Episode 1596 · Thursday, 5 October 2023

Flagger

Global migration authorities pivot to labor-focused resettlement strategies as European and British regulators implement aggressive new transparency databases and speech restrictions to curb online dissent.

By The No Agenda Show | 3h 7m listen | 30 chapters
Flagger cover
The No Agenda Show · No. 1596

About this episode

Amy Pope assumes leadership of the International Organization for Migration as the first female Director General, signaling a shift toward viewing global migration as an essential economic labor supply. Pope, a former senior advisor to President Biden, recently used an Oxford Union address to condemn Donald Trump’s border wall and 'America First' policies as disruptions to globalist institutional norms. This leadership transition coincides with a new European Union pact among 27 member states that critics argue prioritizes the financial logistics of refugee resettlement over the enforcement of national borders.

In New York, Governor Kathy Hochul and Mayor Eric Adams grapple with a surge of Venezuelan migrants, launching job portals to fill 18,000 positions while residents in Chicago’s Amundsen Park protest the conversion of local facilities into shelters. Meanwhile, Novo Nordisk has deployed a $500 million advertising blitz for Ozempic, drawing public skepticism from figures like Oprah Winfrey and Sharon Osbourne regarding the medicalization of weight loss. In Europe, the Digital Services Act Transparency Database reveals that platforms like TikTok and Pinterest are removing 70,000 posts per hour, while the UK Online Safety Bill introduces criminal penalties for 'false' messages, exempting state-aligned outlets like the BBC.

Representative Jamaal Bowman faces scrutiny for pulling a congressional fire alarm during the ousting of Speaker Kevin McCarthy, an event the hosts characterize as a staged political performance. The show celebrates sixteen years of the value-for-value model, dubbing Sir Leo of Low Earth Orbit as a new knight while warning listeners to avoid the upcoming solar eclipse crowds in Fredericksburg. Producers like Dogpatch and Walker Phillips provide the essential 'time, talent, and treasure' to keep the feed independent of corporate influence.


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CHAPTER 01 / 30 Discussion

Taylor Swift, NFL Marketing Contracts and Climate Change

Speculation arises regarding a potential marketing contract between Taylor Swift and the NFL involving her relationship with a professional football player. The discussion suggests the pairing is a publicity stunt to promote upcoming documentaries and films. Predictions are made that Swift will eventually be utilized as a spokesperson for climate change initiatives.

taylor swift· nfl· marketing· climate change· movie promotion

00:00 Boom, you're a dude. Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak. It's Thursday, October 5th, 2023. This is your award-winning Gitmo Nation Media Assassination Episode 1596. This is no agenda. We are dodging the FEMA alert systems live and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA Region Number 6 in the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley where Taylor Swift is at it again, I'm John C. Dvorak. It's Crackpot and Buzzkill! In the morning! We really can't talk about Taylor Swift. That really pisses people off. Oh no, it pisses off that one guy who has a crush on her who's in the chat room. The troll room. It's like the biggest distraction of the week. It's so annoying. I don't think it's gonna... you know, this is a con... I believe this is a contract. And here we go! We're talking about her!

00:54 I, because of marketing. I think this is a contract between her and the NFL. Yeah, there's two movies coming out. Her movie and her so-called boyfriend's documentary. Her so-called boyfriend. Yeah, it's bullcrap. And it's, well, and there's also, I think there's some other issues. I think they paid her to come to these games. Yeah, for ratings and climate change. Trust me, she's going to do climate change. It's coming. For the money? She'll do anything. But that's okay, because that is not the biggest news. The biggest news right at the top of the NOAA Gender Show, everybody. Coming up, it's a feeding frenzy on the move. Bed bugs are giving people nightmares. Over the last 10 years, their population has been exploding. Tonight, we know why the insects are crawling out of beds and into movie theaters and classrooms and more.

CHAPTER 02 / 30 Discussion

France Bed Bug Infestation, Olympic Games and Fulton County Jail

Reports from France indicate a significant bed bug infestation affecting movie theaters and homes, leading to theories that the hotel industry is hyping the crisis to combat Airbnb ahead of the 2023 Olympics. In a related domestic story, the family of LaShawn Thompson is seeking justice after he reportedly died from a severe insect and bed bug infestation while in custody at the Fulton County Jail in Georgia.

france· bed bugs· olympics· fulton county jail· lashawn thompson

01:45 It's from 2020. But it's movie theaters. It was movie theaters in 2020 here in the US and now it's movie theaters in 2023 in France. Yeah, there's another scam. Well listen because they've got the World Health Organization bringing them in now. This is where they should move to. Take to catch all the bed bugs you can and bring them to the UN building. Here's France 24. For more let's cross to the French city of Rouen. Jan Cedric Hansen is of his, Vice President of GLOSA and has worked with the World Health Organization in the past. Thank you for speaking with us here on France 24.

02:32 Hi, I'm happy to talk to you. So first off, is this a blown out of proportion with social media or is there a real problem with bed bugs? There is a coming real problem with bed bugs because this ectoparasite, that means a parasite that lives around the human beings and animals, feeds on blood and therefore, he's not the only one, but he's becoming quite an important issue because

03:10 It is trading not only in some specific areas, but now it is becoming like a pandemic, we could say, because it is now involving and invading any social economic area of industrialized countries. There's some speculation that part of... I mean, this is being used for everything now. It's being used by people who hate Macron for being a douche, having nuclear energy, not closing all of his nuke plants. So it's being used against him. Some believe it's the hotel industry is hyping it up to go against Airbnb for the coming Olympics. Ooh, I like that. I like that a lot, actually. That's the one I like. And of course, it's again movie theaters.

04:02 That's where movie theater, movie theater. You don't want people going to the movies when you got the Olympics. Yeah. So the bedbugs are in the movie theaters and not at the Olympic stadium. They're not in your home where necessarily, well, that should be in your home actually. If they're going to bedbugs, one out of every eight French homes has bedbugs. Yeah. Libid, Libid. One out of every eight. That's I think that brings in the Airbnb thing. Yeah. Yeah. Libet bugs. So I think that's possible, but everybody loves jump... I mean in America we do everything just better. I'm sorry. When it comes to crappy news, which of course, you know, whenever you look at your screens, you know, every TV news bulletin has a story that affects you personally at that very moment. They're very good at doing that. Have you ever noticed that if Hollywood were true,

05:04 Anybody could land a plane as long as there's someone in the tower to talk you down. There's also no lights. No one uses lights in the kitchen. You only have to open the refrigerator door. Use that light. That's the best. All detectives can only solve a case after suspended from duty. This is fact. We all know this. And also my admin think I brought this up years ago on the show which is that when the detectives go into a room They never turn on the lights. They use their flashlights, which they hold in some peculiar fashion like a club like a Flashlight backwards it doesn't matter how many ninjas are attacking you they will all patiently wait one by one to get you You're only fighting one at a time

05:49 That's Hollywood. Pay attention, people. No, this is how we do things in America. Hey, bed bugs. Hey, we got to... It's bed bugs. It's a story. What are we going to do? We need a bed bug story people, get us a bed bug story. It's hot, hot, hot, hot, hot. Tonight, the family of a man who died at the Fulton County Jail is now demanding action. They say he was essentially eaten alive by insects and bed bugs while in custody. Tracy Amick Pierce spoke with him just hours ago. She's joining us now live from the Fulton County Courthouse. Tracy? Well, Leshawn Thompson had been held in the cycling of the jail for three months when an officer found him unresponsive in his cell. His family tells me by that point they couldn't even recognize him. He was definitely a heavyset guy.

06:35 And from those pictures, he looks totally different. He's not the same person. Brad McCray says these pictures of his brother that he shared with us, 35 year old LaShawn Thompson, are hard to look at. His cell at the Fulton County Jail covered in filth and his body covered in sores and bites from bed bugs and lice. It looked like he wasn't eating in jail or malnutrition or maybe the bed bugs did it. The Fulton County Medical Examiner report lists his cause of death as undetermined, but noted a severe bed bug infestation. The family says Thompson was brought to the jail on a misdemeanor simple battery charge in June and was put in the psych wing because the jail was aware of his schizophrenia. They are now demanding the jail be closed and law enforcement open a criminal investigation. Man, and they show pictures that did not look good. That guy was eaten by bugs.

07:27 Eaten by bedbugs. Which of course is, you know, is them getting... And you have to remember that that's the same jail that they dragged Trump into. Oh, is that? No, no. Is that the one? Is that the same one? That's the exact same place. Oh, how interesting. So that makes it, so you put in your mind, you put in the mind the possibility that Trump's dragging bedbugs to Mar-a-Lago and there will be an infestation of bedbugs. Or that he could be eaten by bedbugs. Yeah. Mar-a-Lago bedbugs, everybody. I didn't even pick up on that. That's good. That is good.

CHAPTER 03 / 30 Discussion

Ozempic Advertising, Sharon Osbourne and Oprah Winfrey Body Image

Novo Nordisk has reportedly spent $500 million on advertising for Ozempic in early 2023, utilizing native advertising and documentaries to promote the weight loss drug. Sharon Osbourne recently shared her experience with extreme weight loss and nausea, while Oprah Winfrey publicly stated she prefers to lose weight without medication to avoid the "easy way out." Medical warnings regarding intestinal issues and unrealistic weight loss expectations are also highlighted.

ozempic· novo nordisk· sharon osbourne· oprah winfrey· weight loss

08:04 Well, you don't need bedbugs to eat you alive to lose weight. We have the Ozempic, of course. A lot of stories about Ozempic. And, you know, there's... Now, this is a really, really... You know, Ozempic or Norvo Nordisk in the first seven months of 2023 spent $500 million on advertising. $500 million. That's like political presidential campaign level. Yeah. And of course it's not just on the cute commercials. It's on placed advertising, it's, you know, native ads inside the morning shows. They're now doing, they are sponsoring a documentary exploring obesity in America. And now they've managed in this next report, which is NBC,

09:03 They've managed to turn negative reports, there are two negative reports. Most people who pay attention to M5M, that's you and I sometimes, have seen Sharon Osbourne looking positively anorexic. I mean she's so anorexic she's doing, you know, like eating disorder tricks by wearing a very baggy sweater. where you can just tell there's a skeleton, the woman is a skeleton. And I know her as Sharon, Roly-Poly Sharon from the Moscow Music Peace Festival before the stomach band surgery. What is that called? What is that procedure called? I forget what it's called. Staples. Staples. Stomach staple. Before the stomach staple. And

09:52 And you know, she, I think on Piers Morgan said, you know, I went too far. I let it go too far. Oprah has come out and said, nah, you know, even though Weight Watchers of which he is a major shareholder now known as WW, new branding, they bought a telehealth company that prescribes stuff like Ozempic and Wagovi. Even now she's saying, no, no, no, no, I'm not doing it anymore. NBC somehow put together this package which turned it all positive. I mean, brilliant work. For millions of Americans, the rise of weight loss and diabetes drugs, including Ozempic, feels like something of a miracle.

10:33 I couldn't be happier. Over the past three years, their use has gone up 300 percent, according to a new report from analytics firm Trillion Health. And with the blockbuster success of these drugs comes new warnings they may not be suitable for everyone. The Food and Drug Administration recently updating its Ozempic warning label to acknowledge reports of ileus, or failure of the intestines to move normally. Drug maker Novo Nordisk, which manufactures Ozempic and Wigovi, said it stands behind the safety and efficacy of Ozempic in a statement to NBC. Is that safe and effective? I think it is safety and efficacy. Safe and effective! Adding, the company is working closely with the FDA to continuously monitor the safety profile of its medications. More common side effects include nausea and stomach issues, as Sharon Osbourne recently... So I love how to do that.

11:22 So, you know, some people have got really bad stuff going on, but more common issues is just a little bit of, you know, stomach pain and nausea. This is, you might experience, not that other stuff, you won't have that. As Sharon Osbourne recently shared with Piers Morgan on Morgan Uncensored. You feel nauseous. You don't throw up physically, but you've got that feeling. And I was about two, three weeks where I felt nauseous the whole time. You get very thirsty. and you don't want to eat. Osbourne says she lost more weight than she expected. I lost 42 pounds now and it's just enough. Oprah wins. Oh man, you see how they do that? They took out all the I went too far business and they get this is an amazing amount of weight loss 42 pounds and that's enough.

12:08 I didn't really throw up. I just felt a little nauseous, a little thirsty. This is phenomenal work, NBC. And it's just enough. They get paid the big bucks for this. They sure do. For Winfrey, also recently weighing in on the drugs, Winfrey, who is an investor and board member in Weight Watchers, says she doesn't believe the medications are for her. Shouldn't we all just be more accepting of whatever Whatever body you choose to be in, when I first started hearing about the weight loss drugs, I felt I've got to do this on my own. I've got to do this on my own because if I take the drug, that's the easy way out. Inspired by dramatic before and after pictures. That is so well done.

12:48 That's really well done, but I like the idea of the body you choose to be in. You choose to be in. Yes! Yes! Nailed it. I'm not choosing to be in this body. I'd rather be in some, you know, a different body if I could be in one. I choose to be in a different body. Can I be in that? The muscular one? The ripped one? I choose to be in that body. This is how fantastic this is. They take Oprah, Because it's not working for her, because she doesn't want to die of any side effects that we're hearing about, doesn't want to be puking, doesn't want to be thirsty, doesn't want to be Sharon Osbourne. But she's a shareholder. So what are we going to do? Well, you know, I'm going to talk about, you get to choose the body you're in. I choose to be in this one. And I can do it myself. I'm not going to, quote, take the easy way out.

13:41 Message being, this is the easy way out people. Don't be like Oprah. Don't be like me. Take the easy way out. Take the drug. You choose to be in. When I first started hearing about the weight loss drugs, I felt I've got to do this on my own. I've got to do this on my own because if I take the drug, that's the easy way out. Inspired by dramatic before and after. That's worth a million dollars right there. I'm sure she got paid for it. I'm sure she got a million dollars. Yeah, but the easy way out is okay Well, most people would take the easy way out to be on and did what she just said, okay, exactly It's beautiful choose to be in when I first started hearing about the weight loss drugs And I felt I've got to do this on my own I've got to do this on my own because if I take the drug that's the easy way out inspired

14:30 Inspired by dramatic before and after pics on social media, doctors say many people have unrealistic expectations of how fast they should be losing weight, which can make unpleasant side effects worse. I see too many people who want to start at higher doses. It is best to start slow and low. Slow and low. Bring it on baby once you start slow and low. Meanwhile, there's horrible things happening to people. Oh, some of this stuff is just it's just frightening but they're monitoring the stomach just decides to stop working But don't worry people they're monitoring for your safety your safety so yesterday the the big FEMA test

CHAPTER 04 / 30 Discussion

FEMA Emergency Alert System Test and 5G Conspiracy Theories

The nationwide FEMA emergency alert test conducted on October 4, 2023, is reviewed following public concerns about high-frequency tones and 5G activation. Despite online conspiracy theories suggesting the signal would cause physical harm or activate nanoparticles, no widespread adverse effects were reported. One host notes receiving the alert in Spanish on a specialized mobile device.

fema· emergency alert system· 5g· cell phones· wireless emergency alerts

15:12 Did you die? Oh yeah, did you? I didn't have a phone. Did you die? Obviously, I haven't used a cell phone since December of last year. So you didn't die? And did anyone we know die? I mean, I don't think so. Tina was monitoring, you know, the local text groups and the Instagram and a lot of it was, you know, just in case unplug your computer, turn your phone off. Really? Yes. What is wrong with people? Well after we debunked the tone that would never work through the... The tone won't work at all. Well, I mean there's... Some people said they could hear it when you hit like 8,000 Hertz which

15:55 Nice. Yeah, people were not happy with my test. Well, I guess it set off a few dogs Someone said they got a headache. Oh, please nobody got a headache from that Yeah, one producer said he got a headache right in the middle of his head On the fourth you better unplug your phone you're gonna die No people like that was not cool man, it's not like I didn't say I'm gonna do it That was not cool, man. Not cool. Not cool. Who said that? Several people thought that was not cool. You hurt my ears. It was not cool. Bull bull. Yes, yes. People, they get all triggered like that. It's okay. At least they didn't know they didn't die, so I spun them down in this horrible situation. So once that was debunked, and you know, of course there's a patent that you can blow apart cancer cells, all kinds of stuff if you have a high enough frequency.

16:49 But that won't work through cell phones and your television and your radio. No, no, no, no good. So then it was the five G, the activating the five G. No, it's like five G is on. It's not like they're going to turn it on all of a sudden it's on, but they send out this tone and then there's, they're going to amp up, amp up the output. No, no people. No, no. Well, this is all a throwback to the 5G and the vaccination. That's where this comes from. And people are nuts. People don't believe news. Surprise. So they'll believe anything. That's why people come to the No Agenda show. Now, I did like the idea that some people saying, hey, it's not about that. It's about how many phones respond.

17:45 There may be some, you know, some mechanism in some phones to find out if you, if you turned it off immediately. And there's a couple of things that may have been made or just in general, how people on social media are responding to the idea, you know, that by, it could be a test. It could be some sort of test that by itself is worthy of a test. I got mine in Spanish, which was cool because that's what I need in an emergency. I need my emergency information in Spanish. You got an emergency message in Spanish? I sure did. Well, you know, I'm running the no agenda phone, so who knows what they think that is. Hey man, it's probably an illegal migrant. Oh, it's gotta be some... Oh, this is some sort of cheap phone, so it must be a Mexican. Give him the Spanish. Give him the Spanish, because he's... That's a little racist. You think?

CHAPTER 05 / 30 Discussion

United Nations IOM, NGO Human Trafficking and EU Migration Pact

A deep dive into the International Organization for Migration (IOM) suggests that non-governmental organizations (NGOs) act as sophisticated human trafficking networks funded by Western governments. The European Union's 27 member states recently reached a deal on managing refugees, which critics argue focuses on organizing financial aid rather than stopping irregular migration. The legacy of Angela Merkel's migration policies is cited as a turning point for European political elites.

iom· ngos· human trafficking· european union· angela merkel

18:40 So I did, I got inspired. I got really inspired by Nick the Rats album art for us, which we'll talk about later. But it was this, and it turns out it was AI, surprise. We thought it wasn't up to Nick the Rats standard. No, well it was well chosen. I don't believe they know agenda the way it's presented on the side of the ship. Could be can be done by AI No, he'd you know, he he said he did that himself. It was the you have to do that yourself And that's the main part of the of the that was the guy that that was the catchy. Yeah, that was the gag So it was no agenda, but what what really caught me is you had this little boat and then you have this kind of ghostly huge ocean liner which was you know, just kind of looming out of out of nothingness and

19:37 And that's really the NGO, you know, that's really the big, the elephant in the room. And I was thinking about this and I'm just mulling over what I'm seeing, you know, going back to what, you know, television. So on television and on the news and on your screens, people who have traveled for thousands of miles through harrowing circumstances with coyotes, Human traffickers, rapists. These people show up at our border with new shoes, clean shirts, their hair not dirty, not looking ragged. That last bit through the Rio Grande and the barbed wire, that's just a little show to give us the illusion that these people have made some harrowing journey. Where are the arrests of these human trafficking rings? Where are they? Where are they? How come they... you never hear, oh we got one!

20:36 They had all these people, the coyotes. You never hear about that. And it just dawned on me, the true human traffickers are the NGOs. And so when they say, oh, it's human traffickers. Yes, that's correct. These are paid for by the United Nations, the IOM, the International Office of Migration, by our very own State Department. which I'm going to lay out for you because I went down a rabbit hole and I was blown away with what I came up with.

21:13 So, this is almost like pipeline stuff. If you view this migration replacement, and we had the document from, I sound like Alex Jones, we had the document from 2001, United Nations, it's good, we've got to have all these Western countries, Western Europe, the United States, the United Kingdom, even Russia. We have to have all these migrants in their countries by 2030, coincidence? Because by 2050, you know, they'll need the new people. It's good. We have to get this going. And I think certainly, and I can prove this to a degree, even in the United States, especially in the United States,

21:55 The true elites who are in on this game, which is not your border patrol, this is not Mallorca, this is not FBI or any of these people, this is way above. This is at a globalist level that is never discussed. These elites know that we're raping these countries where these people live. you know, for their iPhones and their EVs. And they feel guilty. So they get in USAID and the National Endowment for Democracy and the Arts and they go to all these galas and they have their fundraisers and their benefits and they get on boards and there's all this money flowing from our tax dollars and money that we've printed. And they roll it into the, you know, we're helping the poor people.

22:43 But just don't put him in my backyard. So this is a global problem, the global West I'll say. And I have a couple things that I discovered which are quite eye-opening. First let's get an update from the EU where we have a deal! Now the European Union's 27 member states have today reached a deal on refugees and migrants. It concerns how to share caring for people during crisis situations and how to organize financial aid. Now note They're not talking about solving anything. No, no, no. Instead of, hey, we got too many migrants coming into our country. Look at Lampedusa. Look at Germany. Look at Sweden. There's no deal that says, yeah, we got to fix. We're going to build a wall or anything like that. But build a wall is also a huge farce.

23:28 There's nothing like that. No, no we have we have solutions and how to organize financial aid as well What's been agreed? I'm in Georgia and our Eurobeditor is with us and Armin just remind us then what the proposed migration and asylum pact actually does I think we have to go back in a way to the big migrant crisis of 2015 to 16, which was a big trauma for European political elites. And that's really informed all of these discussions for the last seven or eight years. Back then, you might remember Angela Merkel, the German leaders, her famous phrase, we can do it, wir schaffen das, we can take in a large influx of migrants. Remember this, John? Remember this?

24:12 Angela Merkel. Of course. She won the Kalergi Award. We covered it very extensively on this show. She won the Kalergi, go look at Kalergi, the Kalergi Award for migration. And a million, over a million migrants came in. We shuffled us. Come on, krauts! We can do it Germans, come on Jerry! We can make this work, there's been a big shift. Yes we can is the you know the basically the uh the German Obama, yes we can! It's not who we are, these people are here! Influx of migrants, we can make this work, there's been a big shift since those times. No European leader talks about this issue the way uh Angela Merkel did back

24:51 then and certainly the German leadership doesn't take that kind of approach. Nowadays we have very much a focus on other things like security, so for example how to simplify and speed up asylum-related procedures, how to hold migrants at the EU's external borders for up to 40 weeks. in certain circumstances. To be fair, there's also been talk under this proposed asylum migration pact, there's been talk of solidarity helping frontline states like Italy and Greece. There's been talk of, you know, making sure there are legal routes for migrants into the EU so they... Legal routes? This is not stopping migration, this is just changing legislation to make it coming by a rubber boat legal.

25:35 That's legal now. They're not changing anything. There's been talk of, you know, making sure there are legal routes for migrants into the EU so they don't attempt dangerous crossings but ultimately we're in a European election year, a campaign year, where security is a very, very center stage. Now you understand why they have to do something about it because all these The minions in the European Union, they're up for a vote. Not that they can do anything when they get into European Parliament, but they could do a yellow card. But they're up for a vote and they don't want to stop. They love Brussels. They love the parties. They love all the stuff that's going on in Brussels. They love the not really having to do anything. You can just show up in the morning, get your

26:20 get your per diem and go home, you get an apartment, you get an apartment in limo, you get an Audi, an Audi limo, get your hair done by Pierre, oh and then we got to look like we're doing something here and just in case you know we get thrown out we we gotta you know we gotta get as many people in as we can. And European elites know that the migration issue is fuel for the various populist parties across the EU that are running in those EU elections next June. So I start looking around and really everything comes from one place. It's the IOM, International Organization for Migration. IOM.int. They get an international domain name. Nice. And the first thing I see, did you know that immigration

CHAPTER 06 / 30 Discussion

Sustainable Development Goals, Climate Migration and Internal Displacement

The United Nations is integrating human mobility into its Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) rescue plan, viewing migration as a cornerstone for global prosperity. Projections suggest that by 2050, over 200 million people could be internally displaced due to climate change. Critics characterize these policies as "migration replacement" intended to equalize global wealth at the expense of Western citizens.

sdg· agenda 2030· climate change· idp· migration replacement

27:12 is actually part of the sustainable development goals. You know, this is this Agenda 2030 that they set up a long time ago and it has to do with climate change and climate change and climate change and world health and migration. And the theme of this past United Nations General Assembly was, oh, we're not doing very well with our sustainable development goals. We're behind. We're not even at 20%. We don't have that. What do we have? We have less than seven years left. We got to hurry up. And right there on the IOM website is a video, Human Mobility is an Essential Part

27:59 of the Sustainable Development Goal Rescue Plan. So they need to rescue these Sustainable Development Goals with, you know, this is the whole climate change, don't eat meat, eat bugs. And to help save it, we've got to have more migration. So this also kind of explains why we need, why we're seeing more migrants across the Western world. I'm going to play this video. It's interesting. Only 12% of the 149 targets are on track and nearly one in three have shown no progress since 2015. The SDG summit in New York marks the halfway point to the deadline set to achieve the 2030 agenda.

28:41 It is imperative that human mobility is incorporated into the rescue plan the UN Secretary-General is urging world leaders to deliver at the summit. Migrants and displaced persons account for one in eight people in the world. Managed well, human mobility can be a cornerstone of development, prosperity and progress. The Global Compact for Safe, orderly and regular migration and the Secretary General's action agenda on internal displacement provide the roadmaps to maximize the positive impacts of human mobility on development.

29:19 It's good. We've got to do it. We've got to do more of it. And it's not stopping it. No, it's encouraging it. It's more. Well, the key word there was internal displace or replacement or displaced. Displaced. Displaced. Internal displace. Yes. Internally displaced. Which means that you're an American. You're out. You're displaced. You're displaced for somebody that came in from, I don't know, Venezuela. Just a thought. Anywhere but you. Anyone, anywhere but you. You're done. The world is... And why? Why are you done? That's the key. What's wrong with the American

29:57 That's here, do they want too much money? Are they greedy? Do they eat too much? Do they refuse to believe half the crap that's thrown at them? Are they stupid? What is the reason? We're not obedient. Yes, absolutely. We'll get there. The world is growing less equal. Less equal. Ah, the world is growing less equal. This is the globalists like, well it's not fair. We've been raping those countries for centuries. It's not fair. It's less equal. Let's do something. Let's equalize it by displacing our own citizens for these poor people over there that we've been raping. More than half of the 71 million IDPs live in least developed countries. IDPs. Let's write that down. What are you?

30:41 I'm an IDP, sir. Check, sir. Got it. What's IDP? Internally displaced person. Internally displaced person and an American. Well, they're talking about people from Venezuela and other countries here. But yeah, you can be in, of course, of course, you're an internally displaced person. We're going to be internally displaced in our own countries. Yes, migration replacement. It says it on the tin. I love this part. So when you let migrants into your country, they send over a trillion dollars per year back to their own countries

31:30 which is more than all investment made by these globalist elites. So they come into our economy, work here, legally or not, or just get money, you know, give you New York, Chicago, you just get money, and they send that back home. And the United Nations hears that's a good thing. That's theft. Am I misreading this? No, not yet. Some governments are responding to the rising anti-migrant xenophobia by closing the door even as they struggle to fill jobs. Oh, well, we've got anti-migrant xenophobia. It's not, you know, hey, what is happening here? No, it's not questioning what's going on. You're xenophobic. I love xenophobia. Well, now you understand why they call Trump xenophobic. This is all, this was the real problem with Trump. This really... Well, if you think about it, let's go back to 2016 with Hillary.

32:31 Who is supposed to get the thing you know, I handed to her in a silver platter. Oh, we're coming to Hillary. Yes, go ahead. She's the one what? Go ahead because Hillary is a part of this for sure. Yeah, she's the one who said that she imagines a day where there's no nothing. There's no borders from the tip of South America all the way up to Canada. Do we think do we have a clip of that? I don't know if we have a clip of that. That would be a hard one to find because it's hard to categorize but She did, everyone knows that that was her policy was there was be no borders, nothing to stop anyone from, as if they're going to walk, going from this tip of South America all the way up to Canada. I'll just finish this for a second. People on the move have less access to the internet and new technologies. That's why you get a free cell phone.

33:22 You have less access, people on the move have less access to the internet and technologies. That's why at our border you get a cell phone. 216 million people could move within their countries due to climate change. Ah yeah, climate change of course! This is the big one, this is the easy one. People have to move because of climate change. It's too dangerous to live in their countries. By 2050. Well hold on. This reminds me of the softening up we got probably five years ago when people kept talking about climate change migration. Yep. And so they kept pounding us with, oh, yeah, sure.

34:03 And now they can use that as an excuse because we've already been softened up with body blows. Yeah, oh, the lexicon is already there. Oh, these poor people. Yes, they're in South America. They have to leave there because of climate change. It's extreme weather events have made, you know, have you seen the flooding? Did you see what happened in Libya? Of all places that nothing happened, South America is one of them. The clock is ticking on the extended G's, but it is not too late to act. It's not too late to act everybody. Okay, because this will save their own sustainable development goals, their own self-imposed rules. So let's just talk briefly about the Mediterranean. There are 15 ships in the Mediterranean operated by NGOs, that's non-governmental organizations. And I think we need to explain a non-governmental organization.

CHAPTER 07 / 30 Discussion

NGO Funding Slush Funds, Van der Valk Hotels and Welcome.us

The financial structure of NGOs is examined, highlighting a legal dispute within the Van der Valk hotel family over millions in profits from housing asylum seekers. The organization Welcome.us is identified as a major relocation entity co-chaired by former U.S. Presidents and supported by major corporations like Google, Amazon, and American Express. These entities are accused of profiting from the logistics of moving migrants into the U.S. interior.

ngos· van der valk· welcome.us· barack obama· corporate sponsors

34:58 And I'll give it a shot, you stop me where you think I'm wrong. A non-governmental organization is an organization that is actually funded by government, a government or sometimes multiple governments, and they are doing the work that the governments want them to do. They are often, I think they're usually non-profit. That may be a requirement. I think they're not all non-profit. This is also a huge slush fund. And I'll just give you a little example, jumping ahead a bit. Big story in the Dutch press about this Dutch family called Van der Valk. And they have owned hotels in the Netherlands for as long as I can remember. I know a couple of them. I know, you know, like some of the cousins.

35:42 Not the one that's in the news. I know one of the big guys. He is very famous He was he is an international arms dealer Of course, I would know him he was in the aviation business and he helped me sell a helicopter one time nice guy you you from the from the you and so these hotels this hotel chain, they're now suing a member of their own family and because they were getting all these contracts for asylum seekers, as they're known in the Netherlands, or irregular migrants, that's a new term, you know, 900 hotel rooms, big deal. So one of their cousins was arranging the rooms and he was in between the government saying, hey we need hotel rooms, and his own family. In the past five years he made 119 million euros

36:33 for just sitting in between the government and the family with their hotel rooms. This is the kind of slush that runs through these NGOs. He was of course an NGO. And the funny thing is, the family suing the cousin, like, hey you ripped us off, we want 20 million of that 119. That's the funny part. Yeah, that is funny. So you've got these w2eu.info, you've got websites, these NGOs, they're helping people, they're literally helping people in multiple languages, what to do, where to go, what country's appropriate for you, best way to get there, what ship to use.

37:14 And then from time to time, you see, oh well, sorry, that one didn't work. A couple people drowned, whatever. The minute one of those ships, one of those little rubber boats is sent out, in comes the big NGO and oh, we'll pick them up, don't worry about it. So I look at it. Well, yes, yes. Good. I was going to interrupt you here. Yeah, go for it. So we can get a sense because you're attacking NGOs in general and they probably should be attacked in general. We don't even know who they are. But if you go to human rights careers, they have the 15 biggest in the world. And it's interesting to note these these things are there. They're huge. And I'm going to name them.

37:58 Because it's names that are very familiar to everybody. Number one, number one, established in 1919, Save the Children. Two, Oxfam International. Three, Doctors Without Borders. Brack number four BRAC. This is a This is monstrous. This is a based in Bangladesh and it had it takes care of most of the South Asia area Yeah, it's you don't you never heard of it in the United States, but you have heard a number five world vision Christian operation the song the song contest the world vision song contest or is that something else? No, no, it's not the song contest

38:46 That's funny though. It has a billion dollars in operating revenue. Revenue. I'm gonna read a few more. We need to know these. International Rescue Committee, this is one of the big ones, one of the guys moving people. Let's go to number seven. Catholic Relief Services. They're big. They are big. They're in the Office of Refugee Resettlement. That's a billion dollar operation. That one is. Yeah. Here's another one. Can I just say there's a lot of religious organizations. Yeah, sure. That's where you can get money that way. Danish Refugee Council's number eight. And the problem with the churches and religious organizations

39:31 It's almost in their charter. The charter of God, you've got to help people. And so everyone wants to help people and then the government says, well, you be an NGO, we'll give you $7,000 per migrant and it becomes a business. And then you can't stop because you grow. You keep growing and then you see these people as clients and they're not even brothers and sisters anymore. They just become things to move because you're Your faith-based organization grows and grows and grows and grows because the money grows and it's a trap. You can't get out of it. You start serving money as the master. Yeah, I used to read a few more of these because these are interesting. Care International's number nine.

40:16 That's a big one. Yeah, we've all heard of. Amnesty International is number 10. They're the ones that we deal with a lot. Here's one, Action Aid International, which you probably haven't heard of. How about the Red Cross? They've got to be on this list. I don't think they are actually. They're too small. I have the- Direct Relief. I'll just read the last three. Direct Relief, Action Against Hunger, and the Anti-Slavery International, and last on the 15th, and that is The 15th is Plan International, which is another one I haven't heard of but it's big. It's established in 1937. So what I have in the show notes is, how many pages is this? Six pages, must be a couple hundred. The IOM, the International Office of Migration, approved list of NGOs.

41:08 And these are the guys who are in the five to one hundred million dollar range. So these are the small ones. One Love Movement, Action Aid, Adesso, African... I'm doing... it's alphabetical... African Disabled Refugee, ALEF, Alternative Espaces... I can't even read that one. So what do we have? Asian Human Rights and Culture Development Forum. Let's see. Center for Development Support Initiatives. I'm just jumping around. Center for Refugee Studies. Deutsche Wellenhilfe. Danish Refugee Council, Harvard University. Hello, Harvard University. Human Appeal, Kids in Need of Defense, also known as KIND. John Hopkins University, Department of Political Science, NGO. It's an NGO. Migrants Organize. I mean, I could just go on and on and on and on. So this is huge. And of course, you'll see a lot of

42:13 Nepotism in these outfits. A lot of nepotism. Yeah, you know, Carrie's kids as an example. My favorite, which I'm surprised it didn't show up on your list, is welcome.us. Have you heard of this? You should have. Actually, I have. Because welcome.us, originally created in partnership with American Express Global Business Travel, The NGO helped relocate Afghans to the US during 2021 and 2022, now working in tandem with Miles for Migrants. While retaining its association with AEGBT, the NGO is committed to funding flights into the US interior for migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Venezuela, Ukraine, and Nicaragua. This is an interesting outfit because the leadership

43:06 And just so you know, let's look at the leadership here. Welcome.us. Oh, wouldn't you know, here are the honorary co-chairs. Barack Obama, Michelle Obama, George W. Bush, Laura Bush, Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Jimmy Carter, Rosalyn Carter. And then you look at this huge list of a hundred people. Airbnb are in on it, of course. The CEO and the COO. Why? Airbnb gets paid to house migrants. You gotta have Yo-Yo Ma in there. Yep, Yo-Yo Ma's on there because, you know, you got, oh, we had a great gala, Yo-Yo Ma played.

43:43 Yeah. And then look at the CEO forum. Julie Sweet Accenture, Sundar Pichai, Google, the Adobe dude, Narayan. Let's see, CEO from Advent, AIG, Airbnb, Airbnb Marketing, Amazon, American Express, Tim Cook. Hello, Tim. Bank of America, Blackstone, Business Roundtable, Chubb, Comcast, Delta, Gap. You know, we'll clothe them. And Amazon is interesting. Amazon provided for free delivery of essential goods and services. Not the goods and services.

CHAPTER 08 / 30 Discussion

Amy Pope, IOM Director General and Economic Benefits of Migration

Amy Pope has assumed the role of Director General of the IOM, becoming the first woman to lead the agency after serving as a senior advisor to President Biden. Speaking from Geneva, Pope argues that migration fuels innovation and revitalizes aging communities by providing a necessary labor supply. Critics argue this approach prioritizes cheap, obedient labor over the interests of domestic workers.

amy pope· iom· geneva· labor supply· united nations

44:18 Not the goods. It didn't give anything free to these people. No, it just gives you free delivery. Oh, just like you're a Prime member. It's right. Migrants become Prime members in America. Automatic Prime members. So now we get to something very interesting. As of October 1st, there is a new Director General of the IOM. Well, wouldn't you know, it's an American lady. Her name is Amy Pope. And so this is active as of October 1st, before joining IOM, Director General. Why do they get to use these titles? I think we should be Director Generals of the No Agenda Show. In fact, that should be a level you can donate for. What is this Director General business? Hair Director General in your case. Doesn't that sound douchey? It sounds totally douchey. What is the point of these

45:15 phony baloney military... Military titles, yeah. And they're not even real military sound... I mean they sound like some... it's like His Excellency at the UN. Oh here's His Excellency. Oh I bet you they get announced like that. Her Excellency Director General Amy Pope. No doubt about it. She served before joining Iowa Pope served as the senior advisor on migration to US President Biden and served as the deputy homeland security advisor to President Obama while working at the White House Director General Pope developed and implemented comprehensive strategies to address migration in areas such as countering trafficking in persons Resettling refugees and vulnerable people and preparing communities to respond and adapt to climate change

46:01 related crises. She worked for Clinton. I like the way they slipped that in. She worked for Clinton in the State Department. The State Department is the largest funder of the International Office of Migration. It's our agenda, it's our money, we're the ones funding it. We're financing it. The disaster they're bitching and moaning about in New York, Chicago and elsewhere, not to mention Texas because who the hell cares what they think, is all because of us, our people in the State Department of our country. Let me play some clips here. This is from Africa today. I had to go far to get a little information about our new UN migration chief and what she's up to. The new head of the International Organization for Migration laid out her vision for tackling irregular migration on Monday. Irregular. To increase the economic benefits migration can have on the countries receiving migrants,

46:58 Speaking from Geneva, Amy Popp focused on the evidence that migration can boost economies by providing well-needed workers a new innovation. The evidence is fairly overwhelming that migration actually benefits economies. And when you look at economies that have had a significant influx of migrants over the years, if you look at how they're performing in the future, we see overwhelmingly that people tend to be better off as a result of migration. Where is this data? Hello Chicago! Where's this data? Don't worry Chicago, it's gonna be great. This is the whole thing. They just make it up. Yes! Whether it's because it's fueling innovation, it's fueling... They fuel innovation. Somehow they fuel innovation. Yeah!

47:46 It's phenomenal. So do the homeless for that matter. As a result of migration, whether it's because it's fueling innovation, it's fueling labor supply, whether it's fueling the renovation or revitalization of aging communities, migration on the whole is a benefit. Or gardeners. Now let's just go back to the former New York banker. We win because we've got new people coming in. Our population grows. They're fueling the economy. They're fueling it. Migration on the whole is a benefit. Pop also decried what she called the normalization of death in the Mediterranean Sea. People are coming because they're getting jobs. And if

48:29 There wasn't an economic opportunity for them to take advantage of on the other side. They wouldn't come. So our goal should be increasingly to build out regular, realistic pathways for people, recognizing that there are job opportunities, whether it's high skill or low skill, and that our best opportunity, and this is where the EU leadership is especially needed and where we've seen very important developments in the space but recognizing... In the space! That's our actual country that she's talking about. We see great developments in this space because these people, they're great workers, doesn't matter if they're low-level, high-level, they're fabulous, they're obedient, they'll do what they tell them to. But if we're really going to stop people crossing the Mediterranean on rickety boats and dying as they do so, we need to approach the situation far more comprehensively.

49:24 Pop recently won her bid to become the first woman to lead the UN Migration Agency, defeating the current IOM Director-General Antonio Vittorino in a vote for the position. So they had a vote. We gotta vote. Hey, we fund that thing. We should have our person, our person should be running it. We need the director generalship because it's coming down to the wire here, people. We need to replace these lazy Americans. They're no good. They can't get by. You know, they're basically saying you can get people from other countries to live on the slave wages that Americans live on, which is, this is why we have strikes.

50:04 You know, inflation is making it hard for auto workers, hospital workers, you know, Kaiser Permanente on strike now because they're just not getting paid enough. So how do you solve that? Bring in people who will be happy to live in a tent. Problem solved. Problem solved. Yeah. Now let's... Screw you, strikers. Let's listen to Amy Pope four years ago when she was in the State Department. And this is very unfortunate, people shouldn't do these things. She did a speech at the Oxford Union. You know, this is where people go and make a case. It's kind of a fun thing to watch. Lots of debate. That's a debate thing. And she is a Trump hater. She's a super Trump hater. And all she talked about was Trump. Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump. Trump's no good. Trump is dangerous. And in this, she and remember, she's in the State Department, which we'll talk about in a minute.

CHAPTER 09 / 30 Discussion

Amy Pope Oxford Union Speech and Trump Border Policy

In a resurfaced speech from the Oxford Union, Amy Pope criticized Donald Trump’s border wall as an ineffective deterrent against sophisticated multinational trafficking organizations. She argued that Trump’s "America First" approach eroded institutional norms and damaged relationships with global partners like NATO. The speech is presented as evidence of the "swamp's" hostility toward policies that disrupt globalist migration agendas.

amy pope· oxford union· donald trump· border wall· globalism

49:24 Pop recently won her bid to become the first woman to lead the UN Migration Agency, defeating the current IOM Director-General Antonio Vittorino in a vote for the position. So they had a vote. We gotta vote. Hey, we fund that thing. We should have our person, our person should be running it. We need the director generalship because it's coming down to the wire here, people. We need to replace these lazy Americans. They're no good. They can't get by. You know, they're basically saying you can get people from other countries to live on the slave wages that Americans live on, which is, this is why we have strikes.

50:04 You know, inflation is making it hard for auto workers, hospital workers, you know, Kaiser Permanente on strike now because they're just not getting paid enough. So how do you solve that? Bring in people who will be happy to live in a tent. Problem solved. Problem solved. Yeah. Now let's... Screw you, strikers. Let's listen to Amy Pope four years ago when she was in the State Department. And this is very unfortunate, people shouldn't do these things. She did a speech at the Oxford Union. You know, this is where people go and make a case. It's kind of a fun thing to watch. Lots of debate. That's a debate thing. And she is a Trump hater. She's a super Trump hater. And all she talked about was Trump. Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump. Trump's no good. Trump is dangerous. And in this, she and remember, she's in the State Department, which we'll talk about in a minute.

51:00 She gives away why there was such a hate of Trump because Trump really was a threat to their global migration operation. Remember, people are showing up, they're not dirty clothes, torn, ripped, they've been on the beast train. No, no, they're a little wet from walking through the Rio Grande and they might have gotten a scratch from the razor wire, but otherwise the shoes are new, there's no luggage they're dragging around. This is a farce. So she's going to tell us how stupid Trump was

51:37 With his border walls, it's it's futile. I posit that he has no foreign policy, that what we're seeing is domestic policy dressed up as foreign policy. Whether it's climate change, whether it's migration, Iran, North Korea, the president does not have his eye on the long-term strategic interests of the United States. That's the stuff that we run, the elites, the globalists, we know what's good for the world, not this yokel. There was a spectacular debacle when the president tried to meet with the North Koreans. And where was the president?

52:22 When North Korea was testing their missiles, the president was talking about the southwest border wall. Now listen carefully because she's going to tell us exactly how sophisticated the globalist human trafficking operation really is. Now, is that American? I ask you, that was the national security issue that if you turned on any news station in the United States, he would be speaking about. The Southwest border wall. Now I spent many, many years working on issues involving Mexico and Central America, and I can tell you, and I'm sure you all know this, that their border wall is not actually a very effective deterrent in the 21st century.

53:09 There are bad actors coming out of Central America and Mexico, but these are sophisticated, multinational, very well-financed organizations that traffic in drugs, that traffic in people, and that traffic in arms. And they have submarines. And they have vast, sophisticated tunnels under our border. And they have air technology. They have a million different ways to get around a border wall. That's right. The NGOs are multinationals, well-funded, they got the tunnels, they have submarines, they have air technology.

53:52 Who do you think you are with your stupid wall? We have a million ways to bring our irregular migrants in around that. Because we run the world! Finally, and this one I think doesn't get enough attention, but I think it's critically important. President Trump is eroding the institutional norms and relationships. That's us. He's eroding our gig. But this is, this, everything was fine. We've got all these multi-billion dollar NGOs. We've got our kids and our grandkids working at the little NGOs. Everything was fine. Why are you doing this, Trump? In a way that is much more insidious than bureaucratic disruption. And this is happening in two ways. First, it's the relationships with our partners, with NATO, with United Kingdom, with Europe.

54:46 By devaluing these relationships, he devalues American power around the world. Because we are foam finger number one. What we do, people have to do as well. Now America's power is not just because we have a strong economy and a strong military. It's because we can lead and others will follow. When we dealt with Ebola, it wasn't just the United States going into West Africa. It was the UK. It was France. It was partners around the globe. We led, they followed. We lead the world. It doesn't matter if it's Ebola or Zika or COVID. We lead. We're the best. We know what we're doing. We're the elites. We are in fact the swamp. She's saying it. And second, the president's

55:36 public humiliation and disparagement of his advisors is deeply dangerous to America's positioning around the world. And I know this just seems like bureaucracy, you're draining the swamp. But it takes real work to come to an agreement with another nation. Yeah, we have to go to Brussels, we have to have dinners, there's parties, I mean, we have to dress up all the time. It takes real work to organize, you know, all the money we take from our American citizens and give it to ourselves and to our organizations, our air technology and our submarines. There is a building of relationships and negotiating of agreements

56:18 That happens time and again before the president sits down at a table with another world leader. I mean, you can't just sit down and have a chat. We have to have all kinds of meetings. And that's not happening here. And every time the president disparages his Secretary of State, his Secretary of Defense, his National Security Advisor, his defense specialists and advisors, he is saying to the world, you can't trust these guys. I don't trust them. Why should you trust them? And that is incredibly dangerous for what the United States needs to accomplish around the world.

56:57 Okay, so it's very clear. They were all mad and angry. He's upsetting the apple cart. This is how we've been skimming money off for years. This is how we're going to get our friends with business, cheap labor. They do not care about anybody but themselves. Quick clip here. She just was voted as the Director General of the IOM. Here she is. She's in front of the United Nations building. And listen to the arrogance. The bottom line is that humans are going to move, right? That is part of... I'm sorry, this is a Zoom call and it's something different. Human nature and it is the most basic fundamental human adaptation strategy. So

57:43 For me, it's not a question of whether people move. It's a question of how they move and whether we as international actors can build out ways for them to... Do you hear what she's saying? It's a question whether we as international actors on the global stage, whether we can move people around like chess pieces to make the world more equitable. That's what they're saying here. Oh, they move and whether we as international actors can build out ways for them to move so that they are not exploited, so that they have the. So that we don't want an actual coyote moving around. We want them to arrive clean.

58:25 Clean with clean shoes. We want them all. So we'll do we'll take care of you. We need ways we're going to make migration paths potential to reach their own human development, but also so they can contribute most effectively to the communities where they ultimately end up. The other thing is, as I said, that the demographics are really going to push I think all governments to start to explore migration as a way to respond to their own individual challenges. So whether you're a country who has a boom in young people, but not enough opportunities at home, or you're a country with an aging population who can no longer sustain its economy, there are going to be interests that

59:14 begin to align and I think our job is to help make sure they do so well. Okay let's take this to a local level. We now have Venezuelans, we have a lot more, but we have Venezuelans in New York City and it's a problem. Oh first we get them into the Roosevelt Hotel, all right that's good. A lot of money being made there by the Roosevelt Hotel, probably some cousins sit in the middle of that one organizing it all. And then we have suddenly temporary protected status for Venezuelans. And it's like, okay, well, I mean, I have a stepdaughter in New York. It hasn't been super easy for her to keep jobs. You know, the cool jobs have been shut down because there's no more money. She's now in the service industry, literally in a service industry.

CHAPTER 10 / 30 Discussion

New York Migrant Crisis, Governor Hochul and Mayor Eric Adams

Governor Kathy Hochul announced a new web portal to connect 40,000 Venezuelan migrants with 18,000 job openings in New York State. Meanwhile, Mayor Eric Adams has faced internal pushback for suggesting the border be closed and is scheduled to travel to Latin America to study the migrant journey. The non-profit Hot Bread Kitchen is highlighted as a corporate-funded entity facilitating migrant employment in the food service industry.

kathy hochul· eric adams· new york city· venezuelans· hot bread kitchen

58:25 Clean with clean shoes. We want them all. So we'll do we'll take care of you. We need ways we're going to make migration paths potential to reach their own human development, but also so they can contribute most effectively to the communities where they ultimately end up. The other thing is, as I said, that the demographics are really going to push I think all governments to start to explore migration as a way to respond to their own individual challenges. So whether you're a country who has a boom in young people, but not enough opportunities at home, or you're a country with an aging population who can no longer sustain its economy, there are going to be interests that

59:14 begin to align and I think our job is to help make sure they do so well. Okay let's take this to a local level. We now have Venezuelans, we have a lot more, but we have Venezuelans in New York City and it's a problem. Oh first we get them into the Roosevelt Hotel, all right that's good. A lot of money being made there by the Roosevelt Hotel, probably some cousins sit in the middle of that one organizing it all. And then we have suddenly temporary protected status for Venezuelans. And it's like, okay, well, I mean, I have a stepdaughter in New York. It hasn't been super easy for her to keep jobs. You know, the cool jobs have been shut down because there's no more money. She's now in the service industry, literally in a service industry.

1:00:03 It wasn't easy for her to get that job. A lot of people lined up to get it, but somehow this is all working perfectly well. And then we bring in the governor of the state, Hochul, who was a part of the system. You could just look at her hairdo. Pierre did it. And what has she arranged here? Oh, this is phenomenal. It's working! Turning now to the migrant crisis, Governor Holcomb announcing more than 18,000 job openings with nearly 400 employers who are open to hiring migrants. All right, Fox 5's Chris Walsh joins us now in studio. Chris, how does the state plan to connect migrants to these companies? Well, Steve and Teresa, they're actually going to open up a web-based portal starting tomorrow on the State's Department of Labor website. Now, the governor says

1:00:43 This means that more than 40,000 Venezuelan migrants who've come to New York will soon be able to hold the job and she says companies are lining up to hire them. In the words of Governor Kathy Hochul... This is a big deal. This is a big deal. This being the fact that on Tuesday migrants from Venezuela who arrived prior to July 31st will be able to apply for temporary protected status. Hokel estimates that 40% of the nearly 120,000 migrants who've come to New York are from Venezuela. She says they'll now be able to apply for work through a portal on an app. And luckily for me, because I tested it out, the app is simple.

1:01:23 It's not cumbersome. Nearly 400 companies across the state have already stepped up, offering 18,000 jobs, nearly a quarter of them in the restaurant industry. Hot Bread Kitchen is one such company. They provide culinary training and help place individuals in the food service industry. The New York City food industry needs the talent, grit, and creativity of the migrants coming to New York. Okay, so this sounded like there were a bunch of companies in New York that are desperate to have people fill these jobs, which my stepdaughter got with luck and perseverance. So I look at this and I see the CEO of Hot Bread Kitchen. She's the one saying, hey, this is great. Leslie Abbey, Esquire.

1:02:11 Go look at her LinkedIn. She's the chief executive officer of Hot Bread Kitchen. She doesn't look like a food person. Now look down the list. Her previous experience. Deputy executive director, chief operating officer of Covenant House, New York. Uh-huh. City of New York, administration for children's services. Huh. Let me take a look at this Hot Bread Kitchen. It's a non-profit! It's funded with $5 million, probably New Yorkers' money. $5 million. This is not a job. This is a non-profit. And then you start to look at what this thing is, this hot bread kitchen.

1:02:57 Oh, it's a write-off. They got parties, they got pictures of, oh boy, we've had all these fantastic, we've raised so much money. Oh, our featured partners, Bloomberg Philanthropies, Google, Citibank, Denise and Michael Kellen Foundation, Chanel, Goldman Sachs, Haagen-Dazs. This is party time. Write it off, oh we're doing so well for these immigrants. We're doing such a good job, Kathy. Good job, Abby. No! No, you're giving them our money. Again. This is not an actual job. And then the mayor of New York? Shut up. One of his assistants who showed up on television with Chanel jewelry, which I thought was somewhat inappropriate,

1:03:45 She gave the wrong message and they, oh no, this mayor is a problem, we gotta sideline him. The move comes a day after Hockel on Face the Nation called for a limit on who can come across the Mexican border. Which is just theater. It is too open right now. And a day after Mayor Eric Adams' chief advisor went even further. close the borders. The mayor likely would have been asked about migrants on Monday, but his staff has instituted a new policy. He will only take off topic questions one day a week. We're going to have one day a week so I can do the business of running this very complicated city. So I reached out to the mayor's office regarding that advisor's comments that the federal government should close the border. A spokesperson says that is quote

1:04:35 not the position of the administration. Now, speaking of the mayor, Adams on Wednesday will depart on a trip with stops in Mexico, Ecuador and Colombia in an effort to learn about the issues at the border and better understand conditions along a migrant's journey. He will return to the city next Sunday. The mayor has to be re-educated. That's what's happening there. You're not, hey, you're not taking any questions anymore. No answering of questions and we're taking it out of the city. You got to go down. We're going to re-educate you. No, they're going to wine and dine him. Of course, that's re-education. Yeah. Come on into the party, brother. You don't really want to save New York at all.

CHAPTER 11 / 30 Discussion

Mike Benz, State Department Stakeholders and Ukraine Censorship

Former State Department official Mike Benz discusses the "national security state" and its role in capacity-building foreign political economies. Benz claims the State Department has a vested interest in censoring American voices to protect war efforts and gas contracts in Ukraine involving companies like Chevron and Halliburton. He argues that the interests of "stakeholders" have superseded those of the American public.

mike benz· state department· censorship· ukraine· burisma

1:05:16 So this is mainly coming from the United States State Department, which makes total sense. Just look at who's run it in the past, especially during Obama, Hillary Clinton. Well, the woman is part of that clique of females that's still there. They're in the old Biden administration. Oh, yeah. The same ones, Lisa Monaco, the twerp. Lisa Monaco is also a torp. They're all kind of torpish. And a lot of lesbians too. A lot of lesbians. Valerie Jarrett. Yeah, Susan Rice, the whole group. So winding this up, there's actually a very interesting guy on the Tim Pool Show, which someone sent me a clip. Mike Benz.

1:06:06 Now, he's he worked in the State Department. He's now like an Internet freedom guy and he's like, well, he's a cyber guy. If you looked at his job, he was basically in marketing communications at the State Department. But he spells out what he witnessed and what it was like there and what the state we know from the economic hitman book. We know what's going on, but it's good to get a little reminder. that permeates that institution in a way that it doesn't at HUD or even at the White House. There's a sense of the bigness of the world and the interconnectedness of the world and the opportunities in the world to go region by region and stack the deck in ways that are advantageous to State Department stakeholders. This is one of these things where until the 2016 election happened and

1:07:04 And the national security state, which has always come home in so many ways. You can make an argument that even the Martin Luther King stuff and a lot of the COINTELPRO stuff was a proxy attack on the Vietnam War. The FBI only got the counterintelligence predicate on him because of him being backed by Stanley Levison, who was said to be a sort of communist Soviet. And you had DOD and CIA involvement in that FBI activity as well. There was always sort of a crackdown on this. What they've done in the modern era has actually shook my – I used to think that we've got this Department of Dirty Tricks that we started to set up after World War II. In 1947, we create the CIA. We changed the name of the War Department to the Defense Department.

1:07:46 to make it sound like we're not doing war. We create this entire NGO swarm army. We create these incredible embeddings between the national security state and the media, a soft power projection apparatus that could effectively control the political economies of any country we capacity build. But there was always sort of a sense, well, it's It's for the benefit of the people who live here. The bigger the American empire gets, the better off Americans are. More jobs are, you know, if Chevron does well, well that's more people who's got jobs in Texas and in Oklahoma. You know, if Pepsi Cola does well, you know, that's more for shipping. There was this At one point, there was a connective tissue between the people who live here and the empire abroad. And at some point, you know, pick your evolution point in globalization, you know, whether that was, you know, in the 70s, whether that was in the 90s when the offshoring really hit the hay and, you know, China joined the WTO and cheap labor. There were so many different points of departure from that.

1:08:43 And no surprise, Ukraine is no different. But in order to understand why it is that you get censored for talking about Ukraine stuff or political movements who are proxies for that get censored is because you now have a State Department vested interest in censoring US American voices. Because if they get a Matt Gaetz in as speaker, or if they get a sufficient enough caucus in the House Appropriations Committee to be able to kill funding, then there goes the war effort.

1:09:26 And then there goes the ability for Burisma to monetize the shale in the eastern region, or Chevron, Halliburton, Shell, and Exxon, which all have billion-dollar gas contracts with the Ukrainian government. All of that goes away if American people have sovereign capacities to think for themselves and decide, with those free thoughts, to enacted to have political representation that votes for that. So there's, this is, there's no, after Smith-Mont was modernized and after, you know, there's been no oversight, there's no Justice Department pushback. We're now in a brave new world where, you know, it's the State Department's world and we're living in it. Totally. I like his line early on in that little soliloquy where he said,

CHAPTER 12 / 30 Discussion

Olena Zelenska Cartier Shopping Allegations and Zelensky Wealth

An unverified report claims Olena Zelenska, wife of the Ukrainian President, purchased $1.1 million worth of jewelry at Cartier in New York during the UN General Assembly. The segment references a Scott Ritter documentary regarding Volodymyr Zelensky’s alleged global property holdings as evidence of high-level corruption during the ongoing conflict.

olena zelenska· cartier· volodymyr zelensky· corruption· jewelry

1:10:09 They want to make everything advantageous to the State Department stakeholders, not to the American public. No, of course not. To the stakeholders, which means the people that are corrupt. Yeah. in a nutshell. And there's a, man this is a great video, it went viral unfortunately on Instagram so I'm sure it's gone. It's this, was this woman, a young woman who was working at Cartier in New York during the UN General Assembly And the story she gives is that she was in essence an intern for a couple weeks. She's at Cartier. Olenska Zelenska, Zelensky comes by. That's Zelensky's wife.

1:10:55 And she's trying to be really helpful, like, would you like to see our selection? And the way she says it is, I don't think you're, I need your opinion. And she got this girl fired, but as the girl was leaving, she took a copy of the invoice of what Zelensky purchased that day, $1.1 million worth of jewelry at Cartier. And she shows it, she shows a copy of the invoice, whether it's true or not, I think that's the level we're talking about here. That's the level of corruption. Well, if anyone wants to go look at the Scott Ritter documentary on Zelensky, the volume one,

CHAPTER 13 / 30 Discussion

Chicago Amundsen Park Migrant Shelter Protest and European Censorship

Residents of Chicago's Amundsen Park neighborhood protested a plan to convert their local park into a migrant camp, confronting local aldermen over the lack of transparency. In Europe, the Dutch program Zembla is accused of editing tweets to frame anti-migration activists as extremists. The discussion notes that opposing mass migration is increasingly being treated as a criminal offense in the EU.

chicago· amundsen park· migrant camp· zembla· netherlands

1:11:38 The amount of property that guy owns all around the world. Beach houses, everything, yeah. Yeah, it's ridiculous. So while that's taking place in New York with these poor people, here's the Chicago residents. We were going to have a shelter at this particular location. You work for us! You work for us! You work for us! You work for us! You work for us! This is a local alderman who two days ago said, yeah, on Saturday we're gonna turn the, it's the Amundsen Park

1:12:24 which is not a poor neighborhood, but it's a thriving park. They got old guys playing checkers, they got kids playing basketball. They're going to turn it into a migrant camp. And they just shoved it down everybody's throat. And the residents are like, no, no, you work for us. It's not a poor black neighborhood, but it's predominantly black neighborhood. And the citizens just took over. Mr. Glover, you're going to get an opportunity to speak. No, no, no, no, turn the mic on. We're tired of hearing the politicians. Turn the mic on. Turn the mic on. Good evening, everyone. I'll show you how disrespectful this is. On the 5 o'clock news, they projected that the migrants would be here by Saturday. Welcome to the welcoming city. Well, I got to tell you, only certain areas are welcoming. That's us.

1:13:17 They say they want to use this park, but let me tell you, LaSalle Street Clark Street, all the office buildings. Nobody wants to be in the loop anymore. They all want to move west because of new buildings with better amenities. Those buildings are empty right now with water, heat, and everything. But they don't want the migrants down there. We're not anti-migrants, but this is so disrespectful for them to just sit up here with this crap and we're supposed to listen to it. There you go. That's what's really happening. There's now 500 people sleeping at O'Hare Airport.

1:13:56 It's everywhere. So when we look at this, we have to take our minds out of the stories of, well, there's the rape tree and it's the human traffickers. The human traffickers are these people. It's the NGOs and whoever... It's the State Department. Let's just boil it down. Yes, whoever... Our own State Department is doing this to us. USAID is a part... The State Department controls the USAID budget. Whoever becomes president, that's the main thing. Stop the money flow. Withdraw from the United Nations, certainly the IOM.

1:14:35 That's where it has, that's the only thing and it's doing damage in Europe. Our State Department, because when we lead everybody else follows. That's your problem right there. Look at who's coming in into Western Europe. Are these families? No. These are healthy young men. I love the, it's a military, they're bringing young men of military age in. They're not going to take over with a military coup. No. They're coming in to take your job. Cheap jobs. Cheap jobs, good paying jobs. Good paying non-union jobs. Because you're being a problem. You're striking. Why don't you take your slave wage? These people will, look, they'll live in a tent. They're in Chicago. They're Chicagoans. So that's what's going on. It's the State Department of these United States.

1:15:32 That's what's doing it. And it's been a plan for a long time, Angela Merkel, Kalergi. So, and you know, that's why, oh, you called the Great Replacement Theory, you're a xenophobic, racist, conspiracy theorist. No, it's because we saw your document and it literally said migration replacement. And we kind of thought that was a bad thing and we called you out on it. And then, oh, I'm sorry. And that's why now in Europe, opposing mass migration is about to be a crime. So if you post against mass migration, there's a very well-known documentary program in Holland called Zembla and they've been really good for a long time and they did a hit piece. They went to these people who had posted anti-migration tweets

1:16:34 and they went undercover and, you know, in essence exposed them as being horrible xenophobic racist a-holes by showing their tweets. But they edited the tweets where someone would be saying, hey, you know, these guys are going to get either beat out of here or thrown out of the country. They kind of edited that to saying, these people should be beaten or thrown out. But they just edited the tweets and so that's what you do. It's Ancilla, the black box organization, they have the online stuff. They exposed this and now this Zembla episode has been removed from the internet after the people were fired from their jobs for being xenophobic a-holes against the migration.

CHAPTER 14 / 30 Discussion

California COVID Misinformation Law Repeal and Medical Ethics

Governor Gavin Newsom has repealed portions of AB 2098, a law that allowed the state to discipline doctors for spreading "misinformation" regarding COVID-19. Attorney Laura Powell explains that the repeal was likely a tactical move to avoid a definitive unconstitutional ruling in court. The discussion explores how such laws shift the doctor's obligation from the individual patient to "public health" collectives.

gavin newsom· ab 2098· california· medical license· hippocratic oath

1:17:24 This is what's happening. Oh, don't talk against it. Don't say anything. Well, this sort of thing brings me to some clips and maybe a segway if you want to get out of this. Yeah, I do. I'm waiting for you. This idea of censoring at that level It's recently been tested in California, and I have some clips on this. Because if you listen to these clips, it's actually hair-raising when you see what they were up to and what they're trying to do. And there was a law passed in California, which was then unpassed. which required doctors to abide by government guidelines in so far as recommendation of vaccines, the therapies, whatever. No ivermectin, obviously, you take a shot. And this law was passed and signed by Newsom.

1:18:15 They were sued over this and let's play clip one. A statewide reversal of a law in California. Governor Gavin Newsom has now done away with portions of a so-called misinformation law targeting doctors signed into law by his own hand last October. Under that law, doctors would have been forced to follow government narratives on things like masks and vaccines or risk losing their medical licenses. Moments ago, we spoke with Laura Powell, an attorney with Californians for Good Governance. Laura Powell, thank you so much for joining us. Great to be on the show. Now that portions of California's COVID misinformation law have been done away with, what's next for you and your clients who are actually suing the state over this very law? Yes, I'm co-counsel with the New Civil Liberties Alliance on a case with five plaintiffs who are all doctors.

1:19:06 who challenged this California censorship law. We got a preliminary injunction in January. So the law has not been enforced since it passed last year, came into force January 1st. And just a few weeks later, we had a preliminary injunction. So now we're anticipating Newsom has now signed the law repealing AB 2098. It will take effect on January 1st. I imagine the state will now move to have our case dismissed as its moot. And I assume that our lawsuit was part of the motivation for them repealing AB 2098 because they saw the writing on the wall and saw they weren't likely to win, that this law was

1:19:46 going to be declared unconstitutional and they're hoping to avoid a legal precedent that would bind in the future to make a definitive statement about how this law violated the constitutional rights of doctors. Not to mention the Hippocratic Oath. This is kind of sinister when you listen to these clips and if nobody gets it out there, I'll explain afterwards. Let's play, go to two. And on that note, how would this law have impacted the doctor-patient relationship if it had stayed in law? Well, I always thought that a large part of this law was sort of the statement it made

1:20:25 to tell doctors that they should be afraid of speaking their mind and telling patients what they truly think, that they needed to stick to the government narrative. So, that chilling effect on their speech would happen regardless of whether or not the medical board actually used the law to go after doctors. But what happens there is that the doctor-patient relationship gets damaged because patients can't trust their doctors. And if they believe that the doctors aren't telling them their honest opinion, but are telling them what they think they need to say to protect their medical licenses. So, that

1:21:02 erosion of the doctor-patient relationship was one of the many reasons why this was a bad policy. Yeah, this was exactly what happened in COVID. I guess people even in California noticed that that was not a good idea. So it gets more interesting. This is the last of the clips. You got two more. Oh, okay. Then it gets... What's happened here is that the government, or Newsom and his lefty buddies, they saw what was going to happen. They're going to lose this case. It was writing on the wall. And what this looked like was a trial balloon for how they can rewrite the law and re-

1:21:42 redo it and put another law in place that might pass muster. And so they pulled the plug on this thing before anything could happen insofar as precedent's concerned, which I think is just the sickest thing I've ever heard. play this third part three. And in your view, given this was enacted into law in the first place, could this happen again down the road? Well, without a definitive statement from the courts that it's unconstitutional, we have the preliminary injunction, but that wasn't a complete opinion from the courts, it could happen again. Although I think what is happening now is we're going to see a change of tactics. I think repealing this law was a victory for us. We won the battle, but there's still the war to win. And I think the state is changing its tactics. We saw the bill's author

1:22:30 stating that they could still go after misinformation from doctors based on pre-existing law. And I know of one case where this is happening, that a doctor who said things like masks don't prevent the spread of viruses is having their license threatened, not under AB 2098, but under the pre-existing general law that says that a doctor who's negligent could lose their license. So I think this is a recognition from the state that this tactic was a failure, but I think they are still going to look for ways to try to control what people say on the topic of COVID. Wow. Wow. So not this time. Yeah, they're these. It was sick when they repealed the law because they only repealed it so that case wouldn't finish.

1:23:21 So there wouldn't be precedence in the law. So there's a fourth clip you said? Yeah, this fourth one was played. It gets a kicker in here I guess. And Laura, you actually touched on this a little bit, but given that medical treatment has for ages been tailored for the individual, do you see misinformation laws like this one disrupting that patient-doctor relationship in the future? Yeah, well, that's an interesting question is that the ethical obligations of a doctor go to their patient. And one thing I've noticed, you can see sometimes there's a switch of language where they say that the doctors have an obligation to public health.

1:23:57 and that their obligation isn't so much to the patient, but what they believe is best for everyone. And this isn't how medical ethics has worked in the past. And that seriously causes, if you're a patient and you believe that your doctor is not telling you to get vaccinated, for example, because they think it's best for you, but because they think it's best for others, that is really going to undermine your trust in your doctor. Oh, wow. Misinformation. Now that the interesting thing here is this has been thematic. This is you want to wear a mask because you don't want to get others sick. Yep. They've other, they've managed to switch the narrative so it's nobody's

CHAPTER 15 / 30 Discussion

UK Online Safety Bill, Ofcom and Nazi Editorial Law Comparison

The UK’s Online Safety Bill is analyzed, specifically Section 180, which criminalizes sending "false" messages while exempting "recognized news publishers" like the BBC. A comparison is drawn between modern editorial standards and Section 13 of the 1933 Nazi editorial law, which mandated that editors treat subjects "truthfully" according to state interests. Ofcom is granted new powers to regulate online disinformation through advisory committees.

online safety bill· ofcom· bbc· censorship· adolf hitler

1:24:41 It's to eliminate the idea of individualism. We have to stop thinking in terms of individuals. We have to start thinking in terms of the collective. This is all Marxist stuff. Transmoralism. It's so obviously Marxist stuff. Well, this kind of brings me into a couple of short clips I have here, which has been brewing. We don't, I mean, this is, there's two laws in Western Europe. The Digital Services Act from the European Union, which I'll talk about in a moment, but the one we've been looking at, especially in relation to the deplatforming of Russell Brand or demonetizing of Russell Brand and probably removal of Rumble or whatever, was the online safety bill. And this is the big UK Ministry of Truthiness bill about what you can and cannot do on the internet.

1:25:35 And I have, I think a UK law professor. It's on a Zoom, it's like 20 minutes. You should watch the whole thing. I just pulled out a couple of clips where he's literally talking about some of the sections of this online safety bill and what it really means. And the first one kind of sets the tone. These are pretty short. Part 10, communications offenses A person commits an offence, this is a criminal offence, if a person sends another person a message and that message conveys information that the person knows to be false and the person has no reasonable excuse for sending the message. Now it's important to understand

1:26:29 It's not just, you know, someone sending a text to someone else. When they define message, this means anything, any type of communication that's online. So this would affect search engines, they're sending messages, it's not just individuals and of course online providers, whether that's X or Facebook or Rumble or YouTube or anyone. Anyone sending a message is committing an offense if there's information that's false in it. So this is really good because messages is, as you said, it's not just an email or a DM. It could be a podcast, could be a blog post, could be a tweet,

1:27:13 could be anything and of course you've effectively outlawed lying which you should you should be able to lie I mean you send the dick pic and you say hey it's it's a 20 inches baby you know that would be a criminal criminal offense it'd be a lie and of course there are exemptions. The very next section this is section 181 which follows section 180 this lists exemptions from offenses okay so these people are going to be exempt from that law. A recognized news publisher cannot commit an offense under Section 180. The BBC, and they're specifically exempt in Section 56, a recognized news publisher, and it says the BBC, and it has a whole list of definitions. So they're going to approve which organizations are exempt from spreading misinformation.

1:28:08 This is, and this is law. So the guy basically said the BBC can lie but you can't. Correct. And this is law, it just has to get, you know, the king has to sign it. Which by the way, you Brits, you should look at this like the president, you know, if the president's gonna sign something or veto something, you know, people put pressure on the president, tell him he's not gonna be elected, you know, and it's not the same thing with the king, but you should be outside Buckingham Palace, like, with a guillotine. This is not okay. So there will be approved news organizations and you have to have a code, a special code of conduct, of standards that you adhere to. And how are they going to enforce this? Well,

1:28:53 Well, of course they're going to have, you know, this is, Ofcom is the British, I'd say it's the FCC, but a little bigger than that. Ofcom is huge. They really determine a lot. They determine what can and cannot be done on the airwaves. So Ofcom apparently. But there's one other thing, you know, which I think is really important. I've not seen this publicized anywhere, but section seven of the bill sets up, it gives huge powers to Ofcom, which is a regulator in the UK, and it tells Ofcom they've got to set up immediately a new advisory committee on disinformation and misinformation. Now that's

1:29:37 That's fascinating and it's something also that the EU Digital Services Act does because that is Orwell's ministry of truth. Ofcom can be told to set up a new committee to basically advise and rule on what is true and what is false and what is what is legal and what is illegal. And in the EU Digital Services Act, similar idea, they'll have flaggers who will be approved, you know, so you can be an approved flagger. I want to be a flagger! Yeah, yeah, that's where this is going. So then this doctor, professor, I'm gonna write that, flagger, then this, he does a little quiz. A little quiz time everybody, you can play along at home and you too, trolls. I'm gonna read you a very short couple of sentences. This is from a piece of legislation which was introduced to protect people from hate speech and it was to regulate journalism. I want you to tell me

1:30:39 Tell me where this was from. Quote, Editors must treat their subjects truthfully. Editors must keep out of the newspapers anything which is misleading, offends the religious sentiments of others, or offends a person's welfare, harms their reputation, or makes them appear ridiculous or contemptible. Unquote. Where's that from? Alright, you want to take a guess before we do the big reveal? It's from the United Nations. I have no idea. I actually thought it was Brave New World, Orwell's 1984. Like that's got to be a gag. That's got to be Orwell's 1984.

1:31:26 Let me see what the trolls say. AP Stylebook? Pravda? It actually sounds like, yeah, I think that's close. Let's see, no one, people are close, but now here we go. Section 13 of the editorial law introduced by Adolf Hitler's Nazi Germany on the 4th of October 1933. I was close. I said United Nations. Yeah, exactly. Someone had Germany was close. They were close. And so now you understand why we had that Department of Disinformation with the with the that up the the was that crazy lady.

CHAPTER 16 / 30 Discussion

EU Digital Services Act Transparency Database and Content Removal

The European Commission has launched the DSA Transparency Database, revealing that platforms like TikTok and Pinterest are removing over 70,000 pieces of content per hour in the EU market. "Hate speech" and "illegal speech" are cited as primary categories for removal, alongside intellectual property infringements on Amazon. The hosts advocate for Podcasting 2.0 and RSS as the only remaining avenues for uncensored communication.

dsa· tiktok· pinterest· hate speech· content moderation

1:32:10 Yeah, the one that was singing and dancing. The one that would be on Broadway. Yeah, that one. So the Digital Services Act is already up and running in Europe and they have, I'm looking at it right now live, the European Commission, the DSA Transparency Database. So this, oh it's changed since yesterday. So this is Digital Services Act Transparency Database. On this page you find some summary statistics of the statements of reasons submitted by providers of online platforms to the Commission. This page is a beta version of an analytics interface that will be revised, blah blah blah. So what this shows is you can see which platforms are removing content and for what reason.

1:32:56 So if I hit the TikTok here, it's kind of interesting because the top most active platforms in removing stuff, removing, not saying that this is where the most bad stuff is, TikTok number one, Pinterest is number two, Amazon three, Facebook four. Wait, what does Amazon got to do with the price of bread? Well, you'd be surprised. Are they talking about AWS? Nope. And Google Maps. I'll tell you what the most used... Google Maps? Oh, Google Maps is always blurring stuff because somebody got upset. So the most used categories, scope of platform service, so you're doing something that's against our terms of service. Number two, illegal or harmful speech.

1:33:57 Pornography or sexualized content, that's Pinterest. Pinterest is number one in porn removal. Violence, violence, and I think this is your Amazon intellectual property infringements. So this is where Amazon shines. They have to remove, you know, the fake Dior stuff and all that. So, and I would say if I'm looking at the list, you could look by keyword. Illegal or harmful speech is really the top one. And it's all stuff like hate speech, hate speech, hate speech, anti-LGBT, you know, not inclusive. But here's the thing. Of all these platforms in the EU, how many removals per hour do you think we're seeing?

1:34:49 So these are top platforms, there's others, but TikTok, Pinterest, Amazon, Facebook, Google Maps. How many pieces of content are they removing per hour for the EU market? One thousand. Seventy thousand five hundred and sixty four per hour. How many people do they have to do this? Apparently that's their entire payroll. I mean, is that crazy? Yeah. Here are the keywords. Animal harm. Podcasting 2.0. That's the only way to go. Here are the categories. Animal harm. Adults. So it's not like they're killing animals online, but I guess they're showing it. Adult sexual material by far the number one. Age specific restrictions, biometric data breach. Hate speech is number two after other.

1:35:48 You have to kind of go into other... this is an interesting little database. Risk for... LinkedIn, the show notes? Yes. Risk for public health is also quite big. But hate speech is big. That would be anti-COVID. Don't take the vax. Yeah, exactly. Let me see if I can find... what is the hate speech? Let me see. We can give you some examples here. Hate speech. I do not like hate speech. No, they're not showing me that. Anyway. Go take a look. Grounds, anyway, that's the grounds. Number one, content incompatible with terms and conditions. So, you know, you're just not allowed to say anything anymore. So yeah, Podcasting 2.0, RSS, blogs. This is the only way out, people. Bring back the readers. We can do it. We can do it. And this is what they want here. It's the same words, the same terms. That's why Elon is going to, you know, close registration. You got to pay. You got to know who you are.

CHAPTER 17 / 30 Discussion

COVID Booster Demand, Viral Load Testing and Masking Advice

Low uptake for the latest COVID-19 boosters is attributed to a lack of public fear and insurance complications. New medical guidance suggests that at-home rapid tests are most effective on the fourth day of symptoms due to changes in population immunity. Dr. Darian Sutton is criticized for recommending that individuals "mask up" while waiting for test results during the "viral season."

covid-19· boosters· rapid tests· viral load· masking

1:36:53 Gotta know who you are. Gotta have your credit card on file. Gotta know what you're doing. That's a foregone conclusion. What you're up to. You know what you're up to. Yeah, it is. It is a foregone conclusion. I guess we should just do it briefly since it kind of came up in your clips. Oh So the COVID booster is off. People are not able to get it. The insurance companies aren't paying for it. I think that this writing was on the wall and that's why they just didn't ship them. We're not going to manufacture this stuff. I don't know how that works in

1:37:50 in the medical field, but is it like the record business or the book business? Do you get returns? It's a flop. Forget it. Turn off the machines. Let's print something else. Seriously. It must be something like that. They didn't want to send it because people are not, there's no uptake. I've actually seen them start to do HPV commercials again. Hey kids, you're going to die of cervical cancer. Cancer of the throat boys, you don't want that. Look at Michael Douglas. They're ramping that up again. They're doing anything to keep the quotas going. So instead we need to placate people because we know that this was too early. We know that whatever the deal was, whatever, remember they were saying was a glitch? Oh, it's a glitch with our insurance companies. No, there's no glitch. They said it would be here around Halloween.

1:38:41 And somehow the, I think the marketing was out of step with production. And so the marketing wasn't ramped up enough. There's no demand. They haven't scared people. There's not enough news reports. We, you know, there's too much Trump in the news. So we're not really getting these COVID, so let's hold them over, let's go back to the testing. With Dr. Darian Sutton who's in for Dr. Ashton all week, it's good to have you as always. Great to be here. And we are talking about a study that shows that at-home COVID tests are actually most effective on the fourth day of symptoms. That's a little bit of a change from the past, break this down for us. At a weight. It's a little bit of a change and an important question as we step into this viral. So when did this happen?

1:39:19 The best time to test is on the fourth day. I like the way she says it as though everyone knows it. Of course we know this. And why would that, and why? Obviously people are gonna use the thing when they get symptoms, it's not gonna change. Oh no, you gotta use another pack. They want to get rid of these tests. They're all expired. Yeah. Oh yeah. Well, that's new too. But the thing is fourth day, wait until the fourth day. With Dr. Darian Sutton, who's in for Dr. Ashton all week. It's good to have you as always. Great to be here. And we are talking about a study that shows that at home COVID tests are actually most effective on the fourth day of symptoms. That's a little bit of a change from the past. Break this down for us. At a weight. It's a little bit of a change. What is, what does that guy go, moooo? What is he doing that for?

1:40:01 Why is the co-host going like a cow? Actually most effective on the fourth day of symptoms. That's a little bit of a change from the past. Break this down for us. What is that about? Because they know it's bull****. Yeah, exactly. Symptoms. That's a little bit of a change from the past. Break this down for us. It's a little bit of a change. An important question as we step into this viral season. So in this study they follow... Viral season? I'm gonna write that down. This is a good one. It used to be flu season. Now it's the viral season. You just get viral stuff. As we step into this viral season, so in this study they followed over 300 people and they followed those who were newly diagnosed with COVID-19 and they tracked their viral loads and they found that the viral load of these patients was highest on the fourth day of their sickness.

1:40:50 And also that corresponded with the most or the highest accuracy of those at-home rapid antigen tests. They found that they were most accurate on the fourth day. Now, why does this happen and why is this different from before? Many believe, and it's likely true, that the population that we're looking at right now is very different from when we first started this pandemic. We have a majority of whom have been vaccinated or have had a recent prior infection of COVID-19. Wait, wait, stop. What does he mean when he says this? pandemic as if it's in play. Oh, that's interesting. It's not a pandemic anymore, bud. Good catch, good catch. It's also different, you know, people have had it so they have this thing called antibodies which is now just accepted. Remember when that, you have no protection.

1:41:35 Take a shot. Without the shot you have no protection. But now there's people who had it so they're a little less susceptible. You know, kind of the way your immune system is supposed to work. Now why does this happen and why is this different from before? Many believe, and it's likely true that... Many believe and it's likely true. This is a great... Wow! Many believe in it's likely true. That's much better than there's no evidence. I think we need to use this. Many believe and it's likely true is fabulous. That's a great one. And this is from a doctor. This is Dr. Sutton.

1:42:12 Many believe, and it's likely true, you're gonna die. that takes time to build up your viral load because your body is already understanding what that infection looks like and fighting it. And so that is one of the reasons why it probably takes a little bit longer to get that rapid test accurate. Okay, so the test is crap. The test is complete moo crap. That's why I was going moo. You could be arrested in the Great Britain if you keep saying stuff like that. Well, and now this next bit

1:43:02 It comes back to what you were talking about in California. So what should you do in between then if it's not, you know, accurate until the fourth day? You know, my recommendation is that if you have symptoms, regardless of whether it's COVID, the common cold, or... Oh, you want to guess here? Well, you should get a shot. No, no, you should probably test, test, test. It doesn't hurt to take the test. No, no, no, no, no, no. Hello? The propaganda is not working on you. Do not take your test until the fourth day because it won't show you as positive with these expired tests because the tests now don't work as well because your body's fighting it, you see. So even though you feel like crap,

1:43:45 Don't test until the fourth day because the test can't determine if you have COVID until the fourth day when your body's just giving up on you. So what should you do? Come on, you know the answer. Wash your hands. Mask up! So what should you do in between then if it's not, you know, accurate until the fourth day? You know, my recommendation is that if you have symptoms, regardless of whether it's COVID, the common cold or the flu, I think you should mask up and take precautions so that you decrease the risk of transmitting it to others. And then if you test initially and it's negative and you're still symptomatic, repeat that test about 48 hours or two days. Is that the same if you don't have symptoms, if you come in contact with someone? I believe that if you come into contact with someone and you believe that it was a high risk interaction, you were very close to someone for a long period of time, then you should basically mind your level of risk when you're transmitting or walking around with other people. I'd wear a mask, for example, if I wasn't sure, and then get tested. What kind of interesting, Flubb, when you're transmitting, he was gonna say when you're transmitting.

1:44:42 Basically mind your level of risk when you're transmit or walking around with other people. I've already said it was gonna say trans are you transmitting? I'm transmitting right now. Mask up! Stop your transmitting! Mind your level of risk when you're transmitting or walking around with other people. I'd wear a mask, for example, if I wasn't sure and then get tested about three or five days after that interaction just to make sure you're not infected. But these at-home tests, they still work? They still work and the expiration dates are changing and so if you're curious before you throw it out, check online to make sure it's not expired. Oh, please. They're changing the expiration dates again! Oh, and there's still people who believe it. There's people masked up everywhere. I'm masked up. I don't, because- You see masked up in Fredericksburg, Texas? Yes, I have seen some people masked up in the, either old people, to a large degree- A lot of old people breathing their own effluent, bringing around their own demise quite rapidly, I'd say.

CHAPTER 18 / 30 Discussion

Rotary Club Presentation, Ham Radio and Local Networking

A host recounts a recent presentation at the Fredericksburg Rotary Club regarding the history of radio and the rise of podcasting. The experience included participating in the Pledge of Allegiance and meeting local ham radio operators. The segment emphasizes the importance of local community organizations like the Kiwanis and Lions clubs for networking and "protection through connection."

rotary club· fredericksburg· ham radio· podcasting· community

1:45:43 But okay, I see a lot of old people too that are wearing masks and staggering around. I did a speech at the Rotary Club, no one was masked up there, those old people are badass. Did everyone say hi to you? So this is something that had been asked months and months ago and I said yeah sure. You know, I'm looking at running for mayor, I was like, you know, might as well get the Rotarians. Oh yeah, you definitely have to hit the Rotary Club. Often. Gotta get the Rotarians on my side. And the Kiwanis, do they have Kiwanis and Lions there? I'm gonna find out. I think I need the Kiwanis and the Lions on my side. Yeah, definitely. So surprisingly, not everybody was old and decrepit. There was one lady

1:46:32 She had a dynamite face facelift. She looked 50. I was like, wow. I almost wanted to say, who did that work? I wasn't that rude. It's always tempting. I wasn't that rude. There were some young people there. There were some young Rotarians. Good for them. Yeah, I'd say late 20s, early 30s. The Rotary Club is huge in France. You're a Rotarian and you go to France and you meet up with those guys that put you up. My grandfather was a lifelong Rotarian in Armonk, or Rye, it must have been Rye, Westchester. Oh, that's where all the spooks are, Rotarians. Of course! It's a great group to be a part of. Yeah, you'd want to be one there. And it was interesting because twice, when I spoke at the city council meeting and at the Rotary meeting, it was the second time in less than a month

1:47:29 that I was part of a prayer and the Pledge of Allegiance. I don't think I've been a part of that with a Pledge of Allegiance for 50 years. Wow. People don't do that anymore. Well, they do there. Yeah, and then they had their their rotary thing. They also have like a Pledge to the Rotary. Yeah, they have four four things, you know, but it is it good for humanity? I forget what it was, but they had a little it's like a Boy Scout chant. Anyway, my point was that I was trying to kind of connect with these people. They want me to talk about podcasting. Imagine this assignment. Talk to talk to the Rotary Club about podcasting.

1:48:06 So I was... That would be... that sounds like a challenge. Yes, well, here's how I did it. I talked about, you know, as a boy, transistor radio, my love for radio, and then I said... So you're stalling? No, no, I was leading into... anybody remember CB radios? All hands went up. Because that's 70s. Oh, everybody had a CB radio. And then, you wait for it, but I said, you know, that reach wasn't so far. It was good though because you could talk to citizens nearby, but really was for traffic information and just, you know, yapping about. But then, you know, I became a ham radio operator. Anybody a ham? Whoa, five hands.

1:48:50 Like all hands more than none. That's good. No, but that's more than I've seen in a long time. And then after the, after my speech, like, Hey, you should come to the, to our, uh, our meetup. Oh yeah. That was a mistake. Thursday morning, 7 30 at the diner. 7 30. I'm going to go like, we'll help you get your antenna up. We'll get your gear going. I love these guys anyway. So yes, still working on my, so lions and what was the other one I need to hit? Kauwattas. Kauwattas? Kauwanas. Kauwanna. Kauwanna. What do they do? Kauwanna, Kauwanna, Kauwanna. What do they do? There's also the optimists. I do, we do have a Masonic Lodge here. Oh yeah, well you definitely want to talk to them. And with that I'd like to thank you for your courage saying the morning to you, the man who put the sea in the cow crap. Ladies and gentlemen, say hello to my friend on the other end, the one and only Mr. John

CHAPTER 19 / 30 Discussion

Value for Value Model, Podcast Apps and Global Censorship

The show celebrates 16 years of operation using the "value for value" model, eschewing corporate advertisements and endorsements. Listeners are encouraged to use modern podcasting apps like Podverse and Podcast Guru to bypass potential platform censorship in the UK and Canada. The hosts reiterate that the show's survival depends on the time, talent, and treasure of its community.

value for value· podcasting 2.0· podverse· mastodon· censorship

1:49:48 Well in the morning you have a shadow crane and more ships keyboard to ground feed ZS up to what games nice out there and in the morning to the trolls in the troll room 1977 is that good? Yeah, it's up 100. Hey, there you go. Then they hung with us We're like a buck 50 into this good work trolls. Good to have you here. You can join them at troll room dot IO 50 What hour and 50 minutes? Yeah, I know. I'm doing like a broadcast talk. No, it's just like sports guys. Sports ball. Sports talk radio. Well, give me an example of sports talk radio.

1:50:30 Yeah, the guy's came in at a buck fifty So light is light is a buck fifty. It's light is a buck fifty. Well, we're heavy. We're late. It's a buck fifty But yes troll room dot IO is where you can hang out with all the trolls You could also use a modern podcast app at podcast apps calm The one that will alert you now actually podcast guru people are loving podcast guru now, and then you can waste this because it alerts you very quickly, like within 30 seconds of the bat signal going out. And it's just the way it functions. People pop around. All these apps are compatible. So I use several different ones for different reasons.

1:51:10 But yeah, people like the podcast guru. I like Podverse, but a lot of people... Your favorite is Podverse, you've been plugging it. Yeah, because it has great notifications and it's not overly complicated. I like it. I like it a lot. And all your old podcasts work in it. And it's a part of Podcasting 2.0. So in the UK, Europe, EU, you better get on board with that because everything else is going to be shut down. Apple's not going to be able to do it. They're going to block. They will block probably our networks, our URLs, whatever. We're gonna have to go to Tor and IPFS. They'll never be able to stop us, but man, it's getting bad. And hope they don't, and Canada, Canada, they're gonna be on board with this stuff. Canada is out of control.

1:52:00 You can also follow us at noagendasocial.com or Mastodon, our little spot on the Fediverse, which is just a small little outpost. We have 10,000 users from time to time. We purge and come back in. Banned outpost. Very banned outpost. You can follow John C. Dvorak at noagendasocial.com, Adam at noagendasocial.com. Probably best is get your own little Mastodon and follow us so no one else can stop you. It's pretty easy to set those up yourself now, five bucks a month. And just don't name it anything like, hey, this is Joe's no agenda instance, because you'll get blocked immediately. You don't want that at all. So value for value is the way that we have survived. And it'll be 1600 shows, 16 years this month, which is quite amazing.

1:52:51 And we have never taken corporate money. We have never run ads. We've never done native ads or any kind of endorsements except for stuff we really believe in, but it's never been paid for. We're happy to do that. And we asked you to contribute this value, the value that you receive. You know, you get that, like you listen to the show, you learn about what's going on with California law and doctors. You learn about the migration replacement. You are much smarter for it. You can be at the water cooler saying, oh yeah, oh yeah, have you heard this Pope woman? Who's spending your money on these people now sleeping in your parks? State Department? You could look smart. You'd probably get dates. I think it's a good way to get dates. In the office. I question that, but maybe. Well...

1:53:40 If you get a date, it'll be the right person. Well, that's true. That's probably the way to look at it. But it could be some girl that's off the deep end. Well, it could be a guy. I mean, we have women listening too. No, we only talk about guys. No, girls. You talk about guy stuff. Screw guys in the office. So all we ask for in return is time, talent, or treasure. Now, when we say this, I want to make it very clear. The time and talent that you're sending back and the treasure is not for us, it's for your NOAA Gender Brothers and Sisters. It keeps this thing running. It keeps everything in operation.

1:54:18 It keeps the time and talent that we have from people keeping servers running. Hello, Void Zero. Hello, Sir Ben Rose. The time and talent. Darren O'Neill, getting everybody warmed up. Can you imagine? Can you afford a warm-up guy? We can't afford a warm-up guy. At all. Not a good one who does it for two hours. This is great. He's a good warm-up guy. He's a great warm-up guy. He's got the energy level, the whole thing. All we're missing is his arms being thrown up in the air constantly. We have no agenda stream. 24 hours a day. The troll room. All of these things are time and talent done by people who we don't have to employ or look after or police or do it or have meetings with.

CHAPTER 20 / 30 Discussion

Episode 1595 Artwork, Jamaal Bowman Fire Alarm and Speaker Ousting

The hosts review AI-generated artwork by Nick the Rat and discuss the recent ousting of Kevin McCarthy as Speaker of the House. Representative Jamaal Bowman is criticized for pulling a fire alarm in a congressional building, which he claimed was a mistake. The media coverage of Matt Gaetz’s motion to vacate is analyzed, with the hosts suggesting the political drama is a "staged show" for public consumption.

nick the rat· jamaal bowman· kevin mccarthy· matt gaetz· speaker of the house

1:55:07 This is dynamite, but it's really for your no agenda brothers and sisters who keep this all running. I just want to make that very, very clear. We so appreciate what everybody does. Now, another way is we have our artists. This is interesting. I have somehow not update the show numbers. No agenda notes. Dot com. That's interesting. Why did that not work? Here we go. Hmm. What? Well, I'm trying to I'm trying to get to our show notes from the previous show. And for some reason, it didn't update. OK, let me go to no agenda, no agenda notes dot com, because otherwise I don't even know who actually won the artwork. You do. You talked about him already in the show. Nick, the rat. Oh, that's right. Well, I'm a busy guy. OK, hold on.

1:56:13 I just need to get the show notes, all the show notes up. Okay. Here we go. It was titled Bin Police. No, 19, that's right, 1995. No, I got it. 1995. Title of it was Bin Police, which was okay. It wasn't that, I don't think, I think we both agreed it was kind of like, eh, it was an okay title. We didn't really have anything else that worked for us per se. But the artwork was indeed done by Nick the Rat. And right away, I know it's in the social, that's our little outpost. ComicStreetBlogger was gleefully posting, It is AI! Nick admitted it is AI! It is AI! Well, you know what? Nick is better at AI than you are then, Mr. AI. Because it worked. Although we both thought the composition was off. Wouldn't you say that that was our... we did have that complaint? I didn't have that complaint. We said something that we didn't... there was something not right about it. It wasn't up to Nick's standard or...

1:57:15 No, you, my comment was that you, I'm surprised you haven't said it was too small. Well the no agenda NGO was not too small. No, but the Cory Dvorak blurb at the bottom was too small. Anyway, we love having Nick the rat back and he hasn't submitted art for how like eight years How long has it been since he submitted? Oh, he at one point if you look at the ratings He's the leading guy for a couple years. Yeah, and then he gave up he was on a roll He was he was like Martin JJ all of a sudden. They just kicked ass and they quit There's another guy I'd like to see come back Martin JJ. Yeah anyway

1:57:55 We had other submissions. Let's see, you actually liked the podcast Kill the Radio Star, I think, if I recall properly. No. No? You said the guy with the radio on his head. You liked that one. You didn't say that. No, I said I just noted it. I didn't think it was good. I thought that the thing we had to talk about was below the Nick the Rat piece, which was ha ha ho ho NGOs have got to go. Little note, a programming note about these types of slogans. People, go, John. It's hey, hey, ho, ho, not ha, ha. Hey, hey, ho, ho. NGOs have got to go. It's always hey, hey, ho, ho, never ha, ha, ho, ho. Who did that? That was like a fail. Who did this? And then the other one was a bunch of people anticipated our discussion of Bowman's pulling the big mistake.

1:58:46 Yeah, you anticipated a story that was lame. I mean, it wasn't something we wanted to talk about. I mean, yeah, he's the same guy who says that no one's above the law, and then he broke the law by pulling the fire alarm in Congress to slow down the process and got caught on camera because he's an idiot. And he's a former school principal, so he knows what a fire alarm is. He thought it was, oh, I thought it would open the door. I'm a liar. He's a lying creep. He's a liar. No, but we never discussed it because it wasn't what I just said is the whole story. Well, here's what concerns me. Is this what people want us to talk about? Well, I would suspect that both, let's see, Correct the Record and Parker Pauly wanted us to talk about it. Or? Those are the two who did that.

1:59:41 Or is this more reflective of the drivel that people are subjected to in between our shows? I think it's the drivel. It's like, oh, all you hear about, oh, everywhere. I mean, you should know, something this unimportant? I mean, it's borderline Taylor Swift level this. Yeah, Taylor Swift. And all it did is just stop the play. It just stopped the performance. You all know that by now. You know what's going on. Here, we're $2 into the show. We're $2 in. We haven't talked about Kevin McCarthy or haven't used the word speaker.

2:00:21 Outside of the FEMA test once. Yeah. Cheesy speakers people have. Because it's all a little show for your enjoyment. Just spin your wheels. This is why you're here. This is why you come to the No Agenda Show. This is the beauty of it. Do we even have any clips on the McCarthy? I have some thoughts on it, but I don't have any clips. You know what? You want to do a donation segment clip? I have one clip. On the speaker? Yeah, I do. I have one clip. Let's see if I have one. It's a... Oh, it's a... Yeah, I have one clip.

2:00:59 You want this clip? Alright play. Come on here we go. The yeas are 216. The gays are 260. Did he just say that? The gays? Sounded like it. The yeas are 216. Yeah he said yeas. The nays are 210. This morning the capital in chaos after that historic. Oh this is chaos. This is where like it's historic. This has never happened before in our lifetime. Think about that. that. Think about that. Soak in it for a moment. This is historic. Never before in America. These are crazy times. The office of Speaker of the House of the United States House of Representatives is hereby declared vacant. So this is ABC. Where do you think they're going to take this at the end of this report?

2:01:43 Climate change? Close enough. Eight Republicans led by far-right Florida Congressman Matt Gaetz and joined by all Democrats voted to remove Kevin McCarthy as Speaker. A humiliating defeat, McCarthy served only nine months, the second shortest tenure of any Speaker in US history. His term bookended by Republican infighting. It took 15 votes for him to become speaker back in January, forcing him to make concessions to far-right members, including a rule change that would allow a single lawmaker to call for a vote to remove him. That concession proved to be McCarthy's downfall. He has failed to take a stand where it matters. So if he won't, I will. Congressman Matt Gaetz targeted McCarthy for working with Democrats last weekend to pass a bill to keep the government funded until November. You can say the seeds of this were planted by all of the deals he cut back in January. You could also say the seeds of this were planted by the rise of the MAGA movement inside the Republican

2:02:40 party over the last eight or nine years. Even though Donald Trump was on the outside of this deal, his fingerprints are all over it. In a news conference last night, McCarthy said he has no regrets but said he won't run for speaker again. Our government is designed to find compromise. I don't regret my efforts to build coalitions and find solutions. I was raised to solve problems, not create them. But McCarthy saying the move to oust him was about more than politics. You all know Matt Gaetz. You know it was personal. It had nothing to do about spending. It all was about getting attention from you. I mean, we're getting email fundraisers from him as he's doing it. Join in quickly.

2:03:24 That's not governing. Pointed the finger at Democrats claiming former Speaker Nancy Pelosi assured him that Democrats would have his back if Republicans tried to oust him. In the end, Democrats grew furious with McCarthy, citing what they describe as broken promises, along with his TV appearance this past Sunday, where he appeared to blame Democrats for wanting a government shutdown. It's all about Trump. It's Trump. It's all about Trump. Oh for Trump. Everything's about Trump. Just Trump. Trump Trump Trump Trump Trump Trump Trump. That's all that it's about. Well I have a clip but I can skip it. Please. I don't care. Let's thank our... I think the whole thing by the way was was staged. Of course. Brought? Really? What? Gambling? There's acting going on here? Please. We kick it off.

CHAPTER 21 / 30 Discussion

Executive Producer Credits, Birthday Shoutouts and Knighting Ceremony

The executive producers for Episode 1596 are recognized, including a $2,209 donation from Dogpatch and a $1,000 "switcheroo" donation from Walker Phillips for his wife's birthday. A new knight, Sir Leo of Low Earth Orbit, is dubbed following a $1,000 contribution. The segment also previews the significance of the upcoming Episode 1597 in relation to the Fibonacci sequence and the golden ratio.

dogpatch· walker phillips· fibonacci· sir leo· knighthood

2:04:18 Our executive and associate executive producers, these are people who just like Hollywood receive credits for supporting the best podcast in the universe. Number one on the list with 2209, he does it every single month with a number that is code, we don't understand it. It's someone does somewhere, no doubt, synonymous of Dogpatch and Lois Labovia, always helping us out. A bridge just got blowed up. He says, Thank you to all producers that continue to make this a useful source of information. Lately, my boots on the ground experience has resulted in very muddy boots and not from climate issues. Now if that's a code... Okay, so that's code for something. You know what I think it is? He was at Burning Man. Huh?

2:05:15 But that was claimed to be climate change, so I mean, I don't know. He doesn't believe in it, but my boots on the ground experience has resulted in very muddy boots. I mean, that's clearly code for someone. It was somewhere and I think they get the playa. I love it. It's as good as anything else. I'll take number two while we're at it. Walker Phillips is in San Rafael, California. $1,000 and this is a switcheroo donation to ensure that my smoking hot wife, uh, Cara Paravelle, Cara Paravelle, celebrates her birthday this Friday, October 6th as a dame of the Noah Dinner Roundtable. I would like to humbly request that you reserve her daming ceremony for a future show as this is a surprise birthday gift and I would like her- this is nice. What a sweet husband.

2:06:13 I would like her to choose her own food and drink for the ceremony, smart man. I'll have her send a note with her request. Please give her... He says... What's that? Well, we didn't get anything. No, that's why she's not being damed. Until she's ready. It's a happy birthday. Happy birthday, Kara. Please give her a biscuit on her birthday and add it to the birthday list. Thanks for everything. We love listening to the show together every week. Cheers, Walker and Kara. They always give me a biscuit on my birthday. What a beautiful, beautiful. This is a contradictory note. He said specifically. He wanted her to celebrate her birthday on Friday, which is tomorrow, as the dame of the No Agenda Roundtable. But yet she's not on the list because she didn't send in her requests. I find this to be distressing.

2:07:03 It's like giving her a picture of the earrings before she gets them. A lot of people do that. Yeah, well this is the same thing. Congratulations. Not even close because she will be given a birthday shout out. Why are you ruining her birthday? I'm not ruining it, I'm just saying she maybe should be damed. No! He specifically says no. I'm not taking that risk. That's why you read it. Okay, then it's your responsibility now. Okay, I'll go on with anonymous in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Actually, I should mention another donation that came in which I guess will be credited on the next show, which she sent a note in. I just want to mention this because it turns out

2:07:49 that she did a Fibonacci... No, that's for next show. We got specific instructions. No, but I gotta... To ignore that! No, no. Because people need to know in advance of next show. Oh, okay. It's a beautiful... It was mind-blowing. I saw... I have it here. It's mind-blowing. We should almost put it in the show notes. It's so mind-blowing. I'm gonna put it in the next newsletter. Okay. It shows that the Fibber, Fibber, Fibber, the Fibonacci sequence has created the golden whatever it's called. It's just unbelievable what's happening on show 1597 in terms of Fibonacci numbers. 1597 is the top of the Fibonacci curve.

2:08:37 Yeah, it creates that crazy looking circle and the golden or whatever it's called. The golden ratio. It's all there. Next show on Sunday, 1597. It's mind-boggling when you see it. So you have to donate for 1597 because it'll be the luckiest show ever. It'll be in the newsletter, the picture that she drew of the of the sequence, the Fibonacci sequence, 1597. So yes, it has to be discussed. We'll put her, she'll be listed in the next show as the executive producer. Meanwhile, we got anonymous in Cambridge, Massachusetts, 334.

2:09:20 He wants Space Force and some baby-making F-35 guy scream karma. Dear John and Adam, my wife couldn't stand being married to a peasant, so I'm finishing out my knighthood with this donation. Peasant. I'd like to be known as Sir Leo of the Low Earth Orbit. And can I get a dookie, a dookie, a cookie, cookie dough, and grape soda at the round table? Oh, that's disgusting. Cookie dough and grapes, yes it is disgusting. Can I also get a birthday shout out for the seventh? I don't know if he's on the birthday list. Anonymous is on the birthday list, absolutely. Keep doing what you're doing. Space Force! You've got... Karma.

2:10:08 You asked, we got it. Jonathan Young, State College, Pennsylvania, 333.33. I have no note from Jonathan. Do you have a note from Jonathan? No, I got zip. Double up karma for Jonathan. You've got karma. You're outgoing as Zachary Nelson in Sneeds Ferry. Sneeds Ferry, California. Assuming you still have a fairy. In the morning, fellas, I found the best podcast in the universe at peak COVID psy-op and told myself if we're all still around when I turn 33, I'll de-douche myself. I think he thinks he wants to de-douching. Yeah, we got this. You've been de-douched. And here we are. My birthday was yesterday. 10-4, good buddy. So I thought it appropriate to donate 333.33. I survived the Marine Corps' COVID shot critical thinker witch hunt, but it still ultimately canned my career. So naturally, I'm executing phase one of my exit strategy as we speak, part

2:11:08 A phase one is starting an Etsy shop. It is phase one always. An Etsy shop with my wife making educational and seasonal crafts for children, reinforcing project-based learning as a homeschooling mother of two, a mother of two human resources with a master's of education in literacy. My wife assures me this will make sense to other homeschooling mothers. The October projects were just listed, so if you have little ones at home, please check the Snowy Owl. Snowy Owl Creative. Creative out at, you know, www.snowyowlcreative.etsy.com. Snowy Owl Creative. Use code ITM10 for 10% off. Jingles, can I get a please get the F35 guy scream goat scream one two punch? I can't thank you enough for what you guys do. Please have a lovely day. Signed, Zach.

2:12:06 Okay, yeah, we can just say who wants the F-35. I think the goat scream should be first. It makes me laugh every time. Sir, 1% is in Dixie, Washington, 33333. And he wants, oh, he wants I love bugs and another F35 scream. Oh, this is very popular. And a goat scream, karma. Okay, as you're reading this note, I'll be flying through the US skies on my way to a friend's wedding in Nags Head, North Carolina on Saturday. Coincidentally, the wedding is on my birthday, so please put me on the birthday list for this 48th spin around the sun I'm embarking on. Did you write this with chat, GPT? From my seat in the first class cabin.

2:12:49 I plan to keep an eye out for French bed bugs and any unattended F-35s speeding past. I'll post pictures to knowage on the social if I spot any. I promised that I would get back to you with more details on Liberland. Ah yes, the topic of my previous executive producer note. I'll be doing so soon but at present most of my energy is going into my pest control business. It's a very busy time of year for Z Pest Control LLC. So if you're listening from the Walla Walla Valley, please do not call me for pest control help. That's an anti-spot. I love it. I may be forced to write off this donation of my taxes as an advertising expense if anyone does and says something like, ITM! Where will the federal grant money come from the study for the study of the intersectionality of transgendered amoebas in intermittent puddles in Africa? Think of the children! Faithfully suppressing your exit strategy one percent at a time, Sir 1% Baron of Liberland.

2:13:46 Sir Scobie's up. He's in Charlotte. North Carolina, thank you both for the value especially the insight on Russia Ukraine trans Maoism kovat in Africa This donation brings me to Duke. He's the guy he's the only he's the only guy that cares about these topics Yeah, your number your it the guy Scovey you're the guy for the especially Africa. Yeah

2:14:30 For the roundtable, please order up the drink of choice for every troll in the troll room. That would be Paps Blue Ribbon. There you go. Bottom up, trolls. Love is lit. Sir Scovia the Piedmont. SirMaga Odessa Florida 333 SirMaga here I saw 10 $3.33 gallons of gallons signs in Florida this weekend I knew it was time to donate that's right you see that number I was hit in the mouth by Julian of Boston two years ago I've not missed a show since please give me a little Rev Al All right, let me give you a little rev. I'll give you a little respect brother. So we got a note from the anonymous lesbian. Yes. She says she's not overboard. She was scolding me for mentioning that she might be. She was very mad. She copied me on it to make sure I knew.

2:15:28 She was irked and she says she's broke because you know she's a classical musician and I'm guessing you're bringing Venezuelan classical musicians up so they can even lower the salaries even more. She's gotta be what's going on. She does have a new album dropping and I said Cinnamon Towns, I want to hear it drop. I told her to pick it up. I'm excited. I told her hey I can get you value for value we can we can make you some real money with that thing. Kevin McLaughlin's up next of course He is the Duke of Luna Archduke of Loon the lover of American comes in North Carolina. It's not 333 I'm not his regular spot. Yeah, so he's up there to get some other he says Please squeeze in the name the melon mix to the end of the show mix and I think there's a melon mix coming up at The end of the show got it in there brother of course

2:16:18 Sir Don Francis, Chandler, Arizona. RoaDux2222, our first Associate Executive Producer for episode 1596. In the morning, gents, no jingles, but a health karma please for my smoking hot wife Dame Stephanie, my dad George, and my best friend Bobby the C. Love is lit. Sir Don Francis of Chandler. You got it, Sir Don. You've got karma. Nicholas Crehal. In Stanhope, New Jersey, 222. ITM, No Agenda Nation, switcheroo, this donation of 222 is to be credited toward Bork the Dog's Knighthood. That's Bork the Dog.

2:17:01 To be the first ever fleece and fur puppet to be served at the round table, Bork is the co-star of the Arbor Buddies YouTube channel and live performance show. Contact Arbor Buddies Live at gmail for booking information on the NJ area. We're doing dog bookings now? I guess. Can we please have an F Cancer Karma for Adam? Krodinger of the Puppet Nerd podcast. Adam is a pillar in the puppet making community and is currently undergoing yet another round of chemo for brain cancer. We'll do that. Thank you for everything you guys do for our amygdalas. You got it, and here it comes.

CHAPTER 22 / 30 Discussion

Connecticut Meetup Report, Producer Donations and Global Karma

A successful No Agenda meetup in Higganum, Connecticut, is detailed, featuring a diverse group of listeners at a local truck bar. Various producers are thanked for their donations, including Linda Lou Patkin of Image Makers Inc. and several contributors from Florida and Australia. "Health karma" and "job karma" are distributed to producers and their families as requested.

connecticut· meetup· image makers· karma· donations

2:17:44 You've got karma. I'm going to do the Connecticut meetup so you can do the last... I'll do Linda Loupatkin. Linda Loupatkin. You know where she is? She's in Lakewood, Colorado. I've heard. Yeah. And she wants some jobs, Carmen, for a resume that gets results. She says go to imagemakersinc.com for all your executive resume and job search needs. I like the fact that she's got a promotion here, but it's short. That's ImageMakers Inc. with a K dot com or just find Linda Lou Patkin under the show's producers list. Jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. And then we have a wonderful photo that was sent to us from the Connecticut meetup in Higga Higga Higginam, the town, Adam, whose name you can't pronounce. We forgive you. It's not Higga Higga Higginam?

2:18:39 And so there's a picture, did you see this picture? This is... Yes I did. This is, this is, I wish they would put, they should put this online because this is a picture of Noah's genome, I'm gonna count 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, like 15 people. We've got a black guy, we got a cowboy, we got a nerd, we got an old guy, we got a smoking hot blonde, we got a like spook in the background with a hat and did we see you spook? I mean this is the perfect no agenda meetup crowd. I love it. Great meetup at the truck bar. There could not have been a better way to spend a rainy Saturday afternoon than hanging out with No Agenda fans. It's $200 by the way. The drinks, food and conversation were all great with a bunch of cool and down-to-earth people. Attach the picture of most of us who came to the meetup. Please accept the enclosed check with a donation amount of $200. The money is from all of us who attended the Connecticut meetup. Also shout out to Tito Till for hitting me in the mouth several months ago. That's

2:19:38 Beach Girl and says, have a great day, Adam and John. Thank you for all that you do. Thank you. Thank you very much. We love these meetups, not just when you send value to the show, but we know that you have connection amongst each other and that always brings you special protection. We'll be doing more of our meetups in a moment as we do have a couple of items on the list, including a nighting or two. We also have some birthdays and until then, John's gonna take us through. I think there's a make good on there, isn't there? That's a... let me see. Yeah, there is... I believe it's a night note actually. But I'll read it right now. Oh no, this is a missed birthday donation. Thank you for reminding me. This is from Daniel McGee in Mount Juliet, Tennessee.

2:20:20 I'm writing to you because I don't recall getting credit for a $59 donation. Right after Adam's 59th birthday. I believe this may have been because I didn't include my info in the note or there were some issues with donations for that show. I'd like a make right, we call it a make do, if you'd be so kind, and a de-douching thank you from Daniel McGee in Mount Juliet, Tennessee. Thank you very much, Daniel, I appreciate it. You've been de-douched. You deserve it. Let's look at the rest of our people here and starting with Sir Knight of the Eastside in Maplewood, Minnesota came in with a $198.90. And I want to mention this because I'm going to put this out there because of the Taylor Swift mentioned earlier. He says this is a Taylor Swift donation because 1989 was the year she was born. Wow. Thanks for that info.

2:21:12 So now anyone who wants to get, you know, do that, I want to see if there's anyone besides Sir Knight. Sir Hugger of Kittens and Zandam. Uh, one, two, three, four, five? Oh, and he's a F Cancer. He has a F Cancer for an ill friend. Yeah, we break for F Cancer. You've got karma. Aaron Lattek in Houston, Texas, $100. John Robineau, $100. Kristen Wiggins in Dover, Florida, $100. Kevin McLaughlin is back with 8008. The boobs, he's the Archduke of Loony. He's going to be a Duke pretty soon, the way he's going with these donations. Not missing a show. Eric Adler in Punta Gorda, Florida, 8008.

2:21:57 Pete Jansen Oviedo. There's a way I pronounce that. I'm not sure what it is. Oviedo! Florida, 8008. Wow. Wyanne Cartini in Torrington Connecticut 7421 Melissa Reeve in Winchester Virginia 70 Kenny Halstead in Elizabeth City North Carolina 6951 break I think Pete LaChanze had a weird way of saying it but I think he wanted a deducing so I'm gonna give it to you've been D douched that was a weird way of saying it yeah David Jarman in North Turimura

2:22:37 New South Wales, Australia, 63. Kevin McLaughlin's back from North Carolina with 6006, the small boobs donation. He's keeping up a double pace here. He's running like a madman. PayPal, I don't know, 57.89. Maybe it's a refund. Pete Federici in Bothell, Washington, 55.55. We'll give you some jobs in the... Oh, he says jobs in interview karma works. Oh, yeah, baby. Scott Mengel in Exton, Pennsylvania, 55-55. Brian Furley, 55-10. Sir GK, 55-10. Sir Tom Dari in DeForest, Wisconsin, 55-10. Troy Funderburk, 55. Michael Gates, 52-80. Eric Hochul, our buddy in Melrose, Deutschland, 52.

2:23:31 for what for was L do I have a brother okay for was L do I I'd I G I G I like to know how this pronounced wash I think it's was al duage and he's in Kuwait he's in Kuwait I've been to Kuwait I'm in a Kuwait City Kuwait's the yeah that's a party town Douglas moocin Cochranton, Pennsylvania, 50. And this starts off our 50s. This will be just names and locations. Mark Rund in Arizona. Kurt Patrick in Nayimo, BC. Jacob Martinez in El Monte, California. James Scharametta in Napa Nock, New York. Andre, Andre, Andre. Shane in Evanston, Illinois.

2:24:23 Uh, he needs to be de-douched. You've been de-douched. Lynn Malinowski in Stafford, Virginia. Coleen Garrett in Cary, North Carolina. Julie Williams in Huntington Beach, California. Michael Labar in Williamston, Michigan. Alex Zavala in Kyle, Texas. David Forrest in Elvin, Texas. Elvin? Sir Vance. Sir Vance. Elvin! servant in Arlington, Washington. He liked your blow-dried cows. I have to say, it got a chuckle out of me too. Yeah, he says, John, thanks for the informative laugh of blown-dried cows. I've washed and groomed our horses but never thought to do it to one of our cows. Hilarious! They look pretty.

2:25:13 They look like a big giant poodles. They did and then last is Sir Brett Farrell Who is I don't know where he's from now. He's moved I guess I don't know but he's less on our list and that is our group of people who have helped the show first number 1596 with the Fibonacci super number coming up next show. Super show. Also the golden triangle and everything else in between. And thanks to everyone under $50 usually for reasons of anonymity but we have a lot of people on those special sustaining donations. They help a lot. They're typically recurring. We appreciate that so much. Remember this is value for value. You're doing it for all of Gitmo Nation to keep the show going. 16 years, 1600 episodes. We're on our way. Here's the karma for anyone who requested it and needed it. You've got

CHAPTER 23 / 30 Discussion

Duke and Knight Dubbing, Topo Chico and Meetup Protection

Sir Scobie of the Piedmont is elevated to the rank of Duke, and Sir Leo of Low Earth Orbit is officially knighted with a Starlink-style sword. The hosts discuss the availability of No Agenda signet rings and the "protection" offered by attending local meetups. A brief mention is made of Topo Chico as a staple beverage in the Texas Hill Country.

sir scobie· duke· knighthood· topo chico· no agenda rings

2:26:03 Karma. And if you'd like to become a producer of the Noah Dunder Show, go here. vorac.org slash N-A. Thank you again to our executive associate executive producers for episode 1596. Our formula is this. We go out, we hit people in the mouth. Words. Order. Shut up, slave. Shut up, slave. We do indeed have a list. We've got Zachary Nelson celebrating today. Hello, Zachary. Congratulations. Sir Pierre turns 59 tomorrow. Walker Phillips, which is his smoking hot wife, Kiara

2:26:51 Happy birthday from everybody here at the Best Podcast in the Universe. Absolutely no douchebags allowed here. Nope, because we have a title change and that is Sir Scobie of the Piedmont. He becomes a Duke!

2:27:27 This is good news, man. Congratulations. That's an additional $1,000 to you to support the NO Agenda Best Podcast in the Universe with them. We appreciate that. We have One Knight who also is celebrating his birthday soon. So we'll get out our special low Earth orbit satellite sword. Here you go. Oh, that one looks a bit like a Starlink sword. It's nice. I like that. It's kind of cool. Glows in the dark. Anonymous, hop on up on the podium here. You, sir, are about to become a knight of the NOAAgenda Roundtable because of your support. An instantaneous $1,000. We call that an instant knight. We really appreciate it. I'm very proud to pronounce the KB as Sir Leo of Low Earth Orbit.

2:28:07 I certainly do. For you we have hookers and blow, rent boys and chardonnay, but as requested cookie dough and grape soda. Also, Pabst Blue Ribbon on the table for the trolls. Enjoy that, trolls. Along with that we've got our redheads and our rise, our beers and our blunts, our Rubin, Esso, Eben and Rose, Gayson and Sake, Vodka, Manila, bong hits and bourbon. We got sparkling cider and Escort, ginger ale and gerbils, breast milk and paddlemen, of course, the always effervescent mutton and mead. Head on over to noagendarings.com, our new knight. Go ahead, Sir Leo. Then take a look. Everyone can take a look at them. Knight and Dame rings are beautiful. They're Cignet rings so you can press it into some wax to seal your important correspondence with. Wax is included. It's all in the box along with your certificate of authenticity to send off your... What are you drinking?

2:28:55 My last bottle of Topo Gijo. Topo Chico, not Gijo. No, Topo Chico. Don't get rude on us. It's our drink here, man. It's what we drink here. Topo Chico in Texas. Send it off to us as a handy ring-sizer in there. Thank you very much for supporting the Noah Jenner Show. We really appreciate it. Now, we have our meetups. I told you earlier about that wonderful group. All of these groups are beautiful. They all hang out together. You can find a place for a meetup at noagendameetups.com. People love going to them, love attending them. They make friendships. Have we had a marriage happen through a No Agenda Meetup? I think I have a feeling we have. I believe so, yes. Yeah, probably. We don't have enough of them. We need more of those. Let's find out what's going on. People love to tell us about their meetups. Here's a couple of meetup reports. No Agenda Meetups!

2:29:50 And we kick it off with the Bring in the Fall meetup. We're gonna sit here and practice fisting nuts today. Barry Gordon Walton here in the morning. This is Brad from Fort Worth, officially no longer a douchebag. In the morning. In the morning, this is Sarah Tonnen from Fort Worth. And Adam, of course Americans have a daddy problem. We were founded by a whole bunch of them. In the morning, this is Sir Matt Wells, knight of the Austin petty cabbies out here with Austin Local 512. Resist we much and make sure to paint your roof blue. I might have mentioned this is the Austin meetup of course. Sir Baron, Sir Scott of the Armory organized this one. Hey this is Kristen, lots of love to you Adam and John, thank you so much. Chris Baker from the Fountainhead Forum is here. I've got 110 shows now, life is good. Farmer Chris here.

CHAPTER 24 / 30 Discussion

Regional Meetup Reports and Fredericksburg Solar Eclipse Warning

Meetup reports are shared from Austin, Philadelphia, and Iowa, highlighting the growing community of "producers." A stern warning is issued to listeners regarding the April 8, 2024, solar eclipse, advising them to stay away from Fredericksburg, Texas. The town expects 100,000 visitors, which the hosts claim will overwhelm local infrastructure and lead to "Burning Man" style conditions.

austin· philadelphia· fredericksburg· solar eclipse· meetups

2:28:55 My last bottle of Topo Gijo. Topo Chico, not Gijo. No, Topo Chico. Don't get rude on us. It's our drink here, man. It's what we drink here. Topo Chico in Texas. Send it off to us as a handy ring-sizer in there. Thank you very much for supporting the Noah Jenner Show. We really appreciate it. Now, we have our meetups. I told you earlier about that wonderful group. All of these groups are beautiful. They all hang out together. You can find a place for a meetup at noagendameetups.com. People love going to them, love attending them. They make friendships. Have we had a marriage happen through a No Agenda Meetup? I think I have a feeling we have. I believe so, yes. Yeah, probably. We don't have enough of them. We need more of those. Let's find out what's going on. People love to tell us about their meetups. Here's a couple of meetup reports. No Agenda Meetups!

2:29:50 And we kick it off with the Bring in the Fall meetup. We're gonna sit here and practice fisting nuts today. Barry Gordon Walton here in the morning. This is Brad from Fort Worth, officially no longer a douchebag. In the morning. In the morning, this is Sarah Tonnen from Fort Worth. And Adam, of course Americans have a daddy problem. We were founded by a whole bunch of them. In the morning, this is Sir Matt Wells, knight of the Austin petty cabbies out here with Austin Local 512. Resist we much and make sure to paint your roof blue. I might have mentioned this is the Austin meetup of course. Sir Baron, Sir Scott of the Armory organized this one. Hey this is Kristen, lots of love to you Adam and John, thank you so much. Chris Baker from the Fountainhead Forum is here. I've got 110 shows now, life is good. Farmer Chris here.

2:30:40 ITM. In the morning, this is Brendan Foster from Austin Local 512. This is Baron Scott on the No Agenda Armory. And Keeper Christine. We're hanging out here at Docks with Local 512. In the morning. Ah, we were in Houston. Every single time Scott organizes a meetup, we're gone. So the next time, Scott, we're looking forward to it. Because those are big. There's lots of people who show up. Here's a report from the wet your whistle meetup. I think that was the first one. Hello, this is Charles Shelton at the Webster County Wednesday wet your whistle meetup. Thank you very much for tuning in. This is, you know, that guy, Charles Shelton. I'm going to pass the phone around and we're going to see all who's here. Dangerous Dan here. I'm not a douche, but I'm wearing my life jacket.

2:31:22 Sir Matt Decker here in the morning. Mrs. Sir Matt Decker here in the morning. So this is the crazy person that is organizing the event, Charles Shelton, and we are here first Wednesday next month. You can come check us out, Community Tap and Pizza for Dodge Iowa. And we had a great time, four of us here. Please, connection is protection. Thank you for your courage. In the morning. In the morning to you. The Barcade Philly meetup, how'd that go? This is Sean from Philadelphia here running the meetup at Barcade in Fishtown. I saved hella kids in Michael Jackson's Moonwalker today. We're here at Barcade and this is Ed and Nathan and we're not gonna eat the bugs unless you make them tasty then we'll think about it. Bugs! I love bugs! Black nights are easy. We go out, we hit people in the mouth. Linda from Philly, 33 is the magic number. This is Rob from Philadelphia and the Morning Slaves. Hi, this is Jason. You will obey. Obey. Obey. Yo, Georgia, Philly. First meet up. Pretty cool. Eagles are 4-0 in the morning. Done and out.

2:32:24 It's Kate from Philadelphia. Adios, mofo! All right, thanks for the reports everybody here's what's coming up today We have a meetup in the Northern Wake rock rock rock rock to burr That'll be at the compass Rose Brewery Raleigh, North Carolina at 6 o'clock today the Central Jersey 732 meetup we drink and we know things that's underway at the Garden State distillery. That's Tom's River. That's my that's sir. Our sir Daniels sir Daniels. Oh I think after he left that whole Project Veritas collapsed upon itself. Let us know how you're doing, brother. Send us a meetup report. On Saturday, the Stony Acre Farms Get Your Goat Meetup. That'll be at 3 o'clock at Stony Acre Farms, Cary, North Carolina. The Tapping the Admiral in the Afternoon Meetup, Rotolo's Pizzeria, Longview, Texas, 4.30 on Saturday. Fletcher's organizing that. That should be a good one. Central Arkansas Amygdala Check and Backyard Bonfire, 6 o'clock. Don't miss the bonfire. That'll be at Hot Springs Village-ish in

2:33:27 In Arkansas, I guess it's a dude named Jared. Now in Arkansas. So he's doing that. He's gonna light a fire in his backyard. Seems like a cool meetup to go to. Love those guys. On the list for the month of October. We've got Japala, Centro, Jalisco, Mexico. I know I didn't pronounce that right. What else do we have here? We've got Alpharetta, Georgia. We've got Camp Hill, Pennsylvania, British Columbia. Albany, California is still on there. Yeah, it is. The big news that I should go to. October 21st, Albany, California. And I would like to make a special announcement.

2:34:07 I see on the list someone scheduled a meetup for April 8th in Fredericksburg, Texas for the Solar Eclipse meetup. Do not do this. Stay away from Fredericksburg for the eclipse. You will not, this is not a good idea. They expect a hundred thousand people to come here. We have to get roadblocks, security guards, we have to oil up our guns. This is going to be, we cannot have a hundred thousand people. Everybody thinks it's gonna be so cute to hang out in Fredericksburg. You're gonna be camping out, it'll be worse than the playa at Burning Man.

2:34:53 I will not attend your meetup. What's the population of Fredericksburg? 15,000. Yeah, you can't handle 100,000. On the weekend, we grow to about 50,000 because we have a few motels. We have mainly a bed and breakfast. That's full. That's it. You know, people think that they're going to camp with their campers everywhere. I mean, we've got task force, we got military, we got all kinds. Do not come. I love you. Do not come. I am going to have Joe Rogan over probably. He's like, hey man, I hear you're afraid of the break. I want to see the eclipse. Okay, that's cool. But no, do not come.

2:35:39 Please attend all the other no agenda meetups. These are great products. Every single one of them is fantastic. They're put together with love It's all meant to get together with people so you have you already have a connection with the show now you can have connection with your brothers and sisters who are right nearby you it's important we saw what Baron Scott did during the snowpocalypse We were really we were better than the ham radio networks, which in fact sucked We were a true survival network. All kinds of things could happen. You want your connection, it brings you protection. NoagendaMeetups.com. If you can't find one near you, start one yourself. Sometimes you wanna go hang out with all the nights and days. To be where you won't be, triggered or held to blame. You wanna bear, everybody feels the same. It's like a party.

CHAPTER 25 / 30 Discussion

EU Foreign Ministers Trip to Kyiv and Ukraine Military Funding

All 27 EU foreign ministers traveled to Kyiv to signal solidarity with Ukraine amid concerns of "war fatigue" among Western allies. The EU promised an additional $500 million in military funding, with plans for $5 billion more in the coming year, including training for F-16 pilots. High Representative Josep Borrell emphasized that Zelensky’s peace plan is the "only game in town."

kyiv· european union· josep borrell· f-16· military aid

2:36:34 I only have two ISOs. What, how many do you have? I got three. You play your two. You always make me go first. I want you to go first. Not always. Always. I have to beg. No, no, no. Let me go first. No. Okay. Here we go. Here's my first, uh, here's my. Yes. A hundred percent. No, that's no good. Why do you keep bringing that one in? No, it's a new one. That's a new one. This is the one. This is the only one I have that is worthwhile. This is why you have a wondrous show. So what did she say? I know I know that people don't understand that you can't hear that when you can't hear it It's no good. This is why you have a wondrous show. This is why you have a wondrous show ah I like the word wondrous. I thought that was kind of kind of cool. That's a cute word mm-hmm all right I got three let's see what we got here. I think all three of mine are better than that thing let's start with unprecedented Unprecedented yeah, that's better than mine right there. Yeah, go to too late

2:37:35 It's too late. It's kind of ominous. This must be your kicker. Hot I just felt something hot on my legs Where's that from don't remember I don't care. Well. I don't care what videos you were watching. I like it That's a good one you like that kind of thing for videos. I got one here. It's a little offbeat mm-hmm This is from the family guy Okay, now you know he did they do like to insult the Republicans and it's just kind of a left-leaning show But I think this would might have been going too far. I don't know how you handle all these kids every week Oh, I don't mind I like children always wanted one of my own someone I could raise a little bit better than my parents did me You'd be a great dad Bruce. You should totally have a kid. I don't know if you knew this but it's

2:38:33 But it's anatomically impossible for a man to get pregnant. Even Lindsey Graham? Well, he's certainly giving it the old college try. Wow! That's great. Lindy Hop, Lady G. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. That's good. That is good. He's giving it the old college try. I have, this is one report that I feel is important. Because it kind of it kind of blows the whole the whole idea of Ukraine if as if the Olenski lady buying 1.1 million dollars worth of jewelry at Cardi was a Cartier Tiffany and I was Cartier as if that wasn't enough. I totally believe that

2:39:22 I actually have a boots on the ground report. But first I want to put... So because of our continuing resolution, no deal, no money for Ukraine. Oh, they're running out of bullets. They're running out of bullets. I think that they were now sending Ukrainian bullets to them. Iranian, I'm sorry. I guess we intercepted a million Iranian bullets. Apparently they just fit into our guns that we've given them. I don't know what that is. Unbelievable! It's crazy. But this happened. They normally meet in Brussels or Luxembourg. All 27 traveling to Kiev required a lot of planning and security. Road trip!

2:40:02 Come on everybody, road trip! No, we're not going- I've got a surprise. We're not having dinner at Chez LePierre tonight. No, we're going on a road trip. Blindfolds, everybody. You'll love it. But as Ukraine faces its second winter at war, this was about sending a powerful message of solidarity. Apart from the symbolism, there was the promise of more military funding. And discussions about Ukraine's longed-for EU membership. Our victory depends directly on our cooperation with you. The more there will be strong and solid steps, the faster this war will be over. We'll be over on just terms with the restoration of our territorial integrity and reliable guarantees for peace in all of Europe. EU ministers promised another $500 million worth of military funding, with another $5 billion to follow in the next year.

2:40:57 There will be continued military training, which will include F-16 pilots. There is concern that some of Ukraine's allies are suffering war fatigue. With continued support for Kiev now an election issue in some EU states and the US, EU ministers insisted their support remains steadfast. We are not intimidated by your drones or missiles. Our resolve to support the fight of freedom and independence of Ukraine is firm and will continue. Yes, we will continue standing for Ukraine. There was also strong support for President Zelensky's peace plan. It demands the full restoration of Ukrainian territory and a complete Russian withdrawal. Josep Borrell said it was the only game in town.

2:41:47 Monday's discussions also included Ukraine's ambition to join the EU. Brussels has said yes in principle and there are hopes that formal accession talks could begin early next year with a two-year deadline. The EU says membership will be one of the best ways to guarantee Ukraine's long-term security. So just so everyone understands when I say foreign ministers, that's State Department. That's all State Departments of other countries. And boy, they went to that dangerous Ukraine. They all went together. I guess those douchebags didn't take a plane, I mean a train. You know they flew in. Sure. Of course they did because it's so dangerous. Oh yes. They had a big banquet and everything. Totally sitting ducks. They lived it up on our money.

CHAPTER 26 / 30 Discussion

Ukraine Reconstruction Investment, Drone Warfare and Cardboard Drones

A lobbyist report suggests that $400 billion in worldwide investment is planned for the reconstruction of Ukraine, with $100 billion backed by U.S. taxpayers. On the battlefield, Ukraine is reportedly losing 10,000 small drones per month due to Russian electronic warfare. The use of Australian-made SYPAQ "corrugated cardboard" drones is highlighted as a low-cost solution for delivering explosives and identifying targets.

ukraine· reconstruction· drones· sypaq· electronic warfare

2:42:34 Exactly. Our money. Speaking of our money, we have two boots on the ground that I'd like to share. The first one is from a... we have such great producers. The boots on the ground reports are really something that no other show has. Adam and John, first I was in a congressional office two weeks ago. Yes, I am a lobbyist. representing an extremely important industry for rebuilding Ukraine after its rubalization. So not only do we have lobbyists, they speak our language and they agree with it. I met with a high-ranking member of a congressional office who worked for a congressman who sits on the House Armed Services Committee. How cool is this?

2:43:16 The staff member told us that the Ukrainians will win this war. He was unmovable on that point and even mentioned his recent trip to Ukraine to tour the country. But the real interesting point was that this high-ranking staff member pitched us to get involved in the rebuild. He said $400 billion of worldwide investment will be going into Ukraine after Ukraine wins, with $100 billion backed by the US taxpayer. This new 100 billion is in addition to the billions of US taxpayer dollars of support that we've already been spent or laundered in Ukraine. This support will not be low-interest loans or supplemented loans meant to be paid back by Ukrainian entities. This will be a direct equity investment into Ukrainian businesses so they can rebuild. I wonder if that foreign investment in Ukraine will have any influence.

2:44:12 So, 100 million on deck, that's probably 100 million from us and then 300 million from Russia that they stole. The second boot's on the ground. Sorry? No, I was going to say as an interstitial here, since it's about investing in Ukraine, I have a clip. And I want you to explain to me what the hell's going on here. This is Ukraine and its arms industry. Congress appears likely to let a Sunday deadline pass for reauthorizing America's multi-billion dollar global effort to fight AIDS. As NPR's Gabriel Spitzer reports, that program will still continue, but it will have less certainty about its future.

2:44:51 The PEPFAR program got its start under President George W. Bush and has been reauthorized three times with wide bipartisan support. But this time around, PEPFAR has gotten entangled in abortion politics. Some Republican lawmakers accused Biden of... What clip are you playing? This is Ukraine arms industry. Weird NPR. This is literally what Ukraine AMS, it says. Industry. Okay, well keep playing it. I don't remember anything about the AIDS crisis, but okay. I might have misclipped. I was interested. I thought it was a really interesting clip. So do you want me to stop this since it's about? No, no. PEPFAR has gotten entangled in abortion politics. Some Republican lawmakers accused the Biden administration of using PEPFAR as a vehicle to promote abortion access. On Thursday, the House voted to reimpose a ban on funding organizations that support abortion services, even if they do so with other money.

2:45:45 The Senate is expected to reject that bill. If Congress does not pass a five-year authorization by October 1st, PEPFAR would still operate under annual appropriations. This is another minute of this. Well, I have it down here as a one-minute, 50-second clip. Yeah, we just played a minute of it. Okay, we'll keep playing this probably gets to the point Ukraine has hosted more than 200 weapons manufacturers and defense ministers from several countries To help ramp up arms production inside the country and peers Joanna Kisses reports from Kiev that Ukraine wants to reduce its dependence on foreign military aid the government

2:46:23 The government kept details of the International Defense Forum, which was held on Friday, a secret until today, Saturday. Speaking at the forum, President Volodymyr Zelensky likened Russia's war on Ukraine to a defense marathon, and he said Ukraine must keep recapturing occupied land. It's very important that Ukraine not retreat, he said. We need a result every day. And it's obvious we cannot do that without producing our own weapons and our own defense technologies. Speaking by video link to the forum, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg added that Ukraine needs to quickly produce high-quality weapons to keep protecting itself from Russian attacks.

2:47:09 They're starting up a weapons industry in Ukraine with our money. Yeah, you know, it's mainly drones. I have boots on the ground. It's mainly drones. This is what everyone believes. What was the line again? Many believe and there's some evidence. No, I got it right here. Yeah, many believe and it is likely true. Many believe and it is likely true that Ukraine has a budding drone warfare, warfare drone industry. They're small drones.

2:47:48 Some of them are coming from Australia. Australia has the flat pack drones. You've seen these. Those are the balsa wood ones? Yeah, well they're made of cardboard actually. And so it's a flat pack like an Ikea flat pack and you fold it out and then boom your drone is good to go. You can put a couple of keys of explosives in there and you know they're which I'm sure these will show up everywhere. This is going to be a lot of fun these cardboard drones. Boots on the ground. We have someone on the ground in Ukraine. I receive, boots on the ground I have here, about 10,000 small drones a month are lost. This is in Ukraine. Increasingly, so, you know, these are seen as very successful. In fact, they're talking about deploying drones when we go to war with China.

2:48:36 Because they work so well. Because the drones, you can't knock them out with anti-aircraft, they're complicated. That's what you'd think, but our boots on the ground says something else. About 10,000 small drones a month are lost here, increasingly from electronic defenses, then why the theater attack was made. That's the theater where all the drone guys were. Russians have learned to target drone pilot locations as more effective than trying to knock down small drones. So, these guys, they go, yeah I'm flying my drone. Oh crap, they just shot me. Oops. Small drones are predominantly a daylight anti-personnel weapon and important to identify supply lines or other targets for artillery.

2:49:25 Payload does kill individuals and can damage some small armored vehicles, but most can be repaired quickly. We only see videos of the successes of the 10,000 launched each month. The newly trained Ukrainian forces entering the offensive were trained in 90 days, much like Vietnam draftees. This is not going to end well for Ukraine. A lot of people are going to die. Still a lot of people have died already for 500,000. They say really yeah One that's a high estimate Just one other thing. I don't have a clip, but you've probably seen stories that vaccinated and people are and women around vaccinated people

CHAPTER 27 / 30 Discussion

COVID Vaccine Menstruation Study and Puberty Blocker Mental Health

A study published in the Daily Mail confirms that COVID-19 vaccines can cause unexpected vaginal bleeding in post-menopausal women. Separately, a UK study of children aged 12 to 15 found that 34% of those taking puberty blockers like Triptorelin reported declining mental health. The hosts speculate on the long-term hormonal impacts of these medical interventions on adolescents.

menstruation· daily mail· puberty blockers· mental health· triptorelin

2:50:16 are indeed still suffering from unexpected menstruation, post-menopausal menstruation. We discussed this during the COVID pandemic when the vaccines came out and in fact got a lot of pushback because we had a study and people said, that's not true. You can't read the study. Oh, I'm sorry. He's right. And we had boots on the ground from everywhere. Who was that one guy? No, it was a lot of guys. We had incredible amounts of boots on the ground, just people having irregular menstruation. And now, this is Daily Mail, but okay, COVID vaccines do cause unexpected vaginal bleeding in women even if they haven't had their period in years, study finds. So Dame Jamie sends me a note, she says,

2:51:17 I saw an article that admits, no that's too strong, shows a correlation of COVID vaccinations causing inflammation and changes in hormone levels. She said that specifically hormone levels because that when you start to menstruate it's a hormonal process. And if you're doing this when you are actually postmenopausal, it's your hormones. And she says What, how interesting that we saw such a surge in teen girls 13 to 15 years old during this vaccination phase who all want to become boys. And she's saying, is it possible that their hormones were knocked out of whack? One suggestion, boom, you're a dude. I thought it was an interesting, an interesting theory.

2:52:17 Because it did surge. Yeah, it did. And I have a clip that discusses one aspect of all this, not related to the vaccine, but related to the puberty blockers. Okay, hold on. This is kind of an interesting clip. Children who take puberty blockers risk poor mental health, according to a UK study. Out of the 44 children studied from ages 12 to 15, 34% of those who took puberty blockers self-reported declining mental health. The puberty blocker examined in the study is called tryptophan. It's used to control the hormones in people's bodies and some common side effects include depression, nausea and hot flashes.

2:53:00 The result of the study may add to the epidemic of deteriorating mental health globally. Nearly 15% of young people have a mental health disorder, according to a survey last year. Another study last year found that in the US, almost 22% of children have at least one mental health condition. Wow. Our poor kids. Our poor kids. Now that, I didn't bring any of these clips, but People are being switched to different SSRIs and they're getting what they call brain zaps Yeah, have you heard this brains app thing? Yeah, I heard about it. What'd you hear about it? I heard people are switching from different SSRIs and getting all kinds of issues Why are they sweating you know that to switch probably because the SSRIs are not working not as effective They all function slightly different. So I suppose you can just go from one to another Yeah, the only problem is no one knows exactly how they function

CHAPTER 28 / 30 Discussion

AI Deepfake Nude Apps and Child Pornography Legislation

Media reports highlight the rise of AI apps used to create non-consensual deepfake nude images of teenagers, fueling calls for government regulation. The discussion notes that existing laws regarding "revenge porn" and child pornography should already cover these fabricated images. The hosts suggest the story is being used to "hype" the dangers of AI to justify restrictive new legislation.

ai· deepfakes· cyber violence· child pornography· legislation

2:54:01 Dad yeah, what's believed to you always say it's believed to do this is believe you see it on the TV ads They say it it's believed to stop this is believed stories being spiked to impress us about AI and make us scared and and want our There are leaders to create legislation so that only the smartest people in the world from Silicon Valley will control it so that you know this kind of thing doesn't happen. This morning a wake-up call for parents as more teens begin to explore artificial intelligence. say

2:54:58 uploaded them to the app and shared them on social media. So essentially, these apps virtually strip individuals and that enables folks to distribute images of them in attempts maybe to sexually shame them, to humiliate them or just because they think it's funny. Sophie Maddox, an expert on cyber sexual violence says these apps are becoming more accessible. This issue is happening for everyday people, not just celebrities and folks in the public eye. And while these images are fabricated, experts like Carrie Goldberg, who's not involved in the Spain case but who has represented victims of digital sexual abuse, says the impact on victims is long-lasting. They're very compelling and convincing photos so that it really does look like it's a picture of the victim dude.

2:55:43 It really has the same devastating consequences as if it was an actual photograph that depicted you. The harm isn't any different. Children in particular don't have the coping mechanism to realize that this could be a solvable problem. Experts say it's important to create a safe space for your child to come forward. It's really important to seek the support of a trusted adult whenever you see or experience something online that makes you feel uncomfortable. And as far as whether or not these deepfake nude apps should even exist, experts agree they're creating much more harm than good, fueling more calls for government regulation of this expanding technology. There you go. A couple of things.

2:56:23 First of all, it's illegal, I think, as a felony to post nude pictures of somebody else. Those laws were passed some time ago. These pictures are equivalent. They're equivalent pictures. They're nude pictures of somebody else and that wasn't brought up in the report at all. And in fact, it was even discussed when it comes to child porn. If you Post a picture of someone that looks like they're underage. That's a felony. Child porn felony. If you draw, I've talked to lawyers about this. Not that because I want to post pictures, but because I want to know. I want to know my rights. I want to know my rights. No, I'll tell you why. It's because some years ago there was a Chateau Mouton Rothschild put out a wine with a line drawing of some kid who was naked. It was like some art shot by Chagall or some artist that was famous. And the wine label was banned from the United States for being child porn.

2:57:26 And it became somewhat collectible if you get a bottle of Mouton with that label on it. I bet. But so I asked around and found out that if you draw a stick figure, according to the lawyer, if you draw a stick figure, stick figure, and put it to have an arrow pointing to it and the saying nine year old girl, that's actually a violation of the child pornography laws. Not if you put it in a school library. It's good there. Good to go. Be that as it may, there's laws to cover this. This story is a phony story. Well of course it's a phony story to hype AI. Keep the stock market going. Yes, an AI phony story. An AI phony story. I have just one last thing because I got a lot of emails about it, a lot of pushback from master... From that same guy? No, master electricians.

CHAPTER 29 / 30 Discussion

Maui Fire Investigation, Power Grid Security and Mobile Generators

New information regarding the Maui wildfires suggests that a second fire in Lahaina may have been caused by re-energized power lines. A grid security expert claims that large mobile diesel generators, brought in for hotels, may have energized downed lines without proper automatic transfer switches (ATS). This theory challenges the "directed energy weapon" narratives by focusing on electrical grid mismanagement.

maui· lahaina· hawaiian electric· power grid· generators

2:58:21 people who know, that's a phony story, your source is questionable, and it was about this. On that day of fire at 6.30am, what I will refer to as the morning fire, appears to have been caused by Hawaiian electric power lines that fell in high winds. The Maui County Fire Department promptly responded to this fire. They reported that by 9am it was contained. After monitoring it for several hours, the fire department determined the fire had been extinguished. They left the scene in the early afternoon. At about 3 p.m., a time when all of Hawaii Electric's power lines in West Maui had been de-energized for more than six hours, a second fire, the afternoon fire, began in the same area.

2:59:15 The cause of that afternoon fire that spread to Lahaina has not been determined. We are working tirelessly to figure out what happened and we are cooperating fully with federal and state investigators who have indicated it may take 12 to 18 months to conclude. Now according to our producer, who is in the grid security business. I know him personally. He's helped us learn about ERCOT here in Texas, how everything works. You know, it's all one big stock market basically. We know all about this. He has seen the logs

2:59:54 because it's an insurance issue at this point. And he said that what had happened is the lines that were down had been re-energized and they were from generators that were on the grid and they were cranking up. And of course, a lot of people who are thinking, oh, like, you know, my Generac here at home. Yes, there's something called an ATS. It's a switch that ensures that that you don't throw your generator power not just to your building but to the entire grid. So people are pushing back. So I said, hey, Hey, boots on the ground, I need a response. And he says, yes, I tend to agree. It's somewhat hard to believe. The fact is, the transmission lines were disconnected. There were no generators other than standby generators capable of energizing the lines to the point that they were talking about multiple megawatts of generation online. Household handyman generators do not account for this. These were these huge mobile diesel generators.

3:00:55 that you see and they brought them in likely for hotels, but that of course is why they have to look around for 12 to 18 months. They put those onto the grid without switches and that is what literally caused those fires to reignite because the lines were down, they got energized, megawatts worth, and that's what caused this fire. I like directed energy weapons better myself, but it's better to know the truth. You're getting pushback from some of the producers out there because they still are subscribing to the directed energy weapon bullcrap? They didn't say that specifically, but they were electricians. Blue and red roofs? It's the blue roofs, man! What you're saying can't be true!

CHAPTER 30 / 30 Discussion

Outro, End of Show Mixes and Episode 1596 Sign-off

The show concludes with a series of musical mixes, including a "Melon Mix" for Kevin McLaughlin and a "Bedbug Mix" by Jesse Coy Nelson. The hosts promote the "Random Thoughts" podcast and reiterate their "value for value" funding model. Final remarks touch on the FEMA alert test and the upcoming Sunday show before the traditional "Adios Mofos" sign-off.

russell brand· bed bugs· melons· 5g· podcasting

3:01:41 No, they were not saying that. But they were saying, hey, you know, that's not how they work. Anyone who installs a generator has got an ATS. I know that. This is a very different situation. No, the update is good. Good information. You want to call it? I can call it. Are we done? Everything I've got can be moved to Sunday quite nicely. Good. Then I will let everybody know that we have some end of show mixes. We got Dee's Laughs with Matty J. We got, by request, the Sound Guy Steve Mellon's mix for our Archduke of Luna. And we have a Dynamite Bedbugs end of show mix from Jesse Coy Nelson who never disappoints.

3:02:25 Coming up next on the No Agenda stream, 24 hours a day, TrollRoom.io, NoAgendaStream.com, and on all the modern podcast apps, Random Thoughts. And that'll be episode 247 titled, Russell Brand of Justice, whatever that means. Sounds exciting. And coming to you from the heart of the Texas Hill Country here in FEMA Region No. 6, where I did not get killed by the nanoparticles activated by the 5G and high tones. In the morning everybody, I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley, where it's widely believed and it's likely true that I'm John C. Dvorak. And with that, please remember us to send your value for value support at dvorak.org slash N-A.

3:03:14 Have a great one, everybody. We'll be back on Sunday. Until then, adios mofos! Hooey hooey! And such! Yeah, I said hello Mark Twain, said goodbye to my guy, why? Diversity in Canadian libraries is gonna die. People are fungible, not just NFTs, unable to unplug ourselves from these online feeds. Canceling banned books before 2008, Trudeau proves that we're living in a dictatorial state. Demon or manic, Elon Musk is mentally unwell. Asperger's a neural ink, only time will tell.

3:04:00 I'm not diagnosed, but he's on the scripts More powerful than the US government Ex-formerly known as Twitter, digital litter Freedom of speech versus reach The users are bitter, our government's chill Pretending to be chill Leave the people to their own devices I mean still A groomed technocratic tool Alex Jones a bridge too far to bring back on the platform Use a fool How you gonna shadow ban your mans fam? This and misinformation determined from one man Damn Starlink, Neuralink Is influence allowed by the state I'm pointing at you Uncle Sam? I think I love melons! Did you know there are over 40 different types of melons out there? Kevin McLaughlin in Concord, North Carolina says, honeydew melons. He just wrote that in there for some reason. He likes melons. Golden delicious melons. The galea melon. Horned melons. How many melons are there in the world? There are over 40 different types of melons. Summertime is the perfect time to show off your melons, ladies.

3:05:04 Honey Globe Melons. That's Honey Globe Melons. Tasty. Camouflage Melons. Nuts. Shoppers in Aisle 3, Camouflage Melons. Jade Dew Melon Donation. Jade Dew is another literal melon. And I've had those, they're pretty good. I think the Tuscan melon's my favorite. Ah, you just love melons. The Picasso melon. Calabash melons. That's Calabash melons. The Kiss melon. It's got a big tongue that comes out of it. The papaya melon. The Balin melon. The Yubari King melon. Autumn sweets. Autumn sweets, the melon of choice for connoisseurs. He's gonna run out of melons, by the way.

3:05:45 I don't know how many melons varieties he has. I don't know, I think there's... he's got... But he hasn't even said watermelon yet. Exactly. Cantola melon, another one I've never heard of, but you know... How long will he be able to come up with melon names? I love melon! Look at this, you can see here what looks to be a bed bug crawling along the armrest of one of the high-speed trains in France. You can imagine, people are just thrilled to see it, they love it. We got bed bugs. Hey, they could turn them into a snack. I guess if he had a, kind of maybe a, like a popsicle stick coated in honey and then you roll the bed bugs on them so you eat like, you know, get to eat a lot at once. Oh, God!

3:06:46 Oh, that is so good. Yum! Bentonite in the malathion a number of times. Delicious, delicious. Then dip it in chocolate. Yeah. Mmm, nice. Bon appétit! Tonight, the family of a man who died at the Fulton County Jail is now demanding action. They say he was essentially eaten alive by insects and bedbugs while in custody. The best podcast in the universe! Adios, mofo. Dvorak.org slash N-A. I just felt something hot on my legs.