this one place nobody else has. Oh, my God, oh, whoa, whoa, whoa. This is unbelievable. And it got caught up as everyone that Oh, right, right. Magic quartz mine in North Carolina, okay, and it's like the lithium is the same way lithium, lithium, the main lithium deposits the United States. Just look it up.

It's Nevada, Nevada and Nevada.

Well, and in the world, Bolivia, we're fourth place. Bolivia's got the most. They

better send some harp over to Bolivia then to capture that, that lithium,

yeah, I mean this whole exaggeration about what's going on in North Carolina, and then throwing this, this quartz based on that Wired article, and lithium, lithium, this is going to be the key. We got to steal it. And. Is the government going to do with it?

And then the whole, I love how they just throw out eminent domain, which I hear a lot, oh, eminent domain. Eminent domain must be used in the public interest. It's very difficult, although there was a court case where they actually tried it. Not too long ago, they tried to say, well, we're going to sell it to this public company or to this private company, because it would benefit the economics in the region. You know now, just, just, let's just go to the last
time we heard eminent domain. Do you remember that? It wasn't that long ago? It was the Maui fire. Same thing, they use sapphire blue beam laser. Everything that was blue didn't fry all the elites houses. They're going to take our land and under eminent domain. So so the the mount the county, did actually propose eminent domain over a swath of land where they dumped all of the fire debris, and the federal judge even
knocked that down so there was no eminent domain. What will happen, I'm quite sure, is people will look at what they can get from these bogative insurance companies, which it may even be the insurance companies launching this nonsense, because you're not going to get the value for your home. And then, you know, the prospectors come in. They say, Well, how about I buy this from you for more than you get from your insurance company, and what are you going to do?

Yeah, I would sell it to the speculator. Yes, I

would think that the insurance companies are launching this nonsense.

I never considered that, but that's a distinct possibility. Yeah,

yeah. Anyway, it is very sad. There's a we have a lot of producers, particularly in the Asheville area in Northwest Tennessee. There's this. This blew my mind. We were just talking about op way, the the handmade leather sneaker company who wanted to make a no agenda sneaker. Yeah, entire
factory wiped away. Well, that's terrible. Yes. Then Justin, and you know, he had just sent us this note saying how proud he was that, you know, they weren't loser millennials, and they had been listening to the show while building this, this company, and they put all their money into the factory and is completely wiped away, and the pictures are just disheartening, heartbreaking. Yeah,

it's a mess. Yeah, happy. The government has done a piss poor job. We can agree on that. Well, there's

a couple of things about that. Yes, the government has done pretty much nothing. But what I'm hearing is that there are Chinook 60s and 40 sevens that are that have not been able to take off and do anything, which is a National Guard, because title 10 has not been enacted, and what I'm hearing is that the state is saying, No, we don't want federal help under Title 10, because we don't want to become the mess that Katrina was, which is interesting. I have no
corroboration, but I also have nothing. I have no Governor talking. I have no mayor talk. Have you seen any of these local officials do any kind of new news conference

if I mean, it's not that they might not be doing them, but we just haven't seen it

well, I have looked and I haven't been able to find anything.

But why? Here's all. We want to send some choppers over the stand down order. We've gotten stand down. That's,

it's. There is something going on, by the

way, when they say this, I've seen a lot of these videos, tick tocks filled with them. Who's, who's giving the stand down order. They, yeah. It's always, they, yeah.

What? What this does show and I love this part about this disaster, is the American people, when it comes down to it, will help each other. They don't sit around and wait for the government. And for the first time in my life as a ham radio operator, the hams actually are doing a good job. I mean, I've been listening on the repeater. And they're doing everything from locating people to finding, hey, I need 100 foot
of four Yeah, but I've never heard them actually do it. And the emergency network, it was good, and it's ongoing, it's they're handing off, and they were doing 24 hour emergency net. That was, that was quite spectacular. I love the people were calling up Lincoln airport and donating, basically buying gas for airplanes and helicopters, private helicopters that were just flying stuff around. People were using drones to fly insulin out to people who were stuck. I. You know that is,
that's America. We don't care who you are, what your political beliefs are. When it comes down to it, the Americans help each other. I love that part, and now I just have to understand, how did this happen? Telling me that 40 trillion gallons of rain fell,
huh?

Did a damn dam must have broken. Something must have happened to create this flood. I, I'm, I'm, besides climate change, of course,
what happened?

You're asking me, I'm not a meteorologist. No, a

lot of rain. All we're getting is climate change nonsense. Well, that doesn't help. No, it doesn't. I have a 47 second update from NBC, former President
Trump arriving in Georgia with the Christian humanitarian relief organization Samaritan's Purse, trying to make a political issue out of the federal government's response. They're not being responsive. The federal government is not being responsive. The former president falsely claiming, President Biden had refused to get on the phone with elected officials like Georgia's Republican Governor Brian Kemp, both the White House and Kemp say the two leaders spoke the night before. He
just said, Hey, what do you need? He offered that if there's other things we need, just to call him directly, which I appreciate that. A furious president, Biden says Trump is making things up. He's lying, and the governor told him he was lying. I care about what he says about me. I care what he what he communicates to people that are in need. Yeah, I'm

glad we politicized it. Now. That's great. That's fantastic. Good job everybody. Good job you do, yeah, now and then we had the magic number popping up everywhere. The
death toll across several states now stands at more than 130 according to the Associated Press, in the wake of Hurricane Helene, and that is expected to rise as hundreds of people in hard hit western North Carolina are listed as missing. Search and Rescue efforts continue as authorities try to reach towns left inaccessible by washed out roads, especially in the Asheville area. Vice President Kamala Harris says FEMA is working hard so far, more than 3300 federal personnel are on the ground to
assist with recovery efforts. They are deploying food, water and generators, and we continue to work with teams on the ground to restore water and power as quickly as possible. President Biden is expected to visit the area tomorrow, and he will get an aerial tour of Asheville. Former President Donald Trump visited Helene's impact on Valdosta, Georgia. Yesterday,

I was scouring through the completely insecure, no agenda telegram groups. I was little disappointed. I mean, we've had meetups in the area. I thought at least some people would be on the telegram groups, communicating or seeing if they could help anybody. And all that I really saw was the lithium. Lithium, yeah, so that was, that was a little disappointing,

by the way. You mentioned, what was the tonnage of rain that you mentioned, 40 trillion

according to, uh, well, New York one. All right, that comes from AP, 40 true. How

many, how many trillion was dumped on during Katrina? I have no idea. Yeah, there you go. There's nothing to compare that to, no

but you know the levees broke. I mean, I don't know it. Just it feels to me like something else happened here, and I know that some dams were in danger of breaking. I'm not sure of any. We just, we basically have no information, none, as usual, no information other than it's a tragedy. It's an absolute tragedy. France, 24 of course, good little servants that they are, they took it to the political realm. And why not? Fraser,
Joe Biden, then visiting some of the worst hit areas this hurricane, government agencies had, of course, been tracking it, giving warnings about its strength. But the very future of those agencies and the work that they do, they could be under threat by a potential Trump presidency. Yeah, this is all revolving around something called Project 2025, which is blueprint for a future Republican. You

believe this? Can you believe they did this? Oh, you think

that's it? It's the Heritage Foundation is responsible and
presidency put forward by a conservative think tank called the Heritage Foundation. Trump says that he doesn't have anything to do with this project, 2025 he said a lot of the people who are the architects of this mandate are former Trump officials. So a lot of the Democrats United States are saying that this is what Donald Trump would be using if he were to get reelected. Under it, it calls for a host of
different things, but some of the federal agencies. That this mandate would dismantle, or at least massively restructure, include FEMA, who are overseeing the disaster relief in the wake of this hurricane, and also NOAA as well, which is the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration now, NOAA has a lot under its mandate, including weather forecasting, but also climate monitoring as well as coastal restoration and fisheries and more, Mondays affects about a third of the
American GDP, so it is a significant Monday that it has, and two of the organizations which fall under it include the National Weather Service and the National Hurricane Center, which, of course, both were pivotal in tracking hurricane Helene. Yeah,

blah, blah, they went on for another minutes with this. Oh, ridiculous. Oh, the more we won't have weather reports. Weather reports,

yeah, they're gonna shut it all down. No more. 2025, they

were tracking it, you know, if anything, they did a horrible job, because they underplayed the danger of this. It was like, ah, it should be 85 mile an hour. You know, 35 gusting.

I watched the fox weather channel more than I should. And I have to say, That's exactly true. And remember, I told considering, what do we see now, especially with the bulldozing the living and the dead, they underplayed it to an extreme. It was like, well, it's going to be gusts, gusts of 90.

And if you remember I said, before this thing hit, I said, I'm getting a lot of notices from people saying they find the reporting very, very odd, very off kilter. Doesn't sound right. And people were saying that before it hit. And there you go. If they had said, hey, it's could be 40 trillion somehow they know it's 40 trillion gallons. Well, I don't know how they measure it, but

I don't know how you do that either.

But now it's like, oh,

computer model, yeah, there you go. And it's all climate change, and probably developed by AI, yes,

with, uh, with cloud seeding and, sapphire blue laser.

I love this sapphire blue laser story that is actually my favorite. What,

what I what I liked. I was watching some C spam, and people were mad. They were mad at the media because the media could not resist. You know this, this is, this is a national tragedy in multiple states, Americans, you know, and oh, man, which is, oh, we got new evidence about Trump. We got this. We got that. We got Oh, we got a debate. People were mad here from Ned in Georgia. Independent line,
yeah, sure. I'm calling from haydenville, Georgia. You mentioned Chick fil A earlier. That's where Chick fil A was invented. True. Cassie used to flip hamburgers for me and my dad. But I called to tell you that if there's anything important in this modern world, sir, it's C span, you provide the general population three hours every day with an
opportunity to call in and say something important. I want to get off the line quickly, because I'm hoping one day somebody will call in and say, Gee, I wonder how Julian Assange is doing today, or how is what Jamal Khashoggi, your fiance doing today? We all hear 20 times a day, how greater or whoever, what did it tell me, I love my cheese, man, but I don't want to hear people talking about the weather in Mexico and how well their dog can blow a truck. Or I want to hear
something important. Did you hear what Willie said about that Palestinian issue? To you all, you ain't hear more talk like that. You want people asking each other how they're doing today. May I go now? Please. Thank
you. We got this caller. Let's hear from David. David in Democrats line, North Carolina, good
morning. Good morning. You're on. Go ahead. This is looking for him. I'm looking I'm looking at y'all now, and they talking a bit about North Carolina, that people's dead in North Carolina, in the mountain area, boom. This just went

on, but every single station was oh, and we got a little update, a little update over here, how it's bad. Oh, there's a house washing away. They they're so removed from it, really. It's just the media is no good and the government, you can't trust the government. You can't trust your local government. And you never should. You never should.

What was the idea? What do you mean? The idea was never to trust the government. That's where the Constitution was written. It was, it was all it was. The whole thing was written as what the government can't do? Yes,
amen to that.

And well, what the government can't do is stock the shelves. We said that this was the real news of the day. It was course before the her. Kane Helene struck, but we've got that. We've got that strike going on now I have a clip. Okay? What you got? I

L U strike,
the big port. Strike enters a day two with no sign of progress in negotiations. We take a deeper look at how the strike could affect you? Okay,
1000s of dock workers enter day two of their massive strike, shutting down 14 major US ports, leaving many at a standstill. It
starts to last long and longer than one week, we're going to start to see serious, I would say, quite serious, problems in supply chain.
Maritime business professor John Paul Rodriguez says consumers may not notice anything in the first week, but things will get more expensive and scarcer very quickly. Harold Daggett, president of the International longshoremans Association, has indicated that union workers are willing to strike for a very long time in today's
world, I'll cripple you. I will cripple you
the effects of the strike reaching even the president. We're hearing
from the folks recently that they're having trouble getting product they need because of the poor strike. Sit down and talk. Remember, we negotiated a similar strike in the west coast before, and they worked it out. It's time they won't even talk. So let's get that done.
Major imports that will be disrupted, retail goods, lumber, electronics, furniture and food,
or 98% of all the coffee coming in this country comes in containers. We may start to see problems, also tropical fruit, everything which is cold chain related is going to quickly be disrupted. And consumers at a grocery store, on the store shelves, or even buying stuff online, are going to start to notice, yes, so

that bit of him, I will cripple you. We played on the on the last show. I have an update here. When Harold Daggett, he is the president of the ILA of the Union, was on the picket line, and he he laid out a bit more about his demands and how angry everybody really is. Are
you worried that this strike is going to hurt the everyday American, the farmers that need to reach the reach the export market? Listen now you start to realize who the Longshoremen are. Right? Nobody cares. People never gave a about us until now, when they finally realized that the chain is being broke. Now, bras won't come in, food won't come in, clothing won't come in.
You know how many people depend on our jobs? Half the world, and it's time for them, time for Washington to put so much pressure on them to take care of us, because we took care of them, and we're here 135 years, and brought them where they are today, and they don't want to share. One question, what will it take to get you back into negotiations? What do you want to hear? Okay? You want to hear it? $5 across the board, for six years, all I can tell I want all my container
royalty, 5050, split. It all comes back to the ILA, where it used to be. What was the other one? Automation, stronger language to get me back to the table. If I don't get that, I'm not coming back to the table. And if we have to be out here a month or two months, this world will collapse. Go blame them. Go blame me. Blame them.

Before we get to the collapse part, we have, we have, of course, the best producers in the universe on all sides of this, one of our truck drivers, boots on the ground, who gets containers out of the ports in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware. He says, the one thing that wasn't mentioned, I hadn't heard the union was asking for the same pay between ports. Apparently, the New York port workers get paid a lot more than the Delaware port workers. But the big thing, he says, is
automation, and this is really the issue the West Coast. I think a lot of it is already automated. And he says, as to automation, I can understand them not wanting it, but when I as a truck driver, get into a port to pick up a container, get told I don't know where it is, and I got to drive around and find it for myself, they definitely need to do something better. We need a better system. And I think what, what they're saying here is you've got to pay us off if you want to bring in
automation. And that's inevitable. And of course, it's billed as AI now it's just automation which will be safer. And there's a lot of you know, China has all

every night is almost fully automated. Yeah,

and yeah. I mean, that is one of those horse and buggy jobs that will have to go away. And automation is not some mythical AI. It's just automation. It's robotics, which I think we need, and we even heard a lot about it with during covid That truck drivers couldn't find what they were looking for. It's very, very different. Call. Now the thing that now, of course, there's a lot of impact that everyone has thoughts on. Here's the CBC with their report, and then I have another boots on the ground.
This strike will at least delay delivery of everything from car parts to alcohol, furniture to cotton and wood. Yeah, we have, we have containers that are at sea. That's Anthony for Musa, president of National Produce Marketing in Toronto. He's scrambling to get containers carrying mangoes from Brazil and pineapples from Costa Rica to a port so they can offload before that produce goes bad.
The value of those containers is going to be, I'll tell you, if you're looking at about, you know, 30 to $40,000 US per container. He says a day or two is manageable, but after that, those mangoes and pineapples will start to rot. Pascal Chan, from the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, says the
potential hit to businesses gets big fast. That daily trade value is estimated in excess of 2.1 billion US dollars, and then given the amount of trade goods and services that flow across the countries, it's $3.6 billion across the border every day. Shipping companies have known this strike was a possibility,
so they've been rerouting containers for months. Ports unaffected by the Labor Action have seen record levels of cargo since August, so there won't be immediate shortages, but even if both sides reach a deal, Danny Munch, an economist with the American Farm Bureau Federation, says it could take months to sort through the backlog. A two
to three day strike will take two weeks to clear. A one week strike will bring us into November, and then two week strike will bring us into early next year before those containers and ships will be processed.
The Biden administration has been under pressure to intervene, but for now, we'll only say collective bargaining is the best way for workers to get the pay and benefits they deserve.

So let's stick with the with the shipping part. So again, from the trucking industry, they have a podcast, believe it or not, and they have an update on inventory, so stuff that is already on shore that needs to be shipped into to destinations within the United States, it
is day two of the International longshoremen Association union strike at East and Gulf Coast ports. Repercussions are rippling into industries across the country, and one of those is trucking. And joining us now is Chris spear, CEO and president of American Trucking associations. Chris, it is good to see you. So let's dig right into the strike. Chris, I'm curious you know the impact, the ripple effects
you're seeing in your industry, the trucking industry? Well, Josh, we're not even two days into this strike, and we're already seeing 62 container ships scrambled that were inbound at East and ghost Gulf Coast ports carrying nearly 500,000 containers. My industry moves as an example, 12,000 of those boxes a day at New York, New Jersey, we're already tracking multiple ports and seeing the activity diminish in
Savannah and Houston, 100% shut down in activity for trucks. If you go a little further out in Savannah, you're seeing truck activity and warehousing down 60% as those supplies and inventories begin to deplete in Houston, 20% but obviously more warehousing there than in Savannah. So we're seeing the activity really quickly unfold and probably by through this weekend. If this strike continues, those inventories will be gone. So we

heard that shipping companies have been rerouting for many months in anticipation of this, and one of our producers comes in anonymously, who works for the largest railroad in the United States. He says, We compete against trucks and barge. If the commodity being shipped can move via barge, it almost always does it that way, because it's cheaper. It's cheaper to float products down a river than use a
locomotive truck to power them across the country. However, he says that the rivers have been at the lowest in a long time, and they have been shipping and moving products from the west coast on 40 train cars, tallow, lumber, automotive parts, steel, etc. He says the Longshoremen are way overplaying their hands on how much of an impact this will have. And again, he says
the river levels have been lower and unpredictable. Railroads successfully made the case that shippers need to have optionality and should fold rail into the transportation plan, and they have been ready for this. So it may not be as bad as everyone is saying. The thing that we're not talking about is the exports. The exports could make it a very cold winter in Europe, because LNG is not moving out. And if you recall,
ever since the war in Ukraine, there's no gas from Russia. Nord Stream magically blowed up, and we have been exporting most of the liquid natural gas to Europe. So that's not going to get out. Also, soybeans. This is major stuff that we export 34 billion a year, corn, wheat, cotton, oil, although oil will be okay, the they can still the reserves at the ports are pretty empty, so they can fill up those vats, from what I understand for
quite a while. So it may not be as bad as everyone thinks it is already, though it's impacting the meat business exports.
Griffiths, with today's Ag Day minute, a strike at East Coast and Gulf Coast ports will have an immediate impact on the movement of some ag products. That's because nearly half of us meat export volume is shipped out through those ports. Officials say the hit to the pork sector will be harder than the beef sector, with nearly a third of us pork supplies being
exported. Officials with the US Meat Export Federation say that for every week the strike goes on, a minimum of $100 million will be lost in revenue.

There you go. So the exports, that could be a real problem. I think that's a bigger problem, maybe even than the imports.

Well, the exports, especially on the East Coast, are high, yeah, not so much on the west coast. But I'll say this, this is kind of interesting. If the meats are not being exported, they have to re, uh, kind of push them into the domestic market, which will lower grocery prices. Yes. And it's almost as if, because everyone says, well, there's going to be inflationary, because everything's going to go
up in price, not food, no. So food will come down in price. So meat prices should come down, because they're going to have to flood the American market with beef. Do you think and pork? Do

you think that's why the Biden administration is not implementing tart Taft Hartley, because they know it will actually lower in place exactly where I was headed with this. Thank you. Yeah, I think you're right. Because they're like, Oh, we're not going to Taft Hartley them, let them go. And then they brought this. Well, you

have to have, the problem is you have to have some pretty sharp and I don't believe this is true. You have to have some pretty sharp strategists in the Biden administration, only have the DONILON brothers, those guys from they're not dumb. They're not dumb, no. So it's possible that the whole thing is
strategized. And it was even encouraged that the strike takes place, because that's going to divert the meat back into the domestic market, which should it should drop the price of cuts of beef to next, and the hamburger be back down to, you know, less than $1 a pound.

Bring back the dollar menu meal,

and we'll get back. Get back to cheap chicken. Cheap chicken is on

the horizon. Uh, producer from Walmart. So the rumors spreading at Walmart HQ in Bentonville today, as there's about 24 hours before shortages start hitting Walmart due to the hurricane and shipping strike, the only thing about this rumor is that it's only being spread by Walmart corporate employees in parentheses, shareholders, has a very similar vibe to the early pandemic. Days before everything went nuts, a bunch of
the execs had covid and kept it secret. Considering we are in the early stages of the Christmas shopping season and we're in election season, the strike seems a bit suspicious.
Toilet paper, yeah. Oh, yeah.

Oh, have you seen what's happening at Costco? Everybody's paper, toilet paper, water, paper towels. Everybody's going, I'm

going to Costco today, and I'll report back. I personally, I doubt it. Well, I

mean, I've seen the videos of the long, long videos, yeah, yeah, yeah, but I think it'll be I'm in agreement with our producers here, by the way, they are boots on the ground. What do I know? I'm not a longshoreman. I'm a long podcaster. Man, literally, it may not be that bad. It may actually be be somewhat advantageous. We'll have to see, because the West Coast is open, and they've been prepared for this, and the trains are rolling lots

of times. I should mention this is I'm kind of boots on the ground in the fact that I have a train track that I can visually see from the hill. I don't see that much. I don't see an increase in movement.

Well, they're probably squeezing the east coast because you guys are a holes like, let's not send it to them.

It just looks normal to me. So CMBS, and I'm not saying, you know, I mean, I understand in Southern California that, because it's been posted lines of trucks that go miles and miles waiting to get into Long Beach and the other whatever ports are down there that take cargo containers. I'm looking at the freeway. I can see the freeway from here. I'm seeing normal amount of trucks carrying a container. I don't see anything. It's not ridiculous. It looks
pretty standard to me. And you know, been to the vegetable store recently. There's nothing different. Peruvian avocados are still there.

Gina Raimondo, the Yeah, exactly. Our Commerce Secretary,

the hatchet faced, horrible rat woman. I.

That's a good description. The hatchet faced horrible rat woman. Yes, our commerce secretary was on CNBC, and this is something that I've noticed that's been happening a lot in the mainstream media. And I know it's related to the Hatch Act. I think it's in this intro. Welcome
back. Everybody joining us right now is Gina Raimondo. She is the current Commerce Secretary, but she's joining us this morning in her personal capacity as a surrogate for the vice president Kamala Harris's campaign and Commerce Secretary. Thank you very much for being here this morning. So

I'm hearing this a lot. You'll see Pete Buttigieg like I'm just here in my personal capacity as a surrogate,

and that's bull crap, because you're still getting paid. Yes.

But this is new. I haven't seen this in the past, where they're all, this is a

legal disclaimer. Because of all the law fair going on, they have to do this so they can. No, I didn't know. No, this is I was on my own. I took the day off.

I'm not really working for the American people are working for Kamala.
I realize you're here as a surrogate for the Vice President's campaign, but there's so much news of the day that I feel we have to ask you about wanted to wait stop.

Does this count as part of her job if she's answering questions, does the ticket? Does the ticker start up?

Now, this is a good question.

This is like a lawyer. You know? They say, Well, this is a lawyer. The clock is on. Here we go about. Wanted
to start with this potential strike at the ports that's expected to take place tonight, at midnight. Obviously, this first time since the 1970s that you would see strikes all up and down, not only the East Coast, but the Gulf ports. What would this mean for commerce in this country? What would this mean for businesses if we go into the strike? And what do you know about it? Good morning. So as you said, I'm here in my personal capacity. I would say, look, it's not a secret that this
would be depending on how long it lasts. Could be incredibly disruptive to commerce, as you well know, you know that so much

commerce, by the way, how much does he sound like Kamala, it's the milieu She's totally in. The camp she's probably living at kamala's house. Be
incredibly disruptive to commerce, as you well know, you know that so much commerce moves through the ports, and especially, you know, if it goes a few days, I think I'm sure companies probably have their plans set. But especially we're in peak season getting ready for the Christmas season. If a strike were to drag on, I think it could be really very, very
disruptive to commerce. So I do hope that the parties, you know, stay at the table and resolve it as quickly as possible, hopefully averting a strike, but certainly, you know, keeping the length of the strike as short as possible the knock on effects through the supply chain come become quite extensive.

Okay, so in for my money, first of all, she works for us. Okay, we don't pay her to work for Kamala Harris. She works for us. She should be on CNBC in her capacity as Commerce Secretary, and be answering these questions, and not as you'll hear in this next clip, dodging around, because I don't want to get in problem with that. Work for us, lady, not for Kamala. Where
are the issues most prominent? Where have you been kind of focused and hearing on what would happen if the strike goes, let's say longer than a week? Again, I have not been very focused on that. I would refer you, why not? You to the White House or the transportation secretary. I know the administration. The President himself has said that he is not going to

push the two. Becky's doing a good job here. She's trying to get it out of her sides together. He's
urged them to talk. And I just wonder, have you heard from business leaders? You probably are the person in the administration who has business leaders here more than just about anybody else, in terms of what this might mean for them.

Come on. Answer the question. I'm
smiling because, again, I want to stay in the bounds of the Hatch Act here. So if you wanted to have me back as Commerce Secretary later in the week. Maybe we could talk about that. But as I said, I haven't been particularly involved. So where

are the priorities with this person? Her priority should be America and the American people, and she should be on first as Commerce Secretary. Then come back or say, Okay, I'll be Commerce Secretary now, and we don't talk about Kamala, and then we'll do the second anything but this, that was, it was very disturbing to me, and they all do it. Pete Buttigieg, pathetic. Pete. Buttigieg goes on Kara swishes on podcast. I'm here in my personal capacity again.
Douchebags, douchebags, and then this, thank
you, Commerce Secretary. Why don't we talk about why you're here today, and again, you are here in your personal capacity today to talk about what you see in the economy and as a surrogate of the Harris campaign, what do you see as the potential impact after the election? On this front, I see huge you were just asking me about disruption associated with storms and ports, and I think that's what you'll see with President Trump. He is erratic. His plans on tariffs, I
think will be very, very negative for this economy. Not only will they raise prices on everything, he's talking about a tariff on all imports. I mean, that's insane, right? That will raise prices of everything for everyone. It will also hurt our manufacturing industry. People don't talk about this, but a lot of things made in America rely upon imports of Americans and such. It's going to lose, you know, it's going to cost
manufacturing jobs. Is going to raise prices on everything. It could kick us into a trade war with certainly China, which we don't need. You know, I say every business leader I've ever spoken with, I used to be a governor. I used to run a business myself. You want predictability, right? You want somebody in the Oval Office who will engage with you, who will listen to you, who will be predictable, who will be smart and thoughtful. That's what you'll get in Kamala Harris,

okay, so she said a lot there about the tariffs and how horrible it's going to be. Trump was on I am the podfather, after all, was on the Dave Ramsey podcast, and he spoke about tariffs and president, William McKinley, this is a wrap. I've not heard from him yet. The word
tariff, to me, is a very beautiful word, because it can, it can save our country, truly. And yet, I think, because of graft, because of a lot of consulting payments and other things that given by other countries. We have so much fighting with politicians on using it. I saved our steel industries by putting tariffs on steel that China came in and dumped. And you know what they do? They dump and dump and dump.
Everybody goes out of business, and they buy those businesses very cheap, and then they raise the prices to higher than they ever were. That's one of the many benefits that they have if they want to do it. But by putting tariffs on as an example, in the furniture business in North Carolina, it was so vibrant, and they stole our business, and they charge us if you wanted to build a furniture place, if you want to
sell your furniture in China, they won't take it. But if you want to build a plant in China to make furniture in China, using their labor, they open it. We're doing the same thing, but a lot of people, oh, well, we don't want to have tariffs. The country was at the richest point in its history. In the 1890s it was all tariffs. If you looked at William McKinley as an example. He was a big tariff president. They had committees that were put in charge of what to do with the money we were
taking in so much money. And McKinley would say, Why should we let other people come in and steal our factories and steal our workers and steal our jobs, and why shouldn't we benefit? And he tariffed other countries, and we made so much, and then they went to the income tax system later on, but they would actually have, they had a blue ribbon committee. Our country was so rich, they didn't know what to do with the money, and this blue ribbon committee was set up to determine how can we
spend all of this money? And they took it in through tariffs. But we can turn our country around, make it strong, and then guarded the tariffs. I

had never heard of McKinley and his and his tariffs. And if you look at shot him, they shot him for it. Oh, really, well, that's a day wrecker.

Well, he wasn't the only tariff president. I mean, Jefferson got himself into trouble doing the same thing much earlier on, but

during McKinley, everything that I've been able to find it works. It there was, I mean, we probably had actual manufacturing

Yes, we had manufacturing. We were making stuff here. And the idea, Trump's idea is, of course, the tariff. The tariff isn't to charge so that everybody has to pay more for the stuff that's being imported. It's to make the American product more competitive, yeah, by having the other prices go up.

But we need product. We do need products, but we don't

make much. I mean, it's an idealistic approach at this point. I think it's too little too late to be honest about it, in my opinion. But that's just my opinion. Do

you think, in your opinion, do you think the tariffs will just raise prices across the board? That's. That's what that's what they're saying. The devil knows

they do. I mean, he, he's done them before, and it hasn't raised prices across the board. What raised Christ what raises prices across the board is ridiculous, unfettered spending, which caused the inflation that we have today, and it had nothing to do with tariffs. Oh, there's

that. There's that. Are you sure he was shot?

Yeah, he was assassinated in 1901, huh?

He had a lot with the Panama Canal. Oh man, let me see assassination. He did too much, yeah, and put up. But he had a cool top hat, though. He had one of those, like, top hats, and he had, he had a big belly, so he had one of those dusters down to his knees. Look, Trump should try that. Look.

Try top hat, as long as they start looking like Taft. That was the fact Taft

was no good. So amidst all of this port and the hurricane and, you know, and I'm, I'm sitting here looking at stuff prepping yesterday, and I'm listening to the hams to the repeater, because it was just really interesting to hear how they were handling that. And then all of a sudden, break egg break,
the judge overseeing Donald Trump's 2020, election interference trial here in Washington, DC, released 165

pages on Wednesday, which has a lot of pages, must be something going on. Basically
outlines the prosecution's case against Donald Trump and includes some never seen before evidence that they have against the former president of the United States. This then part of the Special Counsel Jack Smith's case to try

to raise the story I was always avoiding, but you since you brought it up, I had 200 evidence never seen before. What evidence was never seen before? This is a document. It's coming to somebody bringing you in the document. Was there evidence in there? Like, you know, a book or up some paper fingerprints. I mean, what are they talking about? They

had fingerprints. Now the evidence is at the end of this report. This is why I'm playing the report. And they went on for hours. Jake Tapper was live. Oh, I'm only at Page seven. I'm already sweating. I've got a boner. It's crazy. This
then pause of the Special Counsel Jack Smith's case to try to SCOTUS. Proof this Supreme Court proof this ruling, after the Supreme Court ruled in July that Donald Trump had immunity for acts that he undertook whilst in office. The Special Counsel is arguing that the majority of these things do not fall under that and instead were carried out by somebody who was actively seeking office and not currently holding office.
Those include the fact that Donald Trump was told that his claim about dead people voting in Georgia was false, but continued to push that narrative. This

is nothing new. None of this is new so far, but there is something new. Connor real evidence on the way,
also includes an anecdote about the former Vice President Mike Pence trying to convince Donald Trump that he lost the election, and instead trying to run in 2024 and Trump allegedly said, I don't know 2024 is so far off on how the Trump campaign is saying that this is an unconstitutional witch hunt. They say that it is a tantamount to election interference, the fact that it is happening this close to the election now about a month away. But we're not really expecting
any movement on this case before that election date. If anything, it's unlikely to go ahead before the end of the year. And of course, the future of it depends on who gets into the White House after that election. If it's the Democrats, then this case will likely go ahead, although Donald Trump does have some recourse with the district cause and then the Supreme Court. But if Donald Trump wins and gets in, then his department of justice is likely to make this case go away altogether.

So the whole 160 some pages, the evidence is that he was alone in his own private dining room tweeting, and therefore it was really was he wasn't acting as the president. This is unbelievable. This is the saddest October surprise I've ever seen, because that's what it was. Well, even Hillary Clinton, like, oh, what? Something's gonna happen. We're getting October surprise.

I don't believe this is the October surprise. This is too lame.

These people are lame. I think there'll be

something better than that.
Well, stock,

what's the date today? The third yes,

we're just getting started. Well, I mean, look what we already have. We have a hurricane, we have a port strike, we have Iran and Israel. And what is the President doing? He's sending messages to us.
No agenda is the best podcast in the universe, hands down. My dad used to say, Joey, those no agenda guys shoot from the shoulder. Here's to four more years and John and Adam. I hope you never find that exit strategy.

There you go, the guys,

well that you know that's what he's got, at least a good use of his time.

The guy has nothing better to do than send messages to podcasters. What is he doing?

I think we should talk about the debates,

the. A singular debate. Yeah, the

debate, the debate, okay, and only because I have to, right off the bat the first thing I heard. I don't have a lot of clips from the debate. I have one because it just backs up a point that I want to make with PBS being slanted. I know. Yeah, surprise.

What

a surprise. I'm shocked, shocked, very shocked, I tell you, is the is, can we Britt Hume said, the debate moderators were terrible. They were smug and arrogant, like he says, yes, they are both terrible. Why is Nora O'Donnell still working at CBS? There's been nothing but rumors for the last year that they're going to kick her out of there. And yet, there she is. Can I? And then you have Margaret Brennan, the Face the Nation, woman who is just who I I've mentioned this
before. I saw her when she was being interviewed during covid, when she was at home working, and she's a Hillary Clinton clone. She wears the same stupid hair thing, and she looks like Hillary without her makeup. It's just, it's just like ridiculous

while we're on appearance, can I talk about wardrobes for a moment? Take it well, okay, just from a television production standpoint, they had Vance and Waltz's ties matching the moderator's dresses. So waltz had a blue tie, which is not all and it wasn't a very attractive blue tie, and Nora was wearing her blue dress, and then Vance was wearing an atrocious reddish pink tie, and that's what Deborah was. What's her name? The pink lady

that is. Now you got, you said, Deborah, that screwed me up. I can't remember her name now, but that lady's face, the she's the Face the Nation woman, what?

Who was, who made, who made this up? Who said that was a good idea? I thought it was horrible. It was, it was all colors. I know it's a big deal, but yeah, ugly colors, and then coordinating it across

the shoulder pads, on, on, yeah,

well, that's modern. That's, that's supposedly the look now, yeah, it is, yeah, yeah. They

kind of looks, kind of looks terrible. Yeah.

It looks very 80s, I agree. So anyway, on onward to the content, now that we've dealt with the and, and the whole open is superficial part of it, well, and the whole opening had a very Jeopardy feel to it. You know, with the camera, move up and they're standing behind those desks. I was, I was hearing the tune, doo. Doo, doo. I was hearing the tune in my head. Whole thing was like, I mean, I found it rather tedious and boring. You I couldn't

watch it.

Well, how'd you get clips? Then

I went back and forth. Oh, okay, all right. And I, most of my clips are analysis clips. I don't really have that. I

have a couple clips from from it themselves, but we can do your analysis. I

have one clip from it that I want to bring in after I do that well, as I do the PBS analysis, okay? And then I have a clip that needs to be played. There's the show. PBS did a terrible job. Listen to this. Here's the I got three clips from PBS debate, PBS analysis, one
little more than a month to go, the Republican and Democratic presidential campaigns are dialing in on key swing states, and for the first and only time, vice presidential candidate, Senator JD Vance and Governor Tim Walz squared off on the debate stage. Lisa Desjardins has this report. Lisa

Desjardins with your big nose in Georgia today,
Vice President Kamala Harris arrived to survey the aftermath of Hurricane. I'm here today to thank all of those who are working. What

does this do with the debate?

That's what I'm asking myself. This is a straight up clip right from the show
to get folks the support and the relief that they so desperately need and so rightly deserve, and particularly devastating in terms of the loss of life that this community has experienced, the loss of normalcy and the loss of critical resources.

Okay, that had nothing to do with the debate. So

they throw it to Lisa Desjardins, as you put it, and she talks about Camelot. What does that get to do with anything they started? This is a debate a series of okay, well, let's throw a little promotion in there for Kamala. Let's go to part two. Meanwhile, fresh
off last night's CBS vice presidential debate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz kicked off a Pennsylvania bus tour. What

are they avoiding? The entire debate altogether. They're just promoting them.

Yeah, first we had Kamala promotion. Now we have a bus tour from Tim This is great. Tim timmy's bus

tour to right now
as vice president Kamala Harris has only one. Quiet the people, the people and Donald Trump's party mate, Ohio, Senator JD Vance rallied crowds in Michigan. We already ran this experiment once. Donald Trump's economic policies worked for American families. They worked for American consumers. Governor. Senator, thank you for joining us in the vice presidential debate last night, Vance came out focused on Harris. Governor waltz, you blamed Donald Trump, who has been the vice president
for the last three and a half years? And the answer is, your running mate, not mine. Well, Governor Walz had a shakier start. He was asked about the Middle East and whether Israel should preemptively strike at Iran, Iran or I, Israel's ability to be able to defend itself is
absolutely fundamental. Getting its hostages back fundamental and ending the humanitarian crisis in Gaza at the top of Senator Vance's agenda, immigration moderators asked him about former President Trump's vow to carry out mass deportations. I think the first thing that we do is we start with the criminal migrants. About a million of those people have committed some form of crime in addition to crossing the border illegally.
The contrast was clear, but the tone civil walls blamed Trump for blocking a relatively conservative border bill and criticized for inflammatory false statements about Haitian migrants in Springfield, Ohio, wow.

Now what? What you're telling me that that stupid bill that was killed and it by the that really wouldn't just conservative. Well, they're allowed, like, a million people in a month without any problem whatsoever. This is, this is so slanted, but it gets worse with clip three.
I believe Senator Vance wants to solve this, but by standing with Donald Trump and not working together to find a solution, it becomes a talking point, and when it becomes a talking point like this, we dehumanize and villainize other human beings. The people that I'm most worried about in Springfield, Ohio are the American citizens who have had their lives destroyed by Kamala Harris's open border.
The moderators stepped in with one of just two fact checks in the debate, sparking a fiery exchange. And just to clarify for our viewers, Springfield, Ohio, does have a large number of Haitian migrants who have legal status, temporary protected. Thank you, Senator. We have so much to get a turn out of the economy. Margaret, the rules were that you got a fact check. Another substantive contrast came over abortion.

The report should have said, even though the rules were that the moderators would not fact check. They fact checked anyway, and then wouldn't let him respond and turn the mics off.

Plus she cuts it or she lets, she lets Vance kind of bitch and moan there a little bit. And then she goes on to the next topic about abortion. This is Lisa Desjardins great objective, by the way, PBS has gone so left ever I mean, we say it all the time, but ever since GWEN IFILL died, yeah, this, this, this news operation has is no good either. No good.

I repent often how we, how we made fun of Gwen, and we really miss her. Now she was, she was keeping that thing together. So she

goes off and talks about something else. I had to cut it off there, because you went on and on and on, just kind of going nowhere. So I had to back up. And so I got the debate fact check fiasco clip. And this is what really happened. Thank you, Governor, and I'm sorry this. This is what really happened when, when Vance was confronted by Margaret
Brennan and Nora. And it was really Nora who brought in the fact check, and then Margaret Brennan cut it off and said we got to move on when he tried to correct her bad fact check.
Thank you, Governor. And just to clarify for our viewers, Springfield, Ohio does have a large number of Haitian migrants who have legal status, temporary protected. But thank you, Senator. We have so much to get to. I think it's important to turn out of the economy. Margaret, the rules were that you got a fact check. And since you're fact checking me, I think it's important to say what's actually
going on. So there's an application called the CBP one app where you can go on as an illegal migrant, apply for asylum or apply for parole and be granted legal status at the wave of a Kamala Harris open border wand that is not a person coming in, applying for a green card and waiting for 10 years. Thank you, Senator, rotation of illegal immigration. Margaret, thank you, Senator, for describing the legal process since 1990 Thank you, gentlemen, we want to have has not been on

the books. There it is.
Gentlemen, the audience can't hear you because your mics are cut. We have so much we want to get to thank. You for explaining the legal process. We have microphone power. Not

only that, but she was sneering. Margaret Brennan, we had the big smile on her face after somebody in the control room cut the mic and said, No, we're not talking about this, and we're going to go on down the important things. This was actually a debate that could have broken out. It would have been an actual debate. It would have been interesting. But no, they had to cut the mic because they wanted to be in complete control. So they lied about the fact checking this
CBS. CBS lied about the fact checking. CBS lied about the open mics. This was terrible. Which brings me to my next series of debate clips, which is only a couple, is only a couple. These are the analysis clips I picked off from NTD, because they brought some guy in. Now I have to find them.

Debate analysis unique NTD, just that might be it Joining
us now for his analysis of the first and final vice presidential debate at this election is former Virginia Governor Jim Gilmore. He's also the former US ambassador to the organization for senior Security and Cooperation in Europe, Think Tank. Governor, welcome. Thank you so much for joining us. Thanks for the chance to be on NTD, no, I love it now for all the verbal attacks on the campus,

my commercial rates just went up. Thanks for giving me this opportunity. What

was funny about it when he said, thanks for letting give me the opportunity to be on NTD, he made a point,

if NTD called me today for a podcasting story, I'd like No, no, I got no time for you.
Thanks for the chance to be on NTD. Now for all the verbal attacks was seen on the campaign trail, Senator JD Vance and Governor Tim Walz had a cordial debate, harkening back to what politics used to be. What's your assessment of the tone and substance of the debate? We

used to have actual debates? Well,
first of all, the tone was surprisingly more cordial than we've seen in other times, but, but frankly, I have a little different take on it. It was nice and cordial and friendly until the last question. The last question was clearly a setup. That was the question that basically demanded advance, contradict his ticket leader, President Trump, and put him on the spot on that

he had. What happened there? What just jumped in the audio that was odd. I

did just the way it came out.
That was the question that basically demanded advance, contradict his ticket leader, President Trump, ticket leader, and put him on the spot on that he handled it in a death way. But then you saw walls actually attack him in a vigorous and violent sort of way, told him that he just answer was a damn answer, and that was clearly different from all the preceding
discussions that had been had up to the debate at that point. It seems to me, it's perfectly clear that that was a setup that he had been briefed on that he said, Now there, you know, we're going to ask him this. This is the way you're going to answer. It seems to me that the time has come to get away from this, this business of just picking liberal teleprompter readers as the as the moderators. This was a terrible debate from the point
of view of the moderators. So you know, I'm not as warm and friendly about this debate as maybe some people are, if

I if I can just interject, because this is really bugging me now, these are not debates. This is bullcrap that we, the American people, have allowed the media to determine debates. The whole debate would be, go stand together and then debate and you can and it would be great if you could yell and get in people's faces, and that's a debate. None of this is a debate.

In fact, I think clip two addresses this a little bit, and I have some thoughts on it too.
There's been more focus on this vice presidential debate than previous ones due to a wide range of factors when it comes to moving the needle among voters. Do you think last night's debate will do that? Well, I think that it was intended to try to do that. I think, once again, the the CBS framed the questions in such a way as to try to put Vance in a bad position. They didn't talk
about inflation. They instead talked about giving away taxpayers money to homeowners, even though it was inflation that causes the homeowners problems, paid leave in just all kinds of ways that they were shaping this debate. So I think that the goal was to try to move the needle. And frankly, in my view, the modern telecommunications age does re amplify some of this. So I'm a big fan of the debates, but none
of this. I think it's time to move away from these, these, these same network people, and move back into something more like the Presidential Commission or something of that order. This, this business is just going in and being beat up by left wing commentators. Has got to stop. Up, amen.

And I was thinking about this comment he made, it's got to stop. When did it begin? It began with Trump, because Trump, when, when Trump did an independent debate situation, I think it was with CNN or one of these groups, the ratings went through the roof, yeah, when Trump started. And so all these networks said, Why are we getting in on this action? Because the numbers went through the roof because the old debate,
Nixon Kennedy debates and everything before that. They were, you know, they were, they were debates, all right, but they weren't like Blockbuster tent pole pro things for the for these networks, entertainment, entertainment that Trump, Trump specifically provided. And I mean, it probably began with the primaries in 2016 when Trump was calling, you know, little la Rubio and did Jeb Bush was a loser and all the stuff low energy, low energy, low energy loser. It grabbed the public's
attention. They started watching stuff that they would never watch in a million years. And you watch your local mayoral debates. Nobody watches these things because they're boring. Trump made them interesting and compelling. And people oh, let's go see what he's going to do this time they're eating the dogs. I mean, he always had something and so. But this guy's right. This is bold crap. These networks are this is no good. These these debates are useless crap. Well,

remember, it was the Women's League of voters who organized these previously, and they said, We're giving up. We don't want to participate in this anymore the way the media wants to run it. They gave it. They gave it back. Said, No, yeah, because

the media was stepping all over the basics. The media is a bunch of greedy bastards, and they just saw this as a money maker, a money grab to put Trump on and beat him up, or try to get him to say something silly, like, you know, or something funny, like, funny, usually, yeah, they're eating the dogs.

The best, it is the best. It is the best.

So it was, so it was a, I don't know, I thought the thing was a joke, and Brandon and O'Donnell suck, and they should be out of this.

The whole concept sucks. It's not a debate. It's just, it's just not a debate. Well, when the

debate almost broke out, they cut the mic. Was like, there's there it is, right there, there's your debate. Can't have that.

There was a little bit of a debate where Walt's actually admitted to wanting to censor people for hate speech, and that kind of slipped through. And then a massive fact check, which we've done on this show, which they just let go,
but you guys attack us for not believing in democracy. The most sacred right under the United States democracy is the First Amendment. You yourself have said there's no First Amendment right to misinformation. Kamala Harris wants to threaten government. It

kind of got buried, but I'm talking about hate speech, no, and this could have been a lively debate.
Kamala Harris wants to threaten government and big tech to silence people from speaking their minds. That is a threat to democracy that will long outlive this present political moment, I would like Democrats and Republicans to both reject censorship. Let's persuade one another. Let's argue about ideas, and then let's come together. Afterwards. You can't yell fire in a crowded theater. Fact Check fast. That's the test. That's the Supreme Court test. Tim,
fire in a crowded theater. You guys wanted to kick people off of Facebook for saying that toddlers fire in a crowded theater that is criticizing the policies of the government.

So we actually discussed this not too long ago. Oh, yeah, maybe, maybe 300 episodes, or maybe 200 episodes ago. It was not a Supreme Court decision. It wasn't the Supreme Court stance on what you can and can't do. It was in an opinion, in a dissent, and actually a dictum, non binding statement from Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr, who said, Well, you can't do that. Then they actually got into discussing it. And you if you think there's a fire in a crowded theater, you can yell
fire. You can there is still free speech. There is no Supreme Court decision on yelling fire in a crowded theater or any other venue for that matter.

I I don't understand how they get away with it, and I want to I had one clip here from Bill Gates, no. And what I'm going to play this clip for is this idea that you can't do this, you can't do that, or should be rules against it. You're seeing it on Bill Maher's show with the various guests. You're hearing it left and right, especially from the Democrats about, you know you should there should be restrictions on front basically saying there should be
restrictions on free speech, which is. A joke, if you think about it, but they keep pushing it to the point where you hear stuff like this from guys that you think are smart, like Bill Gates.
We should have free speech, but if you're inciting violence, if you're causing people not to take vaccines, you know, where are those boundaries that even the US should? You know, have rules. And then if you have rules, you know, what is it? Is there some AI that encodes those rules because you have billions of activity and you know, if you catch it a day later, the harm is, is done.

Oh, it's time for another Pie in the Face bill. You gotta be careful with this. This nonce, I

found that to be the most abhorrent thing he's ever said. I haven't watched

his show yet. He has a Netflix series now, but I'm gonna have to, because I think this comes from that Netflix series. Well, it could be I'm going to have to watch it now, because there may be some good clips something else that popped up, which is also not properly fact checked, but I don't have the clip, but waltz was talking about Finland. Finland is so great. Finland. Nothing. They got guns. Nothing ever happens
in Finland. Finland's Fantastic. Well, luckily we have wander Helm, sir, wander Helm, who has come back to listening to the show after a multi year absence. And he

said, Hey, Finland came up and stopped listening in the first place. He didn't

like our stance on Russia and Ukraine. Yeah, and, you know, because Russia is their neighbor, because

we were peaceniks, is that what he thinks we you know, don't you'd rather have war going on between these two. Hey,

I'm happy he came back. He's giving us another shot. I'm happy it always happens. You

always give us free phones. If you recall, I

know that when he worked at Nokia. Then he was really awesome. It gave us lots of free gear. It was fantastic. Well, we also promoted it. We talked about the stuff we got, and we the good and the bad. He says, Well, first of all, the rhetoric about Finland, he says, a little skewed. We have 5.6 million people versus and he looks it up, 333 point 3 million. He says that is actually the number that came
rolling out of Google magic number alert. He says Finland just suffered its first school shooting in over a decade earlier this year. Hmm, that wasn't mentioned in the debate. So yes, of course, they have guns, but the number of murders per capita is much higher than the average European country, mainly, or usually, family members killing each other, or drunk friends who are killing each other

so well they drink too much in Finland

by Luke nice having you.

Well, he has to admit this everybody, I've been there, and one of the things they tell you, they warn you about the fact that there's a bunch. It's like, worse than Poland was when they first invented vodka. Worse than the Russians in their vibe. They drink too much.

You got to do something in those long, cold winters. And what else, you

drink too much you get mad. It's because some people, you know, they're they're angry drunk people, angry drunks, angry, angry drunks. And we all know, we've all run into them. There's a happy drunks, there's there's drunks that want to fall asleep all the time. And then there's the angry, mean spirited drunk. They get a little alcohol in them, and they're all and, boom, you shoot somebody,

yes, and boom, you shoot somebody Exactly. So while we're on the topic, Walt, of course, had the flub of the evening, which everybody laughed and made memes about the best
one. So I've become friends with school shooters. I've seen it look the NRA. I was the NRA guy for a long time. I become friends

with school shooters. All right, I did have another funny clip from CNN this morning with Casey hunt. Casey, Casey and she had senior Trump advisor, Jason Miller, on CNN is really trying to shake it up. He's going up
against a moron, a total moron. How she picked him is unbelievable, and I think it's a big factor. There's something wrong with that guy. He's sick. He went into the Michigan game the other day, got booed out. I went into the Alabama game, the 120,000 people went crazy. So Jason is Tim Walz a moron? Okay,

I have to at least give a little background on walls going to the Michigan game, okay? Walls went to the Michigan game and he was representing for for the other team, yeah, for the wrong team, for the Minnesota team, yes, and University of Minnesota gophers, yeah? So they booed him. Of course they did Yes, yes. And of course he flipped somebody off, which was probably bad for him, yeah. And meanwhile, Trump's going into a game where he's neutral, so they both sides
cheered him. I mean, this is specious, just to mention it, I just like that Casey.

Hunt says this, the
120,000 people went crazy. So Jason, is Tim Walz a moron?

I mean, that's a great question. I think I found the great question that is great.

That's a good way. That's a good question. Two
things can be true at the same time. Here again, the Tim Walz that we see on the campaign trail as he's bouncing around and dancing and pointing to Kamala Harris and looking kind of goofy is not the Tim walls that shows up in debates. In case, I will tell you, I've watched more debate footage of Tim Walz that anyone should ever be forced to do. But what he's going to have an issue is, how does he defend his record? How
does he defend Kamala Harris's record? And be honest, he has to defend Joe Biden's record as well.

So then he actually said something quite intelligent, which we've been saying here for the past 30 minutes. Well,
it's not a debate. Let's just be candid. None of these are sorry, this is Doug Jones debates in the traditional sense of the work. They're just a series of answers, and you're going to answer what you want to do. You know, look, I think Tim walls needs to be Tim walls talk about what they're going to do for America and the hope and the joy that Tim Walz brings. I talk about my my old football team that walked out on that stage at
the DNC. That was a moment, folks, I got to tell you, folks, that moment spoke to a lot of people across this country. Yeah, okay.

Are we done with the debates? Because I have a very important series of clips here that we need to discuss because all of the important

series, I think there's one more clip. It's probably ancillary.

Well, is it important?

I have no idea what's is the just

throwing stuff out there. No,

I have clips. I don't put these clips on this list for no good reason. All right,

well, you said it's ancillary. Here we go. Debate wrap. NTD, yeah,
I guess that must be it. Senator. JD, Vance and Governor Tim Walz each praising their own debate performance as they hit the campaign trail today, Vance defends his answer to a question on the 2020 election, and walls touts a
tougher stance on China entities. Iris Chow has more from Martin, Michigan where Vance is holding a campaign event, holding two campaign events in the key battleground state of Michigan today, Senator J D, Vance praised his own debate performance last night, saying that it went well and that he felt bad for governor. Tim Walz, I thought it went pretty well. I got to be honest, I feel a little bad for Governor Walz, and the reason I feel bad for him is because he has to defend
the indefensible. But just hours after the debate, the Harris campaign launched a new ad highlighting Vance's answer to whether Trump lost the 2020 election. Did he lose the 2020 election? Tim, I'm focused on the future. That is a damning non answer. Vance was again asked about it today, where he said he's focused on the upcoming election, and we'll keep talking about election integrity. Why didn't you answer the question last night during the
debate about who won the 2020, presidential election? We're going to talk about election integrity, because I believe that every vote ought to count, but only the legally cast votes. Meanwhile, Governor Tim Walz today was campaigning in Pennsylvania. Anybody
watched the debate last night? Not bad for a football coach. We had a simple but spirited debate, and after seeing last night that he misspoke about having shot during the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests, Walz told reporters today, yeah, look, I have my dates wrong. I was in Hong Kong. I will tell you this, Xi Jinping is not someone you should look up to. Xi Jinping is not someone who you should say does a good job on things as Donald Trump has said about covid, the

biggest show on earth, ladies and gentlemen, we're

I grab one last comment. I'm gonna ask you this. Why did was Vance chosen?

Why was he chosen? Who? Who?

Who pushed Vance? Why did Trump choose Vance? Because I didn't know this completely. I think I kind of knew it. We may have talked about it, but it turned out that we had, I

thought it was Peter Thiel and the the PayPal Mafia, who pushed who pushed

him? No, it was Donald Trump Jr.

Oh, you're right. I'm sorry, you're right. He he was. You're absolutely right. But Donald Trump Jr is also hanging out with the PayPal Mafia for their Yes,

where Donald Trump Jr is good friends with Vance that became good friends. Bearded buddies. No bearded buddies. There's your show bearded buddies. And so there's a show title. And he he was on Hannity after the fact that, he started explaining how this worked, because he says, Now, I don't think so. I don't know about that guy. You know, he hated me when he first started off, and, you know, he's
different now. And he pushed and pushed and pushed and pushed his dad to pick Vance and he So Donald Trump Jr's not the big dummy everybody thinks he is. He's a has some

influence. He has influence. It was worth

noting that Donald Trump Jr is not a slouch, no,

but he's. Running a shit coin. So we'll have to see how that

goes. Slouch Well, it's

bad form. Very bad form. All of these people, probably not Trump, but you never know. Must be shaken in their boots, because, as was teased by lawyer of the show, our constitutional lawyer, Rob who did not go to school with him, but knows him very well. Tony Busby. Tony Busby, the lawyer from Houston, Yep, yeah, I've

got I'm this is good, yeah, I'm

glad you did this. Here's the background, or ABC new and
disturbing accusations against Sean Diddy Combs, a Texas attorney tonight, says he now represents 120 alleged victims, men and women whose allegations span more than 30 years. The accounts of the alleged victims have not been fully vetted, but their accusations involve the kind of drug fueled alleged sexual assault described in a dozen
civil lawsuits and the criminal case against combs. Combs has pleaded not guilty to federal charges his attorney tonight saying combs emphatically denies any claim that he sexually abused anyone.

All right, so that's a very, very, you're good looking. David Muir, but that was a very short report about what actually went down Tony Busby, must be said, is very successful at what he does. Apparently, his house is unbelievable. So he's, I'm just reporting. He is also good friends with Donald Trump, which makes it a little bit more
interesting. I took a couple clips from his press conference, and we start with with his his opening why he this is about, the scope of this lawsuit and the ages and just how big this is, and what's really going on with and it's not one, it's 120 lawsuits.
As I said, our law firms have been retained by 120 individuals at this point to pursue cases in civil court against Sean Diddy Combs. You should know, in this group, it is evenly divided between males and females. There are 60 males and 60 females who have joined us to pursue these claims as plaintiffs. In this group, 62% identifies African American. 30% are white, the remainder Hispanic or Asian. The victims
are from more than 25 states. Majority are from California, New York, Georgia and Florida. And I want to focus on the ages of these victims. We talk about the ages of the victims when the conduct occurred, it's shocking. Our youngest victim at the time of the occurrence is was nine years old. We have an individual who was 14 years old. We have one who is 1525. Of the 120 individuals who are plaintiffs in these cases were minors at the time of the acts complained of. Now,

I've already seen a couple of trolls posting, no, no, it is not what you think. Now,
there's been a lot of reports that we're filing a class action. This is not a class action. Class actions when one or two people file a case on behalf of a group of people, that's not this. These cases will be individual cases. Each case will live and die on its own merit. These cases will be filed individually, one plaintiff against whoever the defendants were involved in the case. So

it's not a class action. This guy's going all in. He's doing each individual case after carefully vetting every single one of them. And the time frame is vast. The
time frame of the acts complained of is very wide. The conduct at issue spans from the years 1991 all the way to this year 2024 if you wonder why there are so many alleged victims, that's your answer. We're talking about more than 25 years of this type of conduct now, although most of the victims who have stepped forward were victimized after 2015 this has been going on for a very long time.

This is so good. This is, I mean, now we get into it. And he later on, yes,

just to ask you this, you don't think this is the October surprise.

It depends, because he doesn't. The last clip that I have in a moment is about who and his relationship to Trump. Makes me think that this definitely could be for certain. It is going to make a lot of people worried when you hear these, these final two clips, and he goes into some graphic detail, which I did not clip, about what happened to some of some of these predominantly the children. You can just It's everything you could imagine. But here is the clip about what
Acts and where they took place. The
acts complained of in these cases that we're going to file occurred prior. Primarily in New York, either Manhattan or the Hamptons, or occurred in California, primarily in Los
Angeles, or in Florida, primarily in Miami. Most of these events and incidents occurred at parties, typically after parties, our album release parties, New Year's Eve parties, Fourth of July parties, something they called a puppy party, all white party, although several of these events occurred at auditions, many times, especially young people, people wanting to break into the industry were coerced into this type of conduct in the promise of being made a star, or in the
promise of having Sean Combs listen to their tape, or even let them read for Sean Combs. You should know that some of this behavior occurred at well known venues in New York City. Some of this behavior occurred at private residences the people that we all know. Some of this behavior occurred at hotels that we're all familiar with. You should know that more than 55%
of the victims filed reports. Reported this conduct to either the authorities, that is the police, or to hospitals we're in the process of collecting with our team assistance, medical records, reports that were made to the authorities. And I've already said that some of the individuals in this group did, in fact, talk to the FBI, so

interesting that we have some trolls saying, Oh no, this is to take down Trump. But I think you're wrong. This guy is friends with Trump. This is not to take down Trump being

just the opposite control. Think this way. Do they ever listen to this show?

No, I don't know what they're doing. They're on drugs. Speaking of drugs, some of the drugs that took place that were used here. So this is the final clip, and we will be hearing a lot more from Tony Busby, I'm sure. Good name, by the way, Tony Busby in the morning, everybody is he 100 That's a good name, Tony Busby. It's the buzz a 95 five Busby. Busby in the morning. He's not naming names, but he will soon. And, yeah,

this is the part that gets to me. Okay, well,

the reason why is he says he's vetting. They're vetting every single they can't just come out and make allegations without I think this is

a still, because no one's ever done that in their life. Okay, well, listen

to the last clip, and then, then, then we'll I'm happy to hear your opinion.
Many of you came here thinking or hoping, or perhaps, uh, believing, that I may start naming names, that day will come, but it won't be today. The day will come when we will name
names other than Sean Combs. And there's a lot of names. It's a long list already, and of course, I already know who some of these individuals are, but because the nature of this case, we're going to make damn sure, damn sure that we're right before we do that, but the names that we're going to name assuming that our investigators confirm and corroborate what we've been told her names that will shock you. These are individual cases. There are indeed other perpetrators
involved. They will be revealed when that particular individual case is ready to be filed. They already know who they are. And I'm talking here about not just the cowardly, but complicit bystanders. That is those people that we know watched this behavior occur and did nothing. I'm talking about the people that participated, encouraged, egged it on. They know who they are. I call them the facilitators of foul play, willing participants in vile conduct. As we identify them,
each will be part of this case as defendants. These defendants will not only include individuals, but would also include corporate entities who ultimately profited off of this culture and behavior. I'm looking at banks, pharmaceutical companies, hotels. We know that many of these individuals were
paid cash. We know that that many of these individuals involved whether they were the ones being assaulted and abused or they're witnessing other people being assaulted and abused and then paid and threatened and told to leave. Typically pay 10 grand in cash and told to leave.

We'll see how fast he can get some out. But the whole press conference and he had three different representatives from from abuse organizations. And his whole pitch was, if you were involved, come forward now. Come forward now, because we know who you are. And he was talking about tranq being slipped into into drinks and people waking up the next day, you know, with

Well, this is the, the one. Case that Gloria. Gloria already is doing some woman who was tranqed and then bound up and then raped by, supposedly, this alleged, allegedly, yes, allegedly by Diddy and one of his, I guess, one of his bodyguards, or some other guy, yeah, and so she's suing, and this took place in my Degas some time ago. But all reds, no slouch, no. And so this is, this is not going to turn out well, but this is Rick has so much of the earmarks of the
Epstein material. Now, there is supposedly another thing, another aspect of this. This guy, by the way, Busby was on Jesse Walters show waters. Oh, he was on waters. He was on him waters, for some reason, emphasize the fact that record companies are also on this

Clive Davis. Oh, yeah, definitely. Oh, which

is not mentioned those clips you have allegedly, definitely, allegedly, he

didn't, well, he didn't mention Clive Davis, but Clive Davis was the mentor. And if you've watched the Clive Davis documentary on Netflix, you know, after his third third wife, hello, I said, hello, hello. After his third wife. She did after his third wife, he's like, I think I'm gay. I think I like hanging out with the gay guys, and he was hanging out with all the hip hop. This is not the gay stuff in hip hop, particularly around Diddy and Bad Boy Records, is it's been
well known. It's like, and everyone's like, okay, whatever the gay. But we didn't know about all this, or at least I didn't, but it was, nobody did. Well, there's, there's been some.

I mean, if you're in the business, or you're What did these parties, or whatever the case, yeah, you knew them. But nobody in the public, you know the our level of public? Well,

there was a YouTube show, and it was a real hip hop show, and someone sent it to me. This is a while back. I have to go and dig it out. And the the hip hopper, who was, who also has their own YouTube they all got their own YouTube channels. She was talking about what went on these Diddy parties and, like, ah, then the and the mix of drugs that they were using and and the baby, baby oil, and all this stuff. I mean this, but that's, I mean, you can go back to Shirley Temple and then just
look at any of those old Shirley Temple movies. It is disgusting. The sexualization of children in the movies in Hollywood was rampant.

It's been going is it any different today? No,

and talk to the kid from the Goonies kid. What's his name? Who always, yeah, who always did the Michael Jackson impersonation? He's always talking about it, yeah? He's a

number of child actors that are Corey Feldman. Corey Feldman, Feldman, right? Yeah.

And he implicates Charlie Sheen. There's all kinds of stuff that's been going on, but when it gets to miners, and I'm pretty sure that a lot, and it's there's going to be politicians, there's going to be captains of industry, there's going to be in here, and if it's an October surprise, well, he's getting it started early. He's got a couple weeks, but he better hurry up, otherwise it's no good.

I don't know what they're going to do, but it's definitely a story worth following.
I'm on it, yeah,

somebody needs to be on it. Yes, my beat.

I'm on it. I'm on it.

Okay, well, what else? Well,

I have other things. I was taking a break. I have, you want to do anything here?

I have a couple. I have a kind of a respite. Respite a thing in the middle. I got a ragovi thing I have to play is we, by the way it's pronounced, we go, V what's

respite is that A, is that something that you eat a respite?

It's a thing in the middle. It's like the entremont to cleanse your palate. It's a little palate cleanser. Yes, exactly. Is this a wegovy ad? I had to play this because there's an interesting element to this ad. Have you
almost had trouble losing weight and keeping it off same? Discover the power of we go. It overweight, we go, V shouldn't be used with semaglutide or GLP, one medicines.

Well, isn't isn't wegovy, GLP, isn't that? What it

is, it's semaglutide. Yeah, it is semaglutide. And so they're telling you not to use it with with itself, yeah,

because you could OD on it. You can od if you get too much semaglutide. It

should not be used with semaglutide, is what they say. And it is cement semaglutide. Yeah.

Oh, well, I

thought that was odd.

Oh, boy, that cleansed my palate. Ooh, I need a drink of water. And by the way,

I always pronounce the semi. Blue tide. But they pronounce this semaglutide, which is interesting myself. But yeah, sounds,

sounds more 2.5 milligrams. I believe sounds more medical that way. So magnetite, some magnetite. Yes, a magnetite.

All right, that was like the ones that say, do not use it if you're allergic to it. That's

my favorite. Can I do a little Can I do a little bit of big tech stuff?

But we have big tech stuff too. We

got a little big tech stuff. The first one is Marsha Blackburn. She's from Tennessee, isn't she? Marsha Blackburn thinks she's from Tennessee.

I don't think she's from Tennessee. The honorable Senator from Missouri, isn't she?

She's one of those states she's looking up. She is sounding the alarm on meta and Google. Yes,
indeed, we have found out that it appears that what they are doing is coordinating, and they're listening in on phone conversations and pulling keywords. It's called doing a keyword search and then selling that data to advertisers who then, if you're talking about wanting something or going somewhere, all of a sudden, you're going to see that ad that pops up, it is a privacy invasion, and we have tried, many times to pass a federal, federal online privacy
protection legislation. And John, as you know, these lawyers and lobbyists in the millions, 10s of millions of dollars that these platforms spend to fight against this is astounding. So
it's never gotten across the finish line. We've gotten close, but we haven't been able to get it across, and until we're able to establish a federally preemptive, national privacy standard, you are not going to see us be able to reign in this overreach and this data mining and these privacy invasions that are carried forward by these big tech platforms every single day. When you are online, you are the product.

So that's a pretty big allegation that they're listening to your phone calls.

We know they've been listening on those stupid devices. Yes,

yes, but I guess they just have, you know, if you install the Facebook app or any app from Google, then in the EU law, I'm sure you're just saying, Yeah, go ahead and they're listening. And, you know,

I think you install anything, if you look at the laundry list of giveaways you have to do, oh, you would. They have access to your microphone, they have access to your photos, they have access to your contact list. A lot of these things, a lot of these products. There's no reason in the world they should have access to any of this. But they're they demand it, and you to run the product, you got to say, okay, whatever.

I have an early phone to stop this. I have an early phone tip. Yes, I got a I got a new phone. A $63 it is the reasonable, yes, it's the cat, as in Caterpillar. S 22 and I'll tell you why I like this phone, because I I was on my phone too much. I'm just, like, I'm on this phone this, you know, I've got things alerts going off and on my graphene OS, you know, just, there's just too much going on. Like, I want to have something that gives me my email that is not Gmail. Of course I
want text messaging. And what else did I want? The my Bible app. There you go. That's about it. That's all I wanted. But what this phone is, is it? It's a flip phone, and it looks very much like what was the one that had that weird operating system. Now it's like, it's an industrial strength phone has a big keyboard, almost like for grandma, but the screen, which is probably three inches by two inches, it's a version of Android, Android go. So you can kind of customize it with as
little as you want. And even if you put stuff on there, it's so tiny, the screen and the pop up keyboard is so small that it's pretty much useless. So you can customize a very minimal phone. You don't install any of the Google products. T Mobile immediately, just turning it on, popped up a whole Oh, install these games yet. No T Mobile. So you rip all the T Mobile stuff off, and it's a very affordable, very good phone, and it kind of looks cool. It's people like, Oh, what's that? A flip phone?
Oh, that's, it's the new Flex, I'm told, and it's a good product. Other than that's Android, but outside. That if you just want a phone that does some small things that you need and you don't need anything else, it's good to go. That's my tip. You might want to look into one. John, you'd love it. I have a good phone. Yeah, it's in the desk.

No, it's in a drawer downstairs.

We move onwards to my favorite topic, which is AI, we have an update on chatgpt, and OpenAI is going to
start in the tech world, a look at the company behind artificial intelligence chatbot, chatgpt, that's right, Stuart, that company is open AI, and it's now one of the world's most valuable startups. This after concluding a fresh round of fundraising, which brought in $6.6 billion from a number of big investors, including venture capital firm Thrive capital, Japan's Softbank and Microsoft, name a few. This was one of the largest ever funding rounds for a private
company. This means the AI darling is now valued at $157 billion on par with established, publicly listed companies like Goldman, Sachs and Uber, that's almost twice as much as it was worth at the beginning of the year. There are conditions to
this new round of financing though. Open Eye, open. AI has demanded that investors not be allowed to put money into any of its private competitors, like Elon Musk's ex AI, for instance, and investors will be able to withdraw their money if the company isn't fully converted to a for profit company within two years.

So I've been looking at what the what Wall Street keeps calling the hyperscalers. This is an unbelievable expenditure that's taking place for these data centers that everyone thinks is going to be necessary for this artificial intelligence boom that we're supposedly in. And, I mean, it's amazing how, I mean, you talk about their, you know, the there, I think there's six nuclear plants, small, medium
reactors, this, all this stuff is being planned. And you look at the flow charts of all these companies, the picks and shovels of this, and everybody's in on it, but I don't know if they're going to have any customers, because I got this boots on the ground for our producers about epic, epic, epic medical they they're the largest electronic medical records vendor in the industry, and so this is what Larry Ellison was talking about, like, oh, and then the the you won't have to write a report. Me
able to write a report for you. And then it'll contact the pharmacy, and then the pharmacy will will get your prescription, everything's right, and then it poops out a report for the insurance company. Check out the cost structure
per

per Okay. Cost Structure per user, $3,000 per month, 61 cents per user, query, request. How can this be worth it?

Yeah, you can get some minimum wage person to do this work easily,
easily.

So this is our boots on the ground, producers, the execs, are all giddy about it. And he says, meanwhile, since we get

giddy about tech, techie stuff, if it's in around their kind of business, and they can see, I've heard these presentations and seen them where somebody can come up and look at this, look at this, look at this. But the tradition, traditionally in tech, the most appealing factor is the cost reductions. Reduction. It's always reduction. It's gonna it used to cost you this much in the outline, it very carefully. This what it cost you to do this now with our product. And it's
not just half, usually half. It has to cut it way down to, like a 10th as much. Yeah, and this is like more than, this is almost always more than. I don't get what the appeal is. These people are dumb. He

says the execs are so giddy that has anything to do with AI. He says, while they're waiting for this to be implemented, we'll see how long that takes. Their doctors are buried in this reporting stuff, and have started using just chatgpt to write their patient notes, which is a complete violation of HIPAA. You're actually just feeding the models the information about your patience. This is, this is out of control. This really, this is so stupid. But okay, it's
keeping Wall Street afloat. Everybody's happy, I guess. And to drive the

point home, you're such a Debbie Downer.

I am a Debbie Downer. I am I was watching a another piece on, I think was, PBS, about the secret facility in upstate New York. IBM is now working on the real quantum computer. It's so groovy. The quantum computer is going to do everything with their qubits. Qubits are going to make it all happen. IBM lies, someone finally did it for you. John, what is your test? The Dvorak Rorschach test of a good search engine or something that will give you results that you

right. You asked the question, what is the best weed whacker

you buy? That is the question. And 99%

of the time, you get phony sites that own, you know, companies that own the weed whacker, companies showing you, here's the top 10 weed whackers, and theirs is always number one, but they never mentioned that. It's all, it's of scam. The whole thing's a scam. Well, let's

listen to notebook LM, a deep dive on the best weed whacker. All right, so
you're ready to tackle those overgrown weeds, huh? But like, whoa, picking a weed whacker can feel like a mission impossible sometimes, right?
It totally can. They're like a zillion options out there. It's easy to get lost in the weeds trying to figure it all out,
exactly. So diving deep into the world of weed whackers. We're gonna figure out which brands are the real deal, not just marketing hype. And luckily, we've

got just marketing hype, John, it's for you. This is for you an
expert here who can weed out the weaklings, so to speak.
I like what you did there. And yeah, there's definitely a lot to consider beyond just the brand name, totally.
So let's say you're a landscaping Pro. You're out there every day battling some seriously tough weeds. What are the brands you rely on? Well, for pure,
you know, workhorse reliability you can't beat still, like they're known for building these tanks. Basically, their engines are something else, big pistons, heavy duty crankshafts, not your average, you know, flimsy weed whacker. Yeah, these
are the ones that can handle getting banged around a bit, right? Exactly?
Landscapers swear by them. Especially the FS series. Those are legendary. Now,

the steel S, T, I, H, L, E, I

think. No, no, E,

oh, the landscaper series, they're legendary. Do you agree? Is this the best white weed wagger I don't

know. Well, I can't find it out by going on the web, and they're just telling me something I'm sure is done by some sort of a scammer. Okay,
so still's got the heavy duty category covered. But what about someone like me? I've got a small yard, not exactly a jungle out. This is
right. So you don't need a monster truck. You need something a little more like nimble. That's where ego comes in. They've really nailed the whole battery
powered thing. Ooh, battery powered. Tell me more about
that. Okay, so they use these lithium ion batteries, right? Oh, man, they pack a punch. Plenty of power for a typical yard, but no gas, no fumes, and way lighter than those gas guzzlers. That's
a game changer for real.

I don't think we're ever going to get a conclusion out of this, John, they are not solving the problem,

not at all. And it's possible that those products are good. I mean, they may be good, but are they the best? And there's no way finding out. There's no lab testing. All of them, Consumer Reports that i Far as I know, haven't done anything on weed whackers, and they probably will leave out some of them, because they're not complete anymore in their analysis of anything, they always leave something out. Everybody does, and it's just hopeless. It is. I'll just be now listen to these two jokers.

Okay, speaking of jokers, we have big news. It finally happened, there are a few smiles
in world politics more earnest than Mark rutters, the former Dutch Prime Minister has been well known for his affable public persona, something that served him well for the last 14 years in the Netherlands. His next role may require a
different approach. On Tuesday, Rusta takes over as Secretary General of NATO, which has been led by Norway Jens Stoltenberg for the last 10 years, NATO might be the most successful military alliance in history, but is facing challenges possibly more fundamental than any other time their last 75 years. Finally,

Jens Stoltenberg has handed over the reins to the soy boy of the Netherlands, known as Mark Ritter, who used to be in HR at, what's the, what's the big UK, Dutch firm that does cosmetics and baby lotion,

I don't know.

I mean, I do know, but I can't remember, Unilever. Unilever. Oh, Unilever. He was one of the HR ladies at Unilever. So he is now the Secretary General of NATO, and I'm very happy because we get to make fun of how he talks. Good afternoon.
Good afternoon. Hello, and I'm glad to see all you were here today. Yes, it's very good to have you here. Brussels. Hash von. Of the largest international press corps in the world. Yes, and I'm looking forward to be working with you. All right. First, I want again to express my profound gratitude to Jens Stoltenberg, thank you, Jens, for the tremendous job he has done in the past 10 years. Fantastic few leaders of this alliance faced a more challenging geopolitical
environment. Is good, but Jens steered us through difficult times with a steady hand. Very steady hand. He played a big part in making today's NATO stronger than ever, and he leaves behind an enduring legacy,

an enduring legacy, by the way, I think was a hold, which is Albert Heijn. Big shopping concern doesn't matter. He was with the HR lady. So here is the meat of his speech. Surprise, surprise, the soy boy is all in on the military industrial complex. I
have three priorities, three, and sure we have the capabilities to protect against any threat. Yes, the Russia supports Ukraine in fighting back against Russian aggression, aggression and addressing the growing global challenges to Euro, Atlantic security like China first on our military capabilities. Okay, NATO's core mission is to ensure our collective deterrence and defense. No,

no, our core mission is to spend money.
Over the past decade, we have made tremendous progress in ensuring we have the forces and capabilities to deter and defend against any threat from any direction, Russia, but we must go further, okay, and faster to meet the enormous challenge ahead. Here we go. We need more, better Eclipse forces. Yes, more robust transatlantic defense industry. Oh yeah, increased defense production. Money, money. Greater investment
in innovation. Ai secure supply chains. Yes, more money. Allies are already stepping up with plans to require 1000s of air defense and artillery systems, many hundreds of modern aircraft, yeah, mostly fifth generation S, 35 as well as substantial high end capabilities. What about the
money? But to truly match our capabilities with our needs, we need significantly more defense spending money, and I will work with allies to ensure that we invest enough in the right areas, and that we shoulder the burden for our collective defense equitably.

Now I'm glad that everyone else is going to be paying more money, more money for bombs and stuff and F 35 this great congratulations. NATO.

Well, the last thing Stoltenberg said when he got out and left, he did a interview with that funny sounding British, semi British sounding PBS, woman who's been around forever. I can't think of her name offhand, but she has a show. He sits down with her, and he talks about how, you know, the main with the lane, one of the main things I wanted to get
get accomplished is get Ukraine into NATO. And the first thing that this bonehead says he wants to make sure to get Ukraine into NATO, yeah, of course, which is the reason that the Russians are all upset, yes. And all you have to do is say no to that, no, no, no, no, and that war would be over. But nobody wants to do that.

No, only Trump can't have debt, can't have debt. Season of review, a little season of review, seasoning not seasoning the season of review. What that was? Seasoning of reveal, no, no, that's a new product I'm working on. This is just that, but Tate be tasty. This is the season of reveal. We'll remember the snowpocalypse. Oh, man, was it now five years ago, four years ago, when people died all throughout Texas. We were stuck in our home without electricity
for four days, I think, and the show deconstructed. This was a scam. This was a scam by the energy producers, by ERCOT. It was the old ERCOT is our central exchange, which is literally like a stock exchange of trading energy units back and forth at best price that it was Enron people, old Enron people didn't

people. You get a clue, you stay, stay with it work before. Well,

there's an expose, a those
deadly blackouts that we remember and killed hundreds of people during the 2021 winter storm may have been an inside job. A new lawsuit alleges energy companies created an artificial natural gas shortage. KXAN Tom Miller talked to the Hill reporter, saw elbine about the other claims made in that lawsuit. 246 people died in the 2021 winter storm. They were freezing temperatures. There were blackouts. And now there's an
allegation from this pipeline. Analytics company that says this was pre planned, and that's pretty startling. Yeah, so now we need to be careful when we talk about pre planned.
So what it comes down to is supply and demand. The allegations are that in the weeks before the storm, and particularly in the days before the storm, several dozen of Texas's biggest oil and gas and pipeline companies started restricting the supply of natural gas to their power plant customers, effectively strangling them of the fuel they
needed to run the grid. And then, as the grid started to go wobbly, and the power plants panicked, and the state government panicked, and prices were allowed to rise basically freely, then the gas companies, the allegation is, took that gas that they had now had on hand, and they'd freed up by breaking those contracts, and they sold it for a whole lot of money.

Pretty much what we said this is exactly what happened. They they left people out in the cold. And remember the prices? Remember the prices were like $7,000 a kilowatt hour, it was high. It was high. And so now, can we, can we get any, can we claw back any of that money?
Publicly? There was this defense that the grid was not winterized, and the lawsuit says that that's actually pretty misleading. Yeah, so the head of circles Access Pipeline Company says a two inch pipeline, two inch pipeline can freeze a 20 inch pipeline in a state that gets freezes, not infrequently. That's a little bit more suspicious. The defendants are these gas companies, pipeline companies,
banks. What are they saying they were in court to say, we need to throw this case out, and at this stage in the game, what that looks like is you essentially say, let's say everything you're saying is
true. We did the crime of the century. It doesn't matter because we're in the wrong jurisdiction, or you're wrong on some key point of law, and in this case, the reason that they're saying that plaintiffs are wrong is, you'll remember, people were pretty mad just after winter storm Yuri, and the legislature heard how mad you were, and it created a state payment plan to pay off that huge debt, and they created a procedure to go through to make sure that that money was to make
sure that those bills were fair. And so the defendants essentially said, look, the time to bring this up was then, it's too late now.

Scam, massive scam. No one will go to jail. Nothing's gonna happen. This is on KXAN, Austin. No one cares about them.

Little local station. Yeah, we've gone through it here, yes, when Gray Davis was the governor, well, you went through all. We have to have gray outs, brown house blackouts. Remember, we

had the phone calls of Enron guys, yeah, cut the electricity. Cut it, cut it. Black them out, yeah, yeah, yeah.

They got the only thing that happened. They did end up recalling the guy in Schwarzenegger became the governor. Yeah, of course, he didn't do much, but it was at least something. I've

pushed all donations back to the end of the show, John, you probably noticed, since it's going to be long, I figured we'd do everything in one go, because we got a lot of Commodores.

Okay, you just it's gonna take about a half an hour to go through all the donations. That's

why I figured, you know, we get all the news out of the way, and then we thank everybody. You know, it's a happy day.

Hello. No, that's not what I was expecting. Really. You are. Since you want to do that, I don't really have a problem. I have a three by three that was sent in, and now
it's time for three by three. Experiment five, JCD, comparing stories from ABC, CBS and NBC, the never ending three by three.

I'm sorry. I guess I should have cleared it with you. I figured you'd be okay with that. I just looked at the list. I'm like, we should just should just do this all at the

end. I thought when it was long, that's when you why we wanted to break it up. No, no.

But this is, this is too long because it's all top heavy.
So

both sides are just a lot of people. But we're going to talk about the Iranian missile barrage, which is like, I think we may have predicted it was not going to amount to much. We

I think we literally said fireworks.

And here we go with our reporting. I, you know, I'm kind of moving CBS up on this, because I think that they've lost their their mechanic. Well, no, it's like we always thought him as CIA, but after watching the debate and some of these lunatics that are there at CBS, I don't know if the CIA is really doing much there.
So let's start with them from the White House Situation Room, President Biden and vice president Harris monitored Iran's attack on Israel with their national security team tonight, the President says Iran failed its mission. The attack appears to have been defeated and ineffective, and this is testament to Israeli military capability and US military. And he vowed to help Israel defend itself. Make no mistake, the United States is fully. Fully, fully
supportive of Israel. The US has more than 40,000 troops and aircraft squadrons spread across the Middle East, along with 12 warships in the region. Another one is on its way today, two of the Navy destroyers fired
roughly a dozen interceptors against Iranian missiles. We will never hesitate to take whatever action is necessary to defend us forces and interests against Iran and Iran backed terrorists, and we will continue to work with our allies and partners to disrupt Iran's aggressive behavior and hold them accountable. Former President Trump claimed Biden and Harris are leading the us to the brink of a wider war. Iran has been exporting terror all over the world, and it's
been just unraveling. The whole Middle East has been unraveling. But of course, the whole world has been unraveling since we left office. Tonight, the White House insists Iran will face, quote, severe consequences for that missile attack. President Biden said what those are remains to be seen. He has not spoken to Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu since the strike, but says he plans to what

I miss in that report from CBS, they didn't use the phrase ballistic missiles.

I heard that some people use ICBMs, which I thought was interesting, which

I don't know if they were. They're not intercontinental ballistic missiles. Are they? Well, it's intercontinental. Was it between continents? Oh, it's

on No, it wasn't. Well, it's on the same continent. Well, the I have to mention the one thing, the you have to before I get to the next two clips. This is the only the one guy was, you know, they sent out 200 missiles, and one guy's dead. And here's the irony. Read this. This is the, oh, is this the Palestinian? Yeah, Israel ran iron, dead guy, PBS, Israel. Uh, hold on, Israel says ran, but means Iran.

Oh, yeah, I got it. I saw the video of this. Another
Gazan laid to rest today. 38 year old, Sami al asali, a resident of the occupied West Bank, and the only person known killed by Iran's massive missile attack.

Did you see the video of that? No, oh, so it's, it's like, it's like a security camera footage on the building, and you see the guy, why he's the only guy on the street, and this massive, you know, the thrust part, just, you know, this shell from this ballistic missile falls right on top of him, and he just, like, chops him in half.

It's like, glad I didn't see

it. It's the worst day record video of the year. Imagine just walking out by yourself and, boom, this thing falls right on your head. It was unbelievable.

Well, he's the only guy, so let's go with ABC.
We know the US was actively involved in intercepting these missiles today, absolutely helping Israel defend itself. They had two destroyers in the eastern Mediterranean. They launched missiles to intercept 12 of those Iranian missiles. We're not sure how many were intercepted, but certainly some of them, you know, you on those ships. It's like a bullet hitting a bullet, a missile hitting a missile to protect
Israel. Extraordinary precision involved. In the meantime, Martha, I know you've been talking with your sources today. How concerned is the US of the potential of a wider regional war here, and could Israel now vowing to retaliate? Could Israel target Iran's nuclear sites? Well, at this point, David, My sources tell me they don't really know what Israel is going to do, they're waiting. They will probably get some sort of heads up before they respond, but they
are worried about how broad a response. I don't think they're concerned at this point that they will hit nuclear sites, but it is certainly possible. But given the fact that was not major damage, they're hoping that Israel tamps it down.

Isn't this just exactly the same as the last time? Yeah, just, oh, shoot some rockets. Okay, all

that's missing from these reports is the and somebody sent me a number of clips. I didn't use any of them, but I'll mention a lot of clips saying, Well, you know, Iran is one week away from a nuclear bomb. Didn't

they also have that in the debate, didn't enormous. There was a, I think, in the debate, there was a one or two weeks away from having a nuclear weapon, because we've

been hearing for at least, I don't know how far back this goes. Maybe,

I don't know, forever, forever, at least Obama years, definitely.

All right, so let's finish with the NBC, our Comcast operation. President
Biden tonight declaring Iran's major assault on Israel a failure. The attack appears to have been defeated and ineffective. The President crediting the US is extensive planning, anticipating today's attack and working alongside its close ally, Israel. Make no mistake. Right, the United States is fully, fully, fully supportive of Israel.
Earlier President Biden with Vice President Harris monitoring the attack alongside their national security team from the Situation Room, The White House says Iran did not give any advance notice of today's missile barrage. That comes as the Biden administration's months long effort to prevent a larger war in the Middle East is now facing its toughest test yet. The president tonight saying it remains to be seen with the consequences for Iran will be the Vice President also
condemning the Iranian attack. Iran is a debilizing, dangerous force in the Middle East, and today's attack on Brazil only further demonstrates that fact, still, former President Trump, campaigning in Wisconsin, argues, on the administration's watch, the world is spiraling out of control.

He said some Trump said something else, which I thought was rather interesting, which kind of fits into our general theory that many of the main guys in Iran may already be dead, that there's been this systematic elimination of surgical precision, either through bombs or missiles through the window or pagers exploding. And here's what Trump said, this
has really been bad, but they have to finish that process. However, it turns out, they have to finish the process. This is a little bit like two kids fighting in the school you are sometimes you have to just sort of let it go a little bit, and we'll see what happens. That's

a far cry from the brink of destruction. You

Yeah, yeah, this whole thing is suspicious, and until I see any evidence to the contrary, even though you're always going out on a limb when you say, well, this whole thing's theater and bullcrap, which is what we've said, yes, when you send 200 missiles over and you can't kill anybody but some poor, hapless Palestinian atmosphere walking home in the West Bank. It didn't

even get hit by the by the by the warhead. It was hit by the empty shell just dropped on him.

It's like, yeah, no, no, this doesn't make any sense at all. If you targeted 200 missiles, all on, all on your take and, like they said, a bullet, a bullet. Come on. This is, this is harkens back to the old days of the Scud. Remember the Scud missile attacks? The

Scud stud? Where's he? We need him again. Yeah, the Scuds. Yeah, I was good. Did they still use those Scuds? Did we offload those on Ukraine? Guys have been upgraded. Did we send them to Ukraine? You have some Scuds? Well, they

weren't our it was a Russian missile. Was the Scud? Oh,

that's right, we had the Patriots against the Scud. You're the Patriots, which are useless too. Did you see Netanyahu talk to the people of Iran? Yeah, I did. What'd you think?

Well, he's speaking in English. He's talking to us. But make some point or other. Well, the point I got from

him was regime change. Yeah, that's

what it was all about. The whole speech was about, you know, we're gonna, this will be final blow over. You'll get rid of these guys. We

love you. No, he was and we love you guys. We love you guys. We love you Iran. We love you guys. We want to be friends with you. We'll be peaceful and prosperous. It's true. I think he's, he's, he's trying to get, you know, trying to trigger the the next Green Revolution, or whatever it is not that he's going to trigger it with that. Color revolution is the word you're looking for, but it was green specifically in Iran. I think, I think their color was green.

I don't remember the color. I thought it was something else, but, yeah, that would be nice. Whether you can pull that off or not. I'm not sure. Did you hear that they're talking about? Did you hear something? Did you hear ju i have this. I don't have a clip here. I should bring it on. On Sunday, Julian Assange is soliloquy about how they

I saw a little bit of it, a little bit of it. Oh, I

have the whole thing. It's like it was hard to get because it keeps being pulled. But I think it's bull crap.
Tell me, well, he's

talking about the CIA mainly Pompeo and Barr had a scheme to have him killed when he was in the UK Ecuadorian Embassy. And the more I think about it, it's like if they had a scheme to kill him, he

would have been dead. He would be dead.

I don't think it's this. I don't think the CIA I'm not a member. I'll get paid by them, and I'll get a check. I think we get checks occasionally for the show,

but we need more. We'll take cash. We need more. You can use stripe. It's all good.

Stripe works is the I just don't think they're in the I just, I think the there was maybe a. Scenario threat that was given to him to scare him, maybe, but I just don't think they're in the business of killing journalists left and right under any circumstance, especially this guy who is a valuable asset. And like you said, and I would agree, they could have taken him out because he was going on the balcony every day and giving speeches. They could have been taken up by
a sniper 600 yards away. They would never caught him. Yeah, it's a million things that could have happened, but no.

2009 was the Iranian green. Green movement.

It was green, okay? It

was green. It was green. Didn't didn't work too well. The Green Movement,

no, because we, they weren't backed up by Obama pulled a plug. That's right, he didn't do it right

now, the Netanyahu thinking that when I and it's like three minutes, and we don't have to play it, obviously. But when I was listening to him, like, you know, this sounds like there's, you know, he's just saying, Oh, it's the it's the moolahs, it's those guys. Your leadership is no good bastards. Yeah, take them out. And I'm, you know, I we need to hear from our dude named Muhammad.

Have you seen? Well, yeah, a lot of dudes named Mohammed. Did you see the the clips that are going around about the the in in Iran, the latest kind of tick tock thing going on? No. Oh, because so this, this, I didn't retweet it. I don't think I might have, but it's about four minutes of just one guy after another knocking turbans off the heads of all these moolahs. What? Yeah, teenage punks. That seems like a bad idea. Well, they're doing it by the hundreds because they
just showed it over and over, one after another. These kids, these kids would go by on a bicycle, knock the hat off. Oh, there another kid. There's

there's your next Green Revolution. It's the hat tipping revolution.

They are knocking hats off of these guys, left and right. And there's always somebody filming it. And there is, like, we're talking about 10s, there could be hundreds of these guys getting their hands on. They get all angry and shake their face. But all these, by the way, these these moles are wearing these long garbs, and these kids are wearing jeans, so the kids run away. You can't get up up to speed because of their outfits. I'm

telling you this. Do they have a name for it? There must be some kind of, they've got to have a name for this, for this action.

I don't know what to name for it. There has to be, you're right, but it's, it seems to be some sort of a trend. Let

me see knocking turbans off in Iran. Let's see turban tossing. There it is. Yes, sure, yes. That's

what it's called, turban tossing. Turban

tossing. We have a revolution. It's the turbine tossing revolution. I love it. That could be it You humiliate them. You humiliate them by knocking by tossing their turbans off, and then we'll unseat them. Yeah.

Well, anything's positive. Have

you been following the thorium stuff, thorium reactors and stuff, thorium reactors,

yeah, what about Yeah, they've

been around for a while. Do they work? Is that for real? Yeah, they

work fine. They work good. They work well, I'm sorry, yeah,

I think that's what gates is doing. I think he's doing these thorium reactors.

I think he's doing a liquid, liquid salt stuff wasn't

thorium salt. I think isn't that the No, thorium is not

salt. I mean, it may be using the salt in the thorium reactor, but it's not no thorium. I used to have thorium at the lab in when I was working at Union oil, uh huh. And there was always a jar of thorium. It was surrounded by what is it used for? It's used for some tests that I never did. And always had this surrounded by lead, and it was in the shelf
with all the other dangerous products. And it was always interesting, if you had a Geiger counter, so you could take the top off and to get the Geiger counter reading, and wow, stuff is

looking at all these, at all these different companies that are that are building thorium reactors. And, you know, the cost is almost zero, and it takes, like, 18 months to put want to get a reactor set up. This could change a lot of stuff.

Well, there is a move, I think, make it a move toward back to nuclear. Oh, and I think molten salt, thorium, these sorts of things that are going to be in play. I

mean, listen to this great British nuclear unveils SMR shortlist, Wyoming. Bill Gates moves ahead with nuclear project aimed at revolutionizing power generation project. Pele microreactor breaks ground us closes one point $52 billion loan to resurrect Michigan nuclear plant. It's everywhere, and it's all for AI, of course, for the data centers. Well,

I think that's the front. It must be a front. It's like you say, well, we're going to have to have this because, I mean, people push back on nuclear, and you create this front of AI. And. And then AI flops. I say, well, we got to turn this loose to the public. Gets this energy now, and boom, you got your energy prices dropping back down to where this should be,

which, well, it'd be. It would go really low.

Let's hope so. Yeah.

I mean, you could change the world this. You could actually change not with this solar and wind stuff, but this thorium. I mean, it's, you know, one little marble sized ball of thorium would be enough for for you all your energy needs for the rest of your life. Well, that's the sales pitch. That's the pitch.

That's a good one. Yeah,

um, Austria. Following on Germany, following on France, following on arguably the United States, the far right, the far right,
some branding, anti Nazi banners, dozens of protesters gathered outside the Vienna Parliament's building after Sunday's general election, which saw the far right Freedom Party secure an unprecedented victory. That means social cuts for Austria. That means lower salaries. That means a catastrophe, especially for migrants and for the women who are demonstrating in favor of abortion. Again, we started demonstrating 40 years ago, and
I can't do it anymore. It is definitely a shift to the right in Austria and throughout Europe, and that we are losing our free country and our free life. We want to live a communal life, be united and live peacefully. In Austria, some have welcomed the FPOs when I expected the FPO to come first one day, but not today. Yes, it definitely a good thing.
Taking the reins of the party in 2021 Herbert kikel has tapped into concerns about immigration in Austria and has capitalized on anger at the government's response to the covid pandemic. His party is critical of Islam, and it's pushing for tougher laws on asylum seekers. Kikkel is also against giving aid to
Ukraine. He wants sanctions against Russia to be lifted, arguing that they harm Austria more than Moscow, only the conservative Austrian People's Party, the OVP, has offered any suggestion it could work with the FPO, but has insisted it is unwilling to do so with Kiko. If kikl fails to ally with another party, this could end the FPOs aspirations to govern and enable a coalition of more moderate parties. It's

interesting how this has happened in every country in Europe, the Netherlands, France, Germany, they, you know, the people vote, and they say, well, it's far right. The people vote for a party that's against replacement migration, which is the plan they're against, you know, climate change nonsense they're against, you know, the all of this stuff, and then the great, wonderful democracy, the parliamentary system, they all gang up and go, nah, now we're not going to do a coalition with
you. Pound sand. What the people want?

Yes, this seems to be a theme, and I don't understand it, but how people put up with it. But it turns out, somebody discovered that they put up with it, so let's keep doing it. Yeah,

and if you listen to this, support this report about a white supremacist gang who were arrested, you know, there's really no white supremacy going on with this gang. They would do any legal stuff, but it's billed as white supremacists. The LAPD,
FBI, DEA and other law enforcement agencies announced today that they've taken down dozens of members of the notorious white supremacist gang the pecker woods. The gang is based out of the San Fernando Valley. If I

was going to start a white supremacist gang, I don't think the pecker Woods would be my name the first would you get this report? ABC, LA, the pecker woods. Nine
federal arrest warrants were served this morning. 68 members of the gang were indicted on charges ranging from gun violations to identity theft. It appears, however, that the business of hate was not enough for them. Their criminal activity took on different forms.

What is the business of hate? Exactly, the business? Is there a business model or there you have to pay taxes? I mean, what? What is the business of hate. It's

pecker Woods LLC. We're in the business of hate. How much hate would you like for me today
that the business of hate was not enough for them. Their criminal activity took on different forms, driven by greed, as alleged today, they engaged in drug distribution, multiple fraud schemes and firearms offenses, 42 of the 68 gang members indicted are now in custody. The remaining 26 are fugitives. The peckerwoods, according to federal law enforcement, have aligned themselves with the Aryan Brotherhood and Mexican Mafia prison gangs. How

can you be white supremacist if you. Working with Mexicans

Mexican Mafia doesn't make sense.

Imagine the hand, the secret handshake the peckerwoods have. What
we wanted to do through this investigation was neutralizes threat as quickly as possible. So as I said, we're not going to wait around for a tragedy to occur. We're going to take action right away. And in order to do that, we use every tool in our federal toolbox to address that

in our toolbox. This is such nice

handshake involves a hot dog in some funny way.

You got anything else you want to get off your chest before we induct. Some comment, I

have a couple, just two quickies. The quickie. Quickie is Mayor Adams update? Ah, yes,
the mayor guy. Federal prosecutors say they could bring additional charges against Mayor Eric Adams and indict others. Adams appeared in court today after his Friday arraignment. According to the indictment, the mayor accepted about $100,000 worth of free or discounted goods and services. Prosecutors say those included international flights, hotel stays, meals and entertainment from foreign
interests. The allegations spanned nearly a decade. Adams attorney requested a march trial date, an important ballot deadline for next June's mayoral election. Assistant U S attorney Hagan Scott, and told Judge Dale ho that prosecutors will likely seek a superseding indictment against the mayor Scott, and also indicated that additional defendants could be charged. Adams has pleaded not guilty.

Would you send me the email that this Jumanji guy would be the replacement mayor? Yes,

who was the real lefty?

It was like a commie, like a commie, yeah, basically a communist. Oh, man, New York, they're so screwed.

I'd have to say yes. So I do have to, I just the final clips. Since we're gonna go into a long thing, it's gonna
take forever. I have to play this because this just started this week, and it was my, one of my reasons for dropping CBS as the CIA front, oh, a new show began this week called CB because to compete with Kathy, I guess, and her husband, or Kathy Lee, whoever Her name is, Kathy Kathy Lee, Dard Shani or, I don't remember her name, but the CBS mornings, the mornings, you know, the competitive morning show, third hour,

oh yes, Kathy Lee is in the third hour of the of

the of the third hour is it goes up against hoda, hoda and Jenny, whatever their names, I can't keep it. But the drinkers,

the drinkers, the drinkers, drinkers, yes,

I have two clips just to show you that these people, they found two people. One of them was sweet. I mean, she seems okay. What is her name? She's Andrea Adriana Diaz, she's she's nice, but she's like, I don't know. She's got any brains, and Tony dokapol, this other guy who's like, they just, CBS just fired guys that fired a whole bunch of people because of Paramount's new ownership, right? Yeah, they fired like Jeff Glor, who's a terrific character. He should
have stayed with CBS. No, they fire him, and they're using Tony and these two people, they like they let's put two people in front of the public that really don't know a lot about anything. Yeah, excellent. So let's listen to this. Here they have. They're going to discuss, how about air foils, because neither one of them can understand how airplanes work.
Okay? So you, every day about 45,000 planes take off and stay up there in the air. By magic, it would seem. Do you know how they stay up there? I sure don't. But it turns out scientists not sure either. Tony, you've been talking about this frickin must. Do you know that we don't know how planes fly. I've been talking about this literally since my head was low enough to not hit it on the table right here. I've been since as a
child. This is wondrous and amazing, but carry on. Okay, well, I can't hear this anymore, so we brought in Samantha Kelly, who was an expert in all things aerospace. Emily, I'm so sorry. I don't know where Samantha came. Yeah, but you are here to clear things up for Tony, or maybe not clear things up. Yes, well, I will say flight is beautifully complex, and there is no one single theory that can explain it perfectly, all at once, but there are two that give you most
of the idea, but there's still a mystery about one of them. So the first part of the explainers, we have two. The first one is Bernoulli principle. And Bernoulli principle is something that tells you about what what happens when air moves fast? Okay? Because when you have a wing, because of the airfoil and the weights moving through the air, you have fast moving air that goes over the wing. What is airfoil? Oh, my

God, this they should make them drink. This is no good.

And they bring. This expert who caught talks about bernoullis. She's talking about Bernoulli. Bernoulli.

He's, like, it's a sauce, like, we have the wonderful new Bernoulli sauce on our she curious.

At the end of this, this a long exposition. These people go, Oh, really. And the whole thing goes on, and she finally pronounces Bernoulli correctly at

the end. What is an airfoil. I don't know. I don't understand how airplane had to cut it

off there, because it was like, Okay, well, there you go. You don't even know what an airfoil is. Why are you getting paid a ton of money to do a morning show? Now I have one other clip from the same show. This is for this was introduced this week on Monday, and it turns out that this Tony guy has really got some issues, some family issues, that come out in this kind of a just a dumb discussion. And all of a sudden we hear we hear him start to complain about his dad. Here we go. Magic.
You have the biggest heart of anybody. I don't know if you will ever understand how much you impacted my life. Wow. I love this story all telling you. So here is my take away from that there is both healing and joy from acknowledging those in our lives who were there for us and showed up during our darkest time. So I pose to the both of you, is there somebody in your life that you would like to go back and thank I would think my kindergarten teacher, Mr. Roca. I loved her.
I loved her like family. She was call me bambina, which is like, I think, little girl. What does it mean? Patty, bambina, little girl in Italian. So I just he was, made me feel so special. And I misunderstood the assignment. I was going to say my dad, who I went back, not to thank but to say, no thanks. Thanks for nothing. Why did you walk away? But it was actually
well worth it. I also think a lot of people are alienated from family members, reconnecting, finding what you missed, and then getting what you need to go forward is also really important. David Becknell, I love your stories. I will get the assignment right next time, and I'll see you next on the following Monday. Best segment. Title knows America. You can catch David's full story on our CBS morning's YouTube channel.

What was that

you tell me I miss I misunderstood the assignment. I was going to sit here and rage about my dad who left me when I was a kid. Oh no, and I wanted to thank him for doing it. What are? What is wrong with these people at CBS?

Well, you, you nailed it. It got taken over by Apollo. Apollo purchased paramount. Apollo is Larry Ellison's kid, and they immediately cut everything and threw out the good people. And they bring in what they think is entertainment, and they clearly need some
what's an airfoil. I'm gonna show my spoon by donation to no agenda. Imagine all the people who could do that. Oh, yeah, that'd be fun.

Yeah. What are you drinking? I heard you crack one Topo. Chico. Ah, you'll be burping throughout the

whole burping within a minute. So

this is episode 1700 we have a special promotion to become a Commodore. And a lot of people go ahead,

I was gonna say, and we should mention that the next show is 1701 which is the Star Trek Enterprise number, yes, I have all kinds. So we want to continue this Commodore promotion through that. And you can become Captain Kirk, or whatever you want to be a Commodore. And

the the actual certificate for Commodore is very pretty. It has a seal and a ribbon and everything. And you can name yourself whatever Commodore you want. Some frameable. It's very frameable. Someone told me that the Church of Scientology has Commodores. I

didn't know that. Yeah, but to but I want to tell people, because there's a guy who came in, well, you know, here's what I want to be, Commodore, this and that. No, you have to go to the ring site. No agenda. Rings. Calm. Okay, that's weird, because Jay says, Look, I'm not going to take these different and then misspell someone's name is you put it in there. There's a form to fill out. Yeah, she loves these forms. Yes, she's a former. She's a former. And so
not a latter, a former. No, she's a very so she so go to go to the website. No agenda rings I got and fill out your Commodore form.

Yes. So we have a number of Commodores. We have a number of notes. If you had missed it, this is the no agenda show, which runs value for value. I checked earlier we had 2090 trolls in the in the troll room, which you're gonna say is low,

not for Thursday. It's

good for. Thursday. Well, you know, that's why there was so much. 50

is the average for Thursday. Oh, good. We

got extra trolls here. That's good. We should probably, well, we already counted them. Oh, see, I'm all I'm all out of whack. Now you can join them by joining the troll room@trollroom.io and, of course, using a modern podcast app at podcast apps.com you get alerted when it's time. And this is all part of my, part of my award, because I'm an influencer in podcasting, yeah, how? So we run it on value for value, and
we love doing these near the end of the year. This is, this is actually special, because episode 1700 our 17th anniversary is coming up this month. Four more years, we'll keep going for you our fifth presidential cycle, and it's all value for value, which means you return to the show, whatever you get out of it, just send it back. Any value, any amount. We always like to read our executive and Associate
Executive producers. It's $200 and above your Associate Executive Producer, real title that you can use anywhere. Credits are recognized, including imdb.com, $300 and above, you become an executive producer. Before we do that, we want to thank some of our time and talent producers, of which we have many throughout the years, have done many things, including that very troll room, the servers, the noagendashow.net, no agenda meetups.com. No agenda.
Artgenerator.com, and we want to thank our artists for Episode 1699, and that was from Dame Kenny Benn back on back on the stick. And she brought us the no agenda dog flower, which we thought was very cute, really funny. And let's see we there were some other things that that we will definitely

bug things like to eat more beef from clip custodian, I wanted to discuss it to take off on the cow that says, Eat more beef, and he's got a sign that he holds up this to eat more beef is too small. It's not dispelled enough. There's issues with it. So that's that was a rejected, uh,

although it was in the running for a moment, for just a moment, it was discussed just a moment. Is just a moment. Uh, food of the future from Darren O'Neill. I thought comic strip bloggers, bug on a fork was funny, but it was obviously lewd, because the the fork goes right up his butt.

Yeah, it's not good. No, that'll end with the P Diddy stuff.

Yeah, I guess so. Food with the future. No, I think that was kind of it. Dame Kenny Ben, you took it was good. No agenda Art Generator, where you can see all of the artwork that is submitted. Of course, if you're using one of those modern podcast apps, Dr Scott always uses other pieces for the chapter art. It's fun. It's fun to to listen and look along as those as those images change right before your very eyes. Now let us thank our producers. Some of them, many of them actually
become Commodores. Some nights we have some title changes, and we'll start off with Brennan Keller. And Brennan. Keller is in Perrysburg, Ohio, $1,005 which is very generous indeed. ITM gents. I'm a recent listener of the show. I went down a rabbit hole after trying to figure out what the hell Kevin Rose was doing these days. Okay, things I don't think of, wait, we know what. We know what he's doing,

ketamine? Yeah, he's

doing ketamine videos. I watched too much Tech TV as a kid. I watched the video where he talking to another old host of the screensavers, who brought up the legendary John C Dvorak, someone I enjoyed watching after school. Back in the day, I started searching and found the greatest podcast in the universe. This is proof that John doesn't need to do
interviews to get attention to the show. That's true. Anyway, I want to split this contribution in two, all right, one to earn a Commodore title myself, Commodore Brennan of the glass city, and also for Commodore Bubba of the Maumee Valley, as it was his birthday last week, and this show is now our Oh, and he was the first person I told about how awesome the show is, and now our messages are 90% about the show. Well, it does happen. I would love a dedushing for both of us.
You've been deduced over time

restraints. You have to use both of that and baby making karma for myself. You got it. No problem.
You've got karma.

All right, sir Mike and Dame Becky. Hey, ITM gents, please accept this donation. They came in with $1,000 nice. This donation for Becky and I to both become Commodores of Gitmo nation. Question, how do we declare ourselves? No, agenda, rings icon, go to their website and fill out the form. I'm thinking Commodore sir Mike Baronet to the great great Katy Prairie and Commodore Dame Becky Baronet, test of the great KD, para parade, Prairie, Prairie.
Prairie. Parade. Katy Perry, don't want no jingles, no karma, but would love to hear no jingles, no karma. Okay? Thank you both for the best podcast in the universe. May you not find an exit strategy in our lifetimes, Commodore sir Mike and Commodore Dame Becky, anonymous,

Charlotte, North Carolina, still going, Okay, I guess there in Charlotte, 561, dot, 44 congratulations on 1700 episodes of premium content. That's right, value for value. Nothing behind the paywall. None of this premium bull crap. It's all premium, right up front, premium grade A USDA, certified beef. Please accept this donation of 533 dot, 33 plus fees. Thank you for your courage. Anonymous, and thank you

came in at 561 44 that's your fees. Checks are better. Yes. Kotter, keffler, keffi, kefeler, kefir. Coulter, Colter. Coulter,

I think it's cold. Careful. Keffer. Kelter, Kessler, 54345,

fellas, thank you for keeping my amygdala appropriately sized for the last seven years. Please deduce you've been deduced. Keep up the solid work. Can I get def cancer for my mom as well, if you please,
you've got karma.

Sir. Jack ash in Snohomish, Washington, 533

What about servant? No, I'm

sorry there's a big my spreadsheet scrolling like yours these days. Cervente Neral in Slidell, Louisiana. There we go. Look at Slidell. Is it Slidell? Yeah, like Rydell the helmet. Slidell, Louisiana, 543 dot, 21 cervente NARAL here, upgrading to Commodore. Cervente Neral, thank you for all your knowledge and realism, financial karma for all you've got karma. Everybody could use them

now we go to Sir Jack ash. Get it? Jack ash, yep. So nomish Washington, 533 33 couldn't pass up such cost effective way to promote to pay grade, to promote two pay grades and become a Commodore. Thanks again, gents, very respective. Respectfully, Sir Jack ash, PS, Commodore still very much used in modern times as a Navy Captain o 06 in charge of many ships.

It's a real deal. Then we move to Sir huskadava in Dorne in the Netherlands, 530 dot 33 says, Congrats. Congrats. Congrats. With 1700 episodes minestrone and so much more to come, on a stunning road tour through Hertfordshire, Pembrokeshire and Snowdonia in Wales, together with my smoking hot fiance, Dame bean boost, listening to no agenda podcast, the best podcast in the entire universe. It is now time to give some value back. Yes, thank you. I wanted to originally set up an
NA meet up in Wales to get some Welsh hit in the mouth. No better place than and then he has the name of this place, which is unpronounceable. It's about 3030, characters, and mostly
classic Welsh syllables.

It's Latin affair. Look a black on angle anglicy, but almost impossible to pronounce for Dutch or English speakers. So langlack didn't happen, by the way, long means, parish of the Holy Mary in the valley of the white Hazel at the rapid Maelstrom, and the parish of the Holy tisilio at the red cave. I'm glad for that information with my no agenda.

So you wonder why the Welsh language never really took off. You know

what my instructor said in the UK when he was teaching me how to fly? He said, Whatever happens, even if your engine is on fire, you do not land in Wales with my no agenda. Commodore. Donation, I will reach Baron status. And if the nobility committee pleases, I want the title Baron, Commodore of the province of Utrecht, go to noagenderings.com and enter
it anyways. The barren title of the province of Utrecht will cause some skirmish, including other Knights and Dames in the province of Utrecht, sir Hendrix, sir Doris, Dame yaneke of the wood wall, lower of dirty lover of dirty jokes and others who are not mentioned, bring your blades and have a fight like no agenda noble do this will be fought out in a typical N, A lowlands way during an N, a meet up with croqueta and bitter bola. Finally, a shout out to Dre sir of the empty PayPal.
Yes, he had a bit Ebola. Oh, bitter bola are like so you know what a croquette is? Like a croquette in France? In France, yeah, it has, like, bait brain matter on the inside. It's hot, so a soft ball, yeah, so a bitter ball is basically little soft ball. It's a it's a bitter ball, and it is. It has the same brain matter as the croquette only it's in a ball for. More. So shout out to Dre. Serve the empty PayPal, strong health karma from the no no agenda, lowlands community for Sir Dre
for the roundtable. Friska hinder and a lowlands Frisian finest whiskey age at Port oak cast from my home barrel.

Okay, bring it yourself.

Exactly here you go. You got some health karma.
You've got karma little

long onward with Melbourne, Florida's famous sir Salah Houser 505 ITM can also be known as Commodore Amit Mattis. There's a belch Amati, sir Salah Hauser, Baronet of the Space Coast, go to no agenda rings.com and get your put that in amateurs, probably not spelled correctly. Can I please have a Kamala whipping jingle from two shows ago by kornhold? I don't remember anything about that. I

don't know anything about a Kamala whipping.

Title change sir holla Houser of the 321 to Sir Salah Hauser, Baronet of the Space Coast. Sorry

about the Kamala thing. I have no idea what you're talking about, but I do have someone's
getting cornhole

today. Sounds like a recipe for success to me. There you go. Classic no agenda jingle. Ivan Blum in Gaithersburg, Maryland, $500 Hello, John and Adam. Longtime listener, off and on since the first or second year, but first time donor, I've been waiting to send some cash, but this Commodore thing is what pushed me as an airline pilot and instructor. I'm one of your feet in the air, and now I can
pretend I am an Air Commodore. Pretend it's real. Having grown having grown up in the Netherlands, Adam was on radio and TV with Countdown, so it's great to still hear him speak Dutch, John, I used to read your columns and PC Magazine. It's good to hear about your can inspection days. He still inspects cans, believe me, I You guys have been instrumental in keeping me sane with the idiotic media. So please continue. I need a deduction.
You've been deduced. And I'd

like to request jobs karma as I will be applying to another airline to expand my horizons. I'd also like to request some health karma for Angela, my smoking hot wife of 23 years, a rubbilizer, oh my goodness, and John's pet peeve, nuts on a plane. We don't have time for the nuts on a plane, unfortunately, but we will give you the rubbilizer and the carmachador. Yvonne Blom Gaithersburg, Maryland,
India. Mike, standby. 33 3333 33 and jobs. Let's go for jobs. Karma.

Brent Smith and Legrand, Oregon, 500 Thank you, John and Adam, we have a lot of Commodores today. We do. I've been listening since early 2020. Please deduce me.
You've been deduced.

And call out Wyatt as a douchebag. That is the kind of note we like. Action perfect. I claim the title Commodore, cow lawyer. No jingles. May you never find an exit strategy.

It's unlikely at this point. Debbie Elam in Hearst, Texas 500 and she's a wife of my smokin, hot husband, sir networks, taking the title of Commodore lawless, looking forward to an actual peerage in the future. Nerdworks is the guy and gal named Dave in Dallas, Fort Worth for small business nerd works all right. Thank
you, Baron

sir Dr goon in Overland Park, Kansas, uh, John and Adam, this fellow nation not only nets me the title of Commodore counting below, but well, you don't need much accounting for that. It's right here. But also also brings you to the status of Viscount. Also Wednesday is my 25th wedding anniversary, since I'm again approaching the round table for an upgrade. Can I have Tomahawk steaks and Hefa vison? I also like a jobs, jobs, jobs and an r2, d2, karma. That's for every
thank you for everything you do. No exit strategy. Hashtag by counselor Dr Commodore goon Lee, north of Overland Park, Kansas, Kf, zero, B, E, H, 7373
jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. You've got

karma now here's the note we love, sir. Dr, one awesome. Jason in Smyrna, Georgia, 500 and it just says Commodore, sir. Dr, one awesome. Jason. PhD, oh, he's got the PhD. These titles are growing. Thank you.

Baron Victor is. In that same list of short, nice notes, Corvallis, Oregon, also 500 who can resist a no agenda Commodore. ITM from Baron victor of the Willamette Valley, Oregon,

Willamette, dammit, Dr sir, Reverend Joseph James the 33rd cdrd. CDR, is that a Commodore is the art? Is that? Is that

the, I guess it wouldn't be Commodore cadre, one of the two cdre.

ITM no agenda nation. Well, who can pass up a Commodore ship? Sincerely appreciate the twice weekly global insights and amygdala shrinkage attention. All producers should set up a $4 weekly sustaining donation via credit card. It's like a Netflix subscription, only way more valuable. Yes, baby making karma for me and my smoking hot wife, plus jobs karma for all of Gitmo nation, please and thank you. Stay free. Dr sir, Reverend Joseph James the 33rd CD, R, E, jobs,
jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. You've got karma.

I find that baby making karma jingle somewhat grotesque. Archie Brentano in Tigard, Tigard, Oregon, Tigard, Tigard. I don't know somebody called me out on my I used to call it Tigard, but it's not as Tigard. I think figured Tigger 500 I'd like to request the title of Commodore 128 in memory of my first computer. If possible. I'd like to request the jingle, yeah, no, in honor of my dame, I'll be joining you at the round table sooner than later, or later, Archie Patrick

of the Pugna order, incarnation, Washington, 500 in 2003 our choices were the daily source code, dignation, and this week in tech, 21 years later, infinite podcasts, but no agenda is the only one that matters. Thank you for your courage. Commodore, Patrick of the pugnar order.

Dimitri Geier in Austin, Texas, has the best note of the day, $500 Hey, wait no note. He gets double up karma.
You've got

Not to be outdone by Jason Peterson from Round Rock, Texas, right next to Austin 500 Commodore ship. And he says, No jingles, no karma. Boom. Done, done. Douglas

Goldberg in Hamilton, New Jersey, also a Commodore in the morning. $500 in the morning. Gents and greetings from New Jersey. I proudly proclaim my place in the no agenda. Listenership. I've been listening since the covid debacle, and have hit my wife and son in the mouth. Nice last show, my son jokingly called me a douchebag, and I realized that he was absolutely right. I was one of the I was one of the many
who always intended to donate, but never followed through. Then I heard the Commodore offer and the Star Trek reference from show 1697, and that took me as took it to I took it as a sign to get off my wallet. Please deduce me.
You've been deduced.

Give me a goat scream, karma, God bless and God speed. To the both of you and your audience. Hope this note was short enough for John. Smiley face.
You've got

karma, sir Stewart, Stafford and Staffordshire, Great Britain, 500 to John Adam, a small token of appreciation for you too. No jingles, but jobs karma. The Trump good one. Okay? For myself now that I am semi retired to my daughter Lucy, who was starting a new job. Your faithful servant, sir Stewart the angry accountant, jobs,
jobs, job, that's the one you want. You've got karma.

Sir otaku in Flower Mound, Texas. This is an Indian burial site, if I'm not mistaken, 500 congratulations on 1700 shows. Can I get a JCD mac and cheese karma, sir otaku, Duke of nor of northern Texas and the Red River Valley. You slaves can get used to mac and cheese, mac and cheese, mac and cheese, macaroni and cheap chatter melted together, mac and cheese,
mac and cheese. Mac and cheese. Karma.

We go to Kimberly. Cram in Fort Myers, Florida, 500 happy. 1700 looking forward to becoming a Commodore. Here's to another four more years. Hmm.

Steeler, grommo gromore in point, pleasant New Jersey. A lot of Jersey heights today, yeah, uh. Commodore, Steeler of the Ohio River, reporting for service. Gentlemen, I've been saving a while to share my treasure. Please serve up some jobs karma for my spoken hot girlfriend as she tries to move up the corporate ladder. Jobs,
jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's vote for jobs.

Sir. Dominate, spelled in hacksaw, D, zero, m1, n4, t3, San Diego, California, says no jingles, no karma from Sir dominate. You got it. Thank you.

Now we go to Sir Kevin of Devon in Gig Harbor, Washington. He's not in Devon at all. A 500 these are all 500 as we've been going along here. Congrats on 1700 please understand how much no agenda has completely transformed my life and I can't thank you. Enough public service. I have been a listener and then producer since show one, wow. And have never missed an episode, wow. I survived by seeing the world through the no agenda filter that you have
provided all of us. I will retire next year after 34 years with a three letter agency. Oh, there it is. One of the three letter agencies could be,

any IRS could be. IRS

could be. I'm now working on my exit strategy. I've adopted a V for VIV model as part of my reselling business, and just recently started a YouTube channel called real boring flips, ah, house flipper. I'm new at this and not great, you get it. It's not that hard. I'm new at this and not great, but enjoying it improving with each episode. I'm asking any, oh, he's new at the at the podcasting that way. Yeah, flipping, yeah. I'm asking anyone interested to simply
watch my videos where I share tips and secrets. I've developed reselling over the past 25 years. Ah, nice hobby. There's an extra bonus value for any na viewers. I've started adding na easter eggs to my videos. The latest video, my top five keys to reselling success, plus bonus key is littered with them, please smash like and subscribe. Take care and God bless four more years, sir. Kevin of Devon in Gig Harbor.

Todd Moore is in tavern. Tavernier. Tavernier, I would say Florida Commodore, shiproom, 500 Hello, probably Tavernier. Yeah, you're right. Hello. My favorite truth casters. I'm addicted to your show. Your perfectly miked voices and the way you utterly destroy the evil M, 5m Mockingbird assets into 1000s of pieces. JCD brought me here with his grumpy tech humor. But Adam, you won me over instantly on the first episode I listened when you said, I'll never stop using
the word retard. I laugh so loud, and have listened to every episode since it's a retard donation. Anyway, I have a small ask of you, Adam, would it be okay if I used AI for something very important? I want to create a podcast of you reading the Bible, the entire Bible. I can't think of any better voice that would speak these powerful words into a modern audio format than with full podcasting 2.0 compliance. If anyone wants to team up on launching the Bible by Adam podcast into reality,
let's chat. I'm on Twitter at at Todd Moore, T, O, D, D, M, O, O, R, E. I really like the idea, because I want to read the Bible every night, but I'm more of an audio consumer than a book reader, and if Adam hates this idea, then I guess I'll use j, c, D's voice, because I know that old grouch will appreciate the attention. Thanks for your consideration, and God bless no agenda. Todd Moore, white noise, Knight of the Florida Keys and
the no agenda, Commodore send me a sample. Well, they got to hear it first. Thank you, Todd.

He's got a threat in there.

Yes, if I don't like it, then he's going to use your voice, which is very Can you

imagine, it'll be probably set Christianity back 100 years. It'll be your fault. Jesus

might come back. Like, Hey,
stop that.

So now we have Paul, oh brother, Reg,

I would say, I would say it's Dutch, frosten Hill in English. In English, frugal, frugal nil in

Madison. He's in Madison, Wisconsin. He's not in Poland at all, but he came in with 500 bucks and has a nice note that just says, simply says, Thanks,

sir. Dan the man, Cape Coral, Florida, 500 dear. Buzz killing crackpot. Happy Cybersecurity Awareness Month. Oh, we missed it also. Shana Tova to our Jewish friends celebrating. Rosh Hashanah, and kudos to your 17 100th episode. I just sent my donation to acquire my Commodore ship. It also is to mark my 58th birthday on October 7. Libras of the world unite sir Dan, the man Viscount of Southwest Florida.

He's on the birthday list. Peers. Meanwhile, we got sir Gooch of the RVA in Goochland, Virginia. Switcheroo, no jingles, no karma. Thank you for the value far above what I have contributed, sir Gooch is a $500 donation of RVA. This Commodore donation is for my son, Michael Lumpkins, both of you, and I don't want to be neglect to acknowledge that 1000 the 1000s of producers have kept us sane. Thank you.

So does this mean that Michael Lumpkins is on the credit list for this, or we just get the Commodore ship? No, I

said switcheroo. It's got to be on the credit list. He's going to be listed. Switcheroo. And then he can then you could go to no agenda rings.com, and fill out the Commodore form. Okay,

switcheroo has been completed. Sir, prime doctor of illuminated thinking in saccaine, Pennsylvania, I think 500 sir, prime Doctor illuminated of thinking, if so pleases title change the Commodore. Sir, prime PhD. He's got two very nice for him,

sir. James Fukumoto, in Salem, Virginia, no jingles, just karma. Keep up the good work. James Fukumoto, Black Knight, 500

we have karma.

Needs karma. Oh, I'm sorry.
You've got karma,

sir. Anthrax fountain, Colorado. 500 greetings, John and Adam, sir. Anthrax here. I'm afraid my short term memory has continued to decline over the years, but I'm glad I found no agenda before I started this journey. 2012 in Afghanistan, or as we say, Afghanistan, the two of you are my one source of media that seems to always be reaching into the past, helping me with working on longer term recall on
air requests. Can we hear Helen Thomas, about 14 years ago, telling us the Jew needs to get out of the Middle East and return to Europe? I look for it if we don't have it.
Wow, I will.

Fall in. Thomas was an interesting battle

accident, yeah, and she died right after that. That was during the Obama member, I have to say, remember, I keep saying member? Remember she was in front of the the White House press corps, the old bag, and then she said that, and then she got deplatformed, one of the first people to get de platformed. And then she died, like maybe a month or two after that. It was all very, very

odd. That was very odd. Yes, I

should have written in sooner, when the college protests were still a thing, maybe an AI Helen Thomas isn't too far off. Can we play the recording of John telling us about firefighters having to hose each other down? Now we don't have time for that today, but I'll put it in a future. End of show mix. Those are, like, minute and a half things. Yeah, they're too long, not as good as the fisting nut story, but I don't think it's been played. We've got a lot of requests for
fisting nuts, and we play it often. A deducing,
you've been deduced,

and a, let me see, where is it? I could do this one for you and a too close to truth. Fears freedom, anime speech, thanks or anthrax. Old soldiers never die. They just fade away. General MacArthur, fear is freedom,
subjugation is liberation. Contradiction is truth. Those are the facts of this world, and you will all surrender to them. Surrender to them. There you go. Plastic sphere is freedom

comes Sir James from Vancouver, Washington fought another 500 another Commodore. Get on board. Sir James was the Southwest Washington here I wish to be proclaimed as the commodore of 64 another one, only 64 not 128. Bigly. TTP, jobs, karma, please. Thank you. And itMs jobs,
you've got karma,

sir cats, Brighton in the UK, Great Britain, 500 Hi John and Adam. All I wish for is more boat restoration karma. No other jungles. Sounds like you're in trouble. No need to read any of the below tips for the show, just for you, maybe to get some inspiration. Lots of love. Sir Kaz in Brighton, UK, where free speech is not allowed, even in closed groups,
you've got karma, sad,

but it's true. That ends our Commodore listing, and we continue, yes, very good list. We continue with our executive producers, EPS, as they might be called, in the business, electronics business consultants in the Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. You got electronics, electronic business. Beltons, thanks, guys. It's been a while, but your M, S, M, fact check is invaluable during the especially during the election season. I guess I put a value on it just now. It's $343.75

it's a good start. Hey, there's Jackie green, the famous Jackie Green from Orangeville, California. If you don't have to email Orangevale, you don't have to email us and say, is that the famous Jackie green? Because, yes, it is the famous Jackie green. Is the famous Jackie green? He has no notes, so he gets a double up karma. You've got karma. I'm

surprising to send us a note. He used to send us a little note every so often. Yeah, we'll hear from him, I'm sure. Sir Sir Shug in commerce Washington. Know where that is, but 333 must be east. 333 ITM gentlemen, congrats on 1700 episodes. I'll be brief for me. This donation brings me to the second knighthood accounting attached. And I would like this to be a switcheroo and credited to my best friend. And there's another switcheroo, got it? And my smoking hot wife, don't
worry, it's the same personal it's the same person. Oh, okay, good to know. Sorry, I blew the joke there. Yeah. Shall we? She shall henceforth be known as Dame Jitterbug, fixer of gadgets, until and unless she chooses a different moniker, as she may not be interested in the ring and ceiling wax, maybe I'll finally get around to getting that done for myself. Thanks for all you do. No jingles, but a hearty and healthy karma for
everybody. Love is lit sir Shug of the aka Fox faux diddly, faux Diddley, faux diddly.
You've got karma.

We move on to soaps, soaps, Peyton, Colorado, 325, switcheroo. Credit my better half Tabitha soaps with this executive producership. I'm doing it as we speak. Okay, dumb. Thank you for making it tight, keeping it tight and making it look easy. Jingles, Biden, get vaccinated. Trump, I'm gonna come Obama, you might die, and if you don't have Ws, what is that
strategy?

I never even heard the

strategery. When Bush says that you haven't played that ever, I don't think we have it. It's where he says strategic Okay, now I don't have that one.

Yes, you will say it. And here we go get vaccinated.
I'm gonna come

a strategery. Beautiful. It didn't sound at all like no. Zadok Brown, third, not even close. No, I don't, I don't do that voice. I don't do many voices. Zadok, I do accents sometimes. Zadok Brown, the third in Makawa Makawao, Hawaii. Makawao, I think. And he's our first exec associate, executive producer. 222, 40, no mention of anything. So he gets a double up karma.
You've got

karma. And coming in with 217, from Canyon Lake, Texas, Rob Carty, our constitutional lawyer, he sends us a legal note, legal notice on legal paper. Donation number four, hold for episode 1700 It was held ITM John and Adam. Kindly hold this donation for of 217, for episode 1700 today, I wish to advocate for getmo nation. 17 years is an impressive run and reflects a hell of a community by all involved, I move that you extend this mutual allegiance for four
more years. Here are some indisputable facts. One in year one, no agenda will be old enough to vote. Oh, in one year, no agenda will be old enough to vote. Good point in two years, no agenda will surpass the median duration of American marriages. A lawyer would know. In three years, no agenda will outlive King Louis, the fifth of France. In four years, no agenda can finally get hammered in public. To leave these monumental milestones unachieved would be to shortchange not only
yourselves, but also the loyal community you've built. And I dare say, the world, eventually, I hope to extend this advocacy to all Texas and California producers we help with litigation and compliance issues. I also help lawyers across the USA with appeals and complex briefs. Check me out at Rob dot lawyer, yes, that's the URL. Rob dot lawyer, I'm working
to protect Gitmo nation. I respectfully request my usual open up Adam curry jingle and karma to protect us all from the G men and charlatans of all kind, and I thought I had it here somewhere. Oh, that's unfortunate.
I thought I had open

open up. Yes, I do have it here. Okay.
Mr. Adam curry. Ring the door. Mrs. Curry now.

And that's from Rob Carty.
Thank you, karma. Bradley

Taylor in York, Pennsylvania, comes to it to 1134 donation of $200 point 70 with fees. So it's like five bucks, I guess four bucks. I've been listening since the first JRE appearance, and changed my my mindset ever since. That's nice play. The fear is freedom. Jingles for me. Please appreciate all you guys do. Keep up. Keep it up. Congrats on 1700 I'll be here until you stop. Subjugation is
liberation. Contradiction. Facts of this world, and you will all surrender to them. You pinned in huge

clothing. And Darren O'Neill comes in from Chirac in Illinois. 210 60 says on behalf of planet rage, the show that has been described. There's no agenda with anger management issues. We'd like to wish you a very happy 1700 show. Thank you for being an exemplary role. Thank you for being exemplary role models from Larry blender, blender, blender, blender, from Larry and Darren of planet rage. Thank you. That's very kind of you guys. It's a good show. What's nice? Planet rage is a good show.

Early in today's rock and roll thing. He used the term hella

violation. Sorry to hear that. Yeah, violation of sorts.

Eli, the coffee guy in bensonville, Illinois, you got Mike's care package the other day, and I want to thank that $200.33

we got ours too. And thank you for putting in decaf for Tina. That was very kind of you.

Yeah, I'll send you my decaf. I'm not going to ever use it. Congratulations on 1700 words. I find it pointless. Congratulations on 1700 I wonder how He extracts. It's the water extraction. He'll let us know. Congratulations on 1700 shows. I started listening right around show 1000 and I've been hooked ever since. Keep up the great work, gentlemen. October is known for surprises. Visit gigawatt Coffee roasters.com.
And use the code ITM 20 for 20% off your order. You might be pleasantly surprised at how something new in your cup can brighten your day. Stay caffeinated. Eli the coffee guy, jingle, eating the dogs. They're
eating the dogs.

Dan Kesterson in Colorado Springs, Colorado, $200.33 Associate Executive producership. And he says, check out antelope Ridge mead.com. For award winning modern Mead. We shipped over 40 states and occasionally host meetups. Congratulations on show number 1700 Thank you.

Please just send me a bottle of your best. I'd like to I haven't had good me forever. It's hard. Linda Lou Peck, and here she is in Lakewood, Colorado, $200 and she says, jobs karma. She asked for jobs karma, and she mentions that for a faster, more effective job search, visit image makers. Inc.com, that's image makers. Inc, with a k for all your executive job, for your executive resumes and job search needs, we work with Linda Lou Duchess of jobs and what is
this? What was we and work with Linda Lou Duchess of jobs, I'm sorry I blow this every other time. Linda Lou Duchess of jobs, and writer of resumes, happy, my happy 1700s she says, My wife says, Mimi says, ah, you know? She says, Yeah, I like to listen to the donation segment to listen to you botch things. She says, It's charming. That's

well, it is. It is charming. And I think it actually brings more attention to the message, Oh,

definitely. Because when I do a perfect read of Linda lupekin, which is every so often, yeah, it happens, I don't think it has the effect of my charming botch. Jobs,
jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's

vote for jobs. And our last Associate Executive Producer episode 1700 is Micah Ferrell from Georgetown, Kentucky. $200 I really appreciate the value that your show gives you. Truly are the best podcasts in the universe. Wishing you all the best for a never ending four more years. And we appreciate our Commodores. We appreciate our title changes here, and, of course, our executive and
Associate Executive producers. We're going to blow right on through all the way to the 50s to thank everybody, as we do on every single show.

Yeah. So we had a quite a disappointment here with the 170 donations, which kind of represented 1700 episode and episodes in dimes. We only had 12345, starting with the David homani home money in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, and he the fees got paid here. 170 902 Also Rebecca Ha, hug, hug, H, A, U, G, H, in Memphis, Tennessee, 170, 902, and she's also known as Rebecca girl. She needs, she needs a deduction.
You've been there. You go.

Rebecca girl, Charlotte

Wooster, depending. She's in San Francisco. Who knows how they pronounce it there usually, Hey you. 170 902. Sir John in London, UK. 170 33 and then finally, Jonathan Reisman in St Louis, Missouri. 170 then we move on to Perry clan in Alito, Texas, one 5008 he's got a note you might want to read, because it involves him getting either knighting or Yeah,

I have it here. Adam and John couldn't talk. I will be edging ahead of Adam when I turn 61 on October 2. So happy birthday. One day late, my check for one 5008 will put me over the top for a knighthood accounting attached. However, I wish to bequeath my title to my wife, Jodi, who introduced me to the no agenda podcast in 2009 thus opening my mind, shrinking my amygdala, and changing my life forever. Please grant Jody
the title of dame. Jody of the North Texas anettas subject to change, I plan to continue my monthly donations to earn a knighthood for myself. Here's to 40 more years. He says, Alvida Zen hurry, clan Alito, Texas. Oh, by the way, he says, PS, I will be attending the no agenda meet up in Fredericksburg, Texas on October 18. I am looking forward to meeting Adam and Tina at the 1776 bar. Maybe John will fly in to join the fun.
Doubtful. Yeah,

see you there. Brother

Corey Baker in Fort Myers, Florida, 125 apologies for the confusion, he says, but we don't read these notes at this level. I just want to thank him. He He did get, I think he's already donated for this

is a miss note for his Commodore donation. So, oh,

they have to read it. Gotta read a seat, yeah. Uh, but it's been sustaining donation for a while, a bit longer to consolidate my accounting please see attach this donation actually puts me to the Baronet level. However, I will keep the Commodore title, and like to gift a dame hood to my smoking hot wife, Jen. She's on the list. I believe she is. The mutton meat is perfect for me. And Jen would like some cherry coke at the round table. Yep, got it. They still make it.
Oh yeah. And really appreciate all you guys. Do no jingles, no karma. Commodore, Cory and dame, Jen, okay. Beautiful. John Ferretti and Gerard. Gerard, Pennsylvania, uh, Baron Ladakh, it's 105 35 Baron latkin came with 100 as from Houston. And then John Robin, a Parts Unknown, another 100. Chris Knowles in grain Valley, Missouri, 100 and this is a switcheroo for a smoking hot wife, Allison Knowles, and it needs to do. He needs to deduce, you've been deduced. Sure be the
frozen tundra. 85 New Brighton, Minnesota, Dame Rita in Sparks, Nevada. Dame read in Sparks, Sparks, 85 congrats on 1700 Kevin McLaughlin, 0808, he's the Archduke of Luna, lover of American boobs, along with Jonathan Ferris in Liberal Kansas, 8008, and Robert uh. Also, we just know how to pronounce this guy's name, oh, seguida OSA guida,

that's right. Also guida

and he's in Connecticut, Easton 808. Anonymous Fairfield, Ohio, 7377 Dana Carroll in Laughlin, Nevada, 7227 Robert Ross in Richmond, Virginia, 7007 pointy booth. Oh, this

is a new one. Yeah, I

never heard that one. Mark tyre nauer in Midlothian, Virginia, 61 Brian Furley, 5510 Kevin Sullivan in Wallingford, Connecticut, 55 Heather Harper in Lebec Levick, Texas, 5333 sir. Chris of sax saxy in saxy Texas, 5333 Mark Hardwick. These are all basically $50 donors with the amounts added. So I'm just going to read them off as 50s and just name and location, starting with Mark going on to pow Paolo. Paolo. Porco in Boca. Raton Catherine von Esch in silversome
pollen. Netherlands, uh. John basano in Madison, Alabama. Sir Luke in London, UK, um, Daniel Kaiser in Coon Rapids, Minnesota, Rob and pick bikini. Michigan. Brandon lockler In Sugar, Sugar Hill, Georgia. Jordan hoyno in Salem, Oregon. Tony Lang in Castle Pines, Colorado. Scott McCarty and Lodi Jordan. Tierney in oral South Dakota. Daniel leboy in Bath, Michigan. Matt Frazee in St John's, Florida. James charmeta Sir. James in napano, New York, Kurt. Patrick in naimo BC. Jacob
Martinez in El Monte California, Dame melavation. And there's an attached note you're going to read. She's a baronettis, but let's get to the end first, then you can read her note. Aichi Kitagawa, San Francisco, and less than or this is Leslie Walker in Roseburg, Oregon. Yes, want to thank these folks for making the show up distinct reality with

Melanie. Says, Dear comedy team, aka John and AC. I've stopped my paypal monthly donation so I can write so that I can write a check and note to JCD every month, and na gets all the money. This measly $50 brings me to baronetta status, but you can still call me Dame elevation. I laughed nonstop during the first 20 minutes of the 922 show. Thank you for keeping us sane, laughing and connected in this sometimes upside down world. Adam is correct. It is a spiritual
battle, especially for the lives and souls of our children. I myself am a single woman with a with a cat, but I have many nieces and nephews. I pray for all the children out there. Keep on making human resources in a nation. God bless you. All day elevation and she sent the accounting on the back.
Beautiful. Thank you very much. And thank you. As John said to all of our producers, especially our executive and Associate Executive producers and our Commodores of episode 1700 our formula is this, we go out.
We hit people in the mouth. Good.

And we are, as always, at no agenda, donations.com Well, this new short list, Harry plan, turned 60 yesterday. Happy birthday, Harry sir Dan, the man turns 58 on October the seventh. And Brennan of the glass city wishes Bubba of the Maumee Valley a very happy birthday. And we say it the same happy birthday for everybody here at the best podcast in the universe. Title
changes to

we congratulate sir fuscodava, who now becomes sir fuscodava, Baron, Commodore of the province of Utrecht, sir Salah Hauser of the 321 becomes sir Salah Hauser, Baronet of the Space Coast, Baron, sir Dr goon, Viscount, sir Dr Commodore, goon and Dame elevation becomes baronetus. Dame elevation. Thank you all very much for upping your peerage and stepping up on the ladder here on the no agenda peerage for the no agenda show. Now, I've received many notes about the commodoring, about
these sound effects. The most notable was from a very mad producer who said, what the f IS WRONG WITH YOU curry this whistle and Bell shit pissed me off beyond Max and then the what that? What the weird if and F, I guess you're aware that some people use in ear headphones. Can you imagine how effing annoying it is being on the Autobahn at 250 miles an hour, not being able to turn this painful, annoying stuff off. Fu, you nearly totaled my ride. I'm surprised. I'm super pissed.
Sorry, man, wow, I'm very sorry about that. That was

obviously, hold on a second. He's on the auto bond and he's got headphones on. Yeah, he said. And

he says he's doing 250 miles. Isn't that illegal? I would I would say,

so I know it's illegal to wear headphones in California going on as just a freeway at 65 miles an hour, Max, let alone, you know the speeds you get on the autobahn. He's

one of those guys that has his left blinker on doing probably 250 kilometers an hour, flashing everybody. Yeah, get out of my way. I'm listening to no agenda show. I hate those guys true to the speakers. So we got to the official way to do a Commodore ship is by sounding the bells, then announcing the new Commodores, Commodore, ABC, etc. And after the last one, I'm supposed to say arriving, and then play the boat Swain pipe, yes. So this, well, it says boat Swain, but I guess, yeah, boats
is pronounced boson, boson. Okay, the Boson pipe, so I still will set it up properly, because we are very happy to bring in a whole slew of new Commodores. Get ready, everybody. You. Commodore Brennan of the glass city, Commodore, Bubba of the Maumee Valley, Commodore sir Mike Baronet of the great Katy Perry Commodore, Dame Becky baronettis of the great Katy
Perry Commodore, anonymous. Commodore, Colter keffler, Commodore, cervente Neral, Commodore, sir jackass, Commodore, sir huskadavar, Commodore, Amada sir Salah Hauser, Baronet of the Space Coast. Commodore, iWin Blom Commodore, cow lawyer. Commodore, lawless Commodore,
sir. Dr goon Commodore, sir Dr, one awesome. Jason PhD, Commodore, Baron Victor Commodore, sir, Reverend Joseph James Commodore, 128, Commodore, Patrick of the Pugna order, Commodore, Dimitri Guyer, Commodore, Jason Peterson, Commodore, Douglas Goldberg, Commodore, sir Stewart, Commodore, sir otaku Commodore, Kimberly cram Commodore, Steeler of the Ohio River, Commodore, sir dominate. Commodore, sir.
Devon of Devon, Sir Kevin of Devon, Commodore, Todd Moore, Commodore, Paul frogdon Hill, Commodore, sir, Dan the man, Commodore, Michael Lumpkins, Commodore sir, prime PhD, Commodore, James fukamoto, Commodore sir, Anthrax, Commodore, 64 and Commodore sir. Katz
arriving, dang,

that's quite a list of Commodores. We got a lot of things to send out. I am very, very happy about that. It's beautiful.

The bosons whistle that you have that time was a lot better. Yeah,

that's actually from Star Trek. That's the Star Trek Boson whistle really

sounds so much better than this screechy one. Yet, yes, well, I didn't

want anyone to wreck their car on the auto bomb. We have a couple of dames, no knights today, but a couple of dames with a layaway Dame who says, My first weekly This is from Joe Carbone. Says my first weekly donation was July 17, 2018 I signed up as a romantic gesture to my then fiance, now husband, as a way of letting him know that I didn't think he was crazy in this insane world. I guess, yeah, I guess I really
liked him. I've donated $4 a week for all the 324 weeks since then meeting my cumulative donation is now 12 196 it works, people, you can do it. I'm prepared to be knighted Dame darling of the ethereal realms. And if you throw in some baby karmas, some other people needed that as well. So yes, I'll do that. That would be very kind. I love how you guys think and approach the world. And couldn't be prouder to be a lady of the
best podcast in the universe. Oh, and this is my husband's birthday today, sir Dave of dimension B, I believe in his knighting name, 37 today. And he's been smarter or more. He's never been smarter or more good looking. Thanks for everything. Guys. Keep thinking friends. Joe carbone, there we go. Here's your babe making karma you've got Parma All right. After all that, we bring out the blades. John, your blade, please? Yeah, here
you go. Very good. We've

got blades, everybody. Joe corbanu, you're
already here. Get ready. Joanie and Jen, you all have reached Dame hook status, and I'm very proud to pronounce the KD as Dame darling of the ethereal realms, Dame Jody of the North Texas anettas and Dame Jen for you we've got, well, not hookers, but rent poison, Chardonnay, perhaps you'd like that, along with frisky hindered and a lowlands Friesian finest whiskey aides at Port oak cast from His home barrel, Tom Hawk steaks and Heffer wise and cherry coke, along with that
redheads and rise organic macaroni and plasticizers, beer and blunts, cowgirls and coffin varnish, gingrill and gerbil sparkling cider and escorts breast milk and Pablo met. Of course, many people always love the mutton and meat for you Commodores and for you dames, go to noagender rings.com Give us your information. Let us know where we can send your Commodore, ship and or your ring along with your ring size, if
applicable. And of course, that always comes with the certificate of authenticity and and and wax to seal your important correspondence with welcome ladies to the no agenda roundtable,
no agenda and

we have these meetups. They're so much fun. The meetups are really, really the compliment to your no agenda show experience. Go to no agenda meetups.com. To see just where you can have fun. You want to know what fun sounds like. Here's the Tulsa, Oklahoma, not a douchebag meetup recorded on the spot.
Hey guys, don't be a douchebag. Meetup occurred again in Tulsa. Hallie was feeling sick. She says she got a dumb phone, but it's really just a dumb looking phone, you know, because of entropy. This is Spencer just trying to game plan, figure out what it would take to turn no agenda into an am radio station in Tulsa. Love you guys. Thank you. Okay. This is Elsa campeador from Oklahoma, and I'm not a spook. Hey, John and Adam, remember to grow your own food in your backyards. People still
tomato season here in Tulsa. And by the way, we stay safe here. We all left our walkie talkies at home. Good evening, slaves. I am here in Tulsa with an adult beverage, having a great time in the morning in the evening. Everybody. Stay safe. Yeah, howdy fellas, in the morning over here in Tulsa, we're just collecting our popcorn getting ready for the vice presidential debates coming up on Tuesday, also, just so you know, we voted you all the masters of the mug club, media,
keep up the good work. I appreciate you.

All right. Thank you very much. There's a couple of meetups taking place today due to the storm. The North Georgia monthly hurricane makeup meetup kicks off today at 6pm at the legendary distillery in Cummings, North Georgia. Cummings, North Georgia, the yard sign pre election meet up at 630 at Lincoln's Roadhouse in Denver, Colorado, today on Saturday, Charlotte's coming to Concord, North Carolina, noon at Twin peak Sports Bar in Winston, Salem, Carolina, North Carolina.
On Sunday, our next show the TMI evacuation zone October surprise at three o'clock in Evergreen brewing Camp Hill, Pennsylvania. And also on Sunday, the Indiana tribal October surprise meetup that'll be at 330 blind owl brewery, Indianapolis, Indiana, Sir Mark and Dame Maria, as always, doing a great job there. We have many more meetups@noagendametobs.com including one coming up in London, UK. Gwyff, take it away.
No agenda producers of London and beyond, you are invited to celebrate the best podcast in the universe turning 17 on Saturday the 26th of October. We'll be back at the lore of the land pub clogging Mead and munching on mutton from 330 in the afternoon until we're kicked out, come one, come all and find the protection in connection as we implore Jordan Adam to keep
on going for at least four more years. Both the method and Mead are subject to terms and conditions the establishment of law of the land and all its subsidiaries are not liable for any hitting in any mouth and triggering that may or may not occur. For more information, please refer to the website, no agenda meetups.com

now, right. Always does a good job on those promos. Yes. And of course, remember, we do have the big Fredericksburg Texas meetup coming on October 18, Korean, the keeper, both will be there. That's it. No agenda meetups.com. Is where you can find out where there's a meetup near you. If you can't find one, start your go. Start one yourself. It's easy. Sometimes you
want to go hang out with all the nights and days. Wanna be where everybody feels

the same, yeah, baby, like a pate. And now it is time to determine what we will play at the end of the show as an ISO. I have three. You got two. You want to go first? No, I want you to go first. Okay, here we go. What we are living through here is history. That's a little long, I think, yeah, here's this. It's
all about the propaganda. 100% like that one, yeah, and so weird, right?

I don't like that. Okay, okay, word All right, okay, I've got Holy moly. Holy
moly, a great show. Oh, I

like that one a lot. That's piercing. Very good, very good. And

then this good is it always this good?

Ooh, boo. Well, first of all, mine is out.
Gosh,

which one do you like? It. They're both really good.

I think the Holy Moly might be good.
Holy moly a great show. Yeah, I think

you're right. And now, ladies and gentlemen, time once again, 1700 episodes of the tip of

the day. These are tips so they're short and sweet. And this is another foodie tip, foodie tip. So if you buy, I buy these hot chilies from the Hmong at the farmer's market, usually on Saturday, and they have various heat but the Thai chilies, which they like to grow and cross breed with all
kinds of other chilies. These Thai chilies, if anyone's had them, they're small and they're thin skinned, as opposed to a a meaty chili, like, let's say, a jalapeno, which is a very meaty, a lot of very meaty, meaty, meaty, meaty and there and even the eye to me, the serenio peppers also mean these little, these little thin. And skin Thai chilies. You can buy them whatever you pray for them. You're always paying. You know, they're pretty expensive, but generally speaking, without
exception, they will keep in the freezer for decades. You freeze them and they're good forever.

Have you tested this yourself.

Oh yeah, I've got some from five years ago. Okay,

I want you to eat one on the on the next show. I want to hear how you

know, you put throw them in sauce or something. You
don't eat these things. Okay?

For decades. So in like 10 years, Tina, be like, what's this? What is this thing here?
Okay,

there you go. Another two guys. Yes, show us your tips. That's right, just the tips, everybody. And that concludes our broadcast day. Thank you very much. Congratulations to our Commodores, our dames, our new barons, baronesses, viscountesses. It's beautiful to have all of you here. This is a value for value show. The only way we stay on the air is if you want us to four more years. It's up to you. No agenda donations.com. We do have some beautiful end of show mixes coming up from Professor Jay
Jones. We have Tom Starkweather, melodious owls himself and David kecta all queued up with some beautiful stuff. It is the producers who make it happen. We just make it look easy. Coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country, for the 17 100th time in the morning, everybody, I'm Adam curry, and from

Northern Silicon Valley, where it's boiling hot. Boiling hot. I tell you next show, by the way, 1701 Star Trek. I'm John C Dvorak, yes,

1701, get your Star Trek donation donations in and remember everybody's at your Phasers to Stun and remember us at no agenda donations.com Until then, adios, mofos, have great meetups. A hooey, hooey and such. You. Oh yeah, bowl after bowl is coming up next on the stream, forgot to mention,
and now it's time to play what's that smell with your host, Frank
Bolton, what does a monkey taint smell like? What's
that smell? Let's dive in. I'll preach anything that moves
just straight to the monkey taint. And
let's start the smelling.
Are we talking about something acrid, musky, sweet, putrid?

And right on cue,
we'll start the aroma, smelling with
biological factors, Adam,

the lesbians,
urgent, got this word

money has been transferred to a cartel to push this over the border. Good point. The next target for assassination. Monkeys
have their own version of perfume, and we humans are just clueless.

Do a little meta on this. Yeah, please.
You pick up your blue velvet, which has been soaked in celebrity sweat.
What does a monkey taste smell like the whole kit and caboodle? He

said, Yeah. It sucks.
Cultural perceptions of smell.

Anyone can do these. I mean, just

sending out a dangerous product to inject to the American people and the rest of the world. They don't
care. Okay, so
we've talked a bit about the biological side, but we still haven't nailed down what that monkey taint actually smells like.

What does monkey taint smell
like?
It's a question about a smell

says, oh, that's the greatest. And the rest of it is all shows, all theater, fireworks.
So I've become friends with school shooters. I've seen it look the NRA. I was the NRA guy for a long time. They used to teach gun safety, common sense wisdom. So I was in Hong Kong and China during the democracy protests. Went in, and from that I learned a lot. Just got to get back to common sense, economic principles. So those of you out there listening tonight, you're hearing a lot of stuff back and forth, and it's good, it's healthy. That's what
this is supposed to happen. You should be listening. How is this going to impact me? I was raised in a working class family. Now, look, my community knows who I am. Let's just say that's true, just for the sake of argument. So we're not arguing about Weird Science. Let's just say that's true. From Bernie Sanders to Dick Cheney to Taylor Swift and a whole bunch of folks in between to have the
endorsement of Bobby Kennedy Jr and Tulsi Gabbard. I've tried to do the best I can, but I've not been perfect, and I'm a knucklehead at times, but it's always been about that. I grew up in a working class family in a neighborhood where I knew a lot of young women. I don't think we could be the frog in the frog in the pot and let the boiling water go up. We just got to get back to common sense, economic principle. Let's be clear where we're at on this. It's because we got out of an
imbalance on this. You've got to play Whack a Mole. This thing roared onto the scene faster and stronger than anything we've seen. My community knows who I am. They saw where I was at. Look, I will be the first to tell you I have poured my heart into my community. Gun violence is now the number one cause of the death of children in America. So I've become friends with school shooters, not car accidents, not cancer. Gun violence the number one cause of death for the
children of America. So I've become friends with school shooters, and this is the result of many, many issues, including mass shootings and school shootings that are too frequently occurring in our nation. Poured my heart into my community. So I've become friends with school shooters. Poured my heart into my community. I've become friends with school shooters, and I believe we need to reinstate the assault weapons ban. And universal background checks, vorac.org/n, a holy moly, a great show you.