NO

No Agenda Show

Adam Curry & John C. Dvorak

Costco Wine Tip of the Day

From 1867 - "Transmission Window"May 10, 2026

Excerpt from No Agenda Show

1867 - "Transmission Window"May 10, 2026 — starts at 0:00

There are people who swim across the channel. Lunatics. Adam Curry, John C. Devorah. It's Sunday, May 10th, 2026. This is your award-winning Kibonation Media Assassination Episode 187 6. This is no ag enda. Celebrating mobs everywhere and broadcasting live from Amsterdam, the Netherlands here at the airport. In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry. Yeah, from Refinery Row here in Northern California. We mish miss our moms and wish them all a happy mother's day and John C. DeWar. Forgetting. We don't have moms Well, we have moms . No. We don't have living moms. Ah, this is the difference. We have moms no longer with us, yes. And as we know, most of the Or is it changed somewhat? Or so it seems except during COVID . Has it changed somewhat, perhaps my mom oh no second show from uh from the you know I looked out the window this morning and that sign that that caught fire in the hotel outside our room. And they took it down. I took a picture, it's all scorched. The wall is all scorched. That thing that is weird. A thing caught fire. Huh. Yeah. It's short. There's a couple other strange things I just have to talk about. Boots on the ground, you know, on Thursday, we had just arrived, and I'd only seen the inside of the airport. Now I've been around, I've been walking, I went to see Christina. We did the uh the gender reveal. We did the gender reveal. Big gender reveal party . This is where you scoff. This is where you scoff . They're kind of dumb. It was fun though, it was nice. So first of all, in the Netherlands, this may be a EU wide thing, they have done something to plastic bottles . And this is very odd to me . When you open the top of the plastic bottle, it stays attached to the bottle. Okay, I'm sure this is for climate change or to save the earth, but have you have you ever had a bottle of water? Yeah, I've had a bottle of water. And have you just when you're done with your bottle of water, do you just throw the cap away or do you put the cap on and throw the bottle away? What I tend to do Oh here we go . I take the bottle which is usually plastic. Yes. And I squeeze it to it so it's like shrunk into a smallest possible piece. Then I put the cap on it so it can't return to its original size. Then it takes up less space in the garbage can. So you are actually doing a good thing for the earth with the cap . Yep. But you don't need the cap attached to remember does anyone throw the bottle cap away outside of the bottles? Anyone do this? I think it's been done. Well, it doesn't seem like a number one thing. And it's kind of annoying because you want to drink out of the bottle and that thing is slapping you in the nose. Which is important. Your uh conversation about I have to play this an Amsterdam clip which is a girl on on uh Insta talking about the screwball stuff that she's run into and she's grilling her fake friend about it. Here we go. Hey, excuse me, Amsterdam. Um, quick question. Yeah, we'll tease it. So I thought Amsterdam was one of those places where anything goes, but I'm hearing something of a ban that recently went into effect. Well, even we have our limits. But smoking in coffee shops are still legal, yes? Yeah. As are magic mushrooms. Yeah. And public nudity. Yeah. So what could have crossed the line that you have to ban it now? That would be public advertising of fossil fuel products, including meat. So no more ads for gas-powered cars, airlines, or chicken nuggets? Correct. Well, I have a lot of questions, but besides that, is there anything else you've been cracking down on recently? Mm, yeah, uh, young Britishman. What? You're ban ning British men? No, no, not to ban, but we do have an advertising campaign telling them to stay away. So let me get this straight. In a city known for permissiveness, you're drawing the line at British dudes and ads for cheeseburgers. Yeah, naturally, because one ruins the climate and the other ruins our city. Yeah . Well the the ban on young British men, that that's been going for a while. And I think it's kind of slowed down because of cheap airfare is over now that they have barely any fuel. Yeah, yeah. Because yeah, they were getting on the easy jet for fifty bucks and flying over and getting you just fall down drunk and peeing in the mailbox. Yeah, peeing in the mailboxes and stuff like that. Yeah, yeah. Well, unfortunately the mail boxes are connected to the door. You know, it's not like a separate mailbox, so you're peeing into someone's house through the mailbox. So yeah, yeah, the the British the British boys were a bit of a problem. But listen to this. So we go to the gender reveal and uh my first wife is there, who I haven't seen in ten years. So you know it was a kind of an interesting uh um interesting vibe all around. But But what do you think the first question she asked me? We sat down for you know a couple minutes what do you think the first question was that she asked me? Well I would say that was her Think carefully. Think carefully now. I would say hi Adam, how's the show going? Yeah, no. You get another guess. No, you get another guess. Uh Hi Adam, how's your hemorrhoids? You finally got 'em cleared up? Okay. No. Great, John. No. No. No. She says, I'm sure everyone has asked you this. Uh oh. You want to guess now? Oh everyone has asked you this . How do you like Texas? First she said, hey, is that old dude still alive? No, that's not what she asked. She said, What do you think of President Trump? Oh dog, I should have gotten a good question. What am I thinking? The first question out of the gate. And it is it is the first question from everybody. I didn't expect it from her because yes, there were a lot of questions she could have had as the first one at the top of her mind. Um but even you know, Taxi Eric. You know Taxi Eric, the guy that tried to kill you once. Oh yeah, they almost got me killed. Um he says that whenever he gets uh Americans in the car, that he picks him up from the airport, they all go, Oh Trump, oh we hate Trump, we hate Trump. I wrote Aesrump . And and I'm like, that's odd. There's So only Democrats are traveling to Holland now? No, no, no. I think it's because people are afraid Oh, I get it. Yeah, I I've I've pulled that stunt. Now that is also not true because Taxi Eric doesn't hate Trump. And so anyway, so then w my answer to my first wife was Well you know I like a lot of things he's doing. For instance, our borders are closed and he's kicking out the undesirables. When you say this, and it works in every case, not just in ex-wives, when you say this, they go, Yeah, wow, I wish we had a guy here to do something like that. That's exactly what they say. And I said, and there's other things that he's done that I think are pretty good. Well, yeah, yeah, yeah. Oh, that's I hadn't thought about that . So, but every single person, the same thing. First, you say, Oh yeah, no, I I I like Trump. I think he's doing some good stuff. And their face goes And then you just have to say our borders are closed. And we're kicking out the undesirables. Oh, I like the use of the term undesirables. That's a good one. Well, isn't that the truth? The undesirable. Perfect. Very apt. It's good. It's good. And then uh I guess the only other thing that I noticed here is the ratio of commercials to programming is worse than the United States . It is twenty one commercials to every tw elve minutes of programming . No matter what time of day. Twenty one commercials of what length? Varying between fi fteen and sixty . So what what they do here a lot is they'll have a sixty and then they'll have another commercial and they'll come back with a fifteen second, which is a uh like little bonus for the one previous. So they'll you know they'll they'll do a thing for some chocolate and then there's like washing powder and then they'll say, Hey, don't ru don't forget that chocolate it's really good. I don't think we do that in the States anymore, do we? Uh it's been done, but it hasn't it's not popular. Yeah. Uh so uh I do have uh a clip here about the extreme ban on burgers and petrol and cruises from someone who is uh very disappointed. It's all climate stuff. It's it's anything that has to do with fossil fuel. Yes, cruise lines, uh uh airlines, uh uh petrol cars, all of that is for boating. Now the Dutch uh Amsterdam putting in place a ban that is so extreme it is attracted worldwide attention. Uh before I get to that though, certainly in recent years the Netherlands has seen some pretty extreme policies. I mean in the name of the so called green agenda and to comply with EU rules. This is a very Dutch government for some reason wanted to close down thousands of farms across the country to cut down n itrogen pollution and even went this far that if farmers refused to sell up, that the Dutch authorities would push ahead with compulsory purchases of farms to shut them down. And what you've now seen is this in Amsterdam: that there is now a ban in place for certain public adverts. So Amsterdam now from the first of May, so this is coming to effect now. Adverts for burgers, petrol cars, air travel and cruises banned from appearing on billboards, tram shelters, or metro stations because of the outlook on environmental targets from the Amsterdam authorities, who for some reason want to reduce local meat consumption. And yeah, believe it or not, this is now the policy being implemented in Amsterdam. And things could get even more extreme in terms of Amsterdam because it seems now the city actually looking at ban ning cruise ships complet ely that they're gonna look to end sea cruises by 203 5 . They've already decided to reduce the number of cruise ships allowed to dock in Amsterdam, that nearly halved, and they're now looking at banning cruise ships, something that of course will cost them a huge amount of money in terms of port and tourist taxes. And what is not reported is they've reduced the number of slots uh available at the airport. So to fly direct to Amsterdam is is expensive. It's I mean, it's already expensive because of uh oil price and jet fuel availability, but there's even more I mean you look at the ticket , it's seventy five percent is taxes and fees and carbon and and and extra airport fees just because they don't have enough slots for airplanes. This is a this is a huge hub intern atational airport. The Dutch are crazy. And everyone's complaining about the prime minister, Twinklet es , who who suckered all the young people in by being um openly gay, like, oh yes, LGBTQ, it's gonna be great. And this kid all he does is stuff for rich people . So it's this is a country in decline That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard. Kill the cruise lines and then take in uh the an international hub of major importance and and screw it. Yeah. That's exactly what they to save the world. For climate change? Yes. And check this. So Taxi Eric, uh it it isn't a full blown law yet, but they're going to disallow all diesel cars and trucks from the city center. And soon it will be I think that may already be in effect. And most of these cabs, you know, these Mercedes cabs, all used to drive on diesel, of course, because it's much cheaper here . And so now they're going to ban uh petrol cars. So he got a hybrid, and he can drive about a hundred kilometers on battery alone, which is enough to drive into uh the city center and out, you know, a couple times a day. But they have so many electric vehicles and such a lack of uh energy available and and grid capacity that he can't he can't even get a three phase charger at home. He has to plug this thing into the wall and it takes four hours to charge something that could charge in twenty five minutes . Um and there are new homes being built that will never get electricity. They they let that we can't extend the grid to these new homes where they already have hundreds of thousands of homes in shortage because they've given it to all the uh asylum seekers. It was a long term strategy. Woo! It's all good, brother Yeah, there you go. You you nailed it. You nailed it . I don't know what they're gonna do in um Slick. I don't think they're gonna do in Hungary. Here's the uh latest update now they got the new guy in. It's a new era for Hungary. Peter Mody or is set to take his oath as Prime Minister inside Budapest's neo Gothic parliament. He has called on Hungarians to mark the day with a huge party celebrating the end of the Orban era We must immediately begin putting our country back in order, bringing home EU funds, restarting the economy, and improving public services, as well as healing the wounds caused over recent decades, reunifying the Hungarian nation, and of course ensuring justice so that those who committed the crimes of the previous system are held accountable. What was it that bad? Did we just miss all the reporting? I thought everyone loved Orban . Uh they did uh the the corruption I got I I think got too much or or ramped up. I have a report from the BBC. Why yes it is. Okay. This is under your clip says Hungary New Guy One BBC .. Interesting The problem in Hungary is the now speaking Japanese. We've got a real situation on our hands. Oh, here we go. It's a bad edit . It was a moment of pomp and ceremony in Budapest today. A fanfare sounded as new members of Bud Fogadom, hogy Magyarországhoz and alaptörvényéhez hülleszek, hogy Magyarországhoz, és annak alaptörvényéhez hül leszek. In his inaugural speech, Mr. Majester, one of his government 's first steps would be to create an independent office to investigate corruption over the past twenty years. That's the period covering the government of his predecessor, Victor Orban. Afterwards, Mr. Majar gave another speech to his supporters outside the Parliament, saying his premiership would mark a new beginning for his country. Take this day with you as a memory and remember this day for your whole life. Maybe one day you will you will show it to your children to your grandchildren , that this is how it was. This is how it was in two thousand twenty-six the first day of the free and democratic Hungary. All right. All right. Okay. Well, new guys. But the the other thing is wasn't this Oriban gonna be a dictator Yeah, that was typical. It's the same thing with Trump. It's funny. He had some joke the other day about it. He says, well, maybe in about the thing. No, don't play it again. No, I'm going to play it again. What I'm going to play is I got some brand new hot off the press stuff from this morning from the Sunday morning shows. Thank you to Steve uh the clip collector. We gotta talk about Hantavirus. I mean everyone's talking about the Hanta. Hanta is where it's funny before you play that. Th there's been a couple of pieces going around saying claiming the whole thing is a fake. Oh, I haven't seen that. The whole thing is a the whole thing is bogus. The people that have died didn't die of Hanta. Oh. And this just is a complete creation to try to get people. No, I I can I can assure you the dead Dutch people are really dead. Well they might be dead, but are they dead from Hanta? Oh well one of them somebody apparently died of old age. It happens to the best of us . Now what I love about this is we're just rewinding the movie. We're inserting a new word. We're bringing back the same puppets. Who do you want to talk to right away when there's something deadly going on Peter Jotes. No, that's when we're that's we don't have a vaccine yet. We're not there yet. What do you mean? We gotta go back to the Genesis. Who was the first guy? You need a you need the first guy, come on. Well it's not Fauci. No, it's Osterholm . Oh oh oh that guy. I'm joined now by one of the top infectious disease specialists in the Mm. The one who scared our wits. Scared us out of our wits when we started with the COVID. Even before we were the guy you ran into at Rogan. Yeah, when when Rogan was still in Los Angeles. Most Americans, of course, had never even heard of the Hon tavirus. So you can understand We've heard of it. Well it's interesting you bring that up. It's interesting you bring that up. Because yes, that was one of the things that uh that I was uh curious about myself. I think we actually I think we actually have a clip still. Where is it? Hmm. I'll find it. Yes, thank you. And first of all, happy Mother's Day to you. Thank you. Bye bye. In fact, the good news is that in the sense it is hantavirus and not another coronavirus or influenza virus. This is one that has very limited ability to be transmitted person to person. In fact, it's a rare ex ception. And so we have no question about the fact that this really is on the end of its run right now. And they're very possibly maybe not no additional cases from here on out. And and I know i y originally you catch it from rat feces or urine. How many case Why doesn't she just say rat poop feces? Isn't then people don't understand that word anymore, Martha. Yeah, but just say rat poop. It's okay. I think you're right. I don't think people know what the word feces means. I I I think it's too technical for Americans these days. Just call it rat poop. And you you hear her thinking about it. Like, shall I say rat poop? Shall I say rat turd? Shall I feces? Should I catch it from rat feces? You see how she Yeah, you're right. Turd f poop. From rat speci es or urine? How many cases are there generally in a year? In the United States, there are about 30 cases a year on average, and they mostly occur west of the Mississippi, about 96% or west of the Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Now we switch all of a sudden from rat to mouse. Yeah. I don't like I don't like that. And now he says it's west of the Mississippi In terms of what happens around the rest of the world is different with different strains of Hontavirus, and the one that really raised our uh concerns with this boat related transmission is the one from South America. Ah, you hear what he's saying here? Would really raise our concerns with this boat related transmission . So he's there's a little he's being sneaky about this. Because that's a different and that is hemorrhagic. The An the Andean strain is like Ebola, Zika, without the small heads. Not Zika. Zika's not hemorrhagic. Oh. It's the other one. The Marfan, Mar Marb Maruryb . Mar Marlboro lbury. Marlboro. The Marlboro. Marlboro Nailed it. Uh concerns with this boat related transmission is the one from South America, which is called the Andes strain. And that one actually on occasion has resulted in person to trans person transmission. Uh-huh. You see, he's caging it, he's being careful, but yeah, he's slippery this one. And supposedly sneaking it in. And supposedly you aren't uh passing that or transmitting that unless you're symptomatic? Right. Right now you can manage the individuals who have been exposed very simply by asking. Oh how can we manage? What do you think we can manage them with? As of the end of twenty twenty three, six hundred and ninety cases of HANTA virus have been reported in the United States. Oh, okay, since surveillance began in ninety three. Okay. It's possible. All right. Basically an N ninety five mask on. Oh, okay. Back to the N ninety five mask. Oh no. We know this doesn't stop anything of the kind. And stop all transmission. All transmission stops with an N ninety-five. So this is why we don't need this high-tech uh you know containment facilities, et cetera, to monitor these people. We can monitor them very simply. And and should they stay home, I know these 17 Americans are coming back, they've shelter in place. Going to Nebraska, they will be checked then. Self-isolate and And and then they're sent home. And this is just a trust thing, just check your fever. Are you happy with that? Well, you know, it's not actually just a trust thing. In a sense, people really do respond to participating in this for their We have had a lot of experience with this in the past. Ebola was a good example. When we had all right turning uh health care workers coming back from Africa back in 2015 to 2017, we monitored them tw ice a day for their temperature and uh for any symptoms, and that worked very, very well. So I have complete confidence that we will have good compliance here. And I think within days this will no longer be a story. Okay. All right. Within days it will no longer be a story. Why would you even say that? This is how he gets on TV. I would say check back in a few days. We'll see if it's no longer a story. But okay, he's certain. Eva even the people who were let off the ship earlier at uh at the end of April and are now some of them back in the United States. No worries there. No worries there in the sense that they're going to be monitored now as they weren't before. Oh, no worries 'cause we can monitor them But again none of them have had any symptoms onsets, have had no suggestion of infection. The same is uh true with the c all the individuals disembarking right now today. Uh there's no evidence any of those individuals were sick. And if you look at what happened, the first person that came on the ship brought it with them. And you can basically explain all the cases that have occurred to date around exposure just to that one individual, not to multiple people transmitted the Thanks so much for joining us this morning. Put us at ease. Thank you. Thank you. Yes, at ease. You're right, John. We go back to uh March of twenty twenty five. It wasn't all that long ago. Here was the report we played on the show. Tonight, New Mexico authorities with tragic revelations to a week-long mystery, saying Gene Hackman died of heart disease and complications from Alzheimer's, likely a week after his wife Betsy died of the rare deadly disease Hontavirus. The cause of death for Mr. Gene Hackman, aged 95 years, is hypertensive and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease with Alzheimer's disease as a significant contributory factor. The cause of death for Miss Betsy Hackman aged sixty-five years is Hon tavirus pulmonary syndrome. Now I think that's the isn't that the Andes version? That's what I no uh I'm not sure at this point. Well here here's the thing that I've been one is So here's the thing that that um that I haven't seen any reporting on, surprise . In the Pfizer document, the one that was FOIA, the one that was supposed to be locked up for seventy years. Ninety five. Ninety-five years. Um han tavirus pulmonary infection is on the adverse e vent special interest list . What? Yes. For the Pfizer vaccine. The RNA vaccine. Is there are they so careless when they manufacture it that they got hantovirus in the vaccine, you think? Well, first of all, it's on page thirty-three, which just tickles me. Oh okay. That's good news. So I'm feeling better already. Um but the so there's two ways of looking at I don't think hantavirus was included in it. The way I read the and it's it's a very technical document, so we'll have to have other people read it and tell us w what what we're seeing here. The way I read it is that if you have had hantavirus, which could be a mild case, you got a fever, you know, some rat poops Texas, by the way, Waffle House . Waffle House. Waffle House. That it can then bring back the exact same symptoms that you had from hantavirus. So the hantivirus is kind of dormant inside of you, perhaps? Wow, it sounds like herpes. Yes, like bad bad Mexican food. It comes back all of a sudden. Yes . Um Well this is this is what I'm reading. So that would kind of make sense if you think about Gene Hackman's wife. Think she was vexed? Do you think these people were vaccin?ated No, absolutely. Are you kidding? Which would be in fact a pandemic of um death so I'm not so cavalier about all this. Oh I see what you're saying. Well you're saying is that because there could be numerous maybe thousands of cases of of dormant pantivirus infections out there because of the nature of it, based on this paper. Yep. Page thirty-three. Hello. Uh it's possible that they could all be triggered by the COVID shot. Yes. Exactly . And then you can use that as leverage for another fake pandemic. Check it out. This warning sits uh you you you nailed it. This warning sits alongside about twenty herpes family virus reactivation uh symptoms. Also Zika, Guillam Bar et, and there's thirteen hundred other adverse event of special interest categories that Pfizer was cataloging as known events from day one in the document they wanted to hide for almost a hundred years. This is the gift that keeps on giving. Imagine my surprise when who shows up on CBS this morning? Come on, you know who that is now. Potez. No . Who's the who's the Pfizer douche ? Oh yeah, the guy was on the board. For more now, we turn to former FDA Commissioner, Dr. Scott Gottlieb. He also serves on the boards of Pfizer and United Healthcare. Welcome back, Doctor. Thank you. It's almost like he's rolling his eyes like I gotta do this again. Or or maybe he's like, I hope they don't ask about that document. Please don't ask about the document. Whatever you do, don't ask about the document. Welcome back, Doctor. Thank you. So there have been three deaths linked to the outbreak here in the U.S. There are six states monitoring potential exposure all either linked to the ship itself or flights of people who have been on the ship and then those seventeen Americans. Um do you agree with the C D C and the World Health Organization that the risk to public health is low. Oh, yeah. Yeah, I do agree with that. Uh, we have to concede that there's still things we don't know about this virus. We haven't had to grapple with many outbreaks in the past. There's been two large outbreaks in Argentina. But based on that experience, what we know is that typically for transmission you have to have close contact. We also know that people typically aren't contagious unless they have showing signs of s of the infection itself in the what we call the prodromo phase. Pro dromo . We have never heard of the pro dromo phase. No, I've never heard this phase. This is new. Where they start to have an onset of symptoms and the progression from that onset of symptoms to um severe disease and in the these cases death is typically just days. This is a very aggressive virus. And so based on what we know, the transmission risk is low. Now that said, when you look back at the past experience, there are these outlier cases where there appears to have been transmission among people who weren't um perceived to be in close contact And so there are these um cases that we need to look at closely from the past experience and just be wary that perhaps there's things we don't know fully about this virus. I will say that we are nearing the end of the transmission window for the patient. Yeah, I think so. From the past experience. And just be wary that perhaps there's things we don't know fully about this virus. I will say that we are nearing the end of the transmission window for the pa people who are being repatriated here in the U.S. And so it looks to me like the last uh death on that cruise ship was May second. That patient had an onset of symptoms on April twenty eighth. Uh if you believe that the incubation period is about if you believe how about some science, Dr. Gottley? What is this believe crowd? If you believe that the incubation period is about two to six weeks, they'll be at the peak of that incubation cycle. Well hold on a second. That contradicts what Osterholm said. He said, nah it,'s over. This is done. This is toast. Now Gottlieb is giving us two weeks' transmission window space. I don't like this at all. And of course, the one thing that will not help, do not listen to So a key moment here. I mean the WHO said it's very clear this It doesn't say that it's not effective. There's no research. Well, of course not. We've never had an outbreak of I'm wondering what you make of these calls for alternative treatments um and resistance of government health advice. What altern there's no treatment. What alternative treatment is this? This might be a primary treatment. These people make me mad. According to the The I'm sorry, but according to the ivermectin freaks, uh ivermectin the henta virus is another RNA virus which are very easily thwarted by ivermectin Look, I think we're going to be relitigating uh the consequences of COVID for a long time. And I think a lot of people who are in public health positions right now believe that their tenure um and their appointment to these positions is a referendum on COVID in some respects. And so that echoes through their public comments. This is not COVID. It's not going to spread like a pandemic virus, uh like COVID did, like a coronavirus did. It spreads far less efficiently. There aren't any treatments, successful treatments for this virus. Ivermectin certainly isn't uh an effective treatment Well wait a minute. It makes it sound like it did work against other things. What did he just say? It doesn't work against this virus. It uh prevents viral replication uh in the nucleus, not the cytoplasm of this virus replicates. It's just not gonna work. So I would encourage people not to use that. I know that there's been some things on social media um suggesting that people should stockpile ivermectin. We don't have an effective treatment for huntivirus and that way that's what makes this very menacing. Now if I were the global the the the global liberal world order and I'm hating everything Trump is doing. He's wrecking our party. He's screwing it up with what he's doing with oil. He's screwing it up with the banking. He's screwing up he's he's you know, he doesn't want to help Ukraine. He's not playing ball with us. Why wouldn't they just pull the same trick they did in twenty nineteen? You're telling me noan one has has has tabletoped this. No one has war game it and said In fact uh two weeks ago there was a uh one of those things that you always like to bitch about. Um the war game exercise I mean wouldn't you just I mean w it's these these are the exact same people. Wouldn't they be like, Oh this is great. We can get rid of that Trump. I don't think they can they can pull this one all. You can't do it with Hantabis. Well they've already got him in a in a bad situation you know it's like Uh come on boys we can do better than this. Listen to the gaggle. Can you tell us what you burning these breaking well I think you're gonna be told everything and you already have . Uh it's very much, we hope, under control . Who is the ship? And I think we're gonna make a full report about it tomorrow. We have a lot of people, s a lot of great people are studying it. It should be fine. We hope should everything be consumed that you put it right in colorful. Yeah, and so a lot of great people. This was not left unturned, this stone by uh CBS and Gottlieb about a lot of great people. You served in the first Trump administ ration as his uh FDA commissioner in the first term. The person in that job now has been a guest on this program., uh, Dr Marty McCary . He was a vocal critic of COVID response during Trump and Biden. Um there's a lot of reporting right now that his current position that he's at risk of losing his job. Given how important the FDA is, they regulate, I saw, one-fifth of consumer spending in this country. How damaging would it be to lose its leader and is there someone who could step in quickly? No one obvious to me. And there's been some reporting about different candidates that could work on an interim basis there. Marty's a friend. I think that that's a very difficult job. It as you said regulates about twenty percent of the U.S. economy, products that are very important to people's lives, medical products, food, uh, food safety. And so there there's a lot of debate and um consternation about decisions that get made at FDA. And so it's been a controversial position for whoever's held that job, including me. Um you know, I got criticized for decisions that I made in that position as well. I think the continued upheaval at FDA has been uh detrimental to the agency, not just the speculation about Marty's fate, but also the departures that we've seen from the agency. Uh the agency's lost thousands of medical reviewers, some voluntary through the uh through the doge cuts or some forced through the doge cuts. Um at involuntary means some voluntary . There's been a lot of voluntary departures from the ADC. If you look at the oncology division, they had a starting strength of about a hundred medical reviewers at the beginning of this administration. They're down to about fifty. Um the hematological group that reviews drugs for a little Reviewers. These aren't doctors, these are reviewers who uh approve stuff. Uh you know, they're pharma shills. They lost an entire breast cancer review team. So there's been a lot of departures from the agency. You've seen political appointees take over what are tri typically career leadership positions, running the medical product centers, the drug center, and the biologic center. So I think cumulatively that's taken a toll on the agency and it's continued to Uh huh. I'm d I'm just saying they're setting it up. They're setting it up in case they need to. If they decide to pull the trigger, all you need is the media. All you need is a bunch of people who have this adverse event uh what was it adverse event special investigation thing that reactivates this henta virus? I mean, it's it's clear that there's a lot of things going on with side effects of I would say specifically the Pfizer mRNA, hate to say it. Not with everybody for sure. Praise God, our two of our daughters are still good and they've they've been vaxxed to the hilt . Lots of lots of boosters? Many boosters. Yes. Many, many boosters. It's uh it hurts my heart, man . So luckily luckily they're okay. Now, if you don't mind, just want to stay on the pharma tip for a second because uh I would have saved this for later on in the show, but Gottlieb went into this and I have a couple of clips from um from a recent Maha institu te and this is you know the MK Ultra that we've been talking about of SSRIs . And I don't think people understand how big of a disaster this is. Except for Kamala Harris's stepdaughter, who paused from crocheting to think, hmm, I've been on these things for over a decade. I wonder I want to ask you about some of current leadership there. Secretary uh Kennedy was speaking about the use of antidepressants in this country. Almost 17% of Americans use them. He says they're over-prescribed, and he compared his experience of heroin withdrawal to a family member's experience getting off antidepressants known as SSRIs. Take a listen. I watched a family member get off of them after a couple of years on them. And uh she was suicidal literally every day . She woke up every morning and said, I don't want to live. And she said, the only reason I'm staying alive is for you guys for the family. He later said that he was not telling people to stop if they're taking that medic ation. But what do you make of his description of antide pressants as risky? Look, these are prescribed in a primary care setting. Like any drug that's prescribed in that setting, I'm sure there's some marginal prescribing um you know isolated marginal prescribing. What does that mean? Marginal prescribing? Does that mean over prescribing? Is that a a tricky term . I think what he means by a marginal is that maybe the person doesn't need that drug, but they get it prescribed anyway. They're on the margin. Okay. But for most Americans to take these drugs, they're very important and in some cases life saving and I would um encourage everyone who is thinking about potentially stopping these medications based on the Secretary's comments to consult their doctor. There is a period of time that patients need to be weaned off these drugs. They can be successfully weaned off these drugs if they can be it They want to be. And there's alternatives that could be effective for their mental health. But nobody should just stop these drugs um outright without being under the consultation of a medical provider. I worry that the Secretary's comments is going to discourage legitimate use of these drugs in the same way that his comments around Tylenol discouraged use of Tylenol in the setting of pregnancy, where it could be very important for certain pregnant women who need pain relief and fever relief in that setting. We saw a lot of um women's. Oh quick quick I love that little pivot. Hey th these guys are stupid about Tylenol. We've been talking about this topic. First one from Laudens . And she is uh thirty five. She lives in Amsterdam, was put on Lexapro in twenty twenty one. She says I want to support your take on SSRIs by sharing sharing my own experience. Twenty twenty one , I was thirty five. A well meaning doctor here in Amsterdam put me on Lexapro a strong SSRI. It made me extremely agitated, not to mention aggressive, and I am normally a pretty relaxed person. I started spending most of my weekends drinking black coffee, watching very violent video games on YouTube, the kind of games where you're ripping monsters in half with a chainsaw. I had no interest in playing these games, I just enjoyed the graphic violence .in Aga, normally I'm a pretty relaxed person, but these drugs made me aggressive and hypomanic hypo hypomanic? Hypomanic . SSRIs boost serotonin and serotonin is a substance that makes you feel safe and dominant. So it's not hard to imagine why this could lead to dangerous behavior. Of course, doctors are not all aware, since these kinds of side effects could easily be attributed to something else. Maybe you're having a difficult time at work, you just need to meditate. At any rate, getting off SSRIs is its own form of torture with mood changes, brain zaps, and lots of other fun stuff that will haunt you until the end of your days. First put into my head how dangerous these drugs can be. John, another score . Pharmaco pharmacology note lexapro, which is the medical term is esc ital ram is recognized as having one of the highest affinities and top tier selectivity for serotonin transport among SSRIs, often considered the most typical or selective due to its minimal binding to other receptor receptors . And so the Maha Institute, which is a RFK junior symposium, had this doctor Anders Sorensen from I think he's Norway or Denmark, and he gave a little spiel, I clipped three four short clips about SSRIs. They're short. One of them is thirty five seconds, so they're short. About SSRIs and getting off of them. So in twenty eighteen a study was published in the BMJ asking one very simple question. Do parachutes ce the risk of death when jumping from an aircraft. The researchers compared two groups, one jumping with and one without . The result , no significant difference between the groups. Parachutes, it seemed, offer no protective effect, comfortable for those jumping without one. But there was one small detail hidden in the methods section, which you of course always remember to read . All participants had jumped from an aircraft parked on the ground from an average of half a meter . And as the authors noted, one should be cautious in extrapolating their findings to real-world high -italtude jumps. We might laugh at this silly study, but it stops being funny when you realize we're doing something very similar in psychiatry today. Fast forward to 2025, a study in the American Journal of Medicine compared how long antidepressants were studied in the randomized trials we rely on, compared to how long people actually take them . The median duration of the trials was eight we eks, meaning that most participants had only been on these drugs for two months. And the median duration of real-world use in the U S, five years . So we're using short-term evidence to guide long-term treatment. And that gap matters, especially when it comes to dependence and withdrawal. Yeah. So you can already see where this is going that they have no idea how bad these things are if you want to get off of them . Since nineteen ninety seven, SSRI withdrawal has been described as mostly mild and self limiting, lasting a week or two , mentioning only a handful of the more than 80 reported symptoms . That's what the guidelines say . Because they're based on short-term trials far from reality. So what happens in practice ? People who've been on these drugs for years, decades, are tapered off as if they've been taking them for months. Often by aggressively having the dose, having again and then stopping. And when that goes wrong, which it often does, they call it a relapse of an underlying condition. Conclusion: you still need the medic ation . So back on the drug , symptoms resolve, and the therapeutic illusion is complete . It looks like the drug is treating an underlying illness, when in fact it might be just relieving withdrawal. But before we conclude a relapse, which of course could be the case, withdrawal has to be ruled out first. Alright, so what are some of these symptoms? What's confusing is that withdrawal from psychiatric drug isn't just physical symptoms . It's not just dizziness, nausea, headaches, muscle pain, shaking, burning sensations, fatigue. I mean it's that too . But it's also anxiety, insomnia, irritabil ity, depressed mood, mood swings, brain fork, difficulty concentrating, intrusive thoughts. Withdrawal can mimic relapse . Or new diagnosis, for which they are also drugs. The symptoms overlap. And if you don't recognize withdrawal, you will misinterpret it. SSRIs are definitely not harder to quit than heroin, says producer Tim. That's only a commentary on heroin, not on SSRIs. They're incredibly difficult to quit. The long and short of it is you have to go incredibly crazy in sort of a bipolar mood swing kind of way for the duration of your withdrawal, which is about a month. Medical best practice is to very precisely titrate off the dose over a span of several months. But again, I found out the hard way. A lot of doctors just don't know what they're supposed to do. Final clip, which tells you the story that we already know from these from previous medications. And we've been here before, historically. We start with benzoreac ines, introduced first as safe and effective with minimal concern of dependence until decades later, dependence and severe withdrawal became undeniable. Then we saw it again with opioids, again aggressively marketed as safe and effective for chronic pain until we had an epidemic. The pattern is the same. A new drug is introduced, framed as safe and effective, gets widely prescribed. Then people start having trouble coming off it. Then research begins to confirm what patients areing experienc. But that research is pushed aside, ignored, because it challenges the prevailing paradigm. It's textbook paradigm shifts from Thomas Kuhn's 1962 classic. So prescribing continues and recognition comes years, often decades later . And then the cycle repeats with new safe and effective drug until we understand this. The body doesn't care what we call the drug or what receptors it acts on. It just the depths. Setting the stage for withdrawal independence. I like the fact that we at least got one person off or at least to consider it. Oh goodness similar tale of woe about this. We haven't heard from Dame Francine in eon's Oh good. She's writing a lot. Oh wow. Does she still listen to the show? I doubt it. You said these things are the worst. You can't get off 'em. Yeah. Well you can apparently, but it's not easy. It's not easy . Yeah. Well, maybe we'll save one more person, Joe. And I'll try to get it, dig it up and and clip it. Get get it to the show notes of all these different drugs from Darv on to Qualus to one thing after another. Uh I I think there's like the top twenty-five drugs that have been taken off the market. And the and an underlying theme is well they had some data but they kept it to themselves. It's like a theme. They the drug companies say I it's like now you have to wonder what the deal is with these with some of these drugs Well they also take away. No, this system is uh is clear. Like uh the drug goes to the uh to all those people on the review team who Kennedy is fired uh and replaced, uh their former former. I'm talking about at the street level Like doctors being paid off to prescribe drugs. No, but listen. This is what I'm saying. The first part is it goes to the FDA. The FDA has the SHILLS. The SHILLS goes, it looks good to me. I mean whatever you showed me. Then it gets a safe and effective approval. Then the reps go to the doctors and they say safe and effective. Would you like to buy some? Would you like to s serve this to your to your patients? And here's a set of golf clubs and here's a spe we all saw the documentary . And here's a party and here's a cruise and you know, etcetera, etcetera because they've been told it's safe and effective, their butts are covered by the FDA, the whole system is crooked. And I think RFK Jr. is doing something here. It does seem like that he's creating some awareness through a podcast. Yay . Because you're not going to see it on CNN who live by this stuff. That's the other part of it. So yeah, so the doctor s they have um what is it uh what is the term uh culpable uh uh about culpability . I don't know. Yes, you do. There's a term that says that says uh b I I uh Liability . This like where where you where you have a way to show that you couldn't have known because you ha you had to be a plausible deniability. There you go. Boomer moment for both of us. Yes. Not for me. Okay . For me then, boomer adjacent moment. Plausible deniability. Yeah, it's sick. It's sick, I tell ya. Sick. Sick sick sick. Well, it is bad. Yeah. But it's very bad. All right, let'ss get to politic. Because big news. In the UK? Yeah. Yeah, this was great. Yeah, the UK's labor and and the the preface to these, I only have three clips, but you don't need that much of it to understand what's going on. The election took place. The council election the council elections. This was uh live on television. Yeah, it was the it was the little election. Local. The l the little local elections, yes And that Labor just ate it. And now everyone's predicting that both Labor and the Conservatives, they conservatives did not do well. Nope. Nope. Uh that both these parties may be going the way of the you know the way of the dodo, and maybe these new parties will be coming up especially s led by Farage 's oper ation . Yeah, the reform party . Yeah, which she which he started because he got basically quit the other one. What was the one he started before? Was it called? Uh wasn't that the Brexit Party? No, no, it was PK it was UK something, it has some jazzy sound to it. It was very similar to the reform party, but it was different. And he had to quit it because there were too many nutballs that it joined it. It happens. Yeah. So he just started a new party. He isn't going anywhere, following the disastrous results for his governing Labour Party in English local elections and the devolved parliamentary votes in Scotland and Wales. the path ahead and that's what I intend to do in coming days, how we rebuild, how we convince people about hope for the future. And we haven't done enough of that. So I will be setting that out with clar ity about But some MPs within the party are continuing to call for him to set a timetable for his departure. Our UK political correspondent Rob Watson says it's a seismic shift in party allegiances. The more I've reflected on it overnight, Alex, the bigger and the more significant it seems because it really does seem as though the old order has crumbled and a new order is taking shape. And I rate it up there as being as significant this ending of the duopoly of Conservatives and Labour with the creation of the welfare state after the Second World War in nineteen forty-five, with the Suez crisis in the nineteen fifties, where Britain ceased to be an imperial power after its humiliation, uh Mrs. Thatcher coming to power in nineteen seventy-nine and the Brexit vote. I I think it is that big, it's that significant. And while it's Right . UKIP. UKI. UKIP. Yeah. UKIP. Yeah, and they became nutty and so he bailed out. After they tried to kill him, remember they tried to kill him? With a plane crash? Yeah, the plane crash. Oh the plane crash. Right, right, right. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Of course they always try to kill these people. Yeah. Look down you'd clip too. The the facts as driving this are just unlikely to go away. A and they're three and they're not unique to Britain. The first one is the economic squeeze. I mean a lot of this anger is driven by voters feeling that their living standard Oh really? That's the only thing? Really? That's all that it is? No, he he that's that's just one eight. Okay, all right all right. Britain is not going to grow. So that's number one. Number two is just Kirstarmer's own personal unpopularity. He is so unpopular. So I mean it is just extraordinary. It's almost off the scale. No politician has ever come back from that. And then the third one is these what you might call culture, values, issues, identity issues, and that is the anger that's out there in Britain, as in so many other countries about immigration, social cohesion, multiculturalism, how you treat uh British history. A and that again does not look like dissipating Oh did they not bring in the Mandelson Epstein uh No, no. That was that was the big deal in in Parliament. Interesting. These guys out I don't think the British public at large gives a shit about any of it. In fact, when I talked to Orlowski about it, he still thinks that Mandelson is still was still calling the shots uh at 10 Downing from the get go and and continue to do so after they fired him. Wouldn't surprise me. That's uh Andrew Orlowski from the register. Friend of the show. He's with the U uh London Oh really? Oh he's moved up a notch. So he's been writing for the telegraph for about six, seven years. That's a respectable paper. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So friend of the show. F O F S. F O T S Friend of the Show. He does listen to. Friend of the show. He will have heard me say this. Friend of the show. F O T S F ots . So he says that that's what and he claims that you know that this Mendelssohn guy is still in play, and I'm thinking I don't think so, but okay. One of the key policies of the reform party which came out as the biggest winner in the elections in England is to combat illegal immigration. The UK Home Office says over the past eight years two hundred thousand migrants reached England illegally by crossing the Channel in small boats. You know what what what kills me? Because I lived in England. They lock up your pets for six months minimum. Yeah, if you try to bring a dog to England, you you might as well just forget it. Yes. For i six months, eighteen months, they lock up your dog because oh, you might have some eight hundred million dollar deal with France, the UK says the number of people making the journey has continued to rise. James Wattas has sent us this report. Change when you cross the border on the northern coast from France into Belgium. It's an affluent area, and the locals here are facing a problem that really is new to them: small boat migrant crossings. The West Flanders Deputy Police Chief Christian de Ridder is keen to nip it in the bud. We have to stop them before they get to the UK. And we have to find a way to stop them on the water. If we could put on a naval barrier so they don't get into French You know, th I don't understand how you can go across the English Channel in a small boat. I took the Dunkirk Ferry probably twice. Yeah, it's bumble before you know in the olden days in the like the seventies. And then you know, then they but they went to a hover craft , which was cool, a great way to get across, and then of course there's the channel, which is the way to go. Uh but that's the most sickening ride I've ever had m on a boat. Yeah. I don't know how a little boat can go across the English Channel. But it's not a short trip either. Pick up the troops who were locked um and surrounded by the Germans in uh in France and they picked them up and they sailed them all back. And these were tiny little dinghies and all kinds of rowboats. I don't know they were doing Yeah. And I've flown over the English Channel many times smooth as glass. Yeah, well if you fly over. Well but five thousand feet, you know, being the Cessna, I'm looking down like that's pretty nice. If anything , uh please. I have d that is a rough go getting across that channel. It is not it can be there are people who swim across the channel . Lunatics . I do have uh I do have uh two uh quick quotes here from This is the most unpatriotic prime minister we've ever had in this country, heading the most unpatriotic British government we've ever had in this country, and they're even worse than the Conservatives in the last five years, and they weren't very good either. And here he is with a quick prediction. I think if Labour get obliterated in the Red Wall and in South Wales End of May. End of May. End of May is what he's saying. We picked up on Nigel Farage as a character of importance. Early on. Early on. Decade ago. Well, it was two thousand. Yeah, it was a long time ago. And we got grief from various UK listeners. Yeah. They told us he's an idiot, he's no good, b and we were like you're wasting your time following this guy's Are you spiking the ball? Is that what you're doing here? Yeah. I'm I'm spiking the ball without you so. But it's like uh it's just like it's this is typical of this show . Yes, we 're on it. People hate us what I'm trying to say. People hate us for years. Some for some reason they still listen and then later they say, Hey man, thanks for saving But donate Value for value people. Remember these valuable lessons. So I picked up a clip, which is uh it it''ss luckily only a minute because the guy's kind of insufferable. George Galloway. That has Galloway is totally insufferable. But it's worth it in this case because he has he's onto something that's going on with Keir Starmer. And Galloway now he used to be a politician. He was uh was he Labor? I think it was Labor. He must have been labor, socialists. Or a communist. He's a communist, basically. Yeah, and I think he became a column is he a columnist for the Guardian or something. Well he was on Big Brother. It was all downhill from there. Um he's no longer a columnist, John. He's what everybody else is. A YouTuber. He has what he thinks is a podcast because he's basically a YouTuber. And here he is. No part of the British media is covering the fact that at the end of this month, three Ukrainian rent boys rent boys are on trial for allegedly arsening the British Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Is that British can you say arsening as like a verb ? Arsoning? Like like lighting somebody on fire? Yeah, arsoning. Is that is that a verb? I thought arson was just Well maybe it is. Isn't it an adverb? No. Arsoning. I've never heard of it. Let's look it up. Just type it into the into the browser. It'll tell you. Okay. Well, where is I never heard the usage that usage before. Let me see. Hey, book of knowledge. Is arsoning? Can you say someone was arsoning someone else? Okay. It's a widely recognized term. Didn't know that maybe misspelling or a variation of arsen arsen ic. Poisoning. Yeah. Arsoning is a real verb form. Mainly used to be a change voices. You can say someone was arsening a building. Most people just say committing arson though. Oh. This is now see that's different than this. This definition is wide wid ely recognized , which is a misspelling or a variation of arsenic . It does have a specific definition that uh blah blah blah. It goes on. Okay. Alright, back to the clip then, because this is getting fun. Red boys, massage artists, male models, every one of them are Ukrainian, is charged with arson ing two separate residences , two separate vehicles. Now, if this were happening to me or any other citizen in the land, every person in Britain would be fully conversant and would be speculating wildly on exactly why these Ukrainian red boys allegedly arsoned the British Prime Minister, but not one news report has occurred into the extraordinary circumstances of a serving British Prime Minister being singled out for reasons we know not why. Allegedly. But three Ukrainian rent boys. And very pretty boys. The men are pleading not guilty. They may very well be innocent. But they may very well have to be cross-examined. But by the end of the trial, we'll know one whole lot more about just what they had held in the presentation of the Vice Prime Minister. That's horrible. But I can't talk like that if I wanted to. Now so the press has started to pick up on it. They don't call them rent boys, but there is a story. The trial of three men accused of conspiring to commit arson against two properties and this is the this is proper. Conspiring to commit arson, not arsoning them. A vehicle linked to the Prime Minister has started today at the Old Bailey. Now the three defendants, two Ukrainians and a Romanian, appeared in the dock this morning, and they are Roman Lavrinovich, a 22-year-old, Petro Pochranok, who's 35, and the 27-year-old Stanislav Kar puik. Now uh they have been charged with uh conspiring to commit arson, and Roman Lavrinovich is also facing two further charges of committing arson uh with intent to endanger life. Now, all three defendants deny all of the charges set against them. Now listen to this. The prosecution here opened by Duncan Atkinson Casey went through the three arson attacks in turns, starting with a Toyota set ablaze in the early hours of the 8th of May and then a residential property on Ellington Street in Kentish Town on the 11th of May. And finally the third arson attack, another residential property also in Kentish Town on the 12th of May. They said it was immediately clear when the London Fire Brigade and the police attended the second of those arson attacks that hit it had been set on fire purposely, and that's in both of the properties where fires had been started, smoke and flames had entered the houses, endangering the lives of those within them. Now the prosecution went through uh some of the data and information they had collected on the defendants to build the case, including uh telegram chats, locations and images as well. Now there were discussions held between the defendants about these arson attacks and there was also a discovery on the telegram end-to-end encrypted platform. How does that work? Speaking telegram account called L Money. That they were motivated by money, not by any political or ideolog ical reasons. There you go. El money is the Russian pimp. Boys so to speak . Didn't didn't pay him. So they decided to burn it down. I think Galloway's onto something here. Yeah. And that would that would fall right in line with Mandelson tricks . Because he's all about the Rent Boys. Everything is fishy with England. Everything is literally fake and gay at this point. It's amazing . So I have a uh Africa clip. Well, there goes the audience . Well it's it leads to an ask atom. Oh boy. Okay. Now the Africa clip is short. Well it's not that short, but it's just Nigeria. Something's up with Nigeria and I think if you read between the lines on this Nigeria clip, this is just another attempt to get a stranglehold on the oil production of Nigeria. Nigeria. Yeah. Uh uh Nigeria Vance, is that the one we're we're playing here? Nigeria and the United States have agreed to deepen cooperation on security and counter terrorism following high level talks in Washington. The renewed diplomatic push comes amid a surge in deadly attacks against A statement from Niger ia's presidency said that the national security advisor, Nuhu Ribadu, met senior U.S. officials, including the vice president, J.D. Vance, and the Secretary of State, Marco Rubio. Both sides agreed to expand intelligence sharing, defense cooperation, and regional security efforts. Discussions reportedly focused on counter-terrorism and the deteriorating security situation in West Africa and the Sahel, where jihadists have been attacking in several countries. Nigeria had already committed to tackling terrorism and violent extremism in the fight against Boko Haram and the Islamic State West Africa province. Well isn't this just about the the mines, the golds, the minerals, I think that and the and the oil. Is oil in West in West Africa? Is that in Nigeria? I believe there's oil is in Nigeria. I think Nigeria is a major producer, if I'm not mistaken. Well there's also they're killing Christians. Yeah, that's all happening in Nigeria., they they didn't have that in the report. But what's interesting to me this was a Vance and Rubio, which they usually kept apart. Hmm . Hmm. It's a contest is to see who can do better at Nigeria, and that will help determine who Trump is going to support for 2028 . I think Trump's gonna stay out of it. Adam Alright, ask Adam. Okay. How many languages are spoken on the continent of Africa. Ask Adam, ask Adam . Will he know or will he won't? I don't know, but if we go, ask Adam, ask Adam, go. Answer the question. Go. Uh how much now, first of all, Africa is big. Is big. Is big. There's a lot of tribes . So I'm I'm gonna go . I'm going to bet all of my money in this round of jeopardy. I'm all in on this round of jeopardy. I'm going to say five hundred and thirty-seven languages on the continent of Africa or spoke. We did a series of children, child presenters, fourteen of them from across Africa. And I'm blown away by how it's not just the audience who related to these kids, it's how those kids became fanatic conservationists because they were selected for their stage presence to be hosts of a TV show about wildlife. So I do think that local relevance and resonance with the people on the ground is very important. And in a continent like Africa where we have over two thousand languages, we need people to be telling the stories in all those languages and bringing in our cultural knowledge and wow. Well luckily my uh fellow contestants were all like twenty, thirty five, bunch of losers. Over two thousand I go to find out. That is our tip that that's not a tip of the day. That is our little factoid that people can now use to bet money. This is a money maker. Wow. Over two thousand men. And do you think that the one one tribe could understand the other one? You know, like I'm sure there's these there's always some probably one guy, there's a polyglot in every group that can speak three or four of these languages. He's a superstar, you know. Two thousand two thousand over two thousand. That's a lot. Yeah, I like to see a list. That's crazy. They don't even probably can't even call them. They don't even have names. Hey, so um since you brought up uh Rubio, well we both brought up Rubio and uh and Vance and you think Trump's gonna stay out of it. Very possible . Um I got a couple um clips about Tucker. Actually one with Tucker because Oh, you uh after I did all these Tucker things that you grouse about. Yeah, but I'm bringing new stuff to the table. Yeah. You just bring an old hat . Did you say old hat? Old hat, yes. Oh man. Another boomer adjacent term here on the No Agenda Show. He had Massey on, again, Massey . Uh to complain. Yeah, Massey's under a under attack. Yes, and uh and that's why he went on Tucker. Um and so I have a short clip first of the it's the massey disappointment list. But Trump's have changed dramatically. At least the disconnect between what he said he was gonna do and what he's doing is pr is shocking. I I you know, when I endorsed him, I thought we wouldn't have a new war. I thought we would get warrants for FISA that they had used to spy on him. I thought that Maha would be front and center at the um at the HHS with Bobby Kennedy there. Um I thought that we would have sane foreign policy. I thought that where we put America first, that's my definition of sane. I thought we would end our involvement in the war in Ukraine. I thought we would release all the Epstein files and indict some of those SOBs. Um and those are all the things I'm still fighting for. Do you think Mass obese is he a little blinded by his hatred? Because I I mean I see uh I see Maha doing something. I think Maha's doing all it can do . It's it's up against the the most powerful forces in the universe. In the United States, the big pharma force that that owns the media. And are we still in the middle of what does he expect the Maha to do? I mean I 'm super disappointed in they haven't, you know, just stopped T V advertising. That would make a difference. Yeah. But I mean have we not withdrawn from the Ukraine war? Have we not withdrawn from that? I think we have to do it. No, but he says well we should get out of the Ukraine war. We're not in it. We're selling stuff. I don't know. I think he's a little blinded by hatred. I don't think he's a hater. I think he's just like he's he's he's a ideolog ue and he has his you know, and he's he's kind of a stick in the mud So New York magazine has a big thing going on about Tucker. New York magazine. Everything's good. Clip of them, you know, trying to slam him. He is a right now a lightning rod, and he's an op . Here is uh the New York Mag dude uh talking on France 24 of all places about this. Last month, Tucker Carlson, the influential far-right commentator, said he regretted voting for Donald Trump. He made a comment on his podcast during a conversation with his brother Buckley, a former I love I love that right there. You and me, and a bunch of other people is the reason this is happening right now . Do you think this that this is that Tucker is the reason this is happening right now? I'd give Marjorie Taylor Green more props than Tucker. And and uh what's his face? Your boy. Uh talking boy. Come on. Fuentes. Fuentes. I give him some credit. Well, he's now came out and said he's a Democrat, which I'm not sure that's that. But I th I think uh you know for Tucker to to spike it, you know, to toot his own horn here, like, oh yeah, well this is all because of Ulse. The Buckley? Buckley Buckley Buckley, can you get a yard like us for the reason this is happening right now? Yes. Yes. So I do think it's like a moment to wrestle with our own consciences. One of his strongest supporters, Carlson, had called Trump, quote, the single most repulsive person on the planet. Now that is interesting. So in the nineties he hated Trump, then he loved Trump. Now he hates Trump . I think this guy doesn't know anything. He just goes with whatever will get some clicks or views or whatever. I think that that's been asserted. Yeah. He made that comment in a nineteen ninety nine post on That was just before he became a CNN commentator. Carlson later worked at MSNBC. Both outlets that MAGA movement today considers as liberal fake news. It wasn't until Carlson joined Fox that he found real notoriety on Primetime of America's most watched news network. Carlson often went on vicious rants against women, immigrants, or people of color. For many liberals, charging racism has become an almost involuntary habit, a tick. That is literally the definition of racism. These very same people are the quickest to cry racism. Sarah Jong is an angry bigot. It's not about Brett Kavanaugh at this point. It's about punishing everyone who looks like Brett Kavanaugh. But let's get back to the race thing. Race, skin color, racial division, race, and gender, skin color . Carlson was hyperbolic. You could say more entertainer than com mentator. After all, Fox News once even won a court case by persuasively arguing that no reasonable viewer takes Tucker Carlson seriously. But today, reasonable legacy media take him very seriously since that Fox won a court case and their then their legal argument that it was nobody takes stucker seriously? Yes. Oh, I remember that. Absolutely. I know that's hilarious. He's a commentator. Oh yeah. So here's the uh here's the here's the guy from the here's the author of this piece in the New Yorker. Oh for more we can speak to the New Yorkers, Jason Zengerly. He's also the author of Hated by All the Right People, Tucker Carlson, and the Unraveling of the Conservative Mind. Jason, thank you for speaking to Scoop. Um First question, I guess, could you foresee that? Why are you owe brothering? This could be fun. You have no idea. No, it's just the guy. I mean , for one thing, if I'm not mistaken, New York magazine was a Murdoch property from the New York Oh that's a big difference. Yeah, I'm sorry. I I had said it wrong in the beginning. Yeah. No, no, not at all. New Yorker is a stick up its ass operation that's been around forever. They're very serious about themselves. No, it's not a New York Times thing at all, the property at all. Well then wait until you hear what he has to say. Um first question I guess could you foresee this happening, this falling out between Donald Trump and Tucker Carlson? Yeah, uh you could because it's not it's not the first time this has happened. I mean Tucker's relationship with Trump has been a bit of a roller coaster over the last uh three decades, as as you pointed out. Um the the degree to which the falling out has occurred and and the severity with which Tucker is now denouncing Trump, um, I think that's a little surprising. Uh but but the fact that they've fallen out, I mean, as recently as you know, four years ago they had f I mean, both the BBC and the Economist uh were were interviewing him before he had It does seem like he's preparing for that. He seems to be setting himself up for something and I think that, you know, explains some of the forcefulness of his denunciations of Trump. I mean, look, this has been obviously prompted by the war in Iran and Tucker either there has been one sort of consistent thing with him over the past two decades, and that is his opposition to American adventurism abroad. And that was one of the reasons he was supporting Trump is he thought Trump was an America first her. So the fact that Trump has done this, you can see why Trump would be angry, uh, or why Tucker would be angry and you can see Tucker you know viewing this as possibly an opening for him um to to run uh in 28 and to inherit that mantle of of isolationism. Wow New Yorker They do. They take themselves very seriously. Uh there's the essays in there aren't short and sweet and to the point. They're Long feature lengths Well they're not actually they're pretty well written. So the stuff is is is good. They they kind of lost their edge with the cartoons though. They used to have some of the more uh Oh they didn't they have the the dog with on the internet nobody knows your dog was one of theirs a classic . Yeah. But they they've always had these cartoon editors that were top notch. They lost they lost one of the cartoon editors that was one of the better arrogant character, I guess you got on everybody's nerves, and they put in some woke uh people to pick the cartoons. And if you look at their cartoons, they're mostly they're lame compared to what they used to be ten years ago. Well, so how about this then? Could they be pushing Tucker Carlson to fracture the MAGA base and giving people some kind of false hope or throwing stirring the pot to be. I mean they there' somsebody I mean it's obvious that Tucker is part of the and along with Fuentes, who's this love hate relationship with him and Fuentes , he he he goes on about how great Fuentes is in one minute and he says I'm sorry I ever enter I mean Tucker's all over the map. The guy is like a drunk driver. New the new woker. Well then this last clip may uh b may actually uh explain Uh Megan Kelly, also a former Fox host, uh she says she's a close friend of Tucker Carlson. She said she thinks a reason why the New York Times interviewed him was because they hate Trump more than they hate Tucker. So they were eager to have that opportunity to get someone to bash Trump. I mean, um what do you think about these media taking the decision to to interview Tucker? Does that do they have to stoop to their level or was it newsworthy? Because in this day and age, we're seeing influencers like Tucker Carlson have perhaps more reach than traditional media Well I think people have wanted to interview Tucker for a while. I think what's interesting is that Tucker is doing the interviews. I think um I don't think Meghan Kelly should be questioning anybody's motives, frankly. But I think that Tucker um look, there there are a lot of people who have broken with Trump over the years, and there's always been He doesn't think so. So maybe they're not doing that. I don't know . I don't know. But they're taking him seriously for some reason. All right. Sorry I brought it up. No, I'm I'm glad you brought it up. I have a clip I I'm kind of like to watch it myself. It's like a it's like watching a car wreck. I have a clip of a clip of Alan Dershowitz. Um There's another guy who you know before you play let me play a couple of character assassination clips. Yeah. Because I've got Alan Dershowiz is on the list d I know you're gonna groan about this, but John Character assassination clips because and he's got Dershowitz in there coming up. That's coming up. I've got two today. I got one on Newsome. Explain who Kara is. Just expla explain who Kara is. Okay, Kariaku is a whistleblower uh at the CIA. He was a fe he was both a analyst and then became a field agent. So he has a broad b spectrum of of experience with the agency and he uh refused to get involved with the torture program and he was the only one who ref didn't want to take the training or do anything else and and he thought it was illegal and he blew the whistle. He says in hindsight , what he should have done was had a lawyer with him from the get go, because he was kind of naive about blowing the whistle. Yeah. And so he blew the whistle and got thrown in jail for two years uh under some charged espionage act or some bullshit. And he's very pissed off about that, but now he's got a talent agent and he's all over the place and he's on a lot of lot of podcasts and a couple of favorites he likes to do. Does he have a book? What how does he make money? Oh he's got I think three books. Oh, okay. Uh good. He's got a bunch of books. Yeah. Uh but he uh likes to talk and he likes the character assassination. Here's the here is the here he is on Newsom. Gavin Newsom was a member of the San Francisco City Coun cil, then he was the chairman of the city council, then he was the mayor of San Francisco, then the lieutenant governor of California, then the governor of California. Okay? So he's this is a very well thought out plan to move higher, higher, higher and become president. When he was running for governor of California, he asked his lifel ong best friend, who was also his campaign manager, to represent him at a political function . The man did . It wasn't because Newsom was busy. It was because Newsom was having an affair with his best friend's wife. And they got caught . What kind of person is that? If if y your best friend and your own wife can't trust you, why am I supposed to trust you? Are you gonna screw me behind your back as an American taxpayer? So I don't I don't like or trust Gavin Newsom at all. Uh you know, I think is he's got this one guy he loves the interview with his I I can't remember his name. He's a podcast very slick uh video podcast, very YouTuber. Uh it's it's well produced, it's got a lot of b ouquet in the in the shots. Uh the sound is dynamite. Bokeh? Yeah, bouquet's where you have the the person in front is in in high focus and the background is blurry. Oh beautiful. Yes. Beautiful. That's hard to do. And uh it's just too sli I mean this the podcast is super slick. Anyway, so here he is talking about uh CIA directors that he hates . And he's got both Gina Haskell and Mike Pompeo, and here's what he says. He made a mistake twice in his first term appointing very bad people as CIA director. Very bad. Like uh Mike Pompeo, oh my god. The only person less popular than Mike Pompeo at the CIA was Mrs. Mike Pompeo, let me tell ya. I got that from one of his bodyguards. And then Gina has to wait wait why? Why? You go get my my dry cleaning. You go walk my dog. They're like, lady, we don't work for you. We're protecting your husband. We're not gonna go get your dry cleaning and walk your dog. Um, the other one was bloody Gina Haspel. We called her bloody Gina for a good reason. Yeah, and like that's the person that you appoint to the CIA directorship. Wait, why do you call her Bloody Gina? Because she flew out to the secret site to sit in on one of the torture sessions just because she could . Just to sit there and enjoy it and take it all in. What kind of sick person does something like that? He's probably right. I believe that Yeah. Yeah, we knew that she was called Bloody Gina. We'd heard about that. Yeah. Okay, so you think Dershowitz he's um he's uh he's gonna assassinate Dersowitz. Dersowicz is coming up, yeah. He doesn't like Dershowitz. He doesn't like anybody. He thinks that Rudy Giuliani should be in jail. He's dying. He's dying. He's not gonna make it to jail. I agree. So Dershowitz, um, he's kind of on board with our theory about Epstein , which you might want to reiterate. Yeah, he's a it was a he was a pimp uh literally uh uh running a whorehouse in New York, a big one, uh for the elites And the island never never really came into play. And he would procure and he would procure underage, but it'd also I think he'd probably I think he also procured gaze. Yeah, there's no talk of that anywhere. No, it is starting to show up. Ah, okay . Um so Dershowitz takes and this has always been my thing. What what are these victims? I'd like to you know uh the first lady said, Hey, why don't y'all go on the record, victims, tell us your story, victims, on the congressional record, so the you know, you can talk freely there. Your NDAs don't count. It's okay. I don't think any any any uh hearings have been scheduled. I don't think anyone jumped up and down to get that going. And Dershowitz uh has his thoughts about the He was not a pedophile. I have no information about any pedophiles in the Epstein circle. A pedophile medically is somebody who is interested in pre pubescent people, prepubescent people, ten, eleven, twelve. That was not his modus operating. He was interested in sixteen year olds, seventeen, eighteen year olds. That's a terrible thing. By the way, it's legal in France. It's legal in any parts of Europe. Um so it's hard to say you're a pedophile in America, but not in France. Pedophile is not a legal term, it's a a medical psychological term. So I don't think there's a real case Although everybody calls them a pedophile. I also don't believe there was any trafficking going on. What happened is he made it known to the young people in Palm Beach if you, come and give me a massage, you get two hundred and fifty dollars. And many of them came back over and over and over again, collected the two hundred and fifty dollars, and then got five hundred dollars if they recruited other people to come and give him more massages. And then there was this third category, a very large category, of women who never met Jeffrey Epstein, never laid eyes on him, and their corrupt lawyers in Palm Beach would go to them and say, How old are you? Oh, you were about that age when I yeah, why don't you just say you gave Epstein and Massage? We'll collect fifty thousand dollars for you. And they did. Right. So I would love to see a thorough investigation of every single claimed survivor and victim and find out how many there really were. There were plenty. Yeah, you know, no one's ever gonna buy into our theory. They are so convinced that there's people people eating babies on the island. Eatin' babies. Eating babies. And and and Trump played into that himself in many ways. You know, and Q as a lot of Q stuff, and then children being shipped in Wayfair in Wayfair boxes. We've seen it all. But in this case, I I think uh I think Dershowitz is on the right track. That sounds right to me. Yeah, but it's not gonna help. Uh now we got the uh also another thing that broke this week's UFO files. I got two clips. Yeah, I got a couple things on that too. Let's see. UFO files. All right, here we go . Back here at home to the Pentagon releasing UFO files. The Trump administration releasing never before seen images of unexplained objects in the sky collected by the U.S. government dating all the way back to Tonight more mysterious images just revealed. One hundred sixty government files detailing four hundred alleged UFO encounters, including this infrared military video from 2013 of what appears to be an eight-pointed star streaking across the sky. That defy the laws of physics. More grainy, still images of the unexplained. And this image taken from the moon by the Apollo 17 astronauts of what appears to be lights hovering overhead. The astronauts later suggested it could have been ice crystals. Today, President Trump posted with these new documents and videos, the people can decide for themselves. But there are no reports of aliens or spacecraft in government custody. Yeah, I saw the website. It's lame . Yeah. Did you see it? You look at the website? You know, black and white. Black and white are like uh like the X Files. The best thing I've seen recently uh in terms of grainy black and white stuff is the WikiLeaks uh moon uh outtakes. Oh have you seen this? No. Moon outtakes? What is this? Outtakes. The WikiLeaks have found a file of the moon landing that you're always saying is a fake. Yes. Outta kes showing it being filmed as it was being filmed in the Arizona or the N the Nevada Desert. Okay. And they have the guy the same guys they got Neil Armstrong and they got the whole the whole thing. It's like very it was right up your alley. I'm surprised you didn't see it. I may have seen it, but there's so much is No no you would have remembered it, believe me. It's long. Okay, I have to look for that. But it's like yeah . You know. I don't know. I don't know anymore. I we absolutely No we can't yeah, well I I think that's a good point. Here's UFO files too. Many leading astrophysicists remain skeptical. Just because you see something and you don't know what it is, you can't. Oh is this Neil deGrasse Tyson? Yeah. Oh man, that guy. Oh I know I am I am the star gazer. Something and you don't know what it is. You can't then say it must be aliens visiting from outer space. The documents date back to the nineteen forties, including an FBI report from an Air Force colonel reporting a flying discovery, and the case of the case. Circles flying in unison. I have not seen anything to suggest that we've been visited by any intelligent life forms out there. But the universe is massive. At least two trillion galaxies and trillions more planets. Given the vastness of the universe, it's really hard to imagine that life, and even intelligent life, hasn't formed somewhere. It's hard to imagine that anybody is visiting us or continually visiting us. And Tom, tonight there is a pattern, though a lot of these images coming from military pilots that are near or around military facilities or ships. Yeah, and that raises concern that some of these unexplained aerial phenomenon could include technology that America's adversaries here This is a continuous thing that I hear also be some some great technology, military technology from other people, other countries that we don't possess. And you know, I'm thinking we need uh to have about half I don't know half a trillion dollars extra for the budget Yeah. So we should probably not get it. So probably get everybody all kind of every report has that. Every single one. It could also I mean it could be UFOs, but it could also be some Chinese technology. And if you write it Yeah, sure. The Chinese have to still copy our jets. They have to find a jet and then make a photo phony baloney copy of it. Wait a minute. Because they can't dream up anything by themselves. I mean there not that they can't, but they haven't been able or they haven't done it. It could be Russian technology. Yeah, the Russians do the same thing. Are you saying the UFOs are real ? No, I'm not saying that. I'm saying what you're saying. I'm in a roundabout way agreeing with you. By saying the r the Russians and the Chinese they're not they don't ha they're not they don't have flying saucers. So what we always do with our Department of War, or formerly known as the artists formerly known as Department of I've always been fascinated with things that cannot be explained. What is it? You won't believe me if I told you. So let's show you. And I've made a lot of movies about things that cannot be explained. From sharks to saucers. Do you think there could be others? When I was just a little kid. I remember developing a real curiosity about the sky at night and what's happening up there. People have a right to know the truth. And also not the possibility but the guarantee that there is life off this planet. People keep wondering, encountering the unknown. People's questions about what is not only going on in our skies, but what is going on in our worlds, in our realities, has reached a critical mass. They're going! people's complete fascination with are we alone or are we not alone? They are starved for the truth. And if someone knows we're not alone, why haven't we been told? Full disclosure to the whole world all at once full disclosure all at once this is this is the entire script in movie form. Yeah we, got some guys full disclosure. Disclosure day coming from Universal Pictures . Yeah, the old movie gambit. Now we've got we've got two guys out there. We've got Senator Burleson, who I think is from Missouri. We've got Senator Birchett from Tennessee. Who basically Birchett or I think it's Birchett. I think b he was on some show that he basically literally What? I didn't hear this. He lives in his car? Yeah, he he's talking about how he can't get a place in DC so he's he's got a bed in in his office that he sleeps in and then he goes to the gym to shower. Well he was on Joe Rogan. And I found and Joe is a big uh US . Gave him a place to shower, maybe gave him a room to stay. You have no knowledge of what's supposed to be released because it uh the where today's Wednesday. I'm gonna know tomorrow at three. Tomorrow at three PM is that when the world knows? No. I think they're gonna ask me just give me a little bit of it. But I got a feeling they're not gonna tell me much. I got a feeling they're not gonna tell America not much. When uh is it supposed to be disclosed this week? Whatever they're gonna disclose? I don't. I don know't know. But uh if they're gonna disclose it to us, then it'll be out right as soon as they hang up the phone with some guys. So okay. We know what the disclosure was. It was a dumb website. There wasn't anything exciting or new that I could tell. But Burchett, oh, he's got some stories. He's got some good stories. No, but it's interesting. I had that deep throat moment, you know, the not the porn version, but the the um Richard Nixon moment, you know, where I was walking in the in the tunnel one day and a person came up to me and it's always a friend. It's always a friend that does this and said it was just the strangest conversation and I'll never forget it because he said Burchett, he said, uh yeah, yeah, I am. He said Do you really think we need to do this? And I just kept listening. I when I was a young man I'd have run my mouth and said, Oh shut up, but I listened to what he said. He said said he, I mean, you know, this could upset the religious community and and all this other. I mean, is some of this stuff just left unknown, you know? And I said, No, it's not. Government has no right to decide what I can and cannot understand or handle or see. And it to me it and and every time, Joe, let me tell you what they're gonna do. I had a two-page bill to for disclosure, and Chuck Schumer had one that was sixty pages, I believe. And he modeled his after the Kennedy assassination uh committee release, which s we're over sixty years into that and we still don't they haven't released everything that on on President Kennedy getting shot. And that's what they wanted to model this dadgum thing after. Mine was two pages long. Of course mine didn't get anywhere. Dadgum. Dadgum. Dadgum. Dadgum. So what you heard in there is uh how this could upset the religious community. Well, it did . This was a crazy story. Two stories broke today and they are collided in a way nobody expected. A pastor in Alabama issued a public apology to a sitting member of Congress over the viral UFO clip. And on the same news cycle, former President Barack Obama went on national television and told the country flat out that the disclosure everyone is waiting for isn't coming. Hey you followers, I'm Christina Gomez, and welcome to this episode of UFO News Updates. Larry Ragland, a senior pastor of the Solid Rock Church in Birmingham, Alabama, claimed in a video that a very well-known congressman from Missouri called into a private meeting with pastors and warned them that the US government is preparing to tell the public that aliens ceded humanity and that there is no God and, that Jesus and the Bible were both inventions of these beings. The clip identified the Congressman as Eric Burleson, who sits on the White House Oversight Subcommittee investigating UAP, and the clip went everywhere. This was fantastic. So there's all these YouTube pastors and they're all about end times and this is it. Look at what's happening. It's Iran. Oh it's all it's it's all going down now, people. Jesus is on his way. Here's the These are legit true men of God that are still connected to Washington and even this current administration and all branches of military. And they literally told us we had a sitting congressman, a very well-known congressman from Missouri. He was he called into that meeting as well. That was that was just for pastors. And this is what he said. On speaker phone, this sitting powerful member of Congress said, Are the pastors listening to me? I'm getting chills right now because this happened to me. Wait, hold on. Yeah . Nobody recorded this? It was on speaker? No, no, no, of course not. This was an intelligence briefing. You can't record that. No. No, no, no. If it's on speaker, you can. But no one did. No one did. These pastors were on the honor system. Pastors in the room listening to me. And I said, Yes, sir, we are here. And he said, Listen to me. Go and tell the church they are not ready for what is coming. The narrative that is coming, what they are going to say, is going to be like nothing you can even imagine. They are preparing to tell us that they are from another dimension, that they are our creator, and that these beings, these aliens, or whatever you want to call them, they were the ones that seated us here. There is no such thing as God. Jesus was invented by them. The Bible was invented by them. And begin to just say listen prepare the people for what is coming because they're not ready so so Joe brings this up, but here's here's what was interesting. There were two briefings, and I heard about one of them because it took place during NRB. By the way, take clip of the day for that last clip. Oh, it's so soon already. Okay. Sorry. I'll take it. And it gets followed by my getting to say oh brother. No, no, you can you c but this is good. This is really because Burles on did talk to the pastors. This guy, this uh Larry Ragland, he had to issue an apology and he said, Oh, you know, he didn't really say that um that all this was coming, that uh, you know, that the aliens had created the Bible and made up the whole story about God. That was my editorial. I should have made it clear that that wasn't what the senator said. But it was Burles on who spoke to those pastors in Missouri. And Birchett, he spoke to pastors during NRB. I was at and I heard someone this someone mention something. Oh, there's some offsite and Airbnb and you know, there's some senator calling him. And it did happen. But that was Birchett. Burleson was the other one. And here's where Joe brings it up to Birchett. And Birchett's like, eh, because already people only talking about Burleson, they're not talking about Birchett, but he did it too. Yeah, the pastors thing that I sent you, Jamie, is a crowd. Yeah, that's bonkers. I don't know. I don't buy that. I don't uh So this is a guy, it says his name is uh Alan Dido. Yeah. And uh it's weird. Capital D lowercase I capital D lowercase I O io. Didio Um after sitting in a private meeting with pastors and those connected to these investigations, the message was clear. Like what are they preparing the people for? Like what why would they bring it to give pastors I've never heard of? I think it is. I think if he'd have brought anybody in, he'd brought Franklin Graham in. Is this gentleman a pastor himself? Click on his uh Yeah he runs well I mean he also has a show which is uh Oh so his show is about disclosure The Revival Nation Church or something No, no, I don't know that uh this is just with these clips are coming around. Can you click on his bio, please? Like what it clicks what it says. Equipping end time believers for the next great awakening. Oh boy. When the end times are when the end's coming. I'll spare you the the long clip where it turns out that indeed both these guys spoke to a group of pastors, one in Missouri, one in Tennessee. And he's really oh that that's bull crap. He did it. It was definitely Birchett. And I think that these guys are I don't know about Burleson, he may he may be a little bit deeper into the uh we've got to get everybody on board 'cause this is fun and we can get more money for the military. Birchett is probably just a true believer who sleeps in his office and his car. I don't know, but he definitely did that. And now you bring in these idiots whoever invited the pastors, I'm sorry to say it, but the YouTube pastors, the end time pastors, they're they're out of control. They just talk all kinds of crap and then they they scare people and you know we did a survey at our church. Like what would you like to hear Pastor Jimmy preach about? Number three on the list? End times. Because ever ybody's watching this. It's nuts. But of course, if you follow the no agenda logic of military, there's always this thing lurking in the shadows which we've been talking about for almost Project Bluebeam is going to be used not as a not as a replacement for real actions. It's going to be used the way that Hollywood uses uh CGI and it's possible there's gonna be involvement from Hollywood in this um in this uh as well, um where they're gonna be using holograms in order to do what Hollywood calls sweetening of of uh these false flags. And so in other words, uh they can actually have when we have um for instance fake alien invasion where we will have the uh cabal send all of these tic-tacks uh against a uh city, against a s one of our major cities to actually destroy it and to make it um basically uh to wreak havoc upon one of our cities. That's always lurking in the shadows. Project Bluebeam. It fits. It fits. If you want to talk conspiracy, second half of show, Project Bluebeam fits like a T to this. And I don't know if Trump knows about this. But he's like, Oh, if you guys want to disclose something, all right, we'll put it out, whatever. Whatever we got, some tic tac videos . I don't know . Yeah Yeah, well that went nowhere. Yeah, it did. I took it right to Project Bluebeam. What are you talking about? It's perfect. I rounded it out. I rounded it out. I could do the thing about the guy who wrote the book and got killed. But you know the funny thing is you know they talk about well the CIA didn't contribute to this the CIA has a database that you can look stuff up in. Mm-hmm I talked about this like five years ago. You can look up UFOs i in the CIA database . And there's a bunch of screwball stories in there. There's about the guy in the farm that he found the alien spacecraft and he tried to move and he was frozen because of some mental trick they were playing on him. It's all in the CIA files. A whole bunch of these crazy stories. And that these never come to the fore. Only the good ones that they're really working on, like Project Bluebeam. Maybe. Would you put it in the middle of a lighter note? Okay . Uh before we go into the break. Uh so there was a there's a couple of these actresses now in Hollywood are becoming OnlyFans women. Couple, a whole bunch of them. Like like a whole bunch of them. Like big names . And they're and they're making money. Are they are they cute? Uh well there's a bunch of big names and and the latest one is Jamie. Uh J I think her name's Jamie Presley. She used to be an actress who can't get work. But I thought I would go to the well because just as an example, how much money can these girls make? Uh I was watching the whatever podcast or a clip from it and they had this woman Caitlin Segura talking about her income her total income she's made she's one of the more successful you uh OnlyFans girls and I'll mention And who makes ten million dollars a year. No wonder he quit movies. What a hassle. Well she's not getting the ten million. Well no, but let the wife you get at least ten percent. Let the wife do the work. Good idea. So this is Caitlin Segura talking about her income. Kate, you've also, I think on some other podcasts mentioned terms of your income from fans. It's quite substantial. Is there an updated number? I haven't done the math to update it in a long time. Remember do you remember gross is uh eight digit so in the seventy plus million range gross? Se seventy like seventy four, seventy five. In a like a one year period, what's the most that you've made it really high during the COVID years especially. It was running at over like two million a month. Wow. And how much does Uncle Sam gave? Two million Most in one day. I don't think I've ever calculated that before. I think so. I I don't know if there's a higher one, but there was a quarter million dollar day. You also I'm trying to remember it wasn't y like Belle Delphine, she did the did this bathwater thing. Didn't you do something similar? Uh yeah, my hot sub water when the hotzu meadow was really strong on Twitch. Um there's a company that contacted me from Poland. I think it's like Yoni is the company. And they make beer um that that's matches the profile of women's yeast. They'll like you send in a sample and they'll replicate the agriculture amount. They made beer out of your f yeast? Mm-hmm. They're like, we're gonna grow it. Oh man . Seventy five million dollars? Yeah, total. We can make beer out of our armpits. Two million a month. So the question remains, how and she makes a quarter but I think the one day best was a two quarter of a million What w how ? Yeah. Well, by g taking your clothes off. But w who's what what are it's it's just it I it's beyond me. I I cannot gr asp this these numbers. I cannot grasp. I mean what a guy's giving here here's ten grand, babe. Do you and even at ten grand a pop is how do you get to two hundred and fifty thousand? Okay. Have you forgotten Bobby Eden ? Well, yeah, Bobby Eden was a fan of the show. Whatever happened to her, by the way. Well she got out of the business because you know at a certain point. But she got out of the bus too early. She I think she got out before OnlyFans was around. This is back in two thousand. I think we even interviewed her on the show once. She was official Yes. Yes. We did an interview. I know we did, and I played a couple clips from it, I guarantee you. She was the official webcam girl. This is when I was in Los Angeles, the official webcam girl. And she said that men are so lonely and now we're talking fifteen years ago. They're so lonely that they would give her the password to their bank account and say just take whatever you want, whenever you want to. Don't you remember that? I vaguely remember that, but that's it's beyond my grasp. I cannot see getting a quarter of a million dollars considering what we get in a year, getting a quarter of a million dollars in one day uh to strip John, do you know how many people get pig butchered still to this very day to the tune of billions of dollars? Yeah, but it's that that's a that's it's at scale. That's at scale. She's not at scale. I think she's at scale. She's obviously at scale. She's got a total so a running total of seventy two million. But you know what? I can go to sleep at night knowing that I'm an honest podcaster and I keep it. You know what? She can go to sleep at night too, believe me. And with that, I want to thank you for your courage in the morning to you, the man who put the C's in the TikTok. Say hello to your friend on the other end. He would be the only the one and only Mr. John C the World Uh eighteen thirty eight, one thousand eight hundred and thirty eight trolls listening live to this podcast. And we are a podcast because you can get us on a podcast app. Uh sad news. Uh we were approved for Spotify. Uh oh . We got approved. And uh this morning I looked at my email. They have taken down about fifteen of our episodes for copyright violation of uh unspecified uh unspecified copy. Well but but it's not true because we are uh under fair use uh uh They don't know that way. No, I know, but parody is permitted. And everything we everything we use is for news and education and parody is permitted. Yeah, I know. So I'm not gonna fight it, by the way. I have Yeah, you can click a link. Ah, and you get nowhere. You can click a link and you can fill out a form that goes into DevNull and it goes nowhere. Exactly. So all the more reason for podcasters to not build up your audience on places like Spotify and sadly also Apple, because that's why we started podcastindex.org. Because Apple was deplatforming people during uh COVID . And um we built an entire uh ecosystem of independent apps and services, almost ninety at this point, including the modern podcast apps. You want to get one of those because there will be no deplatforming. That's just And with these apps, when we go live, you get a bat signal, you can listen to the live show right there in your podcast app, and within ninety seconds of us publishing the show, you get an alert that We also don't have any commercials. We just bring you pure, beautiful value straight through and all we ask is that from time to time you send us some value in return. That's all that it is. So it'd be so interesting to see people in the troll room who say, well, you know, the way you guys talk, uh you wonder why donations are tough. I got the one the other day a a nasty note saying it's because you guys you donations are down because you're a Trump apolog ist. Now let's just think about it. I'm thinking who what? Let's just think about it logically for a second. If we really bas ed our work and our honesty and our honor , our sacred honor and our fortunes, if we base that on what we said, then we would be super dishon est. You have to conclude that if we hurt our own income by telling you what we actually think , don't you think that that's probably something you might want to pay attention to? Unlike everybody else? Am I seeing this wrong , John ? I don't know what you said. That if we if we people are saying you're you're Trump apolog no, we're we're giving your honest opinion and it actually hurts our income . Oh, I see what you're saying. Then shouldn't you think, well, why are these guys doing it? Are they insane? We're not rich. I can tell you that. We're not I'm sitting here at uh these guys insane Show is that because I'm loaded or is that because uh I I you know it's it's got think logic. Yeah, if you were yeah, if you were loaded , I I'd be like cyan cyan ora Dvorak. I'm gonna hang out with Bernetti. Yeah, be with Bernetti on the road. Yeah, driving uh driving the the fire tri fire engine. Kidding me? Absolutely. So no, instead. Uh we try to bring you value, all we ask is that you send some value back from time to time. It's very simple. Value for value is time, talent, or treasure. You can do that in many ways. We love the treasure. It does keep the fires burning, that's for sure. But we like time and talent. Give us a boots on the ground like we got, help us with some clips like uh the clip collector Steve Jones. Big value for him. I I think he's probably helped you out as well with some clips recently. This really particularly the Sunday morning stuff. I mean he's sitting there, he's doing that's valuable. We really appreciate that. Um people do all kinds of things, including bringing us artwork, uh uh creative artwork, creative prompting, I should say, uh, which is what most of it is. And uh we use that for album art, which always is meant to grab someone's attention. It works quite well on social media. That's pretty much all I do on X is post the show or repost the show, and then Darren will post the show and I'll repost Darren's post of the show. And we were quite pleased with um Francisco Scaramanga, who I think himself was pleased that he was chosen and it was not a naked lady. This was something new. A complete new model. We don't know what he's using. This totally new. This black and white piece of art had everything Holland in it. It had the Dutch the wooden shoe. It had mice. I'm not sure what the kind of like Mickey Mouse Hantavirus. Hantavirus. That's right. The hantavirus that running up and down the leg. You had the hotel with no agenda and the logos on fire. It had a lot of stuff in it. Yeah, and there's an error which I didn't mention But there is an anomaly. There's a hallucin ation. Uh huh. The uh the m the first mouse at the bottom of the foot, not on the b on the shoes. Oh there is a mysterious six fingered hand uh that is where on the shoe. Oh yes, it out of nowhere. Out of nowhere. Well the mouse could be trying to to climb up and he's just he's happens to have six fingers. Well we give we gave it to him. We loved it. Let's take a look and see if there was anything else that um that we considered. Yep. Yeah. And the d wouldn't shoe the whole thing. He had an uh a color version as well. If I Yeah, he did. He had a color version. Uh but it it it and was cool 'cause the rat was looking right into the camera. He had an alien licking an ice cream cone. That had its own merits, but it was color. And it was the black and white that grabbed us, this model, this color. Yeah, well that was Popeye . Yeah, just too much Popeye. Even though it wasn't copyright. I mean it's a public domain character, but it we weren't gonna use it. No, we weren't. But anyway, thank you very much uh Francisco Scaramanga . We appreciate uh appreciate you doing that for us. And now for the treasure portion, uh, which is where we thank all of our producers who supported us, fifty dollars and above, and we have a special sp ots in our heart and on the the credits for people who support us with one thousand dollars uh or m uh or more they become a an instantite. And uh in this case we have a special uh I don't we had only fifty, I'm not sure how many are left. Um the red knight order of the heart. Then we have anyone who comes in with two hundred dollars, between two hundred and three hundred dollars. Now with that we will definitely read your note and we give you the title, a credit of associate executive producer that's in the I want to mention something, some requ got a request since I'm uh in recuperation from my uh episode. I somebody said, Are you are you picking up the mail at the post office box for the which has the checks that go to the post office box? Well he felt that because I was staying, you know, with my daughter and son in law at their house , um , that I wasn't picking we weren't picking up the mail, which is it's not that far from the mail. It's in the same vicinity, so it's not like a big deal. Okay. Sounds good. You're picking it up as far as I know. Yeah, no, we got the like uh the the thousand dollars they came in today came from the mail . Yes, and that is exactly where we start with Sir Kevin Dills from Huntersville, North Carolina. And he wants uh right off the bat, he tells us that he wants some original Manning bingo Boom Shakalaka , little girl boom shakalaka, which I think that's I think that's Nick's kid. And then the remix. I hope I got them all here for you. And he comes in with $2, 3 7 8 .2 . What is this number about? What is the numerology of this fabulous donation? He says: in the morning, this is my annual birthday donation. I'll be turning 40 on May twelfth. Please add me to the birthday list. You are on it. For such a milestone birthday today, I thought I'd get myself a nice gift. Oh, I see. This donation brings me to the level of Archduke, my account ing uh is attached. In addition to the title upgrade upgrade, I'd like to expand my protectorate to include South Carolina. Please upgrade my title to Archduke of the Carolinas. Adam, please play the Bob Dylan version of the title chain song.. You got it Also, since it's Mother's Day, happy Mother's Day to Mom. I love you. She doesn't listen to the show. Thank you for your courage. Sir Kevin Dills, Duke of North Carolina' soson to be Archduke of the Carolinas and let me see if I can do this for you. I did it the wrong way around. But there you go. Yes, you boom shakalakas. You've got karma . Archduke. That's a big big deal. Yes. Matthew Payne in Toma , Wisconsin. He came with a thousand dollars and that was a check. Uh good afternoon, Potfather in John . Uh I write me move this over. Hold on a second. I write to you. I write to you. I write to you upon uh I write to you upon finally being able to fulfill a quest long in the making, like getting my extra clas oh, that's right. He got an extra extra. Nice. Extra class, extra class ham radio. He gets those extra bands we're not allowed to do. That's the creme de la creme de la creme of the hams . Writing my final article for publication, I've looked forward to being able to call I'm not sure if I have been both a producer and a long time listener circa episode . I would like to thank my friend Kevin Neutzmann K N ine K n K nine N T Z uh seventy three for hitting me in the mouth in those years ago all those years ago at least But I was happy to see pulled through and can steadfastly agree with his many critiques of our nation's health care system. His medical event produced some of the most riveting boots on the ground commentary. And it was truly value for value at its finest . I r also really enjoyed the pods. Hurt me . Hurt me. You know who says that to an extreme? Br Brunetti. No, Calicanus. Brunetti never says it. But Calicanus does it to piss me off. I know he does. He listens to every single show. He is I know he's trying to capture a podcast. Their podcast is, you know, they're podcasts. If you're a nerd you know, a serious nerd, their podcast is quite good . But I don't think it's a j a general interest podcast. No, it's not. It's uh it's uh AI podcast AI investment podcast. Yes, an AI podcast. How can we make money from AI? Anyway, he says I also enjoy the pods hosted by Mimi and I might humbly suggest she hosts every fourth episode. Yeah. Okay. Giving John some much needed rest and a chance to work on his vinegar book. The by the way we do have a the Vin egar Book is now become a chapter in the Dvorak family cookbook coming out later. Cop out, cop out. I can spin it off. The sequel to his vinegar book, Many Majestic Mothers , and his seldom discussed plans for direct to paperback Cree de Cour a lifetime of lozen ges soon available on Audible. No jingles, no karma. Seventy threes from the soon to be Sir Matnik . Good uh good note, uh Matthew. Very good note. He is cute. Randy and Crystal, a thousand dollars coming right in from wine country, Napa, California. Please accept this Randy and Crystal . Sir Horse Meds in Gross Point Shores, Michigan. 500 bucks. He's got no note, no nothing, so we'll give him a double up karma. Yes, we do. You can come in with a note later. We've got double up Arma . Susan A Taubenke in Rockville, Maryland. Oh, this is interesting. 444.44. I don't think we've seen that many times. 444.444. And uh Susan says NJNK, so no karma, but thank you very much, uh Susan. I don't I don't remember her name. I don't know if she didn't Douglas Schneider in Austin, Texas, just where you near where you used to be. Adam after three row of ducks donations over the previous three Mother's Day shows, this donation amount would bring my mother to Dame Hood. She is a die hard listener, and no one is more deserving of a seat at the round table. She would like to be known as Dame Roxanne of the right diagon a diagonal and humbly request spicy spicy marg margs? Margaritas must be Margar itas, come on. And uh Calamari for the proceedings. Happy Mother's Day to the soon to be dame and best mom in the universe. Love you, mom. Your son Doug. Oh, that's beautiful. That was good. David McInnes from Bernie, Texas, 333.33. Bernie is really closer to me than Austin for sure. And he says, Adam John, David McInnes from Bernie, Texas, your point cast discussion to ok me right back to the fun times of the early internet. Point cast is actually what inspired me to start PR Web. Wow. Is this the guy who started PR Web ? Is that right? Well that's what he says. And build it into a leading press release wire service. I ran the whole thing on voluntary financial donations start to finish all the way through to my exit nine years later. That's when he became a millionaire. Yeah. PR Web did quite well. Did well. Congratulations. My new service picks up where PR Web left off with a bunch of upgrades. Listen to this. Listeners, grab my book for free. Oh, he's doing the whole thing, ma'am. Whether you're selling coffee, candy, or pain relief cream made of honey, newsmarketing will help you get found online . Go to Newsmarketing Book dot com slash ITM. That's newsmarketing book .com slash ITM. There's no discount because it costs nothing. By the way, I was hit in the mouth a while back by Sir Jean in Austin. A Douching is probably in order since this is my first donation. You've been deduced. No jingles, no karma, just blessings for all the mothers in no agenda land. Wow th what a great story. We should have him do some of our PR. Yeah, for free. Yes, definitely. For free. Free. It's volunteer work. Yes, it's for free. It's volunteer work. It's beautiful. Dennis Cady or Caddy. Cato. Catle, cadle, cadle, cadle. Cato. Oh, so it is cadle. That makes it easier. In Tampa, three three three three three . I TM Adam and John. We've had record breaking sales of our Mano oh is our Manuka Gold guy. We've been blown away, not just by the you know, we div we deliver. We deliver without prepayment. We deliver. Because we like the product. If we like the product, we deliver. That's right. I used to say when I used to do the inside track column in uh PC magazine, I used to plug stuff, you know, just plug stuff without you know any conversation obviously except for the column payment. And uh I tracked it that every plug was worth about a quarter of a mil. Wow . Wow. That's only fans money, baby. And this is like I think we we we're getting into that league. Yeah . Um Um anyway, he says I've always gotten support I but also by the support we've gotten via email and social media from listeners who truly believe in American run family owned businesses. Yes. Nice. As a way to genuin sayely thank you for all the enthusiasm, wholesale and retail orders and networking with like minded no agenda listeners, we're giving away free twenty five dollar small jars of s pure manuka honey with every order for the next week . Our pure Manuka Honey helps with overall inflammation, immune system support, mental focus, and long term term brain health. And we're excited to give everyone a chance to try it. Visit Manuka Gold.com and every single order from now until next Sunday will automatically receive a free gift in every box. Thank you. It's been truly overwhelming in the best way possible, Dennis Cadle in Tampa. Yeah, there was some newsletter that a lot of people received, I f I forgot what it was, and they mentioned uh the interesting marketing opportunity Really? Well they talk specifically about some dude you know donates and mentions his coffee in a fun way and some people have got honey and it was i it wasn't like go market on the no agenda show, which by the way we would reject. If you hit us with straight copy and like here's two hundred bucks, Oh yeah we've done it. You remember that one time we got a bunch of ad copy that was just terrible and you would you just didn't read it. We've even helped Linda Lupatkin uh adjust her copy. Yes, we have had We're full service baby. On occasion we do write copy ourselves. Yeah. Uh Arnus Kelmans, another name I've not heard before. Arnest Kelman's Talon Oh is that EE is that Estonia EE? Yes, Estonia, I believe. three thirty three dot thirty three. Thank you very much. Didn't ask for anything. Just says Arnest Kelmans. It says Arnest Kelman.'s That's all it says. So does it well I'm gonna do a double up karma just in case yeah, my as well. Double up karma karma . Estonia is one of the most it's apparently is one of the most wired uh high end wired countries in the world. Yeah, that's what you say. That's what they say. Well, yeah, sure. They want people to go. Well, they say the same thing about Korea. Yeah, exactly. And I've been there a number of times and disappointed. I know. Uh Terrence Lynch in Savannah, Georgia, 333. Longtime listener. I wish I could donate what you guys are worth. I've lost my accounting info, but I am confident that this donation puts me over the top. For knighthood, I would like to be known as Sir Terror of the Resp ons R E S P A W N S . Uh Please add Manhattans and Pretzel Crisps to the round table. Please doing what you're doing. Keep doing what you're doing. Pretzel keep doing what you're doing. Pretzel crisps. That's that's very British Pretzel crisps. Think? Yep. Todd Uznick. Usnik? Usnik Usnik. I'll say Usenick. Houston, Texas, three fifteen eighty five. time Long listener, first time contributor, please de douce . You've been de douche as I begin my quest for knighthood. Thank you very much . Daniel Lapinsky in Cold Spring, Minnesota Nuts. 21060 becomes a first executive producer for the associate executive producer for the show. And this is a Mother's Day switcheroo for my smoking hot wife Amy Lynn, not a stripper . Oh raising Amy Lynn's a good name for a stripper. And not a channel J girl, Amy Lynn. Got it. Raising a teenage girl is hard. Yes. This house would fall apart. It's just corrected form that we've already given over. This house would fall apart if it wasn't for you. Yes, there you go. Thank you for all you do for us. Jobs, Karma, please. Jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. Sir Robert comes in from Franklin, North Carolina. $200 and $10 and 66 cents as well. Gents, I'm overdue for a donation even as a nice If there's such a thing as comfort karma, uh I would like some for my ninety four year old mother in hospice with dementia. Well, of course we have that. In fact, that includes some goat. Thank you, Sir Robert of the Smoky Mountain Brass. You've got Karma . And bingo, here's Eli the Coffee Guy in Bensonville, Illinois two hundred five ten . Happy Mother's Day to my mom, Tina, and to my amazing better half Jen, mother of our one and a half human resources. She got bun in the oven and number two is on the way in AFU months. Wait a minute. A few month a few months. Uh this was this . Uh m mak ing a human isn't easy. No. You have to do it. You have to do it a lot. So I can can I get some baby making karma for Jen? Uh looks like I'll be back on the sleep deprivation project soon. Good thing coffee helps. If you forget to get mom a gift , visit gigawattcoffee roasters dot com and use code ITM for twenty percent off your ITM twenty for twenty percent off your order and send some uh coffee today. Stay caffeinated, says Eli the coffee guy and I should mention that Mimi said make sure that people should go to n uh too many eggs dot com and for your mom get a copy of the book Too Many Eggs. There it is, everybody you've got yes karma and we've got Stefan Trockels in Soust in Deutschland with $200, no notes, so that means a double up karma for him. You've got double up karma . And now we got Linda Lew in Castle Rock, Colorado for $200 . And she wants jobs karma . For your resume, your resume has about ten seconds to make an impression, and most don't. For a resume that gets results, go to ImageMakersinc.com. Linda helps professionals and executives turn their experience into a clear story of leadership. Results and impact. That's ImageMakers Inc. with a K and Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs, and writer of winning resumes two hundred dollars. Jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. Yes. And I also want to say happy Mother's Day to Tina the Keeper, who was a great mom for her two daughters and a great bonus mom for my daughter and happy mother's day in advance to my daughter who will be a mom uh mid July. So Well I want to say happy Mother's Day to Mimi. There you go. I say happy Mother's Day to Mimi too. And now we continue with the rest of our supporters, uh donors and value givers, fifty dollars and above. Christopher Ebert from Schwarttenburg, South Carolina, 10535. Same amount from Bernice and Breuer in Roseville, California. Dame Rita, Sparks, Nevada, she's always there, one hundred five dollars and ten cents. ITM Happy Mother's Day to all the moms out there. Dennis Vollmer, Saint George, Utah, one hundred dollars. He says uh he's a Gen X er and has a PhD in computer science and he appreciates the pod . $100 from Sir Stewart, the angry accountant. He says this is my eighth man annual Mother's Day donation in honor of my late mother Jill Walton. Also, much love to my wife Michelle, twenty six years of marriage. We have never had a real fight during this time, and she continues to support my two grown up children, Lucy and Alex, each and every day. Many thanks, looking forward to the show. John uh Jan Jan Dubroca, Jan Dubroca, Sharpsburg, Georgia, one hundred dollars. Hope this helps with John's recovery. Oh yeah. It does wonders for him. Anonymous who wants jobs Karmer for Glenn will do that at the end with one hundred dollars. Amy Stubbfield, one hundred from Hickson, Tennessee. Sir Kevin McLaughlin, sorry. Stubblefield. Stubble what? Stubblefield. You said Stubbfield. Oh, Stubblefield. Then say Stubblefield. Not stubbbblele.. Say stu Then do it right. Stubble field. Stubble field . Kevin McLaughlin from Concord, North Carolina. He's not just Sir Kevin McLaughlin. He's the Archduke of Luna, lover of America, and boobs always comes in with a boob donation, $80.8 every single episode. And he says, God bless America and boobs to all the mothers around the world. Happy Mother's Day. Juraj Kodi ak, Prague. Uh, wants an F cancer. Well, we always break for an F cancer. Fucking cancer. Fucking cancer. Sir Dancing Mike. Maryville, Tennessee. Birthday donation for Sir Mike Dancing Mike, his donation for his fiftyth birthday. That'll be today. Michael Ragus in Tustin, California. Thank you, gents. Britney uh that's fifty-five-fifty-five. Brittany Miller, Trinidad, Colorado, also showing up on the list a lot these days, 5272. Brian Gately, Bayville, New Jersey, 5272. Sir Thunder of the Bitterroot Valley. Missoula, Montana, Happy Mother's Day to Dame Mama Thunder of the Bitterroot Valley. Teddy and Jasper say you are Mama of the Year. Thank you for everything, Sir Thunder of the Bitterroot Valley. Bad idea supply comes in with fifty dollars and fifty cents. Here are the fifties. Douglas Mook, Cochrane, Pennsylvania, Rene Kniche in Utrecht in the Netherlands, R odrigue Bra sorry, Roderick Brown, I slipped into Dutch there. From Mermaid Prince Edward Island in Canada, Stephen Schumach, Xenia, Ohio, Bastian Las onder, which sounds like a Dutch guy, but he lives in Well he does. He lives in Hangelow, Oford Eisel, in the Netherlands. He says glad you're back. I wish you a speedy recovery. And finally, Tim Del Vecchio, Blandon, Pennsylvania, fifty dollars round ing out all of the fifty dollars and above uh for episode uh what are we eighteen sixty seven. Let me thank the executive and associate executive producers one more time . Our formula is this . We go out, we hit people in the mouth . Order Shut Up Sleep . And everyone else, thank you very much for your uh fifty dollars and above up to two hundred. You can easily support us with some uh value, uh value back for the value you receive by going to NoAgenda Donations dot com. Please consider supporting the show. Anytime you feel you've gotten value out of the program, the podcast, the pod, go to knowagendadonations.com. Any amount, anything is valid. Does it there's no other tricks or hoops or or anything else you need to do, just support the show. You could even set up a recurring donation, any amount, any frequency, all up to you. Noagendonations.com. It's a birthday birthday . Oh no much . And we say happy birthday to Sir Dancing Mike, who turns 58 today. Sir Kevin Dills turns 40 on the 12th. And happy 5 2nd birthday to Sir to Steve Jones. He is the clip collector. We appreciate the value you give so much. Happy birthday for everybody here at the best podcast in the universe. Come gather round douche back produ ce land slave Is we all think your brothers and sisters who gave and some of them Although um he uh is about to uh become an order of the heart as well. Sir Kevin Dill's uh Duke of North Carolina now becomes Sir Kevin Dill's Archduke of the Carolinas. How many archdukes do we have? It's a very small group, I believe. Uh I can't tell you. I'm pretty sure it's probably about ten max. Can't be much more than that. Thank you very much, Sir Kevin Dills. We appreciate you. Uh more than you can even know. And welcome to your new title, top of the list, my friend, Archduke of the Carolinas . Behold the order of the heart , pure of purpose, right from the stars in the morning , brave and smart, the order of the heart . Yes, these are the people who uh become Red Knights Order of the Heart. They will receive not only their knight ring , but also the beautiful lapel pin in very limited quantity. Sir Kevin Dills, Matthew Payne, Sir Matt Nick, and Randy and Crystal. A pin for each of you, and welcome to the order of the the Heart, Red Knight and Dame Status. Behold the Order of the Heart , pure of purpose, right from the stars in the morning, brave and smart And we have uh a dame and two knights to bring to the round table before we do that. Jobs karma for Liz in Australia and the jobs karma I promised earlier. Jobs, jobs , jobs and jobs. Let's vote for jobs. All right . We got three people here, John, so bring out the sword. You're sounding by the way, can I j before you just keep it in the sheath ? You're sounding so good. It's as if nothing happened. I don't know how you feel. Do you feel good? Do you feel better? You feel I mean, how do you feel? I feel fine. Okay. I feel fine. Thank you for that blade . Pop up on the podium, please. Roxanne, Matthew Payne, and Terrence Lynch, all three of you have supported the No Agenda Show in the amount of one thousand dollars or more that means you get the coveted status of no agenda night or no agenda dame right here at the round table i'm proud to pronounce the case the as dame roxanne of the right diagonal sir matnik and Sir Terror of the Respawn. For you, we've got Hookers and Blow, Rent Boys, and Chardonnay, Spicy Margs, and Calamari, Manhattan and Pretzel Crisps, along with that bong, hits and bourbon, sparkling cider, and escorts, ginger, and gerbils, breast milk and pablum, ruminess women and rose, and as always at the round table, we have Woo! Mutton and Mead . Yeah, mutton and mead. Hey, what you do is you go to uh Noagenderings.com. That is where you will see these handsome dame and knight rings. And uh all you have to do is give us your size. There's a ring sizing guide on the website, and we'll send that off to you along with a certificate of authenticity and yes, as always, a couple of sticks of wax, so you can really use those signet rings to seal your important correspondence. Noagenda rings.com. Yep, the no agenda meetups are everywhere around the world. Um in fact there was one in light in the Netherlands just uh Saturday night. I could not go because we were hanging out with uh with my daughter, but I know they will be sending me a meetup report soon, at least I hope so. Uh we got a couple of meetup reports. The first one is for Sir Brian with an eye who went to the Buda meetup in Texas. You've arrived. The destination is on the left. 404 Main Street. But ah Texas. No agenda meetup. Um let me see. Okay. It looks like I have you guys for five o'clock and y'all are going to be right out there on the patio . Alright, I don't know where everybody's at, but I'm just gonna go talk to women . One minute later . Two minutes later . This is a scam. Hey, this is Sir Brian with an eye at Astra in But ta, Texas. I'm glad everybody finally showed up This is Seth of the Beauty Noah Agenda Meetup. It's Chris in the morning. Hi, I'm Janet Gillis here in Buda, Texas, under the biggest oak tree I've ever seen. Hey, this is Viscount Scott coming up from my gopher hole. Keeper Christine here. Trying to keep him in line. Hi, my name is Alora. I work at Astra in Beuda and honestly you guys everyone needs to show up on the time that's scheduled because I was left with Sir Brian for a whole hour. There's a lot of trains here . Woo! Listen to that horn . Sir Brian with an eye getting very creative. Thank you very much. Good that people did eventually show up. Also, there was a meetup in Sonoma, Huino Country. Uh this happened uh just a few days ago. In the morning. This is Sir Recalcitran Crazy Steve the second. And I've noticed the show is better when a Democrat in the is in the White House and Ron Paul is still right. Oh. Captain Luke, Baron of Sonoma County in the bathroom, totally not doing cocaine. This is Hernan and I'm about to take a shit. Oh please Sir Zulbat here and apparently we all had to go to the bathroom at the same time, so here we are doing the meetup report from in the bathroom. It's Linda of the Shire. Thank you, John and Adam, for keeping on. John, you've been such a trooper. And Santa Rosa loves no agenda This is uh dude main Ben name uh we're here Santa Rosa is bougie as hell and uh you know uh we're all having a great time and people are beautiful and uh we love this place. This is our server. Hey, hi, I'm Chris. Uh and I'm being told to talk, so here we are. 4D chest ! Yes , you too can stand in the bathroom with total strangers and meet children from other lands at a no agenda meetup, and I suggest you do. Go to no agenda meetups dot com, find out where a meetup will be near you. In fact, if you are in Unionville, Ontario on Wednesday the thirteenth, the Duke of the South up North in Toronto meetup takes place. Now, whenever Sir Patrick Cobalt shows up somewhere, it's gonna be a Hootinanny. I suggest you go visit him. Starts at six o'clock at Casa Victoria Fine Dining and Banquet. That sounds like Patrick Coble all the way. Fine dining and banquet. That's in Unionville, Ontario. Duke of the South organizing it. So please go visit Sir Patrick Coble on Wednesday. Um let's see, we have our next show day, the is that the fourteenth? Yeah, I guess it is. The Northern Wake Mate Wake May Meetup, six o'clock at Saints and Scholars in Raleigh, North Carolina. And upcoming on the sixteenth, we have three. We've got uh Colyville, Texas, we've got, I'm sorry, Collieville, Texas, Fort Wayne, Indiana, Los Banos, California, the seventeenth, Indianapolis, Indiana. It's gonna be a big one, it always is. Twenty first, Charlotte, North Carolina, the twenty-third, Wilmington, Delaware, Los Angeles, California, Hickson, Tennessee, Franklin, Tennessee, Dueling, Tennessee meetups, all on the 23rd. Keyport, New Jersey on the 24th, Vancouver, British Columbia on the 24th as well, the 25th. Squim, Washington. That's where you want to go. Meetet me Mimi me. Mimi will be there. The TooMiniEggs.com booklad y. And, and by the way, sometimes co-host, maybe every fourth show, I hear. And on the 30th, we have Anchorage, Alaska. I'm looking forward to these meetup reports. Please consider sending in a meetup report. Doesn't matter if it's done on your iPhone, I'll edit it all together for you if you can't do it yourself. And always try to get your server involved in the meetup report. Would you like connection that gives you protection? Do you want to have people in your life who will be the first responders in case of an emergency? You will meet them at a No Agenda Meetup. Go to one of these. You can find them at Noahgenda Meetups.com. If you can't fund one near you, you should be starting one yourself. It's free Noagendameetups.com Sometimes you wanna go hang out with all the nights and days , you wanna be where you won't be, triggered on hell lame . You wanna be where everybody feels the same . It's like a party. Still to come. Plenty more show for you. We've got uh three dynamite end of show mixes. We also have John's tip of the day. And uh before we do anything, we have our ISOs that we always like to listen to. We don't even remember why, but we like to do it. And we'll stick that at the end of the show. And I'm going to start with my four. This first one I think was sent in by a producer. Let me check. Yeah. Okay . Uh then we have this one. It was fun. It was a fun show. Not too bad. This one? It was pretty great. No. And there's this one. Oh, wow. I always go to the well. I can't help myself I can't help myself. All right, what you got? Let's start at the top dynamite. Wow. Oops. Dino oh might. How do these guys do it week after week? You're already winning. Yes. Okay . Next . Find better. Wow. Find a better podcast than this one. Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh. You just you just blew yourself out of the water . And then money. Hey, you got more than your money's worth. Ooh . I don't know. I dcause if you play that. Hey, you got more than your money's worth. You know, it's like people don't didn't send money to be like, oh Oh, I I I got got I don't have to do anything. It doesn't feel I think this Wow. Find a better podcast than this one. I like that. What do you what do you think? What do you like? What do you like the best? Yeah, well I think the first and second I th that one's good. That one's good. We'll take that one. Hey, but before we do any of that, we have to listen to John's tip of the day. Great fast for you and me. Just the tip with J CB . And sometimes Adam . Okay . And what it happened to my thing? What happened to your lost? What happened to your but I have an image that I have to look at. Oh. Uh okay, the tip of the day. This is Mother's Day, so I decided to go one more day with a wine tip from Costco. Oh great . So now this is interesting because this is a this is I've talked about this grape, this Pinot Grigio. So I looked into it a little bit. Pinot Grigio I say ten years ago. Making it a lot in the uh in the United States. It's junk. Junk wine. It was terrible. But something changed. Junk wine. So something changed. So they're starting to make it it's really good. And uh I I mean I first turned on by one of our producers who makes a uh who has a product from Zavala Vineyards in the in the Alhambra Valley, which is outside of Martinez, and he dropped off some bottles and I bought a a half a case or a case from 'em. Uh 'cause it's just a really tasty Pinot Grigio but sending donuts the wrong way . But the print I know it's funny. So uh he's he's dropped off a lot of wine. So uh but the tip of the day here is is a some stuff from Costco, including a fri uli , it's it's got the labels of Kirkland signature. This is ridiculous, by the way. Kirkland signature Friuli Grav Pinot Grigio product of Italy. The Italians are making a killer Pinot Grigio 's is they should Grigio is Itali an uh for grey uh twenty twenty four. This wine has sold at some Costco's for four ninety nine a bottle. Boy Yeah, four ninety nine a bottle. Now let me ask you for a recommendation here. So if I'm going to serve this $4.99 a bottle and it has the Kirkland label on it, which I mean people who listen to the show they know how Decant it into a carafe. There it is. Decant it into a carafe, ditch the hooch looking bottle, and you'll be dynamo. Wait, uh wait, this this this tip's not over. Oh . Now at Costco for twelve bucks there is another Pinot Grigio which is not a Kirkland one. It might be more to your liking. It's it's a it's called Italio uh C E S C O N Italio Italo Cescon Pinot Grigio 2024, another twenty twenty-four, which I guess is a great year for Pinot Grigio. And it's twelve bucks and it's in a fancier bottle. It is not a Costco bottle. And it's got a actually at the top of the bottle there's a pe there's glued to kind of tied to the bottle is a piece of the grapevine. Oh. Kinda fancy. Yeah. And this w this is the one that that is absolutely a stunner. So here's what you do. You t can you take the grapevine off of the bottle that's tied to the bottle Yeah, you could. You just cut it right off. Yeah, and then you just say to your guest, um, I got this and p Sylb you want to decant it. Say, this is the actual vine this grape came from. You are going to love Yes, that's exactly what I am. When it comes to wine, I'm full of it. Exactly. I love that. So these are a couple good wines. But but the four ninety nine one is gonna be kind of hard to top in terms of price uh comparison. Well, for those of you who are listening at this point in the show, you are just so lucky. You get the best price, you get the best wine, and it's only with the one and only tip of the day. Noagenda fun.com, tip of the day.net . Great fast for you and me. Just the tip with JC . By the way, I should mention that that up north it's five ninety nine. Oh I'm just saying five ninety nine c you can expect to pay that too. Yeah. Stepped on his credit. Oh I did. I stepped on Brunetti's credit. Yeah, yeah. I'll get a letter. Yes, you violated copyright. Demand letter. Bowls with Buds with Shadrach. This is your first warning. Bowls with Buds with Shadrach is coming up next on the Noah Genders Street. He's a Bitcoiner. So that should be fun to listen to. And we have end of show mixes from uh Bonald Crabtree. We've got uh Danny Luce's back and just baker. Uh, all in the mix. Looking forward. I think you'll like it. I enjoyed these. A couple of toe tappers indeed . And not your typical AI slop for some reason. I don't know what it is. And that does conclude our broadcast day. Uh next time you hear me, I will be back in Fredericksburg, Texas. We're leaving on Wednesday. Oh, it's a short trip, short trip. And as always, uh, I am currently coming to you from the hotel with the flaming logo right here at Schiphol in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. In the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry. Yeah, and from Refinery Row up in Northern California, uh, which is not too far from the post office. I'm John C. Dvor ak. We'll talk to you again on Thursday, so please join us until then. Remember us at Noahgendonations.com. Uh hooey hooy, everybody . Uh and such. And such, that's what it was, yes. Propaganda in the movies and TV screen got the masses like puppets repeating their theme No matter how stupid they look they all narrate the same audio book All except no agenda in the morning Give it a few weeks and suddenly you'll notice you're amygdala is singhrink Once you put down the Kool-Aid you've been drinking. That's true. These other parts actin' like they're profits, but in reality they just ain't got it. You know the ones the beanie had bums Video doesn't belong in podcast, it's dumb. That's true. You want prophecy, watch idiocracy, and then go and smash the like button. Literally No agenda in the morning . No ag enda in the morning. Knox your average every day. Listen twice a week and then go on your merry way. No agenda in the morning, not your everyday average. We don't realize how much we need it . Cause we have it . Gentlemen, gentlemen, gentlemen, gentlemen, gentlemen and ladies , trolls and babies from Taiwan to Haiti. Everybody going crazy. He tests his mic on his Linux machine Vibe coded software, vibe coded dream. Extract the goo, eat it with vanilla wave first What they lack in money they are rich in lore Encroach in neutral policies, use the back door No agenda never gonna end 40 more years everybody wins I take your acting strategy and raise you a dime Doping on John's glue. It should be a crime. From the trolls to the spooks. Hi-Fi to LA Broadcasting the truth. Filter ing the gay John's magic glue. Oh a potty mouth slop. We've got so many fluids, it would make your mouth drop The classified skies, no agenda in the files. You ep drop, watch the narrative spin wild. Forty secrets unlocked, but the truth stays veiled. Government reveal of just another veil. Value for value . Keep the signal alive , produces fuel to die . Support keeps it thrive . Pentagon papers clutter like motherships hover Declassify clutter Uncover what they cover radar goats from the cold, whatever hover, no saucers, no lasers, just questions getting louder, seconds multiply. I just testify on the fire, bureaucrats reply with the classic weather on my higher. Transparency, theater lights, camera inquire, or distraction maneuver when the real news retire. Foul stack like saucers in the desert hanger. Black ink predactions dancing like lights in the hangar. Public eye media height on the hanger. But the patterns the same, control release, no danger. We flip the script like buffalo wreckage on the mic. Reverse the height, expose the slider hands light. No little green guys, just endless oversight. Disclosure daylight over another endless night. Independent orbit, no response, satellite, value for value, flight, listeners, keep the altitude right. Nights, drop treasure, dames, drop the measure, B4B is the ledger that sustains the real pressure, no agenda in the lawn. The best podcast in my new life. Mofo Dvorak.org slash NA

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