Episode 959 · Sunday, 27 August 2017

Stay Safe!

Media sensationalism peaks during Texas flooding while political maneuvers in Washington and a constitutional crisis in Australia reshape the global landscape.

By The No Agenda Show | 3h listen | 56 chapters
Stay Safe! cover
The No Agenda Show · No. 959

About this episode

Hurricane Harvey's landfall in Texas has triggered a wave of media sensationalism, with networks like ABC and NBC prioritizing dramatic field reporting over objective data. While officials in Rockport issued grim warnings for residents to mark their skin with Social Security numbers for identification, weather station observations suggest a significant discrepancy between official Category 4 classifications and actual recorded wind speeds. The disaster has already seen critical errors, including an NBC reporter mistakenly referencing 2008's Hurricane Ike during a live broadcast from Houston.

Beyond the storm, the political landscape shifts as Sebastian Gorka exits the White House and Donald Trump issues a controversial pardon for Sheriff Joe Arpaio. In the tech sector, former CIA agent Valerie Plame is crowdfunding a billion-dollar bid to buy Twitter and ban the President, while Amazon Alexa faces scrutiny for killing brand loyalty by defaulting to private labels. Global tensions rise as the European Union threatens Poland with Article 7 over judicial reforms, and Frans Timmermans compares nationalism to alcoholism in a provocative new campaign.

This episode features a formal knighting ceremony for Dame Ashley, Lady of the Lake, and Sir Jonathan Rowley. The human side of the Texas floods emerges through stories of Houston homeowners lifting houses on cinder blocks and the unfortunate fire at Franklin's Barbecue in Austin. Taylor Swift’s new single Reputation receives a critical lashing, while the 27 Club myth resurfaces via a mysterious white Bic lighter found in a thrift store jacket.


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CHAPTER 01 / 56 Discussion

Hurricane Harvey Weather Incident and Media Hype

Hurricane Harvey's impact on Austin, Texas, involves significant rainfall and flooding, with expectations of up to 40 inches in certain areas. Observations from weather stations suggest that media classifications of the storm as a Category 4 were exaggerated compared to recorded wind speeds of 80 to 100 miles per hour. The discrepancy between official reports and local conditions highlights a tendency for news outlets to prioritize sensationalism to maintain viewership.

hurricane harvey· austin· texas· tropical storm· weather reporting· media hype

00:00 We sound like news execs now. Adam Curry, John C. DeVora. And Sunday, August 27th, 2017, this is your award-winning Gitmo Nation Media Assassination, Episode Niner Five Niner! This is no agenda. The world is a good ham shun, right? And coming to you from the darkest corners of the United and downtown Austin, Tejas, Capital of the Drone, Star State, In the Cluedio, In the Morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley, where it's not raining, it's not snowing, there's no wind, it's nice out, I'm John C. DeVore. It's Crackpot and Buzzkill. In the Morning! Yeah, baby.

00:38 I understand you're having a bit of a weather incident. A bit of rain, yes. Yeah, weather incident is correct, yes. Yeah, Texas. Yes, that's right. Yeah, it's been really fun fielding all the text messages and WhatsApp and Facebook. Are you okay? Is everybody okay? Are you safe? Stay safe. Stay safe. Thinking of you and yours. Yeah, it's... It's really quite interesting to be in... we're not really in the hurricane, I have to say. Well, if you watch the Friday news, you guys are part of the... We're dead! We're dead! Three feet of rain. Well, that may be happening, and I think the actual disaster is still ahead of us because of the amount of rainfall that's expected. It's not expected to stop raining until Friday.

01:32 And it is coming down. I think we have... The next five days it's going to keep raining like this? Yeah, in Austin we have, I think we've got like 12 inches now, so almost a foot. Wow. And they're talking about 35, 40 inches of rain in some places. Right. So yeah, it's been very interesting. Tina's been through a couple of hurricanes when she lived in Florida. And when she said, oh my God, it's a cat three, and now it's a cat four, which by the way, I dispute. It's not a cat four anymore. It turned into a tropical storm like last night. I know, John. Thanks for the info. I'm in the middle of it. You'd think I'd know.

02:13 Well, that's what I said. When they, when it was... I was just backing you up. I'm... When it was... I was just backing you up. No, what I'm disputing is it was coming towards shore and then it was, oh, we have incredible intensification. Intensification, is what it's called apparently. Is that when it hits shore? Intensification. And then they said it was a cat 4 and, you know, I am able to monitor weather stations and I was seeing about 80 to 100 knots or miles per hour actually and not 130. And so I don't know exactly, and I tried to look up the classification. It seemed to me like they were a little hypey on the Cat 4, we're all gonna die, and then, oh! We're surprised! We had no idea it would slow down so quickly. How else are they gonna get people to watch these shows? Well, I can do an example of how they get people to watch the shows. Maybe you should go to our reporter on the scene outside there, John. Adam. We got Adam Curry on the scene. He's right there in the middle of the storm.

03:13 Oh my god, that sounds terrible. Adam, stay safe. That's pretty much every report for the past 48 hours.

CHAPTER 02 / 56 Discussion

Media Sensationalism in Hurricane Harvey Field Reporting

ABC News and other networks utilized dramatic field reporting techniques during Hurricane Harvey, featuring reporters standing in high winds to emphasize the storm's intensity. These reports often incorporate political narratives, including claims that the disaster is a direct result of the climate crisis or a test of the president's preparedness. Such coverage is characterized as performative, focusing on "feeling" the storm rather than providing objective data.

abc news· hurricane harvey· climate crisis· weather reporting· media criticism

03:59 Well, ABC had the best grouping. They had three of these guys. Oh, fantastic. Standing in the wind. Okay. Let's see if we got any here. Here's a good one. This is the classic Man in Storm report. There's nothing like it. It's Christie, Texas tonight. And Matt, what are you seeing already? It's not just about seeing, it's about feeling this storm, David. Hard to stand up in this wind and the rain is coming down. It seems like rivers incredibly, there are still people on the roads here now. Harvey's really beginning to sink its teeth into this part of Texas, but this is just a jab

04:41 The full punch is still coming. Oh man, this is great. The full punch! Harvey is smashing into the Gulf Coast tonight. Punch slamming! A ferocious wind, an ocean of water, and officials say deadly potential. It's the most powerful storm to hit the U.S. in over a decade. And from space, you can see the monster storm sprawling over the Gulf, already spawning tornado warnings. Yeah, that's true. There were definitely tornadoes touching down here and there. During this guy's report he's he's out there. Just holding his own and trying to stand up and then and then a car Casually drives by and spray right in front of him. It looks like crap of course And then he says even cars are still out it ruins a big shock. No, there's two things I forgot in my report I feel pretty bad. I didn't do an accurate report. I

05:39 Yeah? Yeah, let me try that again. Yes, yes, John. What's happening? Can I just have new information? New information. Obviously we're getting higher, Scott. And it is global warming. The climate crisis is upon us here in Texas. And of course, we all know that this is obviously a big challenge for our president who is not ready, not prepared. Please keep it going. Back to you, John.

CHAPTER 03 / 56 Discussion

NBC News Hurricane Ike 2008 Time Travel Error

NBC News reporter Joe Fryer mistakenly referenced Hurricane Ike from 2008 as the current event during a live broadcast from Houston. While the error provided a moment of levity, the actual flooding situation in Houston remains critical, with billions of dollars in projected damages. Emergency ham radio frequencies indicate that thousands of residents are facing rising water levels, overwhelming local response capabilities.

nbc news· hurricane ike· houston· joe fryer· broadcasting error

06:16 That's terrible. Stay safe, Adam. And we have to all admit that if it wasn't for Trump, this wouldn't have happened. Yeah, I forgot that part. Now there's a... Okay, well let's go to Storm 2008 report number... Oh, wait a minute. I forgot about this one. NBC decided to do time travel. Oh, hey, wait a minute. They're on our turf again. Yes, they are. And this is the Storm NBC travels. NBC travels to 2008.

06:53 Houston, where the last hurricane to make landfall in Texas, Hurricane Ike, slammed ashore in 2008. That's where we find NBC's Joe Fryer. Joe, what are you seeing there this evening? What are you learning? 2008. That's what he said. He says we're going to go to Joe. He's in 2008. What are we learning? If you want to hear what he had to say, which makes, yeah, well, this is a storm 2008. He's in 2008 making this report. So what are you seeing there this evening? Now we make light of it, but the flooding really is a problem. And Houston, I think, is getting the worst of it right now.

07:51 to the ham emergency frequencies. And this guy's, and of course a lot of these hams are, you know, in their 80s. And they're like, we got two feet of water. I have an emergency. And you know, it comes back, well yeah, there's about 10,000 people who have this. I'm sorry, ham guy. 10,000, I think it's going to be more than that. Well, I'm just telling you what they said on the emergency frequencies. Oh, it's definitely bad. Oh no, T. Houston's going to be wiped out. It's got to be billions of dollars in damage, there's no doubt about it. But we can, you know, we can make, I can make light of it. I'm out in California, we have earthquakes. Yeah, sure, sure. An earthquake will happen. Now, we actually did have a true disaster happen here in Austin. In Austin, we're getting about, we're getting 25 mile an hour winds, gusts maybe 30, probably an average of 25. But the rain is just...

08:43 Was just hammering everywhere, and you know it's it's not like from one direction It truly is a storm system deluge a deluge yes exactly But we had a report that was very distressing, but this is something that we don't hear about often either Franklin's barbecue was on fire and East Austin on 11th Street look at the flames from one of our viewers a keg sand reported photo The fire is out Thank goodness nobody was hurt. Thanks to the rain. We are told from the Austin Fire Department that it started around 530 this morning and it looks like the fire did not spread to the building itself of Franklin's but kind of just stayed outside where one of the smokers, one of the barbecue pits was located.

CHAPTER 04 / 56 Discussion

Franklin's Barbecue Fire During Austin Rainstorm

A fire broke out at the famous Franklin's Barbecue on 11th Street in East Austin during the heavy rains of Hurricane Harvey. The Austin Fire Department reported that the blaze was contained to the outdoor smoker and barbecue pit area, preventing damage to the main building. No injuries were reported, and the heavy rainfall assisted in preventing the fire from spreading further.

franklin's barbecue· austin· fire department· east austin· barbecue pits

07:51 to the ham emergency frequencies. And this guy's, and of course a lot of these hams are, you know, in their 80s. And they're like, we got two feet of water. I have an emergency. And you know, it comes back, well yeah, there's about 10,000 people who have this. I'm sorry, ham guy. 10,000, I think it's going to be more than that. Well, I'm just telling you what they said on the emergency frequencies. Oh, it's definitely bad. Oh no, T. Houston's going to be wiped out. It's got to be billions of dollars in damage, there's no doubt about it. But we can, you know, we can make, I can make light of it. I'm out in California, we have earthquakes. Yeah, sure, sure. An earthquake will happen. Now, we actually did have a true disaster happen here in Austin. In Austin, we're getting about, we're getting 25 mile an hour winds, gusts maybe 30, probably an average of 25. But the rain is just...

08:43 Was just hammering everywhere, and you know it's it's not like from one direction It truly is a storm system deluge a deluge yes exactly But we had a report that was very distressing, but this is something that we don't hear about often either Franklin's barbecue was on fire and East Austin on 11th Street look at the flames from one of our viewers a keg sand reported photo The fire is out Thank goodness nobody was hurt. Thanks to the rain. We are told from the Austin Fire Department that it started around 530 this morning and it looks like the fire did not spread to the building itself of Franklin's but kind of just stayed outside where one of the smokers, one of the barbecue pits was located.

09:26 Oh, this is Franklin's Barbecue, John. If you're going to burn down your restaurant because you can't make any money, don't do it during a rainstorm. Franklin's is very famous and has no problem making money. Yes, Franklin's is one of the most famous barbecue places. You know, the guy's featured on a lot of these food channels, and I think a lot of the Franklin's, I think it's a hyped up place. I bet you there's other places that are just as good. I go to Lambert's here downtown. I like Lambert's a lot. Okay, there you go. Yeah, but well here's a report. Here's a report. That's it. I think one of my favorite ones What if not my favorite? This is a guy we? Condemning people who aren't evacuating because a lot of people aren't evacuating in fact. There's a prelude to this clip Let's play this one. This is the woman who? Storm woman knows best play this

CHAPTER 05 / 56 Discussion

Hurricane Harvey Evacuation Warnings and Sharpie Identification

Officials in Rockport, Texas, issued a grim warning to residents refusing to evacuate, suggesting they use a Sharpie pen to write their Social Security numbers on their arms for identification purposes. This extreme advice highlights the life-threatening nature of the storm as it intensified near the coast. Meanwhile, in Austin, the primary local concern shifted toward long checkout lines at grocery stores like Whole Foods as residents prepared for potential flooding.

rockport· texas· evacuation· sharpie· social security number· disaster prep

10:15 Okay. Tens of thousands of Texas residents ordered to flee, but some, like Janice Moore, staying behind, believing her home is stronger than Harvey. I feel like most residents do need to leave because they don't know what they're doing, but I feel like I do know what I'm doing. Harvey is expected to sit over the Gulf Coast, pummeling it for days, but the facts felt for hundreds of miles. Now, if anyone says, I feel Like I know what I'm doing. Yeah. I'm skeptical. Yeah, I'll say so. Would you talk to your clairvoyant beforehand? I feel like this is the right thing to do. Yes. Now here's the here's the report that I think is the best one of a guy telling people to evacuate and if they're not going to evacuate he's got some advice. This is another storm report and warnings to leave ABC.

11:09 I see okay. I got it. Sorry I Want to do I want to do a cross talk to this guy, I'm sorry. This is way too good. All right, let me do cross talk Really picking up the rain coming down It feels like they're little needles pounding your eyes at this point. And the hurricane is still probably 100 miles out. And this massive storm is still intensifying.

11:49 Texas's governor activating 1,300 National Guard troops, opening enough shelters to house 41,000 evacuees. We can obviously tell already at this stage, this is going to be a very major disaster. Officials in Rockport warning staying could mean dying. Those that are going to stay It's unfortunate, but they should make some type of preparation to mark their arm with a sharpie pen put their Social Security Wow, why don't you get dressed in your body bag while you're at it? Hey, I'm ready for death

12:28 Wow! That is great. Get a sharpie, put your social security number in your arm, get in the bag, zip it up. The biggest complaint heard in Austin about all this? Man, the checkout lines at Whole Foods are insane. Nah, it's bad. It definitely is bad. And we're gonna see some... It's gonna get bad downtown too. I mean, this is... When everything starts overflowing, when Lake Travis goes, It'll start to get interesting. Yeah, that will be interesting. I have an ISO for you from the storm that you can use at any time you want. Just in case I need it. Yes, I mean, I see it here. Already pounding Port Lavaca.

CHAPTER 06 / 56 Discussion

Houston Homeowners Lifting Houses to Prevent Flood Damage

Homeowners in Houston scrambled to employ house-lifting services to elevate their residences on cinder blocks before Hurricane Harvey's floodwaters arrived. This preemptive measure is common in flood-prone areas of the Texas coast and Florida, where houses are often built on stilts to mitigate damage from recurring storms. Harris County officials declared a disaster as bayous and creeks were expected to overflow following 20 inches of forecasted rain.

houston· house lifting· jacob rascone· flood prevention· harris county

13:15 I know it's not the best. Now here's the most interesting story. Nobody else seemed to play this but NBC. But I didn't realize that they even do this. This is the house lifting that's going on. All out for several days producing a potentially devastating amount of rainfall and flooding. NBC's Jacob Rascone is there for us. Jacob, Houston is no stranger to floods, but they have rarely seen anything like what we're talking about here. Lester, if the forecast holds and Houston gets more than 20 inches of rain, the bayous and creeks will overflow. Flooding areas like this, as well as neighborhoods, freeways, businesses and more, local officials have preemptively declared a disaster. Before Harvey slams into the nation's fourth largest city.

14:01 Homeowners scrambled to save their homes by lifting them. Through all our crews at this and hope to race and get it up before it hit. And you're gonna make it? Yes, oh yeah definitely. The Sheffman's house elevated just in time. It's just an amazing feeling. While others are heartbroken. We're about 10 days away from being lifted. It's gonna be our third flood in three years. I'm not sure how we're going to get through this one. We are geared up and ready to go. The threat level is as high as it gets at the Harris County Office of Emergency Management. Oh yeah, lifting the house. Honey! I didn't know they did this. So it seems to me that you'd build a house on a hill instead of having to lift it. But for people that didn't get to see this report, they take and they bring this equipment in and they take the house off its foundation.

14:52 Jerk it into the air about 10 feet or more and then they put blocks cinder blocks underneath the house in about 20 places so it you know it has some stability I can't imagine a big log coming in ramming into the cinder blocks dropping the house. Oh that would be great and then off it floats. That would be bad. Yeah. I can see that. But they had, they showed a bunch of these houses that were all jacked up into the air and then of course one guy, I guess he signed up for the house lifting too late and he doesn't get to get his house lifted. But I didn't even know they did anything like this. I mean, I know in some flood zones, I think they do that around here. Yeah, I think I do that in Florida too, I believe. I know in some areas they actually build a house on stilts. Florida for sure.

15:41 And so the house is already up in the air. And also on the Texas coast, it's also on stilts. You know, we've had problems. Galveston is famous for its massive flood in... when was that? A number of times. There's one I think in... Yeah, there was a bad one. And they got plaques and monuments everywhere to it. So yeah, it happens. It's our turn this time. But there's a lot of, oh Texas, sure you know you want that federal aid, don't you? Now my favorite, this is my last one. I'm glad you had such fun not even being here. Well yeah, it's a lot more fun than being there, I think. You know what's really sad? Christina's here for her birthday with her girlfriend and they've been in the house. They can't get out. When the weather's bad, there's a lot less to do.

CHAPTER 07 / 56 Discussion

Media Exploitation of Hurricane Victims and NICU Evacuations

News crews are criticized for aggressive tactics in seeking interviews with distressed families, including those whose infants were airlifted from coastal NICU units to Dell Children's Hospital in Austin. Reporters reportedly waited outside hospitals and the Ronald McDonald House to capture "sob stories" from vulnerable evacuees. These actions are described as ghoulish, prioritizing emotional footage over the privacy and well-being of families in crisis.

corpus christi· dell children's hospital· ronald mcdonald house· media ethics· nicu

16:35 That's nothing to do. In Texas in general. Well you still have cable, that's a plus. Yeah. Yeah. Okay, so this was the one this I believe was ABC and they they go out of their way to find I don't know I like to know how these reporters even find these people and they must go to local people and they never of course they give credit to nobody but themselves But they always try to find this the worst case sob story some person they lost something or other and then they and they put them on the camera and then they make them cry so they're sobbing over something and it's just this is the

17:10 I don't know how they find these people to begin with, but they do. And this is probably the worst one that I've seen this woman more than once is the storm worst case scenario. And I have a story about that too. Does it make you nervous seeing what's going on outside your window? Yeah, I'm very nervous. And what about your home? We actually live in an RV, so we unfortunately had to leave it on the island. So we're pretty worried that we won't have a home to go back to. Oh yeah. Yes!

17:50 They could only get as far as Corpus Christi because Danielle is due for a c-section here on Tuesday Oh even better No, that one to the section to two punch. Well, I'll tell you because they airlifted a lot of babies from the NICU in I think Houston, but maybe even near the coast And then they airlifted him to Dell Children's Hospital. And so Tina was on call because we had like seven or eight families come into the Ronald McDonald house. So they had to be taken care of and so everyone's on call and then the media is like, yeah, you know, we want to interview with these and we want to get a story. And Tim's like, yeah, no. You know, their children are in the intensive care unit. They're airlifted to another intensive care unit. Their lives are already uprooted. They're staying. It's great to stay there, but they're not home. And you want to grab them now and interview them about all this devastation? No.

CHAPTER 08 / 56 Discussion

Donald Trump Phoenix Speech and Media Criticism

Donald Trump criticized the news media during a speech in Phoenix, accusing reporters of misrepresenting his social media activity as "Twitter storms." He argued that simple updates about his meetings with veterans are unfairly characterized by the press. The remarks reflect ongoing tensions between the administration and major news outlets regarding the framing of the president's public communications.

donald trump· phoenix· twitter storm· media bias· veterans

18:50 And then they said, okay, and they went straight to Dell Children's Hospital. They stood outside and waited for him there. The media are a-holes. They're ghouls. Ghouls is exactly it. Like, come on. Just as a side clip, now that we just made that assertion. That they're ghouls. Well, or that there are A-holes too. I want to play a short clip, and this is just off to the side, a short clip of Trump from his Phoenix speech. Where he did go into a rant, I think a lot of it was quite funny. He went into a rant about the media and of course the media wouldn't report on it. They would never hear this particular clip, this is Trump in Phoenix. You would never hear this particular clip on the news media but I think it's appropriate considering what you just said. And do you ever notice when I go on and I'll put like out a tweet or a couple of tweets, he's in a Twitter storm again. I don't do Twitter storms.

19:49 You know, you put on a little tweet, I'm going to be with the veterans today. They'll say, Donald Trump is in a Twitter storm. These are sick people. I did see him say it. Actually, that brings me to another story as we move away from the storm, if you don't mind. And if we have an update, we'll be sure to break in and bring you that update. In case something's going on, you never know. The CIA is so I have to use the word unhinged, although I like unglued better. About controlling the president or whatever it is that they feel they need to do. They're bringing out all the stops. All the stops. And now they've somehow figured out a great idea. I wish I was in this meeting. To have one of their former agents, big quotes around former,

CHAPTER 09 / 56 Discussion

Valerie Plame Crowdfunding Campaign to Buy Twitter

Former CIA agent Valerie Plame launched a GoFundMe campaign with a $1 billion goal to purchase a controlling interest in Twitter for the purpose of banning Donald Trump. Critics point out that $1 billion would only secure a fraction of the company and that the funds are actually directed toward Global Zero, an organization advocating for the elimination of nuclear weapons. The effort is characterized by some as a scam or a publicity stunt to fund her existing non-profit interests.

valerie plame· twitter· crowdfunding· gofundme· global zero· nuclear weapons

20:45 Valerie Plame, Valerie Plame to show up. Oh yeah, you know I have this story from I was gonna use in the last show. Yeah, I finally got a clip of it because I was waiting for a clip. Oh good. All I have is just the news, is just the article. Right, so she came on with Brolf there on the CNNs and her concept is to crowdfund enough money to buy Twitter to kick Donald Trump off of Twitter. This is, this is, this is her genius idea. Which is obviously an idea, you know, who knows? But it was like, come on. And at first she's like, she's just dumb, but she is, she was an accomplished agent. We don't know that. She's hot.

21:27 Yeah, well we know that. Hot equals accomplished. Yeah. So here's a little setup with with Brolf. Who is taking this idea seriously, which is even funnier? What an idiot. I think the best way to put it is that Trump has weaponized Twitter. I think just last week John Oliver said, you know, who would imagine when... Who? Who? Who? quotes John Oliver. Come on! What is up with that? I think it was the great poet John Oliver who said, come on Valerie Plame, the CIA is really overreaching with this. Well, I think the best way to put it is that Trump has weaponized Twitter. I think just last week John Oliver said, who would imagine when Twitter was invented that we'd be on the brink of nuclear Armageddon. Armageddon, it's a new way to pronounce it too.

22:20 What is that all about? Is she reading? I have no idea what Armageddon or whatever. Why don't you say Armageddon? Armageddon. I'll rack it up. You bet. I think just last week John Oliver said, who would imagine when Twitter was invented that we'd be on the brink of nuclear Armageddon. It's baffling to me. Armageddon. You gotta clip nuclear Armageddon or whatever. Let's remember to do that. I'll write it on the list here. Don't want to do it.

22:57 Armageddon, I tell you. It was invented that we'd be on the brink of nuclear Armageddon. And everyone kind of laughs at that. But people who really follow this, and as you know, this is what I used to do in my old job at the CIA. Now, what is she saying? As you know, this is what I used to do with my old job at the CIA. Was she tracking nuclear arms? I'm thinking more that she was part of a team that did fake tweets. Yes! That's what I was thinking too. And as you know, this is what I used to do in my- Hold on a second. Okay, no, I'm getting the right, this was during the Bush administration. So, okay, anyway, go on. We'd be on the brink of nuclear Armageddon. And everyone kind of laughs at that. But people who really follow this, and as you know, this is what I used to do in my old job at the CIA, we know that this is deadly serious.

23:44 on You are Valerie, you've only raised maybe close to $50,000 for your goal of $1 billion. Dr. Evil! One billion dollars. Listen to this. Listen to Brolf. Take it seriously. This is really good.

24:22 So far Valerie, you've only raised what maybe close to $50,000 toward your goal of $1 billion. Here's the question, are you just trying to send a message? Is this really a serious effort? Because it's a... I'm just curious. Yeah, because it's stupid is what he's trying to say. It's so stupid, but is this... A serious effort? You already have $50,000 of $1 billion. I'm just curious. Yeah, well, a billion dollars is really ambitious and I've just learned today that's only going to buy like an eighth of a controlling share of Twitter. So it's a highly valued company. The point is I want to... Just wait. Don't worry, it'll come down to that $1 billion. Just wait long enough. Shine a spotlight

25:07 on showing how dangerous Trump and his Twitter button can be. And also, I hope, gives people the sense that they don't just have to stand by when through his ever-escalating tweets undermines our national security. So, and I have to make a very valid point here that... I love how she says, I'm going to make a valid point. I think I should just say that all the time. I'm going to make a very valid point here. I don't care what you say, what you think is a very valid point. Undermines our national security. So, and I have to make a very valid point here that I will not keep, I do not financially benefit from any of this money, any of the money, and if

25:50 To the last penny will go to Global Zero, an organization I've been involved with for a long time. They are leading the resistance against nuclear war and ultimately the elimination of nuclear weapons. Yeah, that was kind of interesting. So this is not going to... What? No, this is... The money's not... This is a scam! Yes, the money's not going to buy Twitter. No, it's going to her little group there. Well, she's not going to get the money if she doesn't get to the billion. Uh, no, I think it's Indiegogo. You can set it up where you take whatever comes in. No, but is she on Indiegogo? What is she on? I think so. I thought she said it was, uh... Go fund me. Go fund me.

26:29 It's a GoFundMe. Yeah, and you can take everything that comes in. You can take it right away. GoFundMe, yeah, I believe that's true. Whatever comes in, you get. Now you should check GoFundMe. So she's basically, she's not even worried about the billing. She just wants to collect some cheap money to give it to her organization. Yeah, which is Global Zero, an international movement, globalzero.org, for the elimination of all nuclear weapons. It's members. This one is apparently just not enough money coming in from Soros for this this particular group Yeah, and this is what was annoying is they don't really have their officers or anything like that mentioned It is just needs some dough some spending money. This is ridiculous. Yeah, it is a 501 c3

CHAPTER 10 / 56 Discussion

Robert Mueller Investigation and Russian Playbook Claims

Valerie Plame expressed confidence in Robert Mueller's investigation into alleged Russian interference in the 2016 election, referring to his associates as a "crackerjack team." She claimed that the Trump campaign's interactions with Russian entities follow a classic KGB and FSB playbook for cultivating contacts. These assertions align with broader narratives regarding the sophistication of Russian influence operations in Western politics.

robert mueller· kgb· fsb· russian interference· valerie plame

27:15 Yeah, so what? Yeah. Now it's about nuclear weapons. Its members understand that the only way to eliminate the nuclear threat, including proliferation, nuclear terrorism, and humanitarian catastrophe, is to stop the spread of nuclear weapons. Now, blah, blah, blah, blah. So it goes on and on and on and on. But it's not about nuclear weapons! No. Not at all. Let's just continue with Brolf asking some probing questions so the truth can come out. What I think across the board is that it was really strange that candidate Trump, even before he had the nomination, that so many within his

27:54 organization, his lieutenants, his compatriots, were reaching out to Russians rather than really focusing on trying to make sure they had the nomination and what the campaign would look like. It is more than a coincidence. There are so many instances of contacts, outreach to Russians. And like many Americans, I'm relying upon Robert Mueller and his crackerjack team. You stepped on it. Listen to what she says about me. That's all right. And like many Americans, I'm relying upon Robert Mueller and his Cracker Jack team. Cracker Jack team? Isn't it supposed to be crack team or something? Cracker Jack. It would be crack, yeah, crack team, but Cracker Jack. Cracker Jack means you're like a cheap... I like, it's better. Yeah, cheap, cheap candy.

28:45 Cheap shitty jack team what is like this so they're basically their popcorn with goo over it Or are they the prize inside of the Cracker Jacks box? Cheap toy in there. That's it was that was a I didn't understand why she said Cracker Jack a lot of weird stuff I don't think she was a very I think she was just an office worker They couldn't put a woman like this out in the field of contacts outreach to Russians and And, like many Americans, I'm relying upon Robert Mueller and his crackerjack team to really get to the bottom of this and see what is there. I—it's head-scratching and concerning. So, what do you suspect, as far as these meetings?

29:30 are I don't think the Russians, they couldn't look into a crystal ball and see that Trump was going to win, but they figured, why not? Everything that we've read of how they approached and how they cultivated different contacts, this is classic KGB, FSB playbook. Oh, classic playbook, Jean. Classic.

CHAPTER 11 / 56 Discussion

Al Franken and The Kremlin Playbook Publication

Senator Al Franken discussed the "Kremlin Playbook" on Charlie Rose, describing it as a documented strategy used by the Russian government to corrupt and influence foreign officials. The document, published by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), examines Russian influence in Central and Eastern Europe. The book is available for purchase on Amazon, though its high price point was noted during the discussion.

al franken· kremlin playbook· charlie rose· csis· russian influence

30:12 This playbook thing crops up as a talking point. I have a clip. All she is is a talking point. She's just a talking point. But that playbook thing, I have to play this now that you played that. This is on the weekly show This Week with Charlie Rose where he just runs off stuff that he did and then also what's on CBS. But he had Elle Franken on with the same concerns, almost exactly the same concerns as we just heard from this woman that was trying to buy Twitter. insincerely I might add. But listen to he's got the same kind of nonsense that he says. We know that the Kremlin has done this before in Eastern Europe and there's something called the Kremlin playbook a document which talks about how they do it and part of the way they do is they corrupt people

31:04 And we see... And then they own them. And then they own them. And we see Manafort and Flynn taking money from Russia. We see Trump's son saying in 2008 that the disproportionate amount of our money is coming from Russia. I mean, if the Trump businesses are in large part financed by, you know, it's hard to borrow money in the United States after you've gone bankrupt many times. And so, and if your son is saying there's a lot of Russian money coming into our business, he's presumably saying because there's a lot of Russian money coming into their business. So that's, and part of the Kremlin playbook is corrupting people, is getting their claws into them by investing in them.

31:56 Corrupting them and so We will this will unfold What a dick just yes, just the way he talks to this corrupting them now Maybe he's talking about how lobbyists corrupt him they get their claws into you. I don't know so there's a playbook out there and I don't know if you can buy it on Amazon, maybe. The playbook? Let's take a look because he says it's out there. And so they call it the Kremlin playbook. Okay. I'm gonna look it up. Let's go ahead and look that up. This is something I've been wanting to mention. Playbook. Amazon. Boom. And?

32:53 Well, I spelled playbook with a dash. Let me try, let me just go to the Amazon site, go to books, books. This is a very odd experiment you're doing. Krem, you never know. He says it's a book. The way he described it. Well, here it is. The Center for Strategic and International Studies have the Kremlin Playbook. Yeah, there you go. That's it. Okay. It's the Kremlin, Kremlin Playbook. There you go. Yeah, the Kremlin Playbook. 45 bucks. It's overpriced. Yeah. Kindle's 25 bucks should be a buck 99. Understanding Russian influence in Central and Eastern Europe. It's got nothing to do with... Okay, well I guess it's the same thing. It's the same playbook. It's a playbook. It's a playbook. You can take that playbook and you can... You got a quarterback sneak. You got an end around. All those things. Got an alley-oop. Alley-oop. That's a glass from the past. It actually looks really nice, this Kremlin playbook. I'm looking at the... You know, it's leather bound.

33:54 Red leather bound yes, beautiful like a playbook actually would be that's fantastic. Can you look inside? Yeah? I am looking inside. Yeah, I'll put this in the show notes looks pretty good. It's pretty good Although you know we just have to apply that to us, and then we know how it works. Hey Okay, okay, I guess it apparently Frank it was promoting sales of this book I'm sure he wasn't. Hey, you're a guy who might. Did you watch the McGregor Mayweather fight? Because that seemed to be the only thing of importance here in America yesterday. Yes, I did. In fact, you did watch it. Man, all I saw was people losing their crap over the streaming not working. Did you have any issues? No. Oh. Yeah, apparently they delayed the start of the main event.

CHAPTER 12 / 56 Discussion

Mayweather vs. McGregor Streaming Issues and VPN Workarounds

The highly anticipated boxing match between Floyd Mayweather and Conor McGregor was plagued by technical issues, leading to a ten-minute delay of the main event due to streaming failures. While many users paid $99 for the official U.S. feed, others utilized VPNs to access cheaper international broadcasts, such as the $20 Sky Sports feed in the UK or free licensed streams in Russia. Mayweather's victory followed a more aggressive boxing style than his typical defensive approach.

floyd mayweather· conor mcgregor· streaming· vpn· sky sports

34:47 By 10 minutes. Well, they had a bunch of preliminary bouts. I didn't watch any of that. There was something wrong with the stream. I don't know. After all that money? Yeah. If I paid 99 bucks for it... Yeah. Oh no, people were very angry, believe me. Very angry. I would tell people a couple of things. One, if you really did your homework and had a VPN, you could get the entire feed. You could steal it! No, you could steal it too. But you could get it for I think nine bucks or 10 bucks or 20 bucks. It was less than 99. It was Sky Sports in England. They had a feed for 20 bucks. And that's the one I would do. And I don't know that that had any trouble. It was cheaper. And then if you really looked around, I found a website that showed all of the different services that were giving it out.

35:43 The Russians had a license to show it free. And you could go if you could get a Russia address on a VPN, you can get it. Otherwise, it cut you off. I did a little research. I was doing some, it was a little tech news stuff I was playing around, but I did watch the fight and it was, uh, it was actually a better fight than I thought it would be. Although Mayweather didn't box as he normally boxes, he boxed a different style than he, He thought it would be too boring if he actually, and he would be right if he boxed in his normal style, which is a very defensive type of boxing where he's turned to the side, he's in this kind of an awkward position and it's almost impossible to hit him. But, you know, I wouldn't have paid 99 bucks for it. Well, I have no interest whatsoever. I really don't care. Well, you asked me. I don't know if you had some interest. I asked if you had had streaming problems. I was interested in that.

CHAPTER 13 / 56 Discussion

Lithium in Water Supply and Dementia Prevention Study

A study from the University of Copenhagen suggests a correlation between natural lithium levels in drinking water and reduced rates of dementia. While the findings are considered intriguing by the NHS, researchers note that the results are difficult to interpret and require further clinical validation. Denmark is highlighted as a highly medicated society where such public health interventions are frequently discussed, though the potential for side effects like docility remains a concern.

lithium· university of copenhagen· dementia· water supply· denmark

36:44 No. But since you brought up the Gitmo Nation GMT, very troubling, this wrath of, I'm sorry, rash, a rash of news that has come out regarding a new study, always got to look out for those, from the scientists at the University of Copenhagen, compared dementia rates to the natural quantities of lithium in water, and they have concluded that by putting lithium in the water supply for the slaves to drink, that you will have less chance of getting dementia. This is an old known fact because there's an area and I believe it's in Texas

37:29 that has a high concentration of lithium in the water. And that's where these studies stem from. And this is, I remember hearing about this 20 years ago. I never heard about anybody trying to dope the people with the lithium, but it doesn't surprise me. That's what the talk is all about now. We need to put lithium in the water to save us from dementia. And, groovy side effect, people get kind of docile. And kind of quiet and you know isn't lithium prescribed for bipolar disorder yeah Yeah, typically so they're gonna start or at least they're considering people who have taken lithium. I know a couple personally yes They don't like it. Well. Why not I think the dose is a little higher than you get in the water hmm

38:19 But they seriously don't like it. So here's the national, the NHS, National Health System, service system, I think, adding lithium to tap water could prevent thousands of dementia cases. I mean, that's the lead right there. And I love that this is coming from Denmark, which is the capital of medicated human beings. That's why they're all so happy. It's the happiest place in the world. It is fact. It's the happiest place in the world. And it's also the most medicated place in the world. And now they're sending this over to- Just legalized drugs. Yeah, this is great. This is really good. I can't wait to see if they do that.

39:01 They won't. I mean, although I say that knowing full well that the fluoride's nonsense, they've been sold a bill of goods on using industrial waste fluoride and dump it in the water to get rid of it. And so the public ingests this crap and they get away with it. Here's the conclusion from the authorities in the UK. The study is intriguing because we already know that lithium affects how the brain and nervous system work through many different pathways. However, the results are difficult to interpret. The study seemed to suggest that lithium levels of more than 15 micrograms per liter could be protective against dementia in comparison with lowest levels. However, that doesn't explain why levels of 5 to 10 micrograms per liter seem to increase the risk of dementia in comparison with the lowest levels. I don't know what that means.

CHAPTER 14 / 56 Discussion

Vitamin B6 and B12 Lung Cancer Risk Study

Research led by Theodore Braske at Ohio State University found that men taking high doses of Vitamin B6 and B12 supplements over a ten-year period face a significantly increased risk of developing lung cancer. The risk was found to double in men generally and triple or quadruple in men who smoke, while no such risk was observed in women. The study warns against "super-physiological" doses found in some supplements and energy drinks, which can exceed 8,000% of the recommended daily allowance.

vitamin b6· vitamin b12· lung cancer· ohio state university· supplements

39:50 It's possible that some other factors could be at play. More clinical studies are needed. But there are other things you can do to reduce your risk of dementia in the meantime. That's right. Listen to the No Agenda show. That's right. It'll start right there. And there was a concerning, a very concerning report to me after you promoted this very, very heavily on the show and got me on board. We're pretty close to dying. John, thanks to your medical advice. In a study that followed more than 77,000 people for more than a decade, researchers noticed a troubling trend when it comes to one of the most popular vitamin supplements on the market. What we found was that men who had used dietary supplements, in particular B6 and also vitamin B12,

40:40 were at significant increased risk of developing lung cancer. Surprisingly, there was no risk found in women, but in men, those who took high doses of these B vitamins for up to 10 years had approximately double the risk of developing lung cancer. In men who smoked, the risk was three to four times greater, depending on which of the two B vitamins they were taking. This study looked at both men and women who took high doses for 10 years. A high dose of B6 is considered 20 milligrams. but supplements come in doses of up to 500 mg. A high dose of B12 is considered to be 55 micrograms, but B12 supplements come in doses of up to 5,000 micrograms. So these are super physiological.

41:24 doses that are not necessary for your health. Theodore Braske led the study at the Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center, James Cancer Hospital and Solove Research Institute. He says it's easy to get plenty of B vitamins from diet. Foods like cereals are fortified with them. And some energy drinks have 8,000% of the recommended daily allowance of B12. I don't think there's a clear scientific backing for a healthful need for these supplements at those doses. Thanks. Well, let's look, think about a couple of things that weren't mentioned. I think if you're going to report on this, you have to report on the type of B12 you're talking about. And how does that compare to what I'm told when you get a B12 butt shot from the doctor? And that means an injection in the buttocks, which is a lot more than you get from a couple of the B12, methylated B12 pills that you take.

42:23 Before the show, you said. What does that have an effect to? I mean, how come A, they didn't talk about the type of B12 and B, they didn't talk about the doctor dose of B12 where you get that. Some people have that daily. Some there's people that have, you know, the Michael Jacksons of the world who walk around with a doctor or did. They get a shot of this stuff all the time. Did they discuss this? Michael Jackson is dead. Just want to let you know. Yeah, he's dead. Bad example. It is a bad example, but it's an example. Here's what I'd say. Of course this is some degree of bullcrap or promotion. Maybe they're going after energy drinks. Why was that mentioned specifically?

CHAPTER 15 / 56 Discussion

Houston Population Statistics and Media Framing

News organizations frequently emphasized that Houston is the fourth largest city in the United States during their coverage of Hurricane Harvey. This specific data point is viewed as a rhetorical tool to provide context for the scale of the disaster to a national audience that might otherwise be indifferent. There is some debate over whether this ranking applies to the city limits or the broader metropolitan area compared to cities like Chicago or Dallas.

houston· population· media framing· city limits· metropolitan area

43:06 Or, my favorite, you know, don't be healthy. Don't take good stuff. It's going to kill you. Up is down. Black is white. By the way, when you talk about something being out of place, you have to go back to the Storm reporting. Because I didn't know this until I started listening. Every network would say it the same way. Houston, the fourth largest city in the United States. Houston, the fourth largest city in the United States. They would always drop that little bomb in there about that. I didn't know this. I didn't know that Houston was the fourth largest city in the United States. Well, there you go. There's the news media educating you. I thought Dallas Fort Worth area was bigger.

43:46 So what you're talking about is New York and Los Angeles one and two, one way or the other. And then Chicago would be number two or three. And so then Houston, are you telling me it's bigger than Seattle Metropolitan or San Francisco Metropolitan? Well, I don't know. Or just specific Houston city limits. How big is this place? Two million three hundred thousand people in in Houston compared to- Is that Houston Metropolitan or Houston city limits? I don't know. I mean, Houston, all of Houston. Why are they telling us this? Why are they making a point to tell us that Houston is the fourth largest city? It's not that I'm skeptical of the way the news is reported. No, I think it's... But I am.

44:36 I think it's to show you the or to give you a visual of the scale of human devastation Okay, you know the fourth largest city in America, or yeah, I can see it to me Anybody give a crap about Okay now let's try it the other way the way they're doing it Houston, which is the fourth largest city in America, is going to flood.

45:12 Now which one do you like so that would be the you I think I think you did it Yeah, that is the reason is because nobody cares about Houston, but if you can put it on the scale to the Houstonians all two of them who donate to the show no offense to the Houstonians, but there's nobody that cares about Houston They think of it as a shithole and whatever yeah, so but if you make it clear as the fourth largest city You're at least giving us some context to care. Yeah, yes, I Okay, I'm glad we deconstructed. Yeah, I'm glad we took care of that. I think it was bothering me feel much better now. Yes Okay, let me see. There's a you know this I have a lot of antifa stuff to talk about as they have They're really going nuts in Candanavia now, and they're going after journalists. This is new. Oh, yeah This is new that the backfired

CHAPTER 16 / 56 Discussion

Antifa Targeting Journalists and Canadian Asylum Seekers

Antifa groups have reportedly begun targeting journalists who they claim are propagating "wrong language" or failing to be sufficiently radical. In Canada, authorities are facing transparency issues regarding asylum seekers detained at the Laval immigration holding center. Reports indicate that a small percentage of these individuals were found in possession of child pornography on their laptops, though the exact number of arrests remains undisclosed by officials.

antifa· canada· asylum seekers· child pornography· laval

46:08 Well, what do you mean? Well, I mean, the journalists are ones that triggered all this stuff. Oh, you mean backfired for them? Yes, yes. Yeah. Let me see. I have a couple of things here. Well, mainly, I don't really have anything Antifa per se, other than just a ton of different links. which are all in the show notes where they're saying, oh, we are going to get journalists because they're not fair. You know, they're propagating the wrong language. Yeah, no, yeah, no, I said that. Yeah. This is one of those situations where these crazies on that side of the equation in dimension B, they're jumping on the journalists for not being twisted enough. Yes. Yeah. And it's becoming very problematic.

47:02 And what's happening in addition to this is where it's really fueling all of it is the migrants coming in. Oh, yeah, Canada. Yeah, in Canada, yes. And let's see, this was an interesting report. And it's really coming, you know, the authorities really don't want to talk about any of this stuff. But you know, this is Canada, Canada is open and fair and transparent society. So when it comes to some of these refugees, having laptops, let me repeat, laptops, With child pornography, it's becoming problematic. I'm sorry?

48:05 The guy said process with that Canadian pronunciation. Yeah, it is kind of odd. It's kind of odd. It's a short clip. It's kind of hard to hear but and the guy speaks weird English. He's saying Asylum seekers instead of asylum seekers. Asylum seekers. I like Asylum. I like Asylum too. Asylum. And more precisely, less than 1% of the SNM seekers presented or showed, I would say, maybe serious criminality or any violations. So it's less than 1% of these SNM seekers that are detained at the immigration holding center in Laval.

49:07 I understand that, but my follow-up to you is how many arrests have been made for a child, for people in possession of child pornography? He won't answer the question, but less than 1%, which could be quite a bit, found with child pornography on their laptops. And they're not arresting them or doing anything about it? No, they have detained people, but they're not saying how many and they're very, very non-transparent about it. In other words, they're not doing anything. Probably not. Now the... It's their culture, man. What are you supposed to do? Now the next problem, and let me reiterate that this has come about because the temporary protection status of Haitians, which was extended once, is due to expire, I believe in March, could be a bit earlier than that.

CHAPTER 17 / 56 Discussion

Temporary Protected Status for Haitians and El Salvadorans

The impending expiration of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haitian and El Salvadoran migrants in the United States is driving a surge of border crossings into Canada. While the Haitian status expires soon, a much larger group of approximately 250,000 El Salvadorans faces a March deadline. This migration trend is creating political pressure on the Trudeau administration, which is struggling to manage the influx and the resulting social complexities.

temporary protected status· haiti· el salvador· immigration· canada

49:58 And this is what is spurring many of them to go to Canada, which of course is much greater, much better than here because they're free and people are nice and transparent. The next wave will be El Salvadorians, El Salvadorans, El Salvadorans. I think it's El Salvadorians. I'm not sure. It could be. El Salvador, the people from El Salvador. People from El Salvador. Yes. have a protected status and that is definitely ends in March of the this coming March except there are like four times as many people from El Salvador than Haiti. So we're talking a quarter of a million that apparently is going to pack up and move north of the border.

50:45 Now, I think personally, I think it would be a big mistake for the president not to say, hey, why don't I extend that for these people? But there must be something at play with Canada. I mean, there must be a reason why this is not. Trump went to the Haitian community, went to little Haiti and said, hey, the Clintons suck. They stole everything from you. And now he's not going to help them out? Something must be at play. Something's up. For sure. And it has to do with the border or NAFTA or something. And Trudeau does. It's really interesting to watch. And I got a lot of great written explanations. And thank you very much. I put some of those in the show notes. Niner59er.noagendanotes.com. Because, I mean, it's going to break the country apart. You watch. They have no idea how to handle this. You can't even talk about it.

CHAPTER 18 / 56 Discussion

European Migrant Crisis and Rome Evictions

In Rome, 700 refugees were evicted from temporary housing following protests over living conditions, leading to clashes with police. Meanwhile, in Calais, France, migrants have returned to the site of the former "jungle" camp despite its destruction last year. Critics suggest that NGOs, potentially funded by figures like George Soros, have misled migrants with promises of free housing and income in Europe, contributing to the ongoing humanitarian friction.

rome· calais· emmanuel macron· george soros· refugees

51:40 It's become a real issue. Yeah, Canadians have difficulty when anything's actually a complex mechanism shows up on their doorstep. Look who they have for their, you know, Trudeau running the place. These guys. It's like a teenager. Meanwhile, the migrant situation in Euroland is getting worse. In Rome, 700 refugees were evicted. from one of their temporary housing, mainly because they were protesting that the housing, 800 people, that the housing wasn't good enough for them. They said, you know, this shit housing, shit, we want better. So this is no good. And that was a big fracas and now the police are being condemned for the way they handled them. See, there was, I had more. It's just, it's really, really coming to a head. This is, oh, Calais, after the jungle got

52:33 Rousted there at the at the channel. They're back. What had become a vast shanty town sheltering up to 10,000 migrants was razed to the ground last October. Calais' so-called jungle camp destroyed by French authorities. Nine months on the jungle may have gone but the migrants have returned. This time there's very little here for them and they're desperate to get out. across the English Channel. The dismantling of the camp, it was a defining issue, he says. First of all, in this camp, 60% of the people wanted to stay in France. But now in Calais, people want to go to England as quickly as possible. Even more so now, because there's no way to shelter at night. Their blankets, their bedding are thrown in the canal, you can see behind me, every night or every morning. There's pressure for people to pass through as quickly as possible.

53:25 French President Emmanuel Macron has promised that migrants will be treated humanely. Last month, a local court ordered authorities to provide drinking water, toilets and showers. But there's been no sign of that, according to Khaled from Afghanistan. The difference is huge compared to the former jungle, he says. Police were not harassing people every day. There were houses, tents set up, there was food. We had everything there. There were showers, toilets, a mosque and even a place for eating. We had everything. Here there's nothing. No toilet, no shower, nowhere to sleep, not even a plate to eat from. Campaigners say the tough conditions are aimed at forcing migrants like Khalid out of Calais for good. Yo, sounds like apartheid. Talking about throwing blankets in the river. You got a blanket, toss it in the... I don't even have a plate.

54:18 Well, it's expected now. It's expected from these European nations. It's expected. Bring us in, make it good for us. We were told it was going to be great. Part of the story that's never been explored is the part that goes back to where these guys were told that, you know, go to Germany because they're going to give you a free income, you're going to get income for life. house and a place to stay. It's fantastic. Just go. I mean, who... I always get the sense, and I don't want to keep bringing him up as the bad actor and everything, but I always get the sense that some NGO, and there's a lot of NGOs involved in this, that's for sure, that is some NGO probably financed by the big boy.

55:05 Soros, that was down there selling these guys a bill of goods just to flood Europe with this, and they're all expecting stuff and demanding it if they don't get it? Yep. I think that's very possible. That story's never been told. Well, we tracked that for a while. They had different maps and different instructions that were handed out in the refugee camps, and there are 3 million people there. 3 million. Right. This, I mean, it is a humanitarian crisis. Yeah. And then you have... Without guns. Right. Then you have Erdogan making trouble. Say, hey, everyone in Turkey or everyone in Germany who's Turkish, vote against Merkel. Yeah. I mean, that's the story. It's the story. Da da da da. Here's a story of a bunch of snowflakes who were trampling on some Michael's rights at home.

CHAPTER 19 / 56 Discussion

Antifa Monument Defacement and Gone With The Wind

The movement to remove or deface offensive symbols has expanded to include the Edmonton Eskimos team name and the Christopher Columbus statue in New York. Activists are now targeting Confederate monuments in Gettysburg, raising concerns about potential physical confrontations. There is speculation that this cultural purge could eventually extend to classic literature and films, such as "Gone With The Wind" or "Uncle Tom’s Cabin."

antifa· edmonton eskimos· confederate monuments· gettysburg· gone with the wind

56:02 I'll play the whole thing at the end of the show yeah super agent Paul back once again. Yeah, one of the best yes So the Antifa takedown of pretty much everything offensive continues worldwide worldwide Yes. And everything seems to be offensive. Well, the Edmonton Eskimos are under attack for the name Eskimos. Okay, you know this again, I keep hearkening back to the Washington Redskins. Yeah, could be all about that. But the Edmonton Eskimos say no, no, no, we're sticking with our name. Of course, we had the statue in Columbus Circle of Christopher Columbus defaced.

56:57 Let's see, what else did we have? I'm surprised no one has done what the Russians used to do during, you know, the fall of the Soviet Union, which is you chop the heads off these statues. Oh, yeah, nice. Next target, big target apparently, is the Confederate monuments in Gettysburg. This will be interesting. If people start wrecking stuff in Gettysburg, it's going to be, there's going to be some confrontation. There's gonna be some confrontation in Gettysburg. But I can call- I would stay out of there. I can call what's gonna happen next. Okay. Yes. Yes. We must condemn and destroy all prints and copies of Gone With The Wind. That's gonna be a tough one. Yeah? Well, we shall see. How about Uncle Tom's Cabin for that matter? Oh, that's- of course that's gotta go. So much stuff. Uh, Alan Dershowitz was on- was he on? I don't know if this was- I can't remember what network he was on.

CHAPTER 20 / 56 Discussion

Alan Dershowitz on Civil Liberties and Historical Statues

Lawyer Alan Dershowitz warned against the "educational malpractice" of removing statues of founding fathers like Washington and Jefferson. While he supports moving some controversial monuments to museums for educational purposes, he criticized hard-left organizations for using violence to silence speakers on campuses. Dershowitz argued that historical figures should be viewed through a lens of complexity rather than being subject to modern-day censorship.

alan dershowitz· civil liberties· founding fathers· free speech· antifa

57:57 And, you know, he... I've always liked him for just saying what he felt, and I guess he doesn't give a crap. I'm sure he has enough money, it doesn't matter that much to him. But I think he's going to find out exactly how different the environment is right now. He's a huge liberal, has always donated to the Democrats. As far as I know, he's never supported any Republicans. As far as I know, he's always been a progressive liberal of the highest order, but he's also a super lawyer. And he's a Jew, it makes it even better. And he's Jewish, and he believes in the supremacy of the law and interpreting it properly.

58:38 And he's going to run into a lot of trouble. I just see people spreading these videos of him on social media and they're making really, you know, traitor. Traitor to your country, traitor to your people. It's really horrible. Can't believe this. He has some opinions. Of course there's a danger of going too far. is a danger of removing Washington and Jefferson and other of our founding fathers who themselves owned slaves. Look, we have to use this as an educational moment. We have to take some of the statutes that were put up more recently, for example, during the Civil Rights Movement, and perhaps move them to museums where they can be used to teach young students about how statues

59:26 are current purposes does pose a danger, and it poses a danger of educational malpractice, of missing opportunities to educate people, and of going too far. Remember that President Roosevelt, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, put 110,000 Japanese Americans into detention centers, that President Lowell of Harvard imposed anti-Jewish quotas, that discrimination against women was rampant.

1:00:12 of Communists, socialists, hard, hard left, sensorial organization that tries to stop speakers on campuses from speaking. They use violence and just because they're opposed to fascism and to some of these monuments shouldn't make them heroes of the liberals. Yeah, and just avoid hot tubs.

CHAPTER 21 / 56 Discussion

Abraham Lincoln's 1862 Letter on Union and Slavery

In an 1862 letter to editor Horace Greeley, Abraham Lincoln explicitly stated that his primary goal in the Civil War was to save the Union, not to save or destroy slavery. Lincoln wrote that if he could save the Union without freeing any slaves, he would do so, and if he could save it by freeing all of them, he would do that as well. This historical document is cited to challenge the modern consensus that the war was fought exclusively over the issue of slavery.

abraham lincoln· horace greeley· emancipation proclamation· civil war· union

1:00:50 Very bad, very bad idea. Yeah, for him it'll be a hot tub or just a, you know. No, he'll just have stuff thrown at him. You know, I continue to be so interested in this ongoing dispute. As we know, you said that there's really no consensus among Civil War historians if the Civil War was about states' rights and the Union or if it was about slavery. And if you listen to what is being said in news reports and op-eds and respectable news organizations everywhere, they say, make no mistake, this is about slavery. And I'm willing to believe it, except for I keep seeing evidence to the contrary.

1:01:34 That's because there's tons of evidence to the contrary, because it wasn't about slavery. It became about slavery at some point when it was used to leverage the... I mean, when Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation, the most good that it did was it completely took France and England out of the picture. Now, already I hear people saying, well, why can't it be? Why wasn't it just about both? Well, because the president, and when I say the president, I mean, hammerhand Lincoln, The 16th president wrote a letter to Horace Greenlee, who at the time was editor of the New York Tribune. Greely. Greely, sorry, editor of the New York Tribune. And he had just addressed an editorial to Lincoln called The Prayer of 20 Millions, making demands and implying Lincoln's administration lacked direction and resolve.

1:02:24 So he wrote this reply when a draft of the Emancipation Proclamation already was in his desk drawer ready to go. Here's what he said. As to the policy I seem to be pursuing, quote, as you say, I have not meant to leave anyone in doubt. I would save the Union. I would save it the shortest way under the Constitution. The sooner the national authority can be restored, the nearer the Union will be. The Union as it was. If there be those who would not save the Union unless they could at the same time save slavery, I do not agree with them. If there be those who would not save the Union unless they could at the same time destroy slavery, I do not agree with them.

1:03:05 My paramount objection in this struggle is to save the Union and is not to either save or destroy slavery. You can't get any clearer than that! If I could save the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it. And if I could save it... Here's the question that comes to mind. Can I just finish the quote? Oh, okay. It goes on. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it. And if I could save it by freeing all the slaves, I would do it. If I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone, I would do that. What I do about slavery and the colored race I do because I believe it helps to save the Union and what I forbear I forbear because I do not believe it would help to save the Union I shall I shall do less whenever I shall believe what I am going to do hurts the cause and I shall do more whenever I believe doing more will help the cause he's very clear what this was about yeah big government Fucker New World Order

CHAPTER 22 / 56 Discussion

Modern Interpretations of Civil War Motivations and Reparations

There is an ongoing debate regarding why modern educational and political narratives insist the Civil War was solely about slavery despite historical evidence of broader political motivations. Some suggest this focus serves to justify demands for reparations or to politically marginalize the American South. The desecration of Confederate graves and the removal of statues are seen by some as attempts to trigger further domestic division or even a new civil conflict.

civil war· slavery· reparations· historical revisionism· southern culture

1:04:03 Obviously. Well, here's the question that comes to mind. Why do people want it to be about slavery to the point where they will say stuff? Well, maybe it was about both. Maybe it was, maybe it wasn't, but why is there such a demand that it'd be about slavery? What if it wasn't about slavery? What if it was proof positive was never about slavery? What difference at this point does it make? Well, it's, It helps us... I got bad news. Okay. All right, lay it on me. The Zephyr going about five miles an hour just went by. That is... This is really bad news. What time is it? Oh my goodness. It's an hour late. Oh man, alert everybody.

1:04:53 Anyway, okay, so again. I'll bring it back to the point besides his effort dude. I really thought is this really important I really thought you're gonna lay something heavy on me that to me was it were very sad to see Well, it's we need something well. This is a great question. This is truly one of the great great It is a great. I think this is the only great question yeah, well I Why do you, and you can, people in the chat room, I know that you're the one saying, it could be about both. Why is that necessary? What is gained from that position? Tell me, I want to know. Reparations, there's some angle. Reparations. As someone who, I don't know. Well, this does come up, reparations do come up a lot.

1:05:45 Well, in this case it seems obvious to call the Civil War and anything that commemorates it, commemorates the Civil War, to call it racist. To call it racist. That's, there you go. How about that? I don't think that explains it. Well, someone out there who's smarter than us will maybe figure it out. I've never heard an explanation. But you can... Let me reiterate the question so everyone knows what I'm asking here. Why is it important that the Civil War was about slavery? Okay, send your answers to HGTV. I don't know. I really don't know.

1:06:35 Well, it's apparently important to a lot of people because they keep making this argument when the argument is vague. I mean, if you read the kind of stamp book where there's all the... There's some crazy reasons for... I'm reading what apparently the president himself wrote. So... Yeah, the President Lincoln. Yeah. Yeah, he said it wasn't. Well, there you go. But that's beside the point. Nowadays, everybody wants to... Going back to your historical sources, what you just did, it doesn't count. It doesn't make any difference. No. So there's some reason for this importance put upon slavery. Yeah. I wonder... And I'd like to know specifically what it is. So when did this start? What purpose does it serve? Okay. What purpose does it serve? Well, it served the purpose to guilt Americans in some very specific way somehow into good people and bad people. I think. And also to continually condemn the South. Yeah.

1:07:36 Which has always been kind of a... and I think taking down these statues, many of them are in the south. I think the ones in the north are pointless. But there's some statues down there. Or tearing up a confederate graveyard, desecrating the graves. Which is now happening everywhere. Yeah, which is ridiculous. Shameful. I don't know, the whole thing is very strange. Or maybe to try to trigger another one. Another... Or an actual one. An actual Civil War. But when did this start? When did this meme start that the Civil War... I mean, that's what I learned in school. Well, it started before that. This was a long time ago. Yeah. Yeah. Well, it was an easy explanation for somebody, you know, to throw out in a simplistic high school history course.

1:08:27 Especially since high school teachers generally are left-leaning. And it was instilled in them to promote for some reason, but the reason is never made clear. Well, to me, ultimately, it's just to have good people and bad people in the country. And, you know, and you shift that, you shift it to two spots. One is just in general, hey, you know, like civil war, you're Confederate, you know, you're racist. And maybe this argument itself is meant to divide people. Say, you know, let's just keep this going, you know, we'll just say it was about slaves. Yes, but to what end? To destroy America, obviously.

CHAPTER 23 / 56 Discussion

No Agenda Episode 959 Introduction and Art Credits

Episode 959 of the No Agenda show features artwork by Gaston Garcia titled "The Talking Stick," which depicts a crowded train as a commentary on Canadian immigration. The hosts noted that special characters in the artist's name caused technical issues with the show's RSS feed. Listeners are encouraged to visit the No Agenda Art Generator and the official shop for t-shirts and other merchandise.

no agenda· gaston garcia· rss feed· art generator· podcasting

1:09:12 Well, you could, yeah, well, that's not that easy. I'm gonna go get some Asylum in Canada if it all comes down to it. That's where Asylum needs to be. You need some Asylum. And with that, I'd like to thank you for your courage to say in the morning to you, John C, still stands for Civil War, aficionado, Dvorak. Well, let me get my thing here and say In the morning to you, Mr. Adam Curry. Also in the morning to ships and sea, boats in the ground, feet in the air, subs in the water. If we have any subs in the water left, all the dames and knights out there. In the morning to everybody in the chatroom, noagendastream.com where you can listen to our show live Thursday and Sunday mornings. And in the morning to Gaston Garcia who brought us a classic piece of artwork

1:09:57 for episode nine or five eight. It was titled The Talking Stick, but it had a your favorite image of a million, I think it's Indians on a train hanging off the thing. My favorite image. It was a big welcome to Canada, which was very nice. And also thank you Gaston Garcia for messing up our RSS feed for the second time in a row. It's his name that messes up the feed. Because I'm... That's because you're spelling his name correctly. I know, it's very stupid of me to give a little accent on the O, an accent on the C. Yeah, no, you got to screw loose to be doing that. Yeah, and so I do that in the, you know, to give him proper credit in the show notes, which flows through to the XML-based RSS feed, and... Yeah, what's this, parsed? You're toast. Dead. Dead. Can't do that, that's not right. He can't have any accents in his name.

1:10:48 No agenda art generator calm. Thank you to all of our artists who are always there uploading fun stuff We laugh at most of it as in a good. That's a good thing. We're always very pleased and it's hard to make a choice but we have to make a choice, but also you can find these things that no agenda shop on t-shirts and other paraphernalia and Everyone makes out like bandits. Yeah on the t-shirt sales so I like to say, lots of people come and go with the t-shirt idea and this one group, No Agenda Shop or whatever it's called. What is it called? Noagendashop.com. Yeah. They've actually, they seem to be an operation that

CHAPTER 24 / 56 Discussion

Executive Producer Credits and Spook Language

Sir Onimus of Dogpatch returned as an executive producer with a $700 donation after a brief absence "out of country." His note included references to the 1970s Nazi march in Skokie, Illinois, and the "Lost Cause" meme regarding Confederate statues. The hosts discussed the importance of consistent producer support to maintain the show's independence from outside influence.

seronimus of dogpatch· skokie· nazi march· podcasting· donations

1:11:32 It's really a genuine operation, just a t-shirt shop. But they're doing hats, mugs, posters. They do everything. And I think they have a lot of equipment to do this stuff. I don't think they're jobbing a lot of it out. I get that impression. I could be wrong, but you get one of those t-shirt printers, the eight station t-shirt printers. You put a t-shirt on and the thing spins around and silk screens automatically. That's what you want. So let's start with today's producers and executive producers beginning with our buddy, Seronimous of Dogpatch. He's back. Good. He's back with $700. And he said, forgive me for I've sinned. I've been a month since my last donation, which we noticed. But I am back in the country. You know, donations dry out from somebody. That's a lot of why we haven't seen money from our dukes recently, for example. And you start to notice it. You think they hate us now? You think they're just giving up? Yeah. Oh man overboard. It's the protector of the final draft. Sick of the same, same stuff they were always bitching about.

1:12:32 Forgive me I've sinned I've been a month since my last donation, but I'm back in in the country well or as he puts it back in country Boy talk about a spook language He's back in country back in country after being in hospital leaving that podcasting is global so I can stay informed until the pod Tax is implemented uh-huh Searching for gigas was fun listening. I like so many experienced international travelers. This is good. I carry Sims. I know, this is like, who is this guy? I carry Sims from five countries in addition to a global US carrier. Sure, and a sat phone. And probably a bunch of passports. Next to my 9 mil.

1:13:21 The dual SIM phone is a necessity to keep connections if you use any bandwidth. My poison fountain pen. Adam, I like your solution. John, he readdresses the letter to me, it was the Nazis that tried to march in Skokie, not the Klan. Yes, we have been corrected on that. Yes, yes. I was there. I was there, he said. Okay. Did he have his sheet with him, is the question. I was there in country. Protests against the march included people with numbers tattooed on their arms. Nazi meant something very personal to them. Trivia.

1:13:58 The Confederate statues are predominantly the legacy of the Lost Cause meme, a chivalrous culture destroyed by Yankees. Dogpatch founder Confederate General Jubilation T. Corn Pone statue was certainly survived since it is a national monument commissioned by a grateful President Lincoln for his poor leadership. It's all in code. I have no idea what he's talking about. Thank you to the great producer Thank you to the great producer work by so many people, okay? I want to thank everyone that donates using sweat equity. Love the artwork, even those not chosen, and many musical clips to remind us that there's humor in hate and stupidity. My only talent is cash donations, so just try to keep the lights on. Thank you. NJNK. NJNK? No jingles, no karma.

CHAPTER 25 / 56 Discussion

Dame Ashley and The Lady of the Lake Title

Christopher Blanco donated $500 to secure Damehood for his wife, Ashley Blanco, as a birthday gift. Ashley has been a long-time listener and contributor to the show since 2014. Living near Lake Erie in Ohio, she requested the title "Dame Ashley, Lady of the Lake." Christopher also shared news of his new real estate business, "I Wish Homes," which recently closed its first property flip.

ashley blanco· damehood· lake erie· ohio· real estate

1:14:53 Beautiful. NJNK. NJNK. Well, thank you, Sir Animas of Dogpatch. It is good to have you still on board back in country. Back in country. It's good. Christopher Blanco in Mayfield Heights, Ohio, $500. ITM gents, I want to wish my smoking hot wife, Ashley Blanco, a happy birthday on August 28th. For her birthday, I want to dedicate this donation to get her to Damehood so she will get credit for the producership. I hit Ashley in the mouth around 2014, shortly after her mom passed away and she had been cooked on the show ever since. One of her goals was to become a Dame of the No Agenda Roundtable and she is a little more than halfway there.

1:15:33 563 according to my accounting. I'm about to close on selling my first flip. Well, if that's true, then she should get to Dame Hood today. Yeah, that's why it's blue. I'm looking at the yellow part. I'm about to close on selling my first flip of my new business. I wish homes. I wish homes. I guess his name of the business. I wish I wish homes. Yeah, I thought what a better way of celebrating than to give Ashley Dame Hood for her birthday and support the best podcast in the universe. I think she would like to be known as, he thinks she'd like to be known, okay, well, she may have to change that, but he thinks she might like to be known as Dame Ashley, Lady of the Lake. Well, that's a nice ring to it, I like it. Since we live close to Lake Erie. Thanks a lot, gents, and keep doing what you do. Chris Blanco, and maybe I guess he's a NJNK, he didn't say. An NJNK, and he is, I think, close to ground zero of the poppy crisis there in Ohio.

CHAPTER 26 / 56 Discussion

No Banks Credit Building Platform and Disco Grunts

Joseph Jones introduced a new platform designed to help individuals build credit without traditional bank loans by keeping money within the community through savings circles. He pledged to donate $5 to the No Agenda show for every new user who joins. Additionally, he requested the return of "disco grunts" during the show's intro segments, a feature from earlier episodes of the podcast.

joseph jones· credit building· value for value· disco grunts· community finance

1:16:35 Be safe. Be safe. And then we drop to associate executive producer with Joseph Jones 28008. It's been a long time. This time I'm the sole member of the 583 club. I wanted to let the producers know about a project I'm working on to help people build a credit tour without using bank loans. Our platform is about keeping money inside your community and allowing you to build credit at the same time to keep, to help get things started. I set up a referral account to support the show for every user that joins one of our savings circles. I'll donate five bucks to the show. In addition, the producer will get $5 for completing their circle. Okay. That sounds interesting. Learn more here. Learn more here at itm.im slash nobanks.

1:17:24 So, itm.im slash no banks. And what is this to help people? You build credit without using bank loans. Interesting. Well, you can do it with credit cards. Now for the, which is banks now for the gushing praise. I find it incredibly interesting to hear all your guys, all these YouTubers are now struggling to find a way to implement the value for value model that you guys have been pioneering for almost a decade. You guys make the highest quality product and I'm more than happy to pay my part to keep things going. This donation represents my personal donation as well as Tom Hall, who was the first producer to sign up on our platform using no agenda code. No jingles however, another one. However, I would like to ask Adam to do a couple of disco grunts during the Fab Five intro segment like he used to.

1:18:16 No disco grunts like All right, I'll try that and that would be it is no worse another that's three in a row three njnk's We have a new meme Okay, and now I need to take the keyboard and push the down arrow to see who this is this looks like Brandon Schultz $231.66 unless I skipped someone. No, I think not. On Thursday's show, Ron Pepper gave us a douchebag check and I feel that it's important we... Ah! It's the douchebag check guy. Brandon.

CHAPTER 27 / 56 Discussion

Seahawkers Podcast and Ron Pepper Knighthood

Brandon Schultz and his co-host Adam from the Seahawkers podcast donated to the show, contributing a portion of the support they received from top donor Ron Pepper. The donation is intended to move Ron Pepper toward knighthood, with a request that he serve "catfish and coffee" at the roundtable. The hosts also acknowledged Jonathan Rowley's reach for knighthood and issued "jobs karma" for listeners seeking employment.

ron pepper· seahawkers podcast· knighthood· montana· seattle seahawks

1:19:01 uh... that we respond pepper hit me in the mouth a couple years back and explain our commentary in the sea hawkers podcast toward some of the bullcrap stories we see in sports media similar to the news deconstruction found on the no agenda show as a former journalism may as former journalism majors in college and amateur media critics we had to check it out now whenever we make a trip from montana to seattle for sea hawks sea hawks games he's a and montana i take it 23166 doesn't have a city name but he must be in Montana. No agenda is regularly a part of those trips because Pepper has been one of our top donors to the Seahawkers podcast. I feel it's only appropriate to kick back 33% of his support back to your show. I also understand that this should put him over the edge into knighthood. Our only request is that he serve catfish and coffee at the round table. Hey, wait a minute. So this is not on my list. So they're making Ron Pepper a knight?

1:19:58 I didn't know that Ron Pepper wasn't a knight. 231-66. I think we put this in abeyance for the next show and let Pepper decide what he wants. Yeah, because we need a name and we need all kinds of stuff. Yeah, yeah. We'll do that. Pepper? But I will put, because I like it, I will put the... Catfish and coffee? Catfish and coffee on the list, yeah. In addition to the 33% kickback, I've added $33.33 for myself and co-host Adam so we can both get licensed podcasters licenses. No de-douching required because we have donated, albeit anonymously. So I appreciate Pepper's bag check instead of a douchebag call. He got a bag check. In other words.

1:20:43 Thanks to shows like yours and Jen Briney's Congressional Dish for providing some much needed critical thinking when it comes to what's going on in the world. Go podcasting and go Seahawks! Jingle request. Okay, we're done with the NJNKs. Jingle request. Pew pews and some Seahawks Super Bowl karma. And by the way, I want to mention a number of years ago we said no No team karmas. Oh, okay. Let this be the last time and a reminder. Yes. You've got karma. Jonathan Rowley in Edmonton, Alberta, 226, he'll be our last associate executive producer. And he says, thank you, John and Anna, for the twice weekly dose of reality. It's my birthday on August 27th. I think he's on the list. And by my accounting, this donation, I reached knighthood. What?

1:21:46 Come on. This is also not on the list. Well, the other one I can see not being on the list, but this one should have been on the list. Well, hold on. Let me put it in here. Does he have a name he wants to be known by? Can I request jobs, Carmen, for everyone? And it's just worked for me since I needed a job last Monday. Just through Jonathan Rowley, apparently. No special designation. Okay, and what did he want from the request just job? Yeah? He he's got no jingle request But he wants jobs coming for everyone since it worked for me since I started a job last Monday You bet man also adding you to the list looking forward to the ceremony jobs jobs jobs and jobs I

1:22:38 That would be our group of executive and associate executive producers for show 959, the palindrome show. Yes. All right. Well, thank you for coming in as the on the upper end of the scale is our executive producers and associate executive producers. We do these credits for those of you new to the program. We do them here at the beginning of the show because that's exactly what you do, just like Hollywood. And they've been financing the biggest of the lion's share. Everyone else is on the credits later on. And it works very well so that we can keep doing the show without interruptions or without any types of influences from outside other than those from who are actually producing the show, which is why you're all called producers. And we appreciate that and please remember we have another program coming up on Thursday. Devorak.org slash NJ. For which you need to be out there consistently letting everybody know about it. Our formula is this. We go out, we hit people in the mouth.

CHAPTER 28 / 56 Discussion

Sebastian Gorka Departure and White House Hit List

Sebastian Gorka has officially left his position at the White House, following a series of controversial reports regarding his alleged ties to far-right groups in Europe. Speculation now turns to who might be next on the "hit list," with Stephen Miller and Kellyanne Conway mentioned as potential targets for removal. Miller is described as a "pit bull" for the administration, while Conway's influence is perceived to have diminished recently.

sebastian gorka· stephen miller· kellyanne conway· white house· nazi allegations

1:23:43 Shut up! Shut up! Well, that was good. Yes. It's always good to hear from Sir Onimus. Yeah, I was a little worried about not hearing him. He wasn't in country. He was out of country, yes. Hey, they finally got Gorka! Yes, I wanted to talk about that. There's no clips. They didn't really talk about it on any of the talk shows. No, he was just... he was gone, but then he wrote a nasty letter. I mean, it's confusing. Well, there is a good editorial in the Washington Examiner, I sent it for you to put in the show notes. Yeah, got it in there. That talks about everything that you've heard about Gorka's wrong and they like lied about him to get rid of him because he was, I think the real problem with Gorka was he was too good a Trump apologist on all the talk shows. Because when Gorka was on, it was outstanding. He should have been, he should have been the press secretary. But he's a Nazi.

1:24:45 He's a known Nazi. Which is also questionable. In Europe, he's a known Nazi. Come on, this is what I kept hearing. He's a known Nazi in Europe. Not here, but in Europe, he's a known Nazi. Yeah, everyone knows him as a Nazi, sure. Yeah, all right. So, yeah, well, of course, he was on my list as the next guy to go, and he did go, right on time, right on schedule. So now, I think we're at an impasse, and the impasse is who's next? Yeah, well, Miller still has to go. I don't know how they're gonna get at go after Miller. They can go after he is so creepy looking It's got to be easy. You can call one. They're not gonna be able to get rid of it. Yes talk about ghoulish He looks ghoulish. He looks like a ghoul. Yeah, I agree. He is the definition Wikipedia should have a picture of him under ghoul Well, it's either him or you know, we're still waiting for Kushner

1:25:43 Well, Kushner's gonna be tough to get out because, and they have an issue with Kushner. Kushner's a Democrat. He's a liberal Democrat. And what do you want to get rid of him for if you're going after these guys? Miller is the annoying guy because he comes on and he's like a pit bull more so than Gorka ever was or definitely more so than the apologist Kellyanne Conway who I think they already tried to get rid of and they kind of passed her over because nobody cares that much. No, they really don't. They really don't. She's been demoted. So I don't think she's on the hit list. She may just quit though because she's going to get tired of this.

1:26:22 She doesn't have anything left. I don't think she's going to quit. Maybe she's got nothing else to do. That's probably true. It's a paycheck and that's prestige. It's good on the bio. Yeah. No, she likes to hang out. Yeah. Michael Savage, the right wing talk show guy, even though he's not really white right wing, he's kind of weird libertarian. He calls her the bar fly, which I think has always been kind of a what's your prediction? I mean, who's next? And for yeah, just logically, it has to be Miller. But I don't know if they can get rid of anybody else that easily. I think the other the other one they want to get rid of, which and I'm not going to complain about it is Sessions.

CHAPTER 29 / 56 Discussion

Jeff Sessions, Calista Gingrich, and Vatican Ambassadorship

Chief of Staff John Kelly is rumored to be behind the nomination of Calista Gingrich as Ambassador to the Vatican, a move some see as a way to distance Newt Gingrich from the White House. Meanwhile, Attorney General Jeff Sessions remains under fire from critics who label him a racist and oppose his stance on marijuana legalization. The Vatican post is described as a "plum job" involving high-level social functions and minimal travel.

jeff sessions· calista gingrich· newt gingrich· vatican· john kelly

1:27:08 Because Sessions is from the South, so you gotta get rid of him. He's a racist. We all know Sessions is a racist. Yes, they throw this racist thing at Sessions and his attitude toward legalizing marijuana is so backward that as far as I'm concerned, if they get rid of him, it's no big loss. I don't know who they're gonna put in this place. And in this whole intrigue that's going on, a lot of it has to do with this chief of staff, Kelly, who I think is a bad actor. And he is probably responsible for getting rid of Gorka. And I think he may be partially responsible for getting Newt Gingrich's wife the job in the Vatican as the ambassador, which is the

1:27:59 Which is the softest job in the world. She's an ambassador to the Vatican City? She's been nominated. What a gig! It's the world's greatest gig because you don't have to do any traveling and it's just parties. And I think this was an attempt to kill Newt Gingrich. Because he's going to eat himself to death. I'm kidding. Yes, I kind of do think you're kidding. And I have to read from this Washington Post editorial that just showed up.

1:28:37 And it's ludicrous. There has never been an important or really famous, and there's been always like castoffs and people's wives and people like that that have gotten the job, the Vatican job, but which is considered a plum job if you like the party and drink really good wine. And this is a Washington Post headline is, Calista Gingrich's nomination to the Vatican stinks to high heaven. And then she goes on slamming her for everything she's ever done. Like, she's a former clerk, like, as this is all bad or it makes a difference and who cares? What does this guy, this guy's Dana Milbank, who's a constant Trump hater at the Post, and here's her qualifications the way he sees it. She's a former clerk in the House Agriculture Committee, secretary. She's the author of children's books about an elephant named Ellis.

1:29:32 She sings in the choir at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. She plays French horn in the City of Fairfax Band. That's kind of sexy. She testified Tuesday that she looked at some of Pope Francis's encyclicals on climate change. But really, Gingrich was receiving a confirmation hearing before Senate Foreign Relations Committee because of one qualification. She's married to Newt Gingrich, the former Speaker of the House and a major backer of Trump. Someone seems pissed off. I don't know why, but I think that the Chief of Staff may have something to do with this because Gingrich is the guy who should be Chief of Staff.

1:30:13 And now you get him out of the country and move him out. He's now going to be in the Vatican drinking a lot of high-quality wine and partying with all these characters. With the Swiss Guard. And he's going to eat himself to death, I'm telling you. You watch. Well, you know, President Trump is so toxic that any connection to him at all makes you a racist. I was on the face bag. Chris Breshears, you remember Chris? Oh yeah. Jovial fellow. Yeah, he says look I'm saying this with clear clear and sound mind if you still support President Trump you are a racist. You just you are a racist. He has done so many racist things that you like what? Don't don't do that to me. I'm just telling you what's written. You're a you know, so I guess David Crosby

CHAPTER 30 / 56 Discussion

Ted Nugent vs. David Crosby on Rock Hall Induction

David Crosby expressed strong opposition to Ted Nugent being inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, citing Nugent's political views and hunting habits. Nugent responded by calling Crosby a "bloated carcass" and a "repository for every drug known to man," asserting that his 50-year career and thousands of concerts are a greater honor than any hall of fame induction. Nugent argued that his musical contributions far outweigh those of other inductees like ABBA.

ted nugent· david crosby· rock and roll hall of fame· abba· political views

1:31:05 For those who are... The singer? Yes, for those who still... The singer who's like borderline... Dead? A death watch because if he can't stay sober? Yes. That guy? Yeah, from Crosby, Stills, Nash and sometimes Young. So he made a comment. Now, he's very, he's always been very involved with the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, with the Grammys, with the NARAS, the National Academy for Recording Arts and Sciences, and he's always involved in all this stuff. You always got some guy who's just, yeah, he's gonna be involved in all of it. And he's pretty confident that there's gonna be no induction of Ted Nugent into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Uh-uh, no way, that's not gonna happen.

1:31:46 No way, we can't have racists and animal killers in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. ABBA's okay. I was very happy with the ABBA nominee. ABBA was great when they were inducted. And Ted responds. You have been loud and unapologetic as you should be about your political views. And it seems in this moment it is costing you a great musical honor. I don't think so at all. The musical honor is that 50 years later I'm doing my 6,621st concert for ultra music lovers who just love real rhythm and blues and rock and roll. And with all due respect to David Crosby, if any is due, here's a bloated carcass that has abused his body all his life. He's a repository for every drug and chemical known to man. And if he doesn't have that much respect or soul, then his criticism to me is a badge of honor. He can kiss my ass.

CHAPTER 31 / 56 Discussion

Joe Arpaio Pardon and Media Distraction Claims

President Trump's pardon of former Sheriff Joe Arpaio was criticized by media outlets like CNN as a distraction tactic timed during Hurricane Harvey. Arpaio had been convicted of criminal contempt for violating a court order related to immigration patrols. Supporters argue the prosecution was a political "birther" retaliation, while critics like Don Lemon contend that Arpaio should have served time before being considered for a pardon.

joe arpaio· donald trump· pardon· cnn· don lemon

1:32:34 Go Nuge. God. But it's sad. I mean, come on, Ted Nugent is more deserving of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame spot than Abba. Or I can name probably, you know, at least dozens of people that shouldn't be in there before Ted Nugent. Yeah. Well, now that we're on the topic, only because I see you had a clip, this pardon of Judge Arpaio from Arizona, which, you know, this was the main thing that I saw CNN and to some degree MSNBC saying that President Trump is using Hurricane Harvey as a distraction to slip in the pardon, which some are saying... Also slip in Gorka. Gorka, yeah, Gorka and the pardon, the pardon, the big pardon.

1:33:30 Well, the clip I have is a classic because it's got Representative Steve King and, um, not Peter, and Steve King with Don Lemon, who doesn't seem to have a clue about anything. He just knows he hates, like a lot of people do, that he hates the old man. Yeah, I hate him because he's a racist. He's, you know, well hold on a second. The crime that he committed was continuing to profile people for detention or road stops. And that was a court order and he went against it and continued to do that. I'm very against all this, this road stops and these stupid things in Texas where, you know, a hundred miles from the border, all of a sudden you have to talk to, you don't have to, but you're forced to talk to a border control. I mean, you think Garpeo should be thrown in the slammer?

1:34:29 I have no idea what the... was he headed for the slammer? Yeah. For how long? I don't know. They never said that in this report, but... Well, he broke the law. Did he not? Well, he broke what is called a judicial order. And so they... it was... I believe that what... King said in this what you're gonna hear in this clip. I believe he's right This was really they were out to get our payo and they got him well I know why they're I know why they were out to get him has nothing to do with the court order does that do with one thing and one thing only his complete and I believe accurate deconstruction and forensic deconstruction of the bogus birth certificate that was produced

1:35:18 He had a team that showed all the, look, whether President Obama was born in America and Hawaii or not is not even the question. The question here is why did they phony up this birth certificate? That was everyone who downloaded the image could see all the all the changes to it. Right, we talked about it excessively when we So it is it is a birther issue. That is why people hate it. Well that you might be right about that whatever the case it does say or they do claim that he was set up and this was just a bunch of bullcrap and so so Trump just said okay you're pardoned which he can do

1:35:59 And it's entirely like pardoning Mark Rich for somebody who's like made billions of dollars off the public. It's interesting you say that. Why did you bring that up? Mark Rich? Why did you bring that up? Because I read somewhere that some hate group, you know, I'm reporting them to the SPLC, some no agenda hate group that, oh, oh, they were all over Mark Rich, the Mark Rich pardon and this of course they're going to think is okay. Like as a comparison. Yeah, it's hardly the same. But let's listen to the two of them go back and forth because Don Lemon is just says Don Lemon actually and you're gonna hear now I'm gonna give you the spoiler alert. I'm gonna give it Don Lemon actually says well Trump if Trump should have let him get convicted.

CHAPTER 32 / 56 Discussion

Steve King and Don Lemon Debate Arpaio Pardon

Representative Steve King defended the pardon of Joe Arpaio during a heated exchange with Don Lemon, arguing that the conviction was based on "judge-made law" rather than a specific statute. Lemon countered by citing CNN's legal experts who claimed the pardon undermines the rule of law. The debate highlighted the divide between those who see Arpaio as a victim of political persecution and those who view him as a lawbreaker who defied the judiciary.

steve king· don lemon· joe arpaio· rule of law· judicial order

1:36:50 and let him serve time and then pardon him. That's what this guy says. It's great. Okay, can't wait. To appeal. That's the only thing I regret is that it would have been nice to see the exoneration at a higher court. So you support this, right? You support the president on this? I do. I support the president's decision to pardon Joe Arpaio, who served this country for all of his adult life. He's 85 years old. He's been strong and bold. Yeah, I'm gonna say right here, I don't give a crap about that he's 85 years old. This is what I keep hearing. The president said it too. I don't care how old you are.

1:37:31 He's pretty spry for 85. I don't know, you know, this is... It's ageism. I said ageism earlier. It's ageism, yeah. Why should you not have to go to jail because you're 85? Makes no difference to me. He's 85 years old. He's been strong and bold and confident in the tip of the spear in enforcing immigration law. But he broke the law. But he broke the law. He didn't abide by the law and he hasn't been sentenced yet. I've got to ask you these questions. He broke the law. He didn't abide by what the Justice Department, the guidelines that they gave him. He has not been sentenced yet and the President already pardoned him. What about the rule of law here? No concern for you with that? Don, I would say that my understanding is that it's judge-made law.

1:38:15 that Judge Snow made the law up from the bench. And I also recall that Janet Napolitano jerked his 287G program authorization, and that began well before that when Democrats on the Judiciary Committee began to complain publicly and call upon the Obama Justice Department to go after Joe Arpaio. This was driven from politics in the beginning and I don't think anybody can quote the statute that was violated. Instead it was a judge that made it up from the bench. Well, I'm not a legal scholar or a legal expert but what I have heard from our legal folks here on CNN who are nonpartisan, they're saying that the Justice Department issued

1:38:56 What I've heard from our legal folks around CNN who are nonpartisan. Sure. They can quote the statute that was violated and instead it was a judge that made it up from the bench. Well, I'm not a legal scholar or a legal expert, but what I have heard from our legal folks around CNN who are nonpartisan, they're saying that the Justice Department issued a directive. They told him he had to abide by a law. He broke the law and therefore that's why he was accused of what he did and found guilty of what he did and that the president in their estimation was not abiding by the rule of law as well by issuing this pardon. The president has the authority to pardon. He does have the authority to pardon. He does have the authority. He does have the authority, yes. He does have the authority, but he had not been sentenced yet. What our legal expert says, Laura Coates, is that he's not following the rule of law

1:39:49 he should have at least waited until he was sentenced and maybe even served whatever sentence that he would have been handed down to him, that he should have served that and then a pardon. I think that's a significant, I'll say liberally interpreted. There may be a tradition out there to wait until the conviction would come down and the sentence would be delivered, but I don't think there is for anybody to serve their sentence. But I saw this coming as a political persecution. Yeah, it was about the birther stuff. That's what this is about. That's why they went after him. And because he was doing stuff in a hard-handed way that is not legal. Oh, he's an a-hole. Yeah.

1:40:31 That's that yeah, but it was still the he's right King is right. This is a political persecution and Don Lemon's an idiot Yeah, well, but he has legal legal folks to talk to so yeah He talks to his legal folks and they said that he should have let him get convicted and served You know there's after he was out you can pardon him then what yeah? That's just that's just like he has to be punished somehow. He has to feel some kind of hurt fine And well, the bottom line, president pardons, that's you got to live with it. But we do have a birther issue taking place in Australia right now, which is a crisis. It's a crisis, a crisis of dual citizenship. As it appears, there are multiple

CHAPTER 33 / 56 Discussion

Australian Dual Citizenship Crisis in Government

Australia is facing a constitutional crisis as several members of Parliament, including Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce, were discovered to hold dual citizenship. The Australian Constitution strictly prohibits individuals with allegiance to a foreign power from serving in government. Joyce has moved to renounce his New Zealand citizenship, but the High Court must decide if he was eligible to nominate for office in the first place, potentially shifting the balance of power in Parliament.

australia· dual citizenship· barnaby joyce· constitution· new zealand

1:41:17 Australians in government who also have dual citizenship and that is not allowed. You may not pledge your allegiance to any other country but Australia. No really, so if you're an American and you have an Australian citizenship, you can be a dual citizen in the United States as of about 40 years ago. Yes, and we know that. You can actually have two or three citizenships if you think you can pull that off. And you can be in government. Yes, yeah, yeah, but not Gorka was one of those but not but not in Australia No, no, it's the crisis. That means there's no Americans that are dual citizens with Australia not in government No, no, no in no in nothing. You can't be a dual citizen Australia So you can't be a dual citizen in the United States with Australia as your other citizenship. You can't

1:42:12 If you can't be... I'm not understanding. I'm sorry. I'm dense. This is good. Try it again. If you can't be a dual citizen in Australia, that means if you're an American, you can't hold an Australian citizenship because it's illegal in Australia. No, that's not illegal in Australia. I thought you said it was. No, if you're in government. Only in government. Yes. That's the problem. That's why it's a concern. I thought earlier in this conversation you said it was illegal to be a dual citizen in Australia. As a politician in government. Okay. The federal government is in limbo with its one seat majority under question. While the Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce has moved to renounce his recently discovered New Zealand citizenship, the government must wait for the High Court to decide whether or not he is eligible to be in Parliament.

1:43:05 Bob Catter thinks he's ineligible to sit in Parliament. The Constitution is very, very definite. If you're un-legitimate, it's 20 out of the pound in any way, then you're out. Kim Rubenstein is a constitutional law professor at the Australian National University. Her reading backs Mr Catter. Well, constitutionally it's very clear that if you are a citizen of another country, then you are not eligible to nominate to become a member of Parliament. So there is, in some ways, a black and white answer here. Now, the reason why this is interesting is it's about to change the balance in parlance. So everyone's desperately trying to berther people. So now this guy is an Australian-New Zealand dual citizen? I know, it's the worst. It's like being Dutch and Belgian at the same time.

1:43:58 Yeah, or Walloon and Flemish. I mean, they hate each other. I guess they would take offense to that. But you don't want to say, hey, how's everything going in New Zealand? When someone's from Australia, it just doesn't work. So in their constitution, it actually specifically says you have to exclusively be? Apparently. Do they use those terms? I don't think so. Well, you cannot pledge allegiance. It seems like a legal trick. You can't pledge allegiance to a foreign power and being a dual citizen by default means that. What if you sit out the pledge? You know... You can sit out the pledge here. Why don't you... Why aren't you a lawyer? You don't have to pledge to anything, you can sit down. Okay, fine. That's not the real problem in Australia. Uh-uh. These horrible homophobes. Yeah? Take note, horrible homophobic Australians.

CHAPTER 34 / 56 Discussion

Same-Sex Marriage Debate and National Pride in Australia

Australia is conducting a national postal survey to gauge public opinion on legalizing same-sex marriage. The debate has become contentious, with religious groups seeking protections for clergy and businesses, while proponents argue for total equality. A notable moment in the media involved a host questioning an anti-marriage activist's right to take national pride in gay Olympic athlete Ian Thorpe while opposing his right to marry.

australia· same-sex marriage· lyle shelton· ian thorpe· religious freedom

1:44:58 You have to pledge allegiance to being homosexual? Yes, yes, this is where you're going. No, up right now is they're trying to legalize same-sex marriage and it's gotten to the point where they have sent out a mailer to everybody in the in the census database to get their opinion. Should we allow same-sex marriage in Australia or not? And it's... I like that this debate is happening in Australia. First of all, who knew that the Australians weren't very tolerant? I mean, come on, Australia. Do you want to participate in the big boys land? You got to be tolerant of this stuff. So we're going to hear two politicians, both on the same program. The first is a pro-SSM, is what they're calling it. SSM. They have an abbreviation. This is on the Australian Broadcasting Network.

1:45:54 or corporation system. And then you'll hear a guy, and she's a lesbian just to make it more fun, and then you hear a guy who's against it and of course it comes down to the provisions of well if you're in clergy then you don't have to perform same-sex marriages but But if you're a cake maker, I'm telling you, they just take our template and do the whole thing all over again. If you're a cake maker, you can't discriminate, you have to make the gay wedding cake. And so this is what's going on. But there's a little fun gotcha here that the host of this program hurls towards the anti-SSM-er. And we can see that from Lyle Shelton's answer what the approach of the NoCamp is going to be as this campaign continues over the coming weeks. And what do you make

1:46:39 of the approach of bringing all those other issues in? Well they're just simply not relevant. It's a question of whether or not you agree with changing the Marriage Act. Now, the draft legislation that Dean Smith has prepared very clearly protects the right of religious ministers to opt out if they choose to and that will protect their rights. I mean if Virginia and I turned up at our local Catholic church wanting to get married and the priest They said no, that would be the end of it. It won't change, it doesn't have any impact whatsoever on the teachings of the church. And to say that it does is simply scaremongering. Lyle Shelton, did you cheer on Ian Thorpe and take pride in his achievements at multiple Olympic Games? So he's talking about a gay athlete and asked this anti-same-sex marriager if he cheered the gay athlete. Scaremongering.

1:47:33 Lyle Shelton, did you cheer on Ian Thorpe and take pride in his achievements at multiple Olympic Games? Yeah, of course. I think Ian Thorpe's a great Australian and a great athlete. And so if he did, what right do you have to participate in that joy and take national pride in those? What kind of a debate is this? I love this. I love this question. It's like the man in the middle is taking one side exclusively like a crooked judge. I love how he's saying, what right do you have to cheer on the gay athlete if you don't support same-sex marriage? You horrible man, you. Facetious argument.

1:48:09 So if he did, what right do you have to participate in that joy and take national pride in those achievements if you now deny him the right to feel like an equal and experience the joy of marriage? Well I wouldn't want anyone to not feel like an equal and there is equality under the law in Australia for all people, same sex or not. Can you see that people may see there is an inconsistency and a hypocrisy in your approach there if you feel like you can celebrate the joys of achievements of LGBTIQ people at one level and then deny them a feeling of equality on another. I can celebrate the achievements of all Australians, their sexual identity is not relevant to those achievements. I'm so happy. So what he wanted to say, so what he's wanting, I mean the logic of this lane of questioning is the following which is that

1:49:05 If the guy had said, when he was asked the question, did you cheer for this guy, a runner, whatever he was, did you cheer for him? Because he said, yes, he should have said, no, I hate him. And then it would be fine. Yes. No, I hate him. Yeah. Because, you know, the guy tried to move the debate from being a religious issue to one of hate. And I'm very happy this is happening. I'm happy to see what's happening in Canada. I'm happy to see what's happening in Australia. Because I know that your news media was laughing at us, and here you go. Let's see how you deal with it. And we'll be reporting on it. I find this beautiful. I'm not sure which I like more. Gay hate in Australia or Muslim hate in Canada. I'm not sure. I like them both so much.

CHAPTER 35 / 56 Discussion

Jewish Identity and Political Shifts in the Democratic Party

A listener's letter explores the complex history of Jewish racial identity in America and the perceived shift of the Democratic Party toward anti-Semitism. The writer notes that while Jews were once considered "colored" immigrants, they are now often lambasted by the left regarding the Israel-Palestine conflict. The letter suggests that some liberal Jews are attempting to regain political favor by identifying as "people of color" to counter the influence of figures like Keith Ellison.

jewish identity· democratic party· keith ellison· israel· libertarianism

1:50:02 I bet there were gay Muslims somehow involved and you could combine the two elements. Speaking of, we should read this note about the Jew meme. Yeah, this was a good note. Yeah, and she definitely doesn't want her name mentioned. No, I won't mention her name. This is a very good note. Yeah, it's a good note and this is about, well, it blankets a lot of things. So I'll just read it. Hi Adam and John, I'm listening to episode 957. I was just going to email you about the whole quote, are Jews white or people of color question. But I just heard Adam read that shameful screed from Facebook, shaming Jews who support Trump. That was by far the most disgusting Facebook post I've read or heard lately. It makes me ashamed to share religion with that lying, hateful writer.

1:50:50 breathes. In terms of the original issue, I learned several years ago that when Jews were coming into this country by the millions around the turn of the century, they were actually considered colored along with Italians, the Irish, and other immigrants. Only when Jews successfully assimilated into American society by the mid 20th century did they start being seen as white. My mom always told me that it wasn't right to check off white on forms because Jews aren't white but a whole other ethnicity. I don't think anyone has answers as to whether Jewishness is an ethnicity or just a religion. Obviously, Jews do tend to look a certain way, medium height, olive skin, larger features, sometimes curly hair, etc. and thus don't look like people from say the UK or Scandinavia.

1:51:33 Lately, I think many Jews in America have come up against a major problem. The Democratic Party had sucked in nearly all non-Orthodox Jews during the 20th century and has turned into an anti-Semitic political party. Jews are regularly lambasted for the Israeli-Palestine situation with Democrats calling the state of Israel an apartheid state, etc. And the Jew-hating Keith Ellison coming so close to being elected head of the Democratic Party. We didn't even, I didn't know he was a Jew-hater. He's a Muslim. Okay. I think some ultra-left and liberal Jews have been trying lately to get back into the party's fold by identifying with people of color, thereby regaining their political home and perhaps turning the tide back towards favorability. Interesting.

1:52:19 As a Jewish American woman who was taught by her parents to always think for herself and who used to listen to her mom arguing with her parents, who were diehard FDR people and Democrats their whole lives, I'm ashamed that so many Jews are such lemmings when it comes to politics. We should know that we can't rely on anyone or anything but ourselves if we want to survive as a people. But hey, that sounds libertarian, doesn't it? I don't understand why more Jews aren't libertarian and distrustful of all governments. American Jews could see how much Obama despised Netanyahu and the contempt he had for Israel, but they didn't want to admit it because it went against the narrative. Hopefully more Jews and Americans in general will wake the F up and start using their brains again because shit has gotten out of control. Thank you again for your show. Sorry for the novel. And we appreciate her note.

CHAPTER 36 / 56 Discussion

Historical Concepts of Race and The Races of Man

Historical texts like "The Races of Man" from the 1920s categorized ethnicities like the Irish, Scots, and Swedes as distinct races based on physical stereotypes. Post-WWII anthropology shifted toward a three-race model—Asian, Negroid, and Caucasian—based on genetics rather than nationality. Modern discourse is criticized for conflating religion or culture with race, such as labeling opposition to Islam as "racism" when Islam is not a racial group.

race· genetics· the races of man· caucasians· anthropology

1:53:06 Yes, so that does explain that she has credentials now It reminded her comment in there reminded me of something that when I was a kid There was there was a number of books. In fact. I have one called the races of man and It was done in the 20s familiar for some reason well I'm sure there's a title that crops up as you you know copyright you can't copyright a book title So the races of man who tip... Wait, stop, stop, stop. So I could actually write a book titled, Steal This Book 2.0? Yeah. Damn. Isn't that interesting? Why is that? Why can you not copyright a book title? I'd have to go back and look at the legislation or not the legislation, but the court cases. But there's a reason that's logical reason at the time.

1:53:56 But you can't copyright a book title. So once in a while you get these. This happened when I was working for McGraw-Hill as a book publisher. There were two books called the Internet Phone Book. Oh yes, wasn't that the Yellow Pages? Or the Internet Yellow Pages, that was it. I still have that. But there's two of them with the exact same title. done by two different publishers and everyone's bent out of shape about it. But anyway, let me get back to this. So there's the race is a man and inside the book, there's pictures of all these races, Irish, Swedish, Scottish, British. They had all these and all the pictures when you looked at each one of them, you go, yeah, yeah, it looks like an Irishman, looks like a Scott. You know, they've all the stereotype looks represented the races. So when I was in school long ago,

1:54:45 There was a big stink about this that took place in, I think it ran from the late after World War II into the 60s, that this is bullcrap. These are not races and we should not think of them as races under any circumstances. There are three races and this is based on genetics. There's an Asian race, there's a Negroid race and a Caucasian race. And everybody has to be part of one of those three races. And this was drummed into us because of books like The Races of Man showing a Scot being a different race than an Irishman.

1:55:21 And this was drummed into us to this day. I still think about the fact that when somebody says, it's racist, this is racist because somebody doesn't like a Mexican. When the Mexicans are not a race. Or they don't like these people because you don't like the Lebanese coming in because the Lebanese are a race. These are not races. This is going to just harkens back into the turn of the century 1900s. this notion of what race is, and she exhibited it right there based on looks. Looks that don't determine race. Looks do not determine race. That's what was drummed into me. That has fallen by the wayside for some reason. I have yet to figure out why. And let's just want to call everyone a racist all the time. Yeah. End of lecture. Yeah, good lecture.

CHAPTER 38 / 56 Discussion

4chan Bot Networks and The Decline of Media Buying

Members of 4chan claim to be intentionally creating fake traffic to undermine Google's advertising dominance. This follows historical examples of suspicious viral growth, such as the Kony 2012 video, which saw improbable exponential view counts. The decline in advertising quality is attributed to the replacement of professional media buyers with inexperienced staff who prioritize social perks over brand safety and data integrity.

4chan· kony 2012· media buyers· botnets· forbes yacht

2:00:23 4chan is now claiming that they are the ones that are creating all these fake sites and the fake traffic to try and bring the big mighty Google down. That's an interesting take. That is very interesting and it could be done. I think they're well on their way and I think it's super interesting to see. I mean there's some stuff that shows up on Google. My favorite one always was Kony 2012. Yeah, that was a good one. To watch the numbers on that thing because those numbers were phony. There's no way you were going from 1 million page views or 1 million video views, whatever you want to call it, advertising.

2:01:02 to 12 million in a day and it just kept exponentially flying high. 20 million, 30 million. It was ridiculous. It was obviously some very sophisticated bot network that was not catchable and there are plenty out there. I mean in some instances you will run into these sites and if you do a simplest of searches or analytics that you can run on the site You find out that all their click-throughs and all this stuff comes from the Philippines and some part of India, specific one part of India. And this is an American side, like a news side or a video side, some sort of site. And what are all these clicks coming from the Philippines? How many people in India really care about these videos of somebody?

2:01:50 It's obvious that there's massive amounts of scams going on out there. And the advertisers are apparently too stupid to figure this out themselves. They're starting to catch on, as you and I have mentioned before, the problem really started with agencies and with their clients installing buyers who were really dumb millennials, not just millennials, dumb millennials, who did not give a care, not a care in the world for the brand. for placement, just, well look, yeah, I'll tell you what, you got what? You got Laker tickets? Yeah, no, we'll do a buy on your site. They're completely corrupted, completely. And being a media buyer used to be a very important job in the whole system. Yeah, the media buyer's low-end, usually somebody just out of school.

2:02:41 A lot of women. I was on the, when I was at New York, I was on the, when I was working for Forbes, I got invited to a trip on their big, they have this huge yacht. Oh, the Forbes yacht? The Forbes yacht. Nice. So the Forbes yacht trip was a very nice tour of the Eagle all the way around Manhattan. And I think there was even a little fireworks at the point near the Statue of Liberty. And yeah, we go all the way around the island and back into a port, which is docked on the downtown area. And it's about, I don't know, a couple hours to do this trip, but it was filled with a number of not too many writers, but a few of them. I knew the editor of the online very well, he got me on there. And it was all these media buyers.

2:03:34 and they were all 20-somethings, mostly, I would say dumb as a fireplug. Every single one of them, you couldn't even talk to them for very long because they were so stupid. And all they wanted to do is talk about shopping or something, a rock band or some guy that they had a crush on. It was unbelievable how brain dead these people were. And I could see what the problem was. And you saw it as it started to develop and magazines started to fold in favor of online. And it was a real eye opener for me. Well, um, I, so I did, I did roam around myself by when I got there, I went into the engine room and talked to the guys down there and I'm sure that was dynamite. Was that when you were on your way to the Bilderberg convention hanging with the Silicon Valley? So I followed the industry still coming from that world and there's a podcast

CHAPTER 39 / 56 Discussion

Amazon Alexa and The Death of Brand Loyalty

Voice-based ordering through devices like Amazon Alexa is predicted to accelerate the "death of brand" by removing visual packaging and design from the consumer's choice. When users ask Alexa to "buy batteries," the system defaults to Amazon Basics rather than offering a selection of name brands. Research indicates that Alexa may also charge higher prices for voice orders compared to the standard Amazon website, exploiting a lack of transparency in the interface.

amazon alexa· voice ordering· scott galloway· amazon basics· brand identity

2:04:34 What is it? The L2 advertising podcast, Scott Galloway. Anyway, he... I just wanted to play this because it was interesting. We hadn't considered this, although we had the conversation about the various talking sticks that are now available. The main one being the Amazon talking stick. And I said, the genius of this is something no other competitor has and it's the ordering interface, the ordering interface of the future. You remember I said that. Yes. Alright, because I am from the future. And something neither you or I considered is just how incredibly slick this is. The technology though that is probably in our view the most revolutionary and is going to shake brands to their core, voice. Voice technology is getting tremendous traction. Alexa is in 4% of US households. Siri handles over 2 billion commands a week and 20% of Google searches on Android handsets

2:05:28 are input by voice. Who loses? Brands. Voice-based ordering eliminates the need for packaging, design, and end caps, all the things brands have poured billions and decades into perfecting. The decline of brand began with the advent of Google, and every day fewer people put a prefix of a brand name in a Google search. And the same is going to happen with voice commands. Our research reveals that over the past year, non-branded product searches have increased in every CPG category. Prediction? The decline is going to accelerate. The death of brand is here and it has a voice. Specifically, Alexa. Buy batteries. Amazon's choice for batteries is Amazon Basics AA batteries, 48 pack.

2:06:14 It's $13.60 total including tax. Would you like to buy it? No. I also found 20 pack of Amazon Basics Triple A Performance Alkaline Batteries. It's $7.61 total including tax. Would you like to buy it? No. That's all I can find for batteries right now. Alright. Check the Alexa app for more options. So there's nothing that unusual about a retailer taking advantage of their custody of the consumer to trade them off to a private label brand, which is what Amazon is doing here. Because when you go on the site, in fact, you do find that Alexa has more options. There are several branded batteries. It's just Alexa, without having to bother with the consumer seeing a brand or packaging, has decided to omit or let other branches disappear from your selection set.

2:06:57 Also, the pricing is different on Alexa and through voice commands than it is on the main platform. It seems as if they're taking advantage of this lack of transparency to charge more. We'll see. And they had a graphic up showing the difference in price if you just went on Amazon versus the voice order. It was like a $2 difference, $11 something versus 13 for the same batteries. I hadn't considered this ruse. Well, I kind of did. with my reluctance. But now that has been kind of extrapolated in front of me, by the way, I'll give you a borderline clip of the day, that's a dynamite clip. Thank you, I'll take it. Yeah, it makes nothing but sense. And Amazon's, I wrote a column about this about, I don't know, for PC Magazine, maybe three columns ago, talking about Amazon's

CHAPTER 40 / 56 Discussion

Amazon Private Labels and FTC Competition Concerns

Amazon has quietly developed numerous private label brands that are not explicitly linked to the company, allowing it to dominate search results across various categories. Critics argue that prioritizing these internal brands through voice search may violate FTC regulations regarding fair competition and deceptive practices. As consumers move toward voice interfaces, the ability of independent brands to reach customers is significantly diminished.

amazon· ftc· private labels· trademarks· voice search

2:07:56 Brands they have a bunch of phony brands. They don't even associate with Amazon, but somebody dug them up Yeah by going through a trademark who owns this trademark who owns that trademark and they found Amazon owned a bunch of these trademarks that they don't they do associate sometimes like with Amazon basics We know that's an Amazon brand, but there's a lot of brands that they're coming up with that sound important But they're not you just you mean like realistic Well, Realistic would be a good example of, you know, it's Radio Shack brand. Yeah, I love Realistic. Yeah, Realistic. And, but there's a bunch of these brands, Amazon's got more than a few in many of the categories. And that way they can, if you're talking what this guy claims is as a part of the voice thing, you can actually spew out where we have this brand. It sounds like a real brand when it's not, it's just an Amazon product to make it even worse.

2:08:50 I think it even worsens the situation of what he claims is true, which is Amazon. By the way, what they're doing, it seems to me, is illegal. The FTC will bust them for this. They're not going to be able to get away with this for long. Tell me. They're not going to be able to get away with it. You can't do this. This is like a, this is not legal, what they're doing. It's a competitive thing. You can't say, well, yeah, we got batteries, but all we got is Amazon batteries. It's a lie. You can't lie. Oh, come on! The FTC won't let you do this. A company that size? I guarantee this will be in court. Well, maybe we can bring a suit. We should probably bitch about it immediately. Well, hence this segment of the program. And let me tell you... Bitch segment. We're gonna bitch about this. I am happy that we don't have to do this. And they charge the extra amount? That's another scam. These are scams. This is not legal.

2:09:46 What is interesting is that whereas the main problem we saw with certainly Google for search, weed whacker is the best example. You know the only you know what is the best weed whacker is the one you always say that's how you see if a search engine does a good job and if it comes up with the only true answer which is a goat then it's a great search engine but you know we what you wind up with is a million blogs that's just riff-raff it's riff-raff native advertising on blogs with bogus lists and links to buy up 10 yeah But now we've gotten to the next point forget the voice people aren't saying I need to order you know a Ever ready battery or a Duracell battery no just batteries and the system is determining what you're gonna get back people are becoming stupider Because they don't know this is going on either. I mean all you think they would know you think they would no way You know this is going on

2:10:43 You'd think that people would know. I'm going to have to start discussing this with my friend Brian Roman Lee, who's an expert on, and a huge fiend on Twitter about voice being the future. Yeah. Well, I'll tell you one thing. I am very happy we don't have to deal with phony baloney traffic and other forms of advertising. I'm going to show my support by donating to KnowAgenda. Imagine all the people who could do that. Oh yeah, that'd be fab. On KnowAgenda. Although I have been asked to be a paid advisor to a company that claims to have podcast analytics where they can see how long and when someone listened. Yeah, right. I said the job. Take the gig. Say you convince me of that. I'm in. Take the gig. Take the gig. Take the gig. Take the gig. Take the gig.

CHAPTER 41 / 56 Discussion

No Agenda Producer Donations and Birthday Wishes

A group of producers contributed to the show through various donation tiers, including the "palindrome special" of $95.59. Notable donors include Sir Chris of the Low Earth Orbit and Austin Wilson, who celebrated his wife Laura's 50th birthday. The hosts also acknowledged several early birthday wishes for Adam Curry, who turns 53 next Sunday, and thanked international donors from the UK, Germany, and Thailand.

donations· executive producers· birthday· value for value· podcasting

2:11:43 Well, we do have a few people to thank for show 959. Sir Chris of the low earth orbit. Orbit. Orbit. Being at the top of the list. He's in Houston. I would like to get some feedback from him concerning what's going on there. 13534 Austin Wilson in Sammamish, Washington. He's got a birthday. Happy birthday to his wonderful wife, Laura. He's donated $50 for her first 50 years. 50 for the next. Nice. Okay, good. Anonymous, 9-5, okay we did have the special, so a special, kind of a low-end version of the palindrome which is 9-5-9 and we offered the special which is 95-59 and one, two, three, four people took us up on this.

2:12:34 So we're not getting a lot of... Should I break out the horns? We're not... Yeah, break out the celebration horn. It's okay. A lot of people aren't helping us in these situations at all. We're trying to make it lighthearted and it doesn't work. Anyway, we do have the four people. Anonymous is one of them. Sir Preston Theler. Who says we have an invaluable service 95-59, Jonathan Ferris in Liberal, Kansas, and Sir Jim Zucall, one of our buddies there in Parts Unknown. Thanks, guys. Marv Santayla, 68-68. Why 68-68? Because 69-69, all four eat it.

2:13:23 Did you get that I yeah, I don't get it Emma Davis 5555 She says want to thank for the many laughs and amygdala reducing podcasts I've enjoyed since my husband hit me in the mouth good Emma Good work. Kevin Payne in the S in Richmond, Virginia, 5432. William Young, $53 with a happy birthday. Now this is the other celebration we're going to push for the next couple of shows. It's your birthday next Sunday. Correct. 53 I will be. You'll be 53, so there's a $53 donation. We have a few more of those than the other gimmick. William Young, 53. He says happy birthday. Brian Moss in Sorrento, Santa Margarita. He says happy birthday. Brian Matthews in Bellberg in Ireland.

2:14:10 Says happy birthday Kevin Webb, happy birthday Timothy Breshears, happy birthday Sam Godwin in San Jose or buddy in San Jose. I think it's Sir Sam if I'm not mistaken could be wrong. Daniel Smith 53 so we have one two three four five six seven people. wished you a happy birthday. Let's up that a little bit. Although it's not your birthday yet. John Tannis in West Lynn, Oregon, 5125. Scott Nelson in Melbourne, Florida, 5005. And the following people are $50 donors, name and location, if locations available. Jose Ferreira in Newbury, UK. Nils Bonneker in Hamburg, Deutschland. William Yorick in Parts Unknown. Jeffrey.

2:14:59 William York started listening about six months ago first donation de-douching is indeed in order You've been de-douche Jeffrey Zellin in Oakland, Michigan Peter totes we know where he's from sir Peter sir Peter and I decked for get where he's from but it doesn't come through for some reason Robert Makowski in Rhinebeck, New York Philip Misan, Sir Philip in parts again, parts unknown, Louis Pasteur in Miami, Florida. And last but not least, our lady in Bangkok with the place that you can pick up on the Airbnb, Catherine Sutton. Ah, yes. Very nice. 50. I want to thank her. Yes, thank you. And I know we got a couple of people coming in with

2:15:48 Podcast licenses for 33 there may be some mothership boarding passes, but there's tons of different subscriptions. We'd love to see you on Even down to $5 per per month right five dollars a month Yeah, we do have that. And we'd appreciate if you're making a donation definitely consider one of those as well. And thank you to everybody who came in under $50 or more. That is typically for reasons of anonymity, but we really do appreciate it. Keeps us going. And remember, we need your support for the next program coming up this Thursday. Never can have too much jobs, Karma. Jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. karma

CHAPTER 42 / 56 Discussion

Knighting Ceremony for Dame Ashley and Sir Jonathan Rowley

In a formal knighting ceremony, Ashley Blanco was dubbed "Dame Ashley, Lady of the Lake" following a $1,000 contribution. Jonathan Rowley was also brought into the No Agenda roundtable as a knight. The ceremony included the traditional reading of the "hookers and blow" list and instructions for the new knights to claim their rings and certificates through the No Agenda Nation website.

knighting ceremony· dame ashley· jonathan rowley· value for value· podcasting

2:16:41 For birthdays today, we have Austin Wilson saying happy birthday to his wonderful wife Laura. She turns 50 years old. Jonathan Rowley celebrates today. Chris Blanco, happy birthday to his smoking hot wife. Ashley Blanco celebrates tomorrow. Emma Davis, happy birthday to her smoking hot husband Andrew. He celebrated yesterday. Tim Chaudrian, 25 on the 35th. Ray Jacobson says happy birthday to his son Tristan, who will be 22 on August 31st. And I say happy birthday to my daughter, Christina Valerie Curry, her golden birthday. 27 years old today on the 27th. Happy birthday, everybody here at the Best Podcast in the universe. I got her a big rainbow vegan cake. A what? I got her a rainbow vegan cake. What's a vegan cake? It's a vegan cake. I usually make my cakes from lamb chops. It's a vegan cake. Hold on. Get your blade and we'll talk about vegan. I got it. Oh, there it is. Good. Ashley Blanco.

2:17:40 Jonathan Rowley, step on up both of you. Come on to the podium. Thank you very much for your support of The No Agenda Show, best podcast in the university, amount of $1,000 or more. Therefore, very proud to bring you into the round table of our knights and our dames. And I hereby pronounce the K the Dame Ashley, Lady of the Lake. And sir, Jonathan Rowley for you. We have hookers and blow rent boys and chardonnay, catfish and coffee, pipelines and poppies, runny eggs and grapefruit juice, WWE and dad Arugay and Ambien, Leadslinger's Whiskey and Gunpowder, West's Whiskey and Wet Wipes, Cannabis and Cabernet, Opium and Warm, Orange Juice, Brass Milk and Pavlum, Gin Jail and Gerbil, Sparkling Cider and Escorts, Bond Hits and Bourbon, and of course, Mutton and Meat!

CHAPTER 43 / 56 Discussion

Taylor Swift Reputation Album and Media Payola

Taylor Swift's new album, "Reputation," and its lead single, "Look What You Made Me Do," received extensive fawning coverage on Good Morning America. The segment is criticized as a "native ad" or potential payola, given that the network is owned by Disney and the coverage appeared to be a pre-packaged promotional piece. Despite the massive marketing push, the music industry and critics have given the single mixed to negative reviews.

taylor swift· reputation· good morning america· disney· music industry

2:18:22 And if you want that, and your ring, and your sealing wax, and your certificate, head over to noagendanation.com slash rings and give Eric the Shill your information. And thank you again for supporting the show. It's the only way we keep it going. Your guardians of reality need you. Exactly. Well I was, I got something for you. I only have, I only clipped a little bit of this because it was making me sick. Um, but it was on good morning America and it was obviously paid for and packaged by, it was a, it was a native beyond a native ad because they bet, but because it had to do with entertainment. Um, I think they could let it stretch and in good morning America is just mostly, it's like one of those entertainment news shows all morning. Yeah. Well, it's only by Disney. Hello. That's all they got going on. Yeah. So here's a, so the latest thing is,

2:19:17 And by the way, as you know, I just despise the word dropped for a record album. You know, it's used universally now. Hey man, the latest No Agenda show episode just dropped. Just dropped. Just dropped. Hey, when are you dropping the single? When are you dropping your next episode? I just do this all the time. Hey, when are you dropping dinner? I'm always imagining somebody dropping it on the floor and then trying to pick it up, stumbling around. I agree with you. Hey, she dropped it! Pick it up, lady! This is complete cultural appropriation. This is a hip-hop term that was used exclusively in the black hip-hop community, and if you are a white person using this, you are appropriating culture, and it is a macroaggression. I agree with that.

2:20:08 So Taylor Swift is back in the center of the news. Yes, her album just dropped. It just dropped! And I wish they'd pick it up. All right. So the album is coming out as you just dropped a single, I think. Oh, yeah. Which I wish they'd pick up. And this is the first part of this fawning overproduced piece that is written by obviously written by the Taylor Swift team. They even have a section of a package they put together saying, oh, the fans are giddy. All the fans are getting there. Show a bunch of girls. I don't know where they found these people. It's obviously just part of the fan club. The whole thing was nauseating.

2:20:50 From the beginning and 2009's You Belong With Me, Taylor Swift's music videos have been a key component of her massive success. From the youthful exuberance of 22 to the adult yearning of Wildest Dreams. Filled with fun like Shake It Off or edgy as with Bad Blood. This week, first witnessing her blank slating all her social media. Then the 27 year old posting those enigmatic snake videos before serving up a fresh photo and the title of an album, Reputation, that's due for release on November 10th. It's first single, Look What You Made Me Do, released hours ago just before midnight. Look what you made me do, look what you made me do.

2:21:43 Her fans across America, delirious at the sound of her new music. I care now. Unable to control their enthusiasm. Holy swift. All of it setting the stage for an exclusive sneak peek at the video for Look What You Made Me Do. A first look at the very latest from Pop's preeminent star. Well, this was definitely bought and paid for. You think? The music business, the industry itself, I'm still a member of several groups. And by the way, before you go on with that, how is this not payola? Yeah. Ah, interesting. Good point. I didn't play enough of it probably for it to be payola. No, they went on and on. It kept going. This is like the first five minutes of a 10 minute, 11 minute piece. Yeah. Well, they just call it advertising.

CHAPTER 44 / 56 Discussion

Taylor Swift's Declining Industry Favor and Song Comparisons

Taylor Swift appears to be falling out of favor with the music industry, with Billboard ranking her latest single as her worst lead track to date. There are observations that she is no longer a staple at major award shows like the CMAs, suggesting a shift in her "empire." Some listeners have noted that her new music bears a striking structural resemblance to older famous songs, leading to accusations of a lack of originality.

taylor swift· billboard· variety· music industry· britney spears

2:22:37 But the artists and the industry is up in arms. They hate it. Oh, what a horrible single. She's horrible. I don't know exactly what happened, but Taylor Swift is something happened. I agree with this song. She's fallen out of favor with everybody. She's not on any of the shows anymore that you used to be the highlight of the CMA and all these different. She's been cut out of those deals. They she obviously spent a lot of money to promote this particular thing. And by the way, this song. Every time I hear it, it's... I almost got it, but it is... it's stolen from another song. Oh, gee! Yeah, I know. Surprise. As you know, Taylor Swift's new single just dropped. It's just dropped, fans are standing out here, they cannot wait. Come rain, come shine or hurricane Harvey. When Taylor drops it, people come out in droves. Back to you in the studio, John.

2:23:39 Yeah, be safe. So, but it's something, it's a very famous song and it's got the same rhythm, the same kind of structure. I'll have to listen to it. I'll get it eventually. When you hear it a couple of times, you'll immediately recognize it. I'll have to listen to it. Hey, thanks for that. Why did you even bring that to the party? So, but the point, and then when they, at the beginning of that piece, they played all of her great songs and there's not one of them is memorable. She doesn't have a memorable song. Shake it off. I think her body, I think that Britney Spears body of work actually is better. Britney Spears body is better. Have you seen that? Well, she's definitely, oh my God. Works on it. Girl be cut!

2:24:24 Anyway, so this piece was on Good Morning America. It just seemed too much for me. But you're right, and I've noticed this too. Taylor, I think, is on the outs. But why? Nobody is... Maybe they're just sick of her. I have no idea what it could be. I'm gonna have to look into this. But it was something industry-related. Maybe it's the content here. Billboard ranks. Look what you made me do as Taylor's worst lead single. That's billboard. Let's see what Variety says. Something went wrong. Something went horribly wrong with her empire. It's worth looking into. It is worth looking into. Her empire is massive. Yeah, I'd like to know what happened there. Because the business does not like her. And I'm not sure why. We'll find out. Because they loved her. Well, the EU doesn't like Poland.

CHAPTER 45 / 56 Discussion

EU Threats Against Poland and Article 7

The European Union, led by Frans Timmermans, is threatening to trigger Article 7 against Poland due to proposed changes to the country's judicial system. Article 7 is a severe measure that could strip Poland of its voting rights within the EU. The Polish government seeks to give politicians more power to approve judges, a move the EU claims would abolish judicial independence and erode the rule of law.

poland· european union· frans timmermans· article 7· judiciary

2:25:25 This has not gone away, this change to the Constitution, as we know from our boots on the ground, where they would like to see a judiciary that is run somewhat in the way as it's run in the United States. that politicians would be able to approve, not appoint, but approve, you know, so the president can appoint and then Senate has to approve these judges. That's basically what they want. That's really oversimplifying the matter. The EU is now getting pissed off. And by coincidence, I have two clips today from my friend, Frans Timmermans, the Bilderberger who once pulled me aside and said, you know, you're doing good stuff here.

2:26:12 But he is the messenger boy now. He, of course, is the number two in charge of the European Commission. These laws considerably increase the systemic threat to the rule of law in Poland. Each individual law, if adopted, would seriously erode the independence of the Polish judiciary. Collectively, they would abolish any remaining judicial independence and put the judiciary under full political control of the government. The option of triggering Article 7 of the treaty was part of the discussion and it should come as no surprise to anyone that given the latest developments we are coming very close to triggering Article 7. Yeah, Article 7 baby! Uh-oh. Yeah, Article 7 removes all voting rights.

2:26:58 You get the big dunce cap on and you get to sit in the corner. So they're threatening and threatening. Um... They're the same Juncker and this was, you know, Juncker can, not Juncker, Deputy Juncker, Frans Timmermans. He has one of these voices that I, you know, he's kind of the kind of guy I'd like to slow down, put some echo on him and make him all sound creepy when he's talking about EU. Do it. Well, I don't have to. In this video, which is him condemning extreme nationalism, yes, extreme nationalism, and he does it in a very ironic way, they put some of the echo on themselves. And creepy music. I should point out this is an EU promotional video. For centuries this used to be the European way. In the 20th century, twice, we Europeans tried to commit collective suicide, and this is the result.

CHAPTER 46 / 56 Discussion

Frans Timmermans on Nationalism and Alcoholism

In an EU promotional video, Frans Timmermans compared nationalism to alcoholism, describing it as a short period of exaltation followed by a long headache. He argued that nationalists are "unpatriotic" because they seek enemies and disrupt international trade through protectionism. Timmermans asserted that true patriotism is synonymous with being European and requires unity and cooperation rather than national isolation.

frans timmermans· nationalism· alcoholism· european commission· patriotism

2:26:12 But he is the messenger boy now. He, of course, is the number two in charge of the European Commission. These laws considerably increase the systemic threat to the rule of law in Poland. Each individual law, if adopted, would seriously erode the independence of the Polish judiciary. Collectively, they would abolish any remaining judicial independence and put the judiciary under full political control of the government. The option of triggering Article 7 of the treaty was part of the discussion and it should come as no surprise to anyone that given the latest developments we are coming very close to triggering Article 7. Yeah, Article 7 baby! Uh-oh. Yeah, Article 7 removes all voting rights.

2:26:58 You get the big dunce cap on and you get to sit in the corner. So they're threatening and threatening. Um... They're the same Juncker and this was, you know, Juncker can, not Juncker, Deputy Juncker, Frans Timmermans. He has one of these voices that I, you know, he's kind of the kind of guy I'd like to slow down, put some echo on him and make him all sound creepy when he's talking about EU. Do it. Well, I don't have to. In this video, which is him condemning extreme nationalism, yes, extreme nationalism, and he does it in a very ironic way, they put some of the echo on themselves. And creepy music. I should point out this is an EU promotional video. For centuries this used to be the European way. In the 20th century, twice, we Europeans tried to commit collective suicide, and this is the result.

2:27:59 If fear takes over in society, if hatred of the other becomes a norm, this is where we end up. Neighbours lying together in a cemetery, who'd fought each other and killed each other in two world wars. Europe has learned this lesson. This is a mistake we need to avoid. Every time when we are challenged, this is a risk we run. How do we respond to that? With extreme nationalism? No. I strongly believe that the answer to the challenges of today, which are many fold, such as terrorism based on jihadism, is not to fall for the temptation of fear, is not to fall for the temptation of hatred for the other. Nationalism is like alcoholism. A short period of exaltation followed by a long period of headaches. I love that he compares nationalism to alcoholism, which his boss clearly is an alcoholic.

2:29:01 Junker. I think that's really cute. It's like you get a exuberance and then the big headache. Nationalism is like alcoholism. A short period of exaltation followed by a long period of headaches. Nationalism makes us poor because it's Siamese twin protectionism will destroy the internal market and disrupt international trade. Nationalism makes us weak because it's eternal seeking of enemies, it's disdain of others, it's need to feel superior, makes cooperation with other nations to collectively guarantee our freedom and security much more difficult. So if nationalism makes us poor, weak and morally insecure, how can it claim to be patriotic?

2:29:57 I maintain that nationalists are unpatriotic. Now this is their echo, not mine. A true patriot is proud of his nation, wants it to be strong, peaceful, prosperous, values-based. To achieve that, a true patriot knows he needs unity, he wants openness, he craves cooperation with others. He sees the strength found in compromise, debate and unity. To be a patriot is to be European. To be European is to be a patriot. There you go, Europeans. Fall in line! Do as the man says. Yeah. You don't want to be an alcoholic. Germany be your ruler. Don't be an alcoholic. Just crazy, man. Just crazy. It's like the United Nations had a... Sorry. The United Nations had a vote on a resolution.

CHAPTER 47 / 56 Discussion

UN Resolution on Nazism and US Free Speech Vote

The United Nations Human Rights Committee put forth a resolution to combat the glorification of Nazism and neo-Nazism. While 131 countries voted in favor, the United States was one of three nations to vote against it, citing concerns over freedom of speech. Media coverage has largely focused on the U.S. opposition, framing it as problematic while ignoring the specific legal and constitutional reasons for the "no" vote.

united nations· nazism· free speech· human rights· xenophobia

2:31:03 And this was... very hard to find the full thing, actually, because it's been around for a while and there's multiple versions. And this was the United Nations Resolution condemning the glorification of Nazism over freedom of speech issues. Let me see the actual title. What? Combating glorification of Nazism, Neo-Nazism, and other practices that contribute to fueling contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia, and related intolerance. This was put forth by the United Nations Human Rights Committee and voted in favor, 131 in favor. But when it came to a General Assembly vote, it did not pass. Why not? Well, there were three important no's, including the United States. This is problematic. What were the other ones? Let me see if I have it here. I think it was...

2:32:06 Three against, hold on. See now they're only calling out the United States in all these articles. Oh yeah, we're the only guys. We're the only guys who are a-holes. The other two douchebags get no call out. Yeah, I'll find it for you. But I'm happy that they said no because literally it was like you cannot, you know, you can't say certain words or do certain things. You know, this is part of the big, yes, the freedom, this is the part of the big tolerance push that is happening in the EU. Yeah, yeah I'm irked now that I can't find out who didn't vote. Yeah, you'll get it later. Yeah, okay, so then it well It's kind of important, but it's kind of it's kind of important of important. Yeah, let's let's read this note from Sun Fun one of our producers use of Conflate I should be avoided oh

CHAPTER 48 / 56 Discussion

Linguistic Critique of the Word Conflate

A producer's critique argues that the word "conflate" is often used pompously to hide a lack of specific meaning. The critique suggests that unless referring to the literal combining of two identical texts, words like "confuse," "incorporate," or "pack" are more accurate. The overuse of "conflate" in modern discourse is seen as a distraction that fails to explain how different concepts are actually being related.

linguistics· grammar· conflate· merriam-webster· vocabulary

2:33:05 I have to disagree that the word conflate has any substantial purpose other than to give the speaker a surge of warm, pompous arrogance. Although it does sound clever and concise, it does absolutely nothing. I'm shouting because he's in all caps here. Absolutely nothing to convey how the multiple distinctly different concepts are being related or combined, or what the commonality is, either justifiably or not. By explaining how the ideas are conflated or related, you end up with much more meaning and avoid the distraction and confusing deadwood that conflate usually creates.

2:33:49 Example of crappy conflate usage found online. Quote, the plot gets weighed down when the writer conflates too many issues into one episode. Unquote. Are they combining into one new generalized issue or are both preserved in the new time frame? WTF? Are issues now becoming episodes? Use incorporate, pack or include. I'm Merriam-Webster. on Merriam-Webster, he says. A city of conflated races and cultures. Earl Shorris. What the hell? In this city can I enter my culture as my race on documents? Like what he's referring to, but okay. Also in Merriam-Webster, the editor conflated the two texts. Here is one of the few cases where conflate makes some sense. Only because the two concepts are the exact same entity. Groups of words combined would be just fine here without the confusion.

2:34:51 Usually I hear this crap when people are trying to imply that someone has incorrectly combined two issues. In this case, just get to your point and say the person confused the two issues. Conflate is also often used to quickly imply the joining was justified or not justified, but it says neither. Jeff in Orlando, hey, should I be sending you more money? Yes, yes, definitely. Well, thank you. I always like to improve our dictum. We do. We are actually just one of the, I think we're the only podcast that appears to be preoccupied with this. And did you hear my use of the word dictum? I did. I like it. Okay. I'm trying. I'm really trying.

CHAPTER 49 / 56 Discussion

North Korea Opens Doors to Russian Tourists

North Korea has officially opened its borders to Russian tourists, claiming that the country is "safer than London." The move is part of an effort to bolster the North Korean economy through international travel. While the logistics of visiting Pyongyang remain complex, the government is actively seeking to establish new tourism partnerships with Russian agencies.

north korea· russia· tourism· pyongyang· international relations

2:35:40 I'm not sure it's correct uses, but I like it. I like it no matter what. I have to look it up. Well, I'm going to give you props, John. Once again, you have proven to be alongside me from the future as North Korea has spoken once again. And it says, we have opened our doors to Russian tourists. It's safer than London. They really want the tourism. I know. Give it to them. Give it to them already. Geez, they have to do a deal with some American big American tourist company or Brits. Yeah. Well, how about just princess of the seas or whatever? Can they can we send a? Where to go? Well, the young Yang is inland and I guess not no, I guess not you can't get it You can't get a cruise ship there. That's a problem. Not if you fly everybody in in the Pyongyang Airport. Mm-hmm

CHAPTER 50 / 56 Discussion

Media Framing of Terror Attacks in Brussels and London

Recent knife attacks in Brussels and London were reported with specific linguistic framing by major networks. In Brussels, a suspect was shot after attacking soldiers while allegedly shouting "God is great," a translation of "Allahu Akbar" that critics argue sanitizes the religious context. In London, a man with a knife was detained outside Buckingham Palace, an incident that was heavily emphasized despite the Queen's absence from the residence.

brussels· london· buckingham palace· terror suspect· knife attack

2:36:41 Oh, here's, I got a couple of reports from ABC that just galled me to no end. This in particular, there was a minor terrorist attack in Brussels again. Yeah, with a knife, I believe. Yeah, a knife. Here is, played as Brussels. Yeah, boring, knife. We sound like news execs now. Brussels, boring, knife, super boring. Our news execs. Super boring. Tell me what's wrong with this story. This is the Brussels terror guy. In Belgium tonight, a terror suspect is dead after attacking two soldiers with a knife in Belgium. Police say the suspect attacked the soldiers in Brussels shouting, God is great. Military forcing them, forces then shot them. The suspect apparently known to authorities for petty crime, but not for terror until this case.

2:37:31 Well, this is very obvious and I find this quite disgusting because of course he did not say God is great. He said, oh Yeah, he didn't say God is great for one thing. Why would he be speaking in English? He's in Brussels Yeah, and why would he be saying anything other than a what aloo Akbar? It's just like this is a bad report. This is a this is a report that is that his fault as fake news Yeah, he did not say that no No, of course not. He said, I'll go back to Snack Bar. Yeah, you and your Snack Bar. I gotta keep saying it. Yeah, I haven't said it yet. Here's another one.

2:38:14 This is, since you mentioned the knives, this is a story that just kind of amused me because again it involves knives. This is the man roaming around with a knife. It's like this is a major, major story. You got to run it on ABC Network News. At a scary scene tonight outside London's Buckingham Palace, police say they stopped a man there and found him to be in possession of a knife. While detaining him, the man lashed out, injuring two officers. There is no word from police about the man's motive. The queen was not at the palace at the time. Thank goodness. News. Great. Glad you stopped that. Stopped everything. Well, knives are a big deal, so they have to push the knife meme. They're trying to get knives off the streets and out of kitchens, I hear, in the UK.

CHAPTER 51 / 56 Discussion

Psychiatrists Warn of Trump's Mental Health

A group of psychiatrists, led by Dr. Brandy Lee of Yale University, has written to Congress warning that President Trump poses a "clear and present danger" to the world. They cite impulsive and reckless behavior as evidence of mental instability, particularly regarding the control of the nuclear arsenal. Critics view this as a political strategy to frame the president as unhinged ahead of the 2018 midterm elections.

donald trump· brandy lee· yale university· mental health· north korea

2:39:00 Why take a chance? It's taken a while, but a group of psychiatrists has now written to Congress to warn that Donald Trump poses a quote clear and present danger to the world. Oh? Yes, leading them Dr. Brandy Lee of Yale University, who was also reportedly consulting with Democratic members of Congress on setting up an expert panel. Oh, that's a coincidence, isn't it? Setting up an expert panel to give advice on the president's mental health. Yes, she is very concerned by Trump's dangerousness. Dr. Lee told USA Today, I guess Pelosi. The group's letter sent to members of both parties said, quote, it no longer takes a psychiatrist to recognize the alarming patterns of impulsive, reckless and narcissistic behavior regardless of diagnosis that in the person of President Trump puts the world at risk.

2:39:54 We now find ourselves in clear and present danger, especially concerning North Korea and the president's command of the US nuclear arsenal. They're still trying it. They're still trying it. Yeah, well, I've said it before and I'll say it again. It's not going to work. If these guys wanted to get their act together, they'd focus a little better. The problem is all these arguments are weak. I think if they focused on one or two things that could drive the guy crazy, but he's this, he's that, he's this, he's that, he's a Cheeto. It goes on and on with this huge list. We put the list together.

2:40:34 It's not working this way. They're gonna have to come up with a better strategy, although it's working in the one way, which I say you just keep bringing this stuff to the forefront. So by 2018, you can make, you can roll out your strategy, which is that this guy's unhinged. He's a racist. And we can't get rid of him. He's a racist. Because we don't have enough Democrats in office, so let's vote in more Democrats and then we can get rid of him. Yeah. Which is really what this is all about. Yeah, and I think it feels like they're doing a good job. Good job of keeping him in the news. Yeah, the storm has screwed them up Yeah, that was that was not a good that was a problem and it seems to let up a little bit here Yeah, just a tad. Yeah, not too bad. You can go out then Yes, yeah, well poor kids Christina's already all freaked out about becoming a member of the 27 Club. Oh

CHAPTER 52 / 56 Discussion

The 27 Club and The White Bic Lighter Myth

The "27 Club" is a famous urban legend involving musicians like Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin who died at age 27. A related myth claims that many of these artists were found with white Bic lighters at the time of their deaths. This superstition recently caused personal anxiety for a listener's daughter who found a white lighter in a jacket purchased from a thrift store on her 27th birthday.

27 club· jimi hendrix· janis joplin· white bic lighter· urban legend

2:41:30 You know the 27 club? No. The 27 club is, you know, all these famous musicians who died at 27. She's a famous musician? No. But here's the problem. Apparently as a part of the 27, you know, this is Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, you know, Jim Morrison, everyone died when they were 27. Except for Prince and George Michael, but okay. And apparently as a part of this meme that they all were found with a white Bic lighter And we went to Goodwill yesterday. She loves Goodwill. This is like the Rubicon, the 13 episodes of Rubicon that were released. Where it had to do with the four leaf clover. Yes, something like that. And so she bought a jacket.

2:42:24 Then she puts the jacket on in the jacket is a white Bic lighter. So now she's yes She's convinced something horrible is going to happen to her She just stays inside well you never know she does she should pull up for a year She's in limbo what to do now And the only thing I had to mention as a final bit of news which I found interesting And actually it would by the way. It's just for a second I don't believe any of this for a minute that Janice Joplin and Morrison and Henry's had a white Bic lighter. I did not verify the story. I'm sure it's bull crap. Just telling you, just telling you poor kids. Update from Greece.

CHAPTER 53 / 56 Discussion

Chinese Investment in Greece and The Dragon Head Project

Following years of EU-imposed austerity, Greece has seen a massive influx of Chinese investment. China plans to transform the Greek port of Piraeus into the "dragon head" of its ambitious One Belt, One Road project. This strategic move allows China to establish a major logistics hub in Europe, taking advantage of the economic vacuum left by Northern European states' reluctance to invest in the Greek economy.

greece· china· piraeus· one belt one road· austerity

2:43:13 So Greece, well of course they've been squeezed by the European Union and hated universally. I mean, wow, we tracked all this. Do you remember when people were going into Greek restaurants in other countries and saying, I'm not paying, we already paid you enough money? You remember that was happening? Do you remember that? Another story that is sketchy. No, there were some real accounts of that. That happened in, yeah, well. For sure there was an end, for sure when this started, when they got screwed by Goldman Sachs and the like, and wasn't Jared Kushner a part of that somehow? He should have been. There was a lot of resentment from the northern states. This goes years back, but I remember it very clearly. These stupid Southerners, why do we even have them in the European Union? Okay, so we've done a good job. We gave them austerity and then we said, oh, you know, they can't pay it back. Okay, here's more austerity. And then, hey, you know what? While you're at austerity, let me give you another tablespoon of austerity.

2:44:13 So guess who has slipped in and started to buy up everything and put in huge investment? The Clintons. Close, man. The Chinos. Soros. The Chinos. Oh, the Chinos. The Chinese are in. Oh yeah, they would be. Yeah, they're good at this. They are in there cutting deals like crazy. I wish, I wish we had gotten some piece of that, of Greece. Remember when they put everything up for auction? Yeah. Yeah, we missed that one too. Just like Germany. West and East Germany. Yeah. Yeah, we did privatize everything. So they are making Greece, I think there's a quote here, the dragon head

2:44:58 So here it is. China plans to make the Greek port of Piraeus the dragon head of its One Belt, One Road project. Nice. So there's a twofer if I ever heard one. So all eyes on Greece and the Chinese. That could get very interesting. Yeah, I'm almost of the opinion that at some level we've given up. Yeah, but why? I mean, it makes it so dumb. Greece is so important for the, you know, with all the opportunities to bring gas into Europe. It's like someone was, you know, their hate of Greece just somehow they forgot the importance of it. Now the Chinese are slipping in? Hmm. Well, we'll see if we can do something about that. I do have one other interesting little shorty. Yeah, that'll have to be it. This would be the best report of this incident.

CHAPTER 54 / 56 Discussion

Charleston Restaurant Shooting and The Gordon Ramsay Effect

A disgruntled dishwasher shot and killed a chef at a crowded restaurant in Charleston, South Carolina, before taking a hostage. The incident is discussed in the context of high-stress restaurant environments, which some argue have been influenced by the aggressive "screaming chef" persona popularized by Gordon Ramsay. This cultural shift is seen as normalizing workplace hostility in the culinary industry.

charleston· shooting· gordon ramsay· restaurant culture· workplace violence

2:45:53 Because they actually said everybody else had this report all bus boy grabbed some hostages and shot shot a staff I don't know what happened here. I don't know what happened. We'll play This is the bus boy shoots the chef none of a hostage drama that played out for hours today in Charleston authorities say it started when a fire dish dishwasher shot and killed a chef at a crowded restaurant filled with tourists and He then locked the door to the restaurant and told diners to get down on the floor. All but one managed to run out another exit. After a three-hour negotiation, the suspect was shot and wounded by police and the lone hostage was freed. All right, dishwasher a little different than busboy? Well, dishwasher, whatever. I believe that what we have here is a situation where some chef

2:46:41 took on the persona of Gordon Ramsay, which is the cool thing to do. Which a lot of chefs do. Yes. I think more so than in the past. And in the past it was, I mean, I worked at a one Michelin star restaurant when I was 17 and the chef would throw stuff like, you know, knives and plates and all kinds at the front of house staff. Really? What place was this? The Auduprince. It was one, actual one star Michelin? Yeah. Yeah, I was not very... I've told you the story about that. I'm not very... I was not very... When I dropped the ice cream flambé onto the bride's dress, that would kind of ended my career. That would probably do it, yeah. Surprised you weren't stabbed.

2:47:30 Yeah, you think this is a Gordon Ramsay influence, everyone has to be all angry and stuff and then finally this guy had enough of it. Yeah, he doesn't have to be yelling and screaming to make anything work. It's gotten into the culture to such an extreme. I think Gordon Ramsay's done a couple of things. One, I think he's improved the ability of average restaurant goers to know a little more than they did so they might know how to send the wine back or refuse some food. So I think that's a plus and also they know they could demand better product. But I think it also created this idea that the people that work in restaurants are idiots and they have to have a chef screaming at them. Yeah, seems to be to get anything done. And I think this is by the way, this, the meme is not completely formed yet, but it's forming that Trump is a screamer. Oh, yes. We were watching something last night. What the hell? It was some documentary. It was actually quite good. And then all of a sudden it turned into, God, what was it?

CHAPTER 55 / 56 Discussion

LAPD Crackdown on Metro Conduct and Manspreading

The LAPD and the Long Beach Sheriff's Department are increasing enforcement of a code of conduct on public transit, targeting "rude riders." Offenses include playing loud music, eating, and "manspreading"—the act of a rider taking up more than one seat. Fines for these behaviors can range from $75 to $1,000, with repeat offenders facing potential jail time or bans from the Metro system.

lapd· metro· manspreading· code of conduct· public transit

2:48:29 Ah shit, if Tina's listening she'll text it to me. But you know, it was a good documentary and all of a sudden it was all about, this is all because of Trump. It's like, what? Netflix, damn it. I should look at my past history, what the hell that was. There's so much, everything's being tied to Trump. You got a problem, tie it to Trump. Yeah. Well, let's tie this one to Trump, Los Angeles. As of last month, officers from the LAPD in Long Beach are now assisting the Sheriff's Department and Metro's enforcement searches, cracking down on rude riders. According to their code of conduct, they're looking for customers who are disturbing others, displaying disorderly, lewd conduct, playing loud music, eating, drinking, smoking, vaping, or occupying more than one seat and blocking a door. They call that manspreading, where a rider takes up

2:49:22 up too much room. You would think these are pretty common sense. Absolutely. One thing we don't like to see is one person taking up more than one seat. Metro spokesperson Dave Cetera says some folks may get warnings, but fines range from $75 for a first time offense to $1000 jail time and even being temporarily banned for repeat offenders. The writer pauses for the other writers to exit. The rider executed that play perfectly. They also plan to release new humorous Metro Manors videos and posters this fall. He says since adding 20 new miles with the Expo Line and Gold Line extension, they have new riders to educate and retain. Our goal is to ensure a pleasant ride for all of our customers, and it really, we depend on the public to do their part. And you can expect those videos and posters to be blanketing trains, buses, and the internet starting this fall. Yeah.

2:50:14 manspreading again. Yeah, yeah. A-hole manspreaders. Yeah, yeah. It's like, I've never understood this gripe. That we're doing this on purpose for some reason, just to, hey, look at my junk just spreading my legs. Is that really what you think is going on? I think it's pretty rare. Yeah, guys that take up too much space when they're in but it's a real thing. It's a real It's like women have a real issue with this and I'm just I don't blame them I have an issue with you got to sit next to one of these jerk offs Yeah, but I've never really seen anything like this like well the finish off then I got the this is the rundown from the this week show at Charlie Rose this is the this is the the the This week it's called and it is

CHAPTER 56 / 56 Discussion

The Week Ahead and No Agenda Outro

The upcoming week features the start of Burning Man, the US Open, and the 20th anniversary of Princess Diana's death. The No Agenda show concludes with a reminder to stay safe during the Texas floods and a call for continued listener support through the value-for-value model. The episode ends with a montage of "douchebag" callouts and a parody song about the "Snowflake Bunch."

burning man· us open· princess diana· no agenda· podcasting

2:51:07 The week ahead. Where Charlie does his little montage of all the bits and bobs. Well, they do it. It's a package and they run it at the end. It's all the really the most important things that are going to happen. And I always look at this. None of these are the most important. Very few of them are, as a matter of fact. And let's see what they have to say. And here's a look at the week ahead. Sunday is the opening of the 31st annual Burning Man Festival in Black Rock City, Nevada. Monday is the start of the US Open Tennis Championships in Flushing Meadows, New York. Tuesday is the day the annual Guinness World Records are published. Wednesday is the first day of the Venice International Film Festival. Thursday is the 20th anniversary of Princess Diana's death. Friday is the start of Colorado's Telluride Film Festival.

2:52:04 Saturday is the National Book Festival in Washington DC. Yeah, I know how this goes. Hey, did anyone do the coming up segment? Aw crap. Get the calendar. Get the show prep calendar. It's always on the show prep calendar. Well, thank you for sharing that with us. Yeah, well Burning Man's coming up. I'm gonna head out. Alright, I'm heading out too. Go pick up that vegan rainbow cake. Don't let it get rained on. Alright everybody, thank you very much. It is a show day. Keep your eyes peeled, ears open, you never know what's gonna happen. And I will be providing constant updates on the Aris Network regarding how everything is here in downtown Austin with the flooding. Which actually could be kind of shitty. So stay safe everybody.

2:52:56 And coming to you from a very wet downtown Austin, Texas, we are the capital of the Drone Star State, located in FEMA Region 6. Now more important than ever, in the morning, I'm Adam Curry. And from northern Silicon Valley, where it's a beautiful day in the neighborhood, the rest of you can just live it up as best you can, cake and all. I'm John C. Dvorak. Until Thursday, everybody, as we always say, adios! Look, we are fully and totally committed to no agenda, no agenda in the morning. From the inner cities to the rural outposts, from the Sun Belt to the Rust Belt, from east to west, to north to south, every American from every background is entitled

2:53:54 entitled to no agenda in the morning. We pledge our allegiance to no agenda. We support the incredible men of no agenda, right? Can I say that? Most people think I'm crazy and I think they're right. No agenda in the morning. Who's your largest private fund? What's his name? Who's your largest private fund? What's his name? I have no idea. I have no idea. It's everybody knows.

2:54:34 RAC, RAC, who's your largest price holder? I have no idea. Yes, everybody knows. Everybody knows. Everybody knows. I have no idea. I have no idea. I have no idea. RAC, RAC, who's your largest price holder? Everybody knows. Everybody knows. Everybody knows. Mama's all left, daddy's all, I just need another generation.

2:55:27 No agenda, deconstruct the news today Get the douchebag callout button ready. Get ready. Call you out as a douche. Douchebag. Yeah, I guess you've been called out as a douchebag. A douchebag callout. Call you out as a douchebag. A douchebag reports sharp and germ douchebaggery. Such a douche! Douchebags, mm-hmm, total douchebagging. Please call him out as a douchebag. Douchebag. Doucheur. Douchebag call. Douchebag. What a douche! Douchebag. Douchebags.

2:56:38 Douchebag! So cool! I'm free! Totally getting want, needed! I'm free! Oh yes! The Volkswagen bus represented the ultimate freedom machine! You got your bus, you threw a mattress in it, you were driving across the country to Monterey, baby! You were going everywhere through the desert! You had freedom! How does the electric version of that convey the same freedom? Oh, can't wait to get it. Be free for 150 miles. I'm free finally from big oil. Screw those guys. I've got my electric vehicle. I hate Trump. I have to go to Costco and when I go to Costco I might pick up some other things like some, you know, red wine or some lamb chops.

2:57:34 Because when I go buy the lamb chops, lamb chops in the package, it's too fatty. I don't want this meat. It's too fatty. I don't want this meat. I make a change on the spot. I make a change on the fly. You can't do that with all this kind of bull crap ordering. I have to go to Costco and when I go to Costco I might pick up some other things like some, you know, red wine or something. I have to go to Costco and when I go to Costco I might pick up some other things like some, you know, red wine or something. I make a change on the spot, I make a change on the fly. I make a change on the spot, I make a change on the fly. You can't do that with all this kind of bull and crap ordering. I make a change on the spot, I make a change on the fly.

2:58:35 I have to go to Costco and when I go to Costco I might pick up some other things like some, you know, red wine or some lamb chops in the package. Lamb chops in the package. Here's a story of a bunch of snowflakes who were trampling on some other people's rights. With their mother, they wanted to start fights. It's the story of a bunch of baddies, whose addiction was to outrage all the time. They got so whipped up into a frenzy, they commit some crimes. Then though one day they went to a tender rally.

2:59:28 And everyone who disagreed was punched And his group thankfully got arrested Now we get to laugh at them, the Snowflake Bunch The Snowflake Bunch The Snowflake Bunch Now we get to laugh at them, the Snowflake Bunch The best podcast in the universe!