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Adam Curry
These I, I call bogus.
John C. Dvorak
Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak. It's Thursday, March 27, 2025. This is your award winning Kiwo Nation media assassination episode 1750. This is no Agenda. Fat fingered and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas hill country right here in FEMA region number six in the morning, everybody.
Adam Curry
I'm Adam Curry and from northern Silicon Valley where everybody has to resign, I'm John C. Dvorak.
John C. Dvorak
It's Crackpot and Buz in the morning. Oh man, oh man. This is, it's days like this when the job is just tough because there's just nothing else in the world is happening. There's nothing happening. It's all signal gate. I know you feel the same because you're like, oh well, there goes the material.
Adam Curry
Now I found some stuff outside of signal gate.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, me too.
Adam Curry
Because the car tariffs, that's the other big news.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, no, but that's not news.
Adam Curry
We don't want to talk about this morning. The ms.13 guy. Some guy, some 25 year old guy was arrested.
John C. Dvorak
Well, I'm, I'm glad you mentioned it. Here we go, here's Pam Bondage.
Pam Bondi
Good morning. Thank you for being here.
John C. Dvorak
You're welcome. Did you see Cash Patel in this? He had his.
Adam Curry
They're all there.
John C. Dvorak
But did you see what he had on? His is like FBI flight jacket.
Adam Curry
And you know that was camo.
John C. Dvorak
No, it wasn't camo. No, that's his like outdoor arresting people jacket. He got the hat on, he's got his sneakers on.
Adam Curry
Yeah. Cash, Cash.
Pam Bondi
We have been out since about 4:30 this morning.
Adam Curry
Let's stop for a second.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, really?
Adam Curry
Why is she even there?
John C. Dvorak
Well, they all report to her.
Adam Curry
Well, she was at. She's there, Cash. They're all there. It's like.
John C. Dvorak
Well, they were all out at 4am this morning and then they had donuts and like. Come on, let's go announce this thing. All right. Yeah. Everyone dressed right.
Adam Curry
It just seemed to be showboating if you ask me.
John C. Dvorak
You think? Whatever. This was a. Please pay no attention to signal gate. We got an ms.13 guy.
Adam Curry
Exactly. Right?
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, totally.
Adam Curry
The great men and women of law.
Pam Bondi
Enforcement have been working on this operation for days and days and probably weeks.
John C. Dvorak
What, you don't know? You don't know probably weeks. Do they report to you? I thought.
Adam Curry
You think she'd have an exact date when they started?
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, we started this on this date and we got through.
Pam Bondi
I guess not this morning. Early this morning. One of the top leaders.
John C. Dvorak
Top. I love this. The top Leaders, the tippy top all the way at the top of the pyramid.
Pam Bondi
Top leader leaders of Ms. 13 was apprehended. He was the leader for the East Coast. One of the top three in the entire entire country. Right here in Virginia, living half an hour Outside of Washington D.C. he is an illegal alien from El Salvador and he will not be living in our country much longer. He's in custody this morning. One of the top leaders right here near our nation's capital.
John C. Dvorak
Right there, right there. He was right there. One of the top guy. Hey, listen, the biggest criminals live in Washington. Okay? They don't, they don't live in Virginia. But good job, Good job, everybody. Just let me do the. I have a couple signal gay things just to do.
Adam Curry
You have the super clip?
John C. Dvorak
I have a super clip, yeah. I don't know which one you're talking about.
Adam Curry
What's the one with all the Democrats going how this is the worst thing that's ever happened to the country since.
John C. Dvorak
No, no, I don't have that one. Oh, well, I didn't because I was looking for super, super cuts. Not super clip supercuts.
Adam Curry
A haircut.
John C. Dvorak
No, I actually got. I thought it would be fun to do a different version of supercut, which. Yeah, we're doing something different. It's upside down day here on the no Agenda show, people. The Libjos are in the House. They've made a big deal out of.
Adam Curry
This because we've had two perfect months. The main thing was nothing happened. The attack was totally successful. In my administration, I'm going to enforce all laws concerning the protection of classified information.
John C. Dvorak
I always say you have to learn from every experience.
Adam Curry
Hillary's private email scandal which put our classified information in the reach of our enemies, disqualifies her from the presidency. This journalist, Mr. President, wants the world talking about more hoaxes and this kind.
Pam Bondi
Of nonsense rather than the freedom that you're enabling.
Adam Curry
The President's National Security Advisor sent top.
John C. Dvorak
Secret emails on an unsecured server that we know our enemies were trying to access. He was sending back and forth freewheeling and yet we see nothing there. My communications, to be clear, in a signal message group were entirely permissible and lawful and did not include classified information. This was a huge mistake, correct? No. Mishandling classified information is still a violation of the Espionage Act. It started with Hillary Clinton. It has continued without accountability.
Adam Curry
Nobody was texting war plans.
John C. Dvorak
And that's all I have to say about that. If there was anyone other than Hillary Clinton, they would be in jail right now.
Adam Curry
When you take Something out of a skiff.
John C. Dvorak
If you're a senator, you know exactly what you're doing. So I found that supercut, I thought that was rather entertaining.
Adam Curry
Yeah.
John C. Dvorak
You know, but more, more fun was a trend we have noticed recently amongst Democrats affectionately called the delusional Dems. And it's the cussing. And so here they have an opportunity, they have an opportunity to have the upper hand on everything. I mean, it's just from. Because I mean politics, truth doesn't matter. It's just whatever is on X and whatever is being replayed by the media. But they cannot help themselves. Here's Adam Schiff. So tonight I want to talk about Signalgate and what a colossal fuck up this is in terms of our national security. Why he doesn't need to. He does a six minute video, but that's how he starts it off.
Adam Curry
That's not good. And then even Van Jones, I don't know if you have.
John C. Dvorak
I have that. I have that. First, first, first, let's. You're jumping the gun.
Adam Curry
I always do that.
John C. Dvorak
You're jumping the gun. In the sequence you want to go. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That means quiet.
Adam Curry
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
John C. Dvorak
Mayor Pete, lovable, adorable little Mayor Pete.
Adam Curry
Throws a couple bombs, breastfeeding thing on you.
John C. Dvorak
I try not to jump in with the tape. By the way, we should start our show hates Pete. I mean, does he think he is Madonna? Hey, it's Pete. Hey, it's Pete. I try not to jump in with a take on everything or comment on everything we see in the news of the day, but what we learned about today is truly incredible. The US Secretary of Defense, the National Security Advisor, the Vice President of the United States and other very senior, very.
Pam Bondi
Powerful Trump White House officials, it turns.
John C. Dvorak
Out, discussed highly classified war plans not only on an unclassified channel, but accidentally and randomly it seems, including a journalist. And to see this administration claiming that it cares about competence and merit and.
Pam Bondi
Then be responsible for an epic fuck.
John C. Dvorak
Up like this demonstrates that these are not serious people. He's not done yet. Intelligence failure calls the question on whether there is any place for merit or competence in this administration at all. Because if they're not, highly serious consequences for this level of screw up, then it will make clear that all of the bluster about merit that you hear about from this White House is just bullshit. We deserve so much better than this. It is getting clearer by the time that the people in charge of the American government cannot keep the American people safe. All right, here's the Van Jones remark.
Adam Curry
I think that this party is Scrambling.
John C. Dvorak
Trying to seem tough.
Adam Curry
And I'm seeing this party traffic in a lot of curse words. That's supposed to like the new cool thing to do. I don't think that that's going to be as useful.
John C. Dvorak
I even heard Pete Buttigieg with a whole bunch of curse words.
Adam Curry
I don't know who gave that memo.
John C. Dvorak
I don't think that's very useful. So it was a memo. Clearly there was a memo that went out. Van is questioning who gave out the memo. Is that another Chuck Schumer thing, do you think? Yeah, that's all talk tough.
Adam Curry
I think this is organic. I think it stems from the powers of the President. I've said this before, that the President sets the moral tone of the country. And it's always been the case that's the first thing they teach in college poli sci classes. And so they've given. The President gave the go ahead because he says bullshit all the time.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, but not the F word. I haven't heard him F bomb.
Adam Curry
No, I don't. I think he has, but I don't think it's. It doesn't. The way they. The main, main people that do this, of course, are the main screaming Mimis that are on the Mimi.
John C. Dvorak
Screaming Mimis?
Adam Curry
What kind of screaming Mimis?
John C. Dvorak
What kind of backhanded slap is that? It's your own.
Adam Curry
This is what they're called, the Screaming Memes.
John C. Dvorak
It's a great band name, but I've never heard of the Screaming Mimis.
Adam Curry
Screaming Mimis are the people that are on the tick tock and they're screaming and yelling and. And cussing. And they're the one set the stage for this, it seems to me. And now that the fact that the politicians are starting to cuss. This is really. And they're the ones who bitched and moaned about coarseness. Oh, coarse. Oh, Trump is bad. Because language.
John C. Dvorak
Yes.
Adam Curry
If you're going to do that, if you're going to set up yourself by complaining about coarseness and then you start cussing. This is not. This again. This is not a good look.
John C. Dvorak
I do have a couple of insightful clips about this because we're not going to do what everybody else is doing. I heard. I was listening to DH Unplugged every Tuesday. They do it live at 8:00.
Adam Curry
We do. It's also a podcast.
John C. Dvorak
Yes. John C. Dvorak and Andrew Horowitz. And Horowitz is saying, why does the news always do five stories? They do five stories all day long. Five stories. And then you. And you Backed him up by saying, that's what Fox does every single Fox show. Five stories. Five stories. And the reason for that is you play the hits, man. When you're in a linear time format, people aren't watching all day. You want them to tune in and get the top five stories. That's what that's about. Play the hits. You can't go wrong by playing Madonna.
Adam Curry
Yeah, that's probably the only.
John C. Dvorak
That's.
Adam Curry
Well, I remember when I was at Tech TV and we had an old pro that was running one of the guys that was one of the main producers of the whole operation. He said, and you get a story that's hot, you just milk it. Yeah, it's all you do all day is they just go on this story and it's all you play. Just yak, yak, yak about the one thing, I mean, we shy away from that on this show because I think people are sick of it.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah.
Adam Curry
Who knows that?
John C. Dvorak
And this. I mean, people always want to hear about this stuff. Well, yeah, but we have opinions. Okay, I'm just gonna.
Adam Curry
Well, we have different. We also have perspective. We have a different look at these things.
John C. Dvorak
We are awesome. That's what we're.
Adam Curry
Great.
John C. Dvorak
Here's a backgrounder.
Pam Bondi
It was the screenshot the world was waiting for after members of the now infamous Hootie PC small group lined up on Tuesday to insist no classified information was shared on the Signal chat. The Atlantic magazine dropped the so called war plan Pete Hegseth sent to senior intelligence officials and a journalist from the Atlantic that readers might judge for themselves.
John C. Dvorak
12:15 Estimated time F18's launch, first strike.
Pam Bondi
Package 1945 trigger based F18 first strike window starts. Target terrorist is at his known location, so should be on time. Also, strike drones launch MQ9s. After the initial strike, the target is identified on signal as the Houthis quote, top missile guy. Members of the Signal thread are now saying the Atlantic magazine's editor, Jeffrey Goldberg oversold the extent of the breach. Among them the Pentagon chief himself.
John C. Dvorak
Nobody's texting war plans.
Pam Bondi
There's no units, no locations, no routes.
John C. Dvorak
No flight paths, no sources, no methods, no classified information.
Pam Bondi
This after Goldberg's original article said the plan included precise information about targets. But in the hands of foreign intelligence, the messages sent two hours before zero hour would have been an ample tip off to Houthi command of an impending attack.
John C. Dvorak
You're right about the President setting the tone, because not a single person can just say, yeah, that was dumb. They don't seem capable of that. Like yeah, well, we were in a hurry. We're doing this, you know, it's an approved thing. We just threw together a group and that was bad.
Adam Curry
This is the era of no apologies.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, yeah, sorry about that. Vax. No one is going to apologize for everything. And President Trump, he still.
Adam Curry
The Vax is still on the market.
John C. Dvorak
Of course, of course. I mean, get. Get your eighth booster. Get your eighth booster. I did. It was an interesting. Because, you know, this journalist is interesting for a number of reasons. And then we can talk about what we think happens briefly. Matt Taibi was on Newsmax, Newsmax, top. He's a top, top guy on Newsmax as a guest. And here's what he had to say about the Atlantic journalist Jeffrey Goldberg. What exactly is Jeffrey Goldberg in your mind? What do you think of this guy? Look, a lot of journalists, when Jeffrey Goldberg' up, we all kind of look at each other with a bemused glance. This is somebody who has a reputation for getting things massively wrong and somehow being reported, promoted. Anyway. He was infamous for getting the WMD story wrong multiple times. In fact, he won multiple awards for getting that story wrong and somehow still ended up the editor of Atlantic magazine. So he's a figure of some mystery in the business. Yeah, that was the Great Terror article in the New Yorker in 2002.
Adam Curry
Yeah, he's the one who promoted the suckers and losers story. John Kelly commentary. He also did two or three other of these. He's a spook. There's got to be something like that. I mean, I don't have. I am not looking at his wiki page, so I can do a spot to spook analysis, but there's something fishy about. First of all, why is he the guy that ended up on this thing? The second thing was, is that the walls. The National Security Advisor says when he went to CIA, I guess the first thing they gave him was a secure phone. It had a signal on it. And then he talked to some CIA guys. He talked about this in the testimony. And the head of communication, somebody there says, oh, no, don't worry about it. Everyone's got this. Just use it, it's fine. And then all of a sudden, just Jeffrey Goldberg guy gets on the call. How'd that happen? And they're looking. Of course, nobody can figure out how that happened. And maybe they will, maybe they won't. This whole thing is a setup.
John C. Dvorak
Goldberg dropped out of college and worked for a time at the Washington Post because that's where all college dropouts go. Did you drop out of College. You're hired, son. Come on in. Would he get hired by Woodward? He then moved to Israel and served in the Israeli Defense Forces during the first intifada. He was a prison guard there.
Adam Curry
He.
John C. Dvorak
Let me see.
Adam Curry
You're on his wiki page.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, I am, I am. He's a. Oh, I can't be trusted. Dual Israeli citizen. It's one of those guys. Can't trust him. Well, the.
Adam Curry
Is there any other spot to spook indicators?
John C. Dvorak
Don't really see anything.
Adam Curry
Well, that's actually good. I mean, it may actually be a real one. A real one?
John C. Dvorak
A real one, yes.
Adam Curry
As opposed to one that's just kind of, you know, sloppy. Well, because the fact that he's the guy. Of all the people that ended up on this call, why him?
John C. Dvorak
Well, you know, sometimes just Occam's razor. Sometimes things just happen.
Adam Curry
Yeah, but this sort of thing is anything but Occam's razor. It's like the opposite. Well, it's so out there.
John C. Dvorak
No, not really. I mean, if you're adding. Because the whole signal text thread was about adding people to the mix.
Adam Curry
Yeah, but you have to have. First you have to have the number in your book.
John C. Dvorak
No. Yeah, well, I mean, you have lots of people's numbers in your book. You wouldn't add to a text chat with me. I'm sorry, you have an actual book? What am I thinking? You don't have it in your phone.
Adam Curry
Actually, I do have the Google. I do have a large address book on Google and they will move it to my phone every time I get a new Android.
John C. Dvorak
You've gotten a new one?
Adam Curry
Well, it's not new, but every time you get a different phone. I have different phones over time that end up in the same drawer, but when you boot it, they demand that you log into somehow you gotta log your old account in, and once you do that, then they throw a bunch of crap on your phone, but they're throwing stuff on. I have phone numbers for people that I don't even know. And so there's. So it's possible. But again, somehow that number got on that phone. Walls's phone somehow.
John C. Dvorak
No, I'm pretty sure they know each other. They know each other.
Adam Curry
Waltz claims that he doesn't know him.
John C. Dvorak
Ah, I don't buy that. I'm not buying that. I like what our Sir Grantilius of the Great Plains said. Waltz was working for the Department of Defense as an advisor to Cheney in the Bush days. Goldberg was publishing work, actively supporting the invasion of Iraq. That's your wmd the Cheney gang despises Trump. Could Goldberg have been invited on purpose? That's what he said.
Adam Curry
That's reasonable.
John C. Dvorak
That is. That's reasonable. You know, but there's a lot of.
Adam Curry
Reasonable things that you can.
John C. Dvorak
But who is this? Who is this? If I think this is. If it's targeted, it's targeted against Hegseth, who has the capability, first of all.
Adam Curry
Well, they really. What? They really hate Hegseth.
John C. Dvorak
Yes. And Hegseth has responded very poorly. He's not good at this.
Adam Curry
No. You think he'd be better because he's media savvy.
John C. Dvorak
He's so defensive and. Nope. This is not this bull crap. That guy is a. That guy's no good.
Adam Curry
No. Just say Hankseth plays too much of a tough character. Yeah, he's a tough guy. They push him into this position where he's got to be kind of assertive, and he doesn't have experience in a large bureaucracy, so he's a little sensitive about that.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah.
Adam Curry
And so he's in a position where they can get shook. And so far, you know, I think Trump likes him. I think he probably could do the job if they don't. But they're going to try to shake him out of there.
John C. Dvorak
I think he has to go out of all this. They're not going to stop. And if this was a target targeted thing, then it was to get to make Hegseth look bad, because it was Hegseth who's sitting there going like, we got the Q, got the reaper drones. When I kill this guy. And the thing that's kind of sick about it all is the jubilee. And, like, yay, American flag emoji punching, fist emoji, fire emoji. We killed him.
Adam Curry
Yeah, that was a mistake, of course.
John C. Dvorak
But that's how. That's how these people are. Probably how most people are.
Adam Curry
But it's number one, foam finger.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. It's always a little jar. I mean, to me, that was the jarring thing. I mean, not that this. That this was. And clearly, clearly, clearly, the timing of this and how much time there was before the reaper drones and whatever else they were planning, clearly that would have been enough to alert people. Here's my question, though. This is the thing. This is the part I understand, and this is where it smells of a setup. If this is you or I and we get added to some awesome text group, and on this text group, it's. It's podcasters. It's Megyn Kelly. It's Dan Bongino. Oh, no, he's no longer podcaster. It's Tucker Carlson. They have like this pod. The top, top, top podcasters group. I would not be removing myself.
Adam Curry
Who was brought up on Gutfeld by one of the contestants.
John C. Dvorak
Who does that?
Adam Curry
I forgot who was. But one of them said, why would you out yourself if you're going to end up on these groups? Because you could as a journalist in particular, because you're like the fly on. Now you're a fly on the wall.
John C. Dvorak
Yes.
Adam Curry
Why wouldn't you want to continue to be the fly on the wall as long as you can? And you just build up and build up.
John C. Dvorak
Do you remember, do you remember back? Well, you still have one. Back in the landline days, if you called someone on a landline, you know, the thing that's on the wall, and, and the other person didn't know. How did it work? It was like there was a thing where you could keep listening. I mean, if the other person doesn't hang up. And there was something where this happened.
Adam Curry
There was some situations with. Well, first of all, when I was in France for the first time in 73.
John C. Dvorak
Getting your hair cut by Pierre.
Adam Curry
Yes. That's when you had to always go to the postal office to make calls. It was very strange to do overseas call. You had to go to the post office and they had. It was a postal telephone.
John C. Dvorak
Post office, ptt.
Adam Curry
But the phones that. If people did have a phone in their house, when you hung up, it didn't hang up anything.
John C. Dvorak
Yes.
Adam Curry
So you could stay on the line and when the other person hung up, you hear the click. But the phone was still live for a good five minutes.
John C. Dvorak
This is what I'm talking about. I remember this.
Adam Curry
There was something like that that went on in this country too, but it wasn't quite the same mechanism. It was something else.
John C. Dvorak
No, I think I remember it.
Adam Curry
I remember it too, because I. I remember people hanging up and then I could still hear it.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, yeah. And, and, and what you did was you didn't hang up and say, oh, I hope I don't hear anything I shouldn't be hearing. No, you're listening.
Adam Curry
Well, that's like being on the party line.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. Yes.
Adam Curry
Which. When you're. When I was a real little kid and I was on the party line all the time, and I've talked about this on the show before, and I got caught a couple of times by the girl talk. She'd be talking to her boyfriend. I'm listening in at this. These two cooing over each other and she caug me somehow.
John C. Dvorak
Well, Here's a modern day example. Let's move it out of Boomerland. Butt dial. When someone butt dials you and you.
Adam Curry
Hear them same thing.
John C. Dvorak
You don't hang up and go, oh, butt dial. No, let me hear what you do.
Adam Curry
What you do? Yeah, you listen. Unless you can you listen for at least a little while. But if it's, you know, obviously you're not going to hear anything because you can tell by the nature of the butt dial because you can't hear. You just hear rustling and then you hang up. But otherwise, yeah, you listen a little bit if you can hear anything. But if you don't hear anything, you don't listen. So it doesn't make sense that this guy outed himself, would remove himself and he's got. And his story was a nothing burger.
John C. Dvorak
You used nothing burger.
Adam Curry
Basically, there wasn't really anything. He just was there to humiliate Hagset. So. And Walls, to a lesser extent.
John C. Dvorak
Well, Walls is under attack. So people are now combing through Waltz and they find out that his official X account, he's following a gay porn star known as Big Dick Bottom. A black. A black guy.
Adam Curry
Really? Yeah, I didn't catch that.
John C. Dvorak
And then he unfollowed him quick.
Adam Curry
Yeah, I would imagine.
John C. Dvorak
Sorry. Not porn star. An adult content creator. I'm sorry.
Adam Curry
And by the way, I will say this, so that could be. That's. That could be planted.
John C. Dvorak
Oh yeah, easy. Hey, let me. Let me see your phone for a sec. You know who do I know that does that? Who did things. Yes, John C. Dvorak. Give me your phone for a second. And you switch it to Korean. And it would be impossible to find your way back to turn it back. Turn off the Korean.
Adam Curry
Yeah, you have to do a lot of research to figure out how to do it. That was one of your most. Gag. Come on, people.
John C. Dvorak
It's a horrible gag. It's just as horrible. So, yeah, my feeling is this is the first major chink in the hegseth armor and that was the intent. Also, it was from the account from Goldberg. It was Waltz who added him to now that cannot. I don't signal, doesn't send. Doesn't send out invitations as far as I know. I was surprised. Just as an aside, that Signal is an approved encrypted messaging app for the US Government.
Adam Curry
Do you know that the chairman of the signal board, it's a foundation that runs. Is the. The woman. She is the head of npr.
John C. Dvorak
No, she's gone. But I think. Didn't the woman from Blue cry also Come.
Adam Curry
No, the woman from NPR still runs it because they. Here, here's the clip. They talk about it. I think I have one of the signals.
John C. Dvorak
I have a couple of her clips.
Adam Curry
But no, I have the disclaimer.
John C. Dvorak
Okay.
Adam Curry
Wow.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, wow was right. You sure you have it?
Adam Curry
I know I have it. I just don't know what it's called.
John C. Dvorak
Breach Story, Weird npr. Shall we try that one?
Adam Curry
What is it?
John C. Dvorak
Breach Story, Weird npr.
Adam Curry
Oh, yeah, that could be it.
John C. Dvorak
The fallout continues from the revelation.
Adam Curry
Senior Trump administration officials somehow added a journalist to a Signal Group chat in which they discussed secret plans for military strikes in Yemen.
John C. Dvorak
At a White House hearing today, Democrats.
Adam Curry
Disputed the administration's claims the information wasn't classified and called for people will be held accountable.
John C. Dvorak
Here's NPR's Ryan Lucas. Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee pushed Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard and CIA Director John Ratcliffe for answers, particularly after the full group chat chain was made public by the Atlantic. It showed Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth texting details on timing weapons and attack sequencing of the US Airstrikes in Yemen. Here's Colorado Democrat Jason Crow. Nobody is willing to come to us and say this was wrong, this was a breach of security and we won't do it again. Crow, who is a former U.S. army Ranger, said the refusal to accept responsibility is outrageous and a leadership failure. And he called on Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to resign. Ryan Lucas, NPR News, Washington. NPR CEO Kathryn Barr chairs the board.
Adam Curry
Of the Signal foundation, the nonprofit that supports the app.
John C. Dvorak
That's, that's, that's a, that's not the lady who was in Congress, though. Yeah, no, her name is. I don't think that's her name.
Adam Curry
No, there were two ladies in Congress.
John C. Dvorak
Hold on a second. It's NPR News, Washington. NPR CEO Catherine Barr chairs the board of the Signal foundation, supports the app. The other lady, Catherine.
Adam Curry
Catherine. That's her March or March.
John C. Dvorak
There are two ladies from NPR called Catherine Mar. Mar. Did he say Mars?
Adam Curry
I think.
John C. Dvorak
Let me listen again. Did he say Mars? Washington NPR CEO Catherine Marr chairs the.
Adam Curry
Board of Single Family.
John C. Dvorak
Okay. Oh, interesting. Well, what is he doing that for? Well, that makes it all very suspicious that.
Adam Curry
I thought it was very suspicious first time I heard that. And that's one of the few times that they actually ran the.
John C. Dvorak
You're going to, you're going to grill me in Congress? Watch this. Can I play a couple of those clips? I thought those are kind of interesting.
Adam Curry
I would like you to play. I didn't get any of Those clips. I love those clips. The thing is, they don't have. It was funny to listen to. I will say this. You listen. I was almost going to take this, but then I was thinking, well, one too many Jesse Waters analysis is not good for this.
John C. Dvorak
Do we have more today?
Adam Curry
I have none.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, good.
Adam Curry
But Jesse Waters had some of the best of the clips. And then when you played him up against the long version, longer exposition on PBS NewsHour, there was no comparison. The Water stuff was far superior.
John C. Dvorak
Well, I focused really on one thing, and that's the money. Because that's what it was about. It's about, do we, do we continue to fund the National Public Radio? Where does the money go?
Adam Curry
And the kicker is, oh, well, the government doesn't really have. Only gives maybe 1% of the total and doesn't mean a lot and who cares? We need this money.
John C. Dvorak
Okay, I guess I don't need to play the clips. You did it again. You went straight to the kicker.
Adam Curry
But that's just what you're setting me up for it. You got to do a better job.
John C. Dvorak
I'm going to play Catherine Marr. Be quiet.
Pam Bondi
I understand the subcommittee has questions about funding for NPR and public radio. The vast majority of federal dollars, more than 100 million of the 121 million annual appropriation for public radio goes directly to 386 local non commercial stations across the nation. This highly efficient investment enables your local stations to raise an average of $7 for every federal dollar. As a grantee of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, NPR received Federal funding of 11.2 million last year. These funds allow us to maintain the National Public Radio satellite system, helping safeguard our national security, civil defense and disaster response, and enabling public radio to reach every corner of America. Additionally, these funds help protect journalists covering our troops overseas and reverse the decline of local journalism.
John C. Dvorak
So people don't really understand how NPR works. They're all independent stations. They have to do their own fundraising. The problem is they basically can't create much of their own local content. I mean, even KUT in Austin, remember when we had Snowpocalypse, they were playing Fresh Air with Terry Gross. They have to buy the programming. And that's where a lot of the money goes, because it's commercial companies making the majority of this content. It's not like government employees. All of this comes through the prx. The public radio exchanges the public. What is it? The public media. Forget the name of the group. So really the only thing that makes it a network is explained here. I'd like to spend the rest of my time talking about funding. This is Jack. Representative Jack from Georgia. I know that some of my colleagues talked about it a little bit today, but could you walk us through the amount of money that NPR receives from CPB annually?
Pam Bondi
Yes, sure, sir. We receive $11.2 million this past year, the majority of which goes to the public radio satellite system, which we operate on behalf of the entire public. RAD also received a smaller amount of funds.
John C. Dvorak
Let's just stop there. The prss, the Public radio satellite system is an anachronism. This thing should immediately be shot out of the sky. I think there's still one show that broadcasts live. The Morning Edition. Maybe All Things Considered is a live stream from the satellite, which of course we could do much cheaper with a Starlink dish that would work in case of an emergency, but you could still do it. I mean, we've had T1 lines for a long time. And what all these is a very expensive, very antiquated system where they in essence download WAV files of programming. That's the incredible importance of that. $11 million and of course, Catherine Marr's salary and whatever else they do with that. But that thing is absolutely not necessary. But I don't think any of these people in Congress actually understand what NPR is or how it works.
Pam Bondi
We also received a smaller amount of funding in the course of the past year that went to help us hire those additional editors and analysts in order to be able to beef up that editorial review. We received funding to support the coverage of the recent election in order to make sure that we had our journalists all across the country and were able to speak to Americans of all different political backgrounds.
John C. Dvorak
And what percentage of your budget share comes from the federal government?
Pam Bondi
Depending on how you count it, sir, it is. It's less than 5%.
John C. Dvorak
And to help me understand too, the CPB, you know, as I understand it, we've. Congress has appropriated $500 million to CPB. It flows out and I think smaller radio stations go and apply for grants for it. 500 million for CPB, which includes PBS. What else does that include?
Adam Curry
It includes a lot of little stations who have to give the money back. I mean, the whole thing is something of a Ponzi scheme.
John C. Dvorak
Do you receive payment from smaller radio stations through licensing agreements and things of that nature?
Pam Bondi
We do. And the fees for that are designed around the.
John C. Dvorak
What do you mean designed? The fees are designed. And of course, Jack is only out to get her to stick it to her like everybody else. No follow up questions on that are.
Pam Bondi
Designed around the amount of funding that they get from private member donations. So it's not. The fees are not designed around federal funding. They're just.
John C. Dvorak
How is a fee designed? I mean, a fee is a fee. So is it based upon how many people listen? Is it based on how much money you raise? This makes no sense. They get money to keep the stations on the air. That's expensive. And then the fees are designed somehow.
Adam Curry
I'm trying to say is that if the larger markets have to pay more money around the pretty common amount of funding, it's like newspaper syndicates. If you're a small town paper with 100,000 cirque, you're not paying the same amount for the Dilbert cartoon as somebody with 250,000 cirque designed around the amount.
Pam Bondi
Of funding that they get from private member donations. So it's not. The fees are not designed around federal funding. They're designed around what sort of direct private support and donations they receive from members and listeners.
John C. Dvorak
Well, they're basing it on. She's saying that they base it on how much they get. So how much did you raise? $2 million. Oh, your fee is.
Adam Curry
I don't think that's. I don't know what she's talking about. She's just rambling. I mean, I think she'd maybe just be snowing the guy.
John C. Dvorak
Well, here's the real question, and this came from Jack as well. Could NPR survive without the 5% that we give NPR annually?
Pam Bondi
My belief is that the funding is essential to the public radio system, and that is the 246 member stations, but the 1300 stations across the nation so that we're able as a network to serve all Americans with 100% coverage.
Adam Curry
This is bull crap. She would. This is a snow job, what she's saying right here. Yes, There is no substance to what she's saying.
John C. Dvorak
She's not answering the question.
Pam Bondi
Federal funding for our network goes away. It means that people in rural parts of America, places where they can afford to make private donations to support their local journalism. Those will be harmed. But, sorry, if I may, the bigger harm as well, or the additional harm is that Americans in places that are affluent or do have many media choices, do have many media choices, will not be able to hear from their fellow Americans that are often under her.
John C. Dvorak
She says something very interesting. At first I misheard her, but she's saying what I think she's saying here is rich people who've got a lot of choice won't be able to hear the Poor suckers out in the sticks tell me I'm wrong. Americans in places that you gotta start it over there.
Pam Bondi
Bigger harm as well, or the additional harm is that Americans, Americans in places that are affluent or do have many media choices will not be able to hear from their fellow Americans that are often underheard.
John C. Dvorak
Isn't that what she's saying? You won't hear from the poor people without us.
Adam Curry
That's exactly what she's saying. I don't know how. Like, what else could that mean?
John C. Dvorak
So npr, so, so the rich people.
Adam Curry
Are going to suffer. Yes, they're going to suffer horribly.
John C. Dvorak
That's exactly what she's saying.
Adam Curry
If they don't give the little people some money so the little people can speak up because the little people don't a voice without the government money. So you bastards in the government, you better give the little people some money because you're just, you're shutting them down.
John C. Dvorak
Have you ever heard of X or Facebook? Little people have a voice these days, lady.
Pam Bondi
Americans in places that are affluent or do have many media choices will not be able to hear from their fellow Americans that are often underheard.
John C. Dvorak
And you're an NPR guy, please make sure that next time you hear some poor people who aren't heard, make sure that if they're ever on npr, you clip it. Because usually I only hear douchebags.
Adam Curry
It's all douchebags.
John C. Dvorak
It's all douchebags. Bottom line, if the 5% went away, would NPR still exist?
Pam Bondi
Well, it would be incredibly damaging to the federal, to the. Excuse me, to the National Public Radio system.
John C. Dvorak
Well, this is why I say, wait.
Adam Curry
So in other words, 5% goes to the poor suckers. The 5% is going to be incredibly damaging because rich people, despite what we do, we can't make up 5% of that, of that debt funding. We can't find some other way of doing it. We can't open up a gates of hell of advertising. We can't do anything. That 5% is all there is to it.
John C. Dvorak
That was the question. That was the question.
Adam Curry
Something is wrong with that answer.
John C. Dvorak
So instead we just hounded her. It is fun to listen to this. This was the Brandon representative, Brandon Gill, who did exactly what they're doing to National Security Advisor. Waltz. Let's comb through your tweets and embarrass you. It's interesting because a lot of your thinking as expressed by your public.
Adam Curry
Hold on. Can you stop for a second?
John C. Dvorak
Yeah.
Adam Curry
It's John Kennedy. The guy from Louisiana, I think is the guy who perfected this Technique in Congress.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, and he has his own YouTube channels, and you don't even know how old it is. I mean, it's evergreen, the stuff he does.
Adam Curry
Yeah, he has nothing but show business. Did you write this tweet? Let me just get it straight. And then you read. Is that something you actually wrote? And she said, well, I think so. Well, you would know. I'm reading right from it. You might. You know, it goes on and on.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, this guy did a pretty good job. It's interesting because a lot of your thinking, as expressed by your public statements, is deeply infused with economic and cultural Marxism. Do you believe that America is addicted to white supremacy?
Pam Bondi
I believe that. I tweeted that. And as I've said earlier, I believe much of my thinking has evolved over the last half decade.
John C. Dvorak
I've evolved. I've evolved as a human being because.
Adam Curry
Wait, she said over the last half decade.
John C. Dvorak
I know that's. Isn't that a great. You mean five years?
Adam Curry
It was only four, actually. To be honest. Look at the number. But it's four years ago. She wrote that.
John C. Dvorak
Well, she's good.
Adam Curry
Oh, you know, my. Everything's evolving over the last half. The last half a decade.
John C. Dvorak
That's amazing. You mean during the Biden administration earlier.
Pam Bondi
I believe much of my thinking has evolved over the last half decade.
John C. Dvorak
It has evolved. Why did you tweet that?
Pam Bondi
I don't recall the exact context, sir, so I wouldn't be able to say. Okay.
John C. Dvorak
Do you believe that America believes in black plunder and white democracy?
Pam Bondi
I don't believe. Believe that, sir.
John C. Dvorak
You tweeted that in reference to a book you were reading at the time, apparently the Case for Reparations.
Pam Bondi
I don't think I've ever read that book, sir.
John C. Dvorak
This is my best. This is the best one. You were reading a book. You tweeted about this book. I don't think I've read that book, sir. I don't think I read that book in the last half decade. Tweeted about it. He said you took a day off to fully read the Case for Reparations. Put that on Twitter in January of 2020. So she's a liar. Of course she didn't read the book. She didn't read White Fragility either. Just Virtue signaling.
Adam Curry
I have a couple clips coming up later in the show that also. Do you use this trick that when you say, I'm thinking about this half decade thing. The first thing, that if you're. If you. If you're calculating that in your mind, you think that count that's 50 years. Because when you think of it, when you say half, half is always at 0.5. So it's 0.5 decade 10. And in your brain, you multiply it, and so it says in the last half decade, it really, I think, subconsciously it sounds like 50 years.
John C. Dvorak
Hmm.
Adam Curry
I think it's a very tricky NLP. I think it's an NLP trick and gives you the sense that it's a long time.
John C. Dvorak
Well, she also slipped in their Federal Public Radio, which I thought was interesting.
Adam Curry
Yeah, she's good.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. She know. Yeah. Spook.
Adam Curry
She may be a spook, but what's her name again?
John C. Dvorak
Catherine Mar. Marr said you took a day off to fully read the case for reparations. You put that on Twitter in January of 2020.
Pam Bondi
I apologize. I don't recall that. I did.
John C. Dvorak
Okay.
Pam Bondi
I'd no doubt that your. Your tweet there is correct, but I don't recall that.
John C. Dvorak
Okay. Do you believe that white people inherently feel superior to other races? This is great. This is your virtue signaling coming back and slapping you in the face like a wet salmon. People inherently feel superior to other races.
Pam Bondi
I do not.
John C. Dvorak
You don't? You tweeted something to that effect. You said, I grew up feeling superior. Ha. How wide of me. Why did you tweet that?
Pam Bondi
I think I was probably reflecting on what it was to be to grow up in an environment where I had lots of advantages.
John C. Dvorak
So that's a racist statement right there. Because you were white, that means that you had lots of advantages. Have you seen. What about those poor schlubs who need 5% to listen to NPR to create content for NPR so the rich people can hear it?
Adam Curry
Okay, let me stop you for a second. After high school, Mar graduated from the Arabic Language Institute.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, yeah.
Adam Curry
We went to her intensive program at the American University of Cairo in 2003. She. She recalled a formative experience, and she developed her interest in the Middle East. What's she doing here? Maher also studied at the Institut Francais, and she was in Damascus. She was in Syria. She spent time in Lebanon and Tunisia. I'm reminded of a meeting I had with the economic hitman for lunch one time. He says, my entire family says, don't take Arab because they're all CIA spooks, and said, don't take Arabic because you'll be stuck in the Middle East.
John C. Dvorak
No, you want Mandarin.
Adam Curry
From 2007 to 2010, she was at UNICEED, and she was at the National Democratic Institute as an ICT program officer. Worked at the World Bank. She worked at Twitter. D.C. based access now, Operation Advocacy. This woman is Wikipedia Foundation. She was the communications officer there. Mary, just one thing after. This is an unbelievable bio. U.S. state Department Foreign Affairs Policy Board worked with Clinton, Secretary with Hillary. She's just unbelievable.
John C. Dvorak
Well, this, this leads me to believe that Signal is not a safe app.
Adam Curry
That's leads me to believe the exact same thing. Or it's just a back door operation.
Pam Bondi
I was probably reflecting on what it was.
Adam Curry
You know, you could have probably, you know, talking about that, that it's possible that they just slipped Jeffrey in and nobody really put him on. On the call at all. Very suspicious. And this woman is extremely suspicious.
Pam Bondi
To grow up in an environment where I had lots of advantages.
John C. Dvorak
It sounds like you're saying that white people feel superior.
Pam Bondi
I. I don't believe that anybody feels that way, sir. I was just reflecting on my own experiences.
John C. Dvorak
Do you think that white people should pay reparations?
Pam Bondi
I have never said that, sir.
John C. Dvorak
Yes, you did. You said it in January of 2020. You tweeted. Yes. The North. Yes. All of us. Yes. America. Yes. Our original collective sin and unpaid debt. Yes. Reparations. Yes. On this day.
Pam Bondi
I don't believe that was a reference to fiscal reparations, sir.
John C. Dvorak
What kind of reparations was it a reference to?
Pam Bondi
I think it was just a reference to the idea that we all owe much to the people who came before us.
John C. Dvorak
That's a bizarre way to frame what you tweeted. Did. And he went on and on and on and on. But that was entertaining.
Adam Curry
Yeah, of course.
John C. Dvorak
But in. In.
Adam Curry
But she was slick. I watched her. She was. She. Calm, cool and collected.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, in. In. I mean, in regards to. To signal. That's a little troubling. I wonder why she. Well, maybe on the other hand, maybe that's exactly why it is sanctioned for use within the government, which I learned. I didn't know that. I didn't think that they could use their private phones for anything that had a government business. How about don't we have the National Archive act and all kinds of stuff that you have to. No matter what has been discussed, has to be archived somewhere.
Adam Curry
Yeah, supposedly.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. So someone needs to fess up or someone needs to go. And I think that Hegseth is one more gaff away from.
Adam Curry
Yes, you're right. One more gaffe he's done.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. So I like him, but the way he responded. Did not like him. Thought that was very.
Adam Curry
Yeah, it was very poor. It was. He wasn't. He's not using his resources.
John C. Dvorak
Use Your words, Pete.
Adam Curry
No, I'm talking about, you know, there are people. That. Pentagon has something like 27 to 60,000 public relations specialists. I mean, that many people. So they can just hound the media and they have people there that could. That what. How should I respond to this? Meetings could take place with 10 of the top people.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah.
Adam Curry
And they would give him, you know, the marching orders. I don't think. I think they're cut him off.
John C. Dvorak
I wonder if this could have been a Pegasus type deal where someone basically just controls your phone and can remotely add someone to a signal chat. Hey, watch this. That seems more likely.
Adam Curry
It wouldn't surprise me.
John C. Dvorak
By the way, you know, Tina's out of town. She's in Indiana visiting her mom. And so that gives me an opportunity to watch stuff that, you know, how you. Oh, you don't know, per se. But we're sitting at home and I'm surfing through the Netflix and I'm like, yeah, let's watch this. And like, oh, no, that is Robert De Niro in it. I hate him. Which, by the way, I'm like, yeah, you're right. So I watched Zero Day, which is starring De Niro, and he plays the president, ex president of the United States. Very good movie. And it deals a lot with what can happen with phones and apps. And even more delightful how, you know, what the circumvention is. You know, everyone gets around all of these. All of these things when they're doing something nefarious. How did the bad guys communicate?
Adam Curry
How.
John C. Dvorak
Ham radio, baby. Ham radio. That's when the story.
Adam Curry
Well, you know, De Niro was also in Wag the Dog, which was a fantastic movie, which is another fantastic.
John C. Dvorak
He was great until. Until he had to pull his own documentary out of the Tribunal, a film festival, about how his kid got autism and he thought it was from vaccines. And then they were like, you'll never make another movie in this town again. De Niro. Oh, okay. Do you remember that? That was during the show.
Adam Curry
That information has been lost on.
John C. Dvorak
No, that was during the show. Yeah, he pulled. From his own film festival. He pulled the doc. Oh, no. There's not enough evidence about this. I've decided to pull this documentary. That's when he went. Saw. Come on, man. Taxi Driver. Was he in Taxi Driver?
Adam Curry
Yeah.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. So.
Adam Curry
Well, what else we got in this regard?
John C. Dvorak
Well, I don't think much else. I mean, we'll just see what happens. But we need to keep an eye on. On Hegseth, because I think he's on deck.
Adam Curry
Yeah, it's what it looks like they're.
John C. Dvorak
Not, they're not letting up on this. Doesn't matter. You, you gotta. You got a top Ms. 13 guy who cares. Signal gay. You're going to put 25% tariff on all cars coming into America. Who cares? Signal gate. Who cares? Nobody cares. Everybody wants get some veterans. Well, I fought in the war and people I know died because of intelligence mess ups. So cynical. All this stuff. I hate mainstream media.
Adam Curry
Let's go to the car tariffs. Okay, now I have the BBC, I have a series. These are all spelled C A E and tariff is misspelled. I usually correct these.
John C. Dvorak
You got K Reye. I thought K Reyefs was a lady that I was very interested when I saw your clips come in. People have to know John sends me clips. I don't listen to them. I just look at the titles to know. Okay, maybe I don't need a whole series of clips here because if there's something about K rariffs in the news, I don't need a clip on it.
Adam Curry
It was a typo and apparently she's blurry. So we start with the now my vision was blurry.
John C. Dvorak
Do you drive?
Adam Curry
This is the one. This is not the analysis clips.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, this is the, this is the.
Adam Curry
Now just the BBC straight up.
John C. Dvorak
Wait, is this World Service?
Adam Curry
Yeah, BBC World Service.
John C. Dvorak
And now another series of clips from the BBC World Service. President Trump has announced a 25% tariff on all cars imported into the United States from the second of he claimed the measure would spur growth in the US car industry and create jobs and investment. Our North America business correspondent Erin Delmore reports.
Pam Bondi
President Trump said the new tariffs would bring car and truck production back to the US and generate billions of dollars in revenue. Mr. Trump made clear that the new tariffs are permanent and not a negotiating tactic designed to extract concessions from America's trade partners. But determining which vehicles are made in America can be complicated, particularly when it comes to America's closest neighbors, Mexico and Canada. The new taxes immediately hit millions of foreign made cars sold in the US each year. The move is poised to send a shock through the industry with potential for higher prices, lower supply and lower production. Shares of the US's big three automakers fell in after hours trading.
John C. Dvorak
Okay, well, shaking things up, I don't.
Adam Curry
Know why the prices would fall because you think these guys, the US automakers would benefit. But I guess the only car that's actually made here is Tesla. Yeah, the rest of them are made parts from everywhere.
John C. Dvorak
Isn't there a carve out for parts?
Adam Curry
No, not yet.
John C. Dvorak
I think you're wrong.
Adam Curry
Well, they've been talking about it. I listened to this morning. I was watching Outnumbered and they had Charles Payne on as the dude because there's a bunch of women in one guy and that's why it's called Outnumbered.
John C. Dvorak
Yes.
Adam Curry
And he went on about it and they talked about the car parts carve out and it was like it was still unsettled.
John C. Dvorak
Well, I'm just going to interrupt and then we'll get back to your BBC anal clips.
Adam Curry
This is analysis.
John C. Dvorak
I know what it says. This production line in Japan is churning out Toyota cars, many of them destined for the US In a week's time, they'll be subject to a punishing 25% tariff, prompting the government to plea for an exclusion. We have again strongly urged the US Government to exclude Japan from the scope of these measures, but only if the car is made in America. Other top suppliers hit hard by the tax are Canada, Mexico, Germany and South Korea. Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney called it a direct attack on the country's workers.
Adam Curry
We will defend our workers, will defend.
John C. Dvorak
Our companies, will defend our country. Yes. Currently, half the cars sold in the US Are American made. And industry experts say the move could increase prices per car by thousands of dollars and impact jobs. President Donald Trump says it will revitalize American industry. We're going to charge countries for doing business in our country and taking our jobs, taking our wealth. After a 25% duty on steel and aluminium, this is Trump's latest move to renegade on a trade deal he struck in his first term with Mexico and Canada. The new tariff applies to cars and light trucks. Auto parts that comply with the 2019 deal will remain tariff free for now. There you go.
Adam Curry
Yeah, I don't think that's correct.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, it's France. 24. How could you doubt the French?
Adam Curry
Yeah, I don't think they know what they're talking about. All right, okay, so let's go with the analysis clips. These should be fairly short.
John C. Dvorak
Here to make sense of that announcement is our north of America correspondent, Aaron Delight.
Pam Bondi
Clearest way through it is to think of it as a 25% tariff on all cars not made in the United States and no tariffs on cars made in the United States. He also made a mention that Americans would be able to deduct interest payments on their car loans from their taxes if their cars are made in America. You know, to me, one of the big things that stood out is he said he's not budging. He said that these tariffs are permanent and that he's not putting this forward as a negotiating tactic to try to get concessions from America's trade partners, partners in future tariff negotiations. He said, this is permanent. We are going to bring domestic production, domestic manufacturing of cars and trucks back to the United States.
John C. Dvorak
What about car parts coming into the U.S. is there any clarification yet as whether they may face import duty as well? Because that would be significant, wouldn't it?
Pam Bondi
Absolutely. Here's why it would be significant. Car parts can come in from foreign suppliers, but they also are made in Mexico and Canada as well and then cross borders into the United States, into U.S. production facilities, facilities for cars that look to be U.S. made. They look and purport to be American made cars. But perhaps within the cars there are not American made parts. Those are foreign made parts. And so now the question, yes, is will they be tariffed? The best indication and reporting we have now is that the answer to that question is yes, it is.
John C. Dvorak
Yes, that appears to be the case. Well, there goes my Corinthian leather. Another, another boomer joke. I'm easing, I'm easing.
Adam Curry
You're getting worse.
John C. Dvorak
I'm easing into it. I'm starting to like it.
Adam Curry
Yeah, the old timers that listen to this show must get a kick out of us.
John C. Dvorak
Someone hopefully somewhere does.
Adam Curry
Well, the kids don't. They're going, what the fuck are these guys talking about? So here we go at clip two, this announcement.
John C. Dvorak
I mean we, we are used to lots of tariffs. Tariff announcement. This seems a pretty serious one because Donald Trump has clearly said he's not going to withdraw these tariffs.
Pam Bondi
Absolutely.
John C. Dvorak
And it's a really interesting line in the sand. And listening to Mark Carney there, you.
Pam Bondi
Know, having spent a lot of time in Canada, you know, the Canadian auto sector is hugely reliant. This is, you know, hundreds of thousands of jobs, billions of dollars. So very significant. But I think around the world now.
John C. Dvorak
It'S not going to affect Australia. We don't make any cars anymore, haven't for quite some time.
Pam Bondi
So it won't have an impact directly in that way. But you know, these things have a tendency of having a big ripple effect.
John C. Dvorak
Right.
Pam Bondi
And across other sectors. And you know, the steel, aluminium tariffs.
John C. Dvorak
That will be coming onto Australia already, there's shaking the chain on drugs and medicines.
Pam Bondi
That's something Australia provides a lot of medicines to the US and brings a lot of in.
John C. Dvorak
We have a free medicines policy or.
Pam Bondi
Program for lots of Australians rely on.
John C. Dvorak
The government to buy for no cost.
Pam Bondi
Or low cost medicines.
John C. Dvorak
Ireland's also worried about it.
Pam Bondi
So But I mean, I don't know. Can he really have a permanent tariff?
John C. Dvorak
I don't know.
Pam Bondi
I don't know whether that's possible.
John C. Dvorak
I would imagine, unless he intends to.
Pam Bondi
Be the permanent president, I wouldn't think there'd be permanent tariffs.
John C. Dvorak
But I don't know.
Pam Bondi
And I don't think we should be.
John C. Dvorak
Predicting too much at this point, Stephanie.
Adam Curry
It is a complicated issue, tariffs here.
John C. Dvorak
Because the global car industry operates in so many different, different parts of the world. So you're sitting there in your office and you're like, oh, yeah, I got, I gotta do this, I gotta get that laugh. Extra, extra kooky. We don't, we don't, we do work for you people. What was it? Shaking the chain. I like that.
Adam Curry
Shaking this whole thing is because this is a non significant or a quite significant idea that he thinks he's gonna do. You know, this, the global. You start to realize when you start hearing these analysis, especially the moaning and groaning that takes place from everyone. Oh, the Australians, now they're worried about this and that and all the Canadians think it's all about them. You realize that the intent, the globalist entanglements have been set up so well. It's massive that it's like, wow, these guys. This is. Trump is not going to pull this off. I don't think he's going to pull it off.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, I think he will. Oh, I definitely think he will. And I'll tell you why after your clips.
Adam Curry
Okay.
John C. Dvorak
All right.
Adam Curry
Onward.
John C. Dvorak
Around 50% of cars sold in the US are imported. It is the world's biggest importer of cars. About 22% of those imports in 2024.
Adam Curry
Came from Mexico, Juan Carlos Baker Pineda.
John C. Dvorak
Of course, familiar voice on this program is Mexico's former Vice Minister for Foreign.
Adam Curry
Trade, currently a researcher at the Pan.
John C. Dvorak
American University in Mexico City.
Adam Curry
Quiz.
John C. Dvorak
Hello. One car. Yeah, you know, there's a lot going on in the world at the moment. A lot of confusion about many things. You're in Mexico.
Adam Curry
Yeah, yes.
John C. Dvorak
What do you make of this decision? It could have a huge impact on, on the car industry there. I love this. You're in Mexico.
Adam Curry
Yes, yes, I'm a K2 tall.
John C. Dvorak
I'm in Mexico.
Pam Bondi
Yes, absolutely.
John C. Dvorak
And the, the consequences of this are not entirely clear now, but as you say, the impact on this is very significant because cars represent the largest export of Mexico to the United States. It also represents a significant sizable contribution of the, of the GDP. Anywhere between 8 and 9% of Mexico's GDP somehow is connected to the automotive industry. So the fact that these tariffs are announced, the fact that President Trump seems to have no regard whatsoever, however, for the USMC and its rules clearly is very disturbing. Right now today, the Minister of the Economy, Secretary Marcelo Evrad and his team are in Washington and it has been reported that they will be having meetings tonight and tomorrow with the people of President Trump's cabinet, the Secretary of Commerce. And well, clearly something has to be worked out because if the tariffs are imposed as the President suggests, well, the.
Pam Bondi
Impact on Mexico is going to be significant and it's going to change the.
John C. Dvorak
Mood, I would say robust between Mexico.
Pam Bondi
And the United States right now.
John C. Dvorak
And the, the relationship as it is is going through some tense moments and this clearly is not going to help at all.
Adam Curry
Go on and on. And so let's go to the last clip, which is I think another, another. So we have the Mexicans complaining, the Australians complaining. I don't know why they're complaining. The Canadians complaining, the Europeans, everyone's complaining.
John C. Dvorak
Because they believe he's, he's serious and I think he is. Let us hear a couple of more V. Here's Glenn Stevens. He's executive director of Detroit based Industry Auto Industry Group, Mitch Auto. He told me these tariffs are bad news for the industry and customers. We don't see any positives in the short term. We had anticipated this, the President had signaled this. But about half of the vehicles sold in the United States every year are imported, 7.68 million last year. So this is a significant shock to the system. We also have steel and aluminum tariffs. We have China tariffs, now reciprocal. And now these tariffs, tariffs, the cost of the vehicle, the input cost will go up. We expect anywhere from 3,000 to 10,000 depending on the transaction price of the vehicle. It will increase. And in the US a vehicle already costs $49,000 to purchase new on average. So it's already at an all time high. We're concerned about this. We have a lot of questions right now tonight that we're trying to sort through. What's the top one on your list that you're going to try and answer, which is the one you, you're struggling with at the most at the moment is you trying to make sense?
Adam Curry
Yeah.
John C. Dvorak
The number one issue is our vehicles from Canada and Mexico because of the existing USMCA agreement. Are they included in this? It appears that they are, but we don't have confirmation of that. And that's, that is a big situation, particularly for the companies based in Michigan for GM and Stellantis. So just to give you an idea. And actually one of our producers just posted that in the troll room. In the Netherlands you have something called bpm, which is a special tax for cars. And if you do the math, a, let me see, a Ford Mustang which costs what it, 35,000, $40,000.
Adam Curry
Yeah.
John C. Dvorak
In the Netherlands, 120,000. After the VAT, the BPM, the climate tax, all that stuff was put on. But BPM is just a made up number. It's like, oh well, you know, we got to tax you for that. So Trump is not wrong.
Adam Curry
No, I think he's correct.
John C. Dvorak
And, and, and when you look at.
Adam Curry
What I'm saying is not, I'm not complaining about his correctness or his righteousness about this. I'm complaining, not complaining, but I'm suggesting that the entanglements are so broad based that it's going to be almost impossible to actually make any of this work.
John C. Dvorak
But this is the hill he's going to die on. This has been his thing for, for 30, 40 years he's been talking about this.
Adam Curry
Yeah, forever.
John C. Dvorak
So now he has the opportunity and he means it and he's trying to brand it, but he's not doing a very good job. Well, I may give a lot of countries breaks, but it's reciprocal. But we might be even nicer than that. You know, we've been very nice to.
Adam Curry
A lot of countries for a long.
John C. Dvorak
Time, but I call it Liberation Day. April 2nd is Liberation Day.
Adam Curry
But today is your know, we did.
John C. Dvorak
Something with respect to Venezuela. You heard about that and that will be quite important. We'll be announcing some additional tariffs over the next few days having to do with automobiles, cars and having also to do a little bit with lumber down the road. Lumber and chips. Chips.
Adam Curry
We're going to get all those chip companies coming back.
John C. Dvorak
They're already coming back without even doing it. So it's, it's been very good.
Adam Curry
But we'll be announcing some others.
John C. Dvorak
But for the most part, April 2 will be a big day. That'll be reciprocal day. And we'll be bringing some of the money back that's been taken from us. Let's be nice by using the word taken. I don't want to use a stronger word because these guys are professional politicians and they don't like to hear those words. I refuse to use the word stolen from us. But so it's Liberation Day. It's reciprocal day. It's, I don't know what day it is. Is it's April 2nd. He needs to work.
Adam Curry
That's what you mean by he's not. Not branding.
John C. Dvorak
No, no. I mean liberation. If you're going to do Liberation Day, you need a media package. You need some memes out there on the Internet of people with big two F250s and, and Mustangs, you know, cruising around.
Adam Curry
Yeah. It could be coordinated. Better not.
John C. Dvorak
You mentioned much better.
Adam Curry
There's really no. He's sticking with this, you know, running a million miles an hour, but not really coordinating anything in such a way that you have a big splash that goes from one thing to another.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. So instead he has a very small announcement.
Adam Curry
Today. We're delighted to report that Hyundai is announcing a major $5.8 billion investment in American manufacturing. In particular, Hyundai will be building a brand new steel plant in Louisiana which will produce, produce more than 2.7 million metric tons of steel a year, creating.
John C. Dvorak
More than 1,400 jobs for American steelworkers.
Adam Curry
And then there'll be major expansion after that. This will be Hyundai's first ever steel mill in the United States, one of the largest companies in the world, by the way, supplying steel for its auto parts and auto plants in Alabama and Georgia, which will soon produce more than 1 million American made cars every single year.
John C. Dvorak
Boom.
Adam Curry
The cars are coming into this country at levels never seen before.
John C. Dvorak
Get ready.
Adam Curry
This investment is a clear demonstration that tariffs very strongly work and I hope other things also. But the tariffs are bringing them in.
John C. Dvorak
At levels that have not been witnessed. So a million American cars. Well, I mean, everyone's going to buy an American car. If you're going to buy a car or American made car, I should say that that part will work, especially if you get, if you're allowed to deduct the interest on your car loan. Whoa. Now you're talking. But that's a Congress thing. That's not an executive order, is it?
Adam Curry
That's a tax thing.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. Which is Congress.
Adam Curry
I would say the problem is we don't, you know, with half the cars being imported, until these reports came out, I didn't realize that half of our, in other words, our own automotive industry can't even keep up with the Toyota.
John C. Dvorak
No.
Adam Curry
And BMW and all the people that ship cars into this country. So we. So half of them are imported. They'd have to double production of American cars, which they're not going to be able to do. You can't just double production.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah.
Adam Curry
Overnight. And I think what one thing is going to happen is the used car market is going to heat up again.
John C. Dvorak
Exactly. I'm like, I'm not driving my car, I'm keeping my Miles. But I'll need a car. That's the problem.
Adam Curry
Yeah, you need a car.
John C. Dvorak
Do you have wind chimes in your studio now all of a sudden?
Adam Curry
Oh, this is. This, this is these things in the back. It's funny, you know, I don't understand how that mic can pick this up.
John C. Dvorak
It's my ears.
Adam Curry
Well, I don't think anyone else can. Any chat room I'm going to.
John C. Dvorak
We don't have a ring. These trolls. Trolls. Do you hear the chimes now?
Adam Curry
I'm ringing them loud.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. Well, you hear that for sure? Sure.
Adam Curry
Well, not necessarily. That's on the backside of the mic.
John C. Dvorak
Everybody hears it. Everybody hears it.
Adam Curry
They all hear that?
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, they all hear it. Yes.
Adam Curry
That's disappointing. It must be reflective. That could be it.
John C. Dvorak
Of course, one of the the hottest car manufacturers right now is certainly not American.
Pam Bondi
BYD sales last year surpassed the $100 billion mark, beating rival Tesla on revenue for the first time time since 2018. It reported a revenue of $107 billion for 2024, up 29%. Tesla's 2024 revenue meanwhile stood at 97.7 billion this year already looks like it could be an even better one for the Chinese EV maker. It unveiled a new ecosystem that allows EVs to charge for 400km in just five minutes and introduce advanced driver assistance technology in even its most basic models.
Adam Curry
You wanted to say I'd like to know this BYD I'm impressed with. But of course they don't sell any even one car in this country. So they. So the market possibilities for them is pretty high.
John C. Dvorak
I think you have the same question I have about the charging.
Adam Curry
How does this work?
John C. Dvorak
Well, I looked it up. It will charge within five minutes. Minutes with a. Now they make it sound nice to say a thousand kilowatt charger. That's a megawatt. You're going to put a megawatt charger in my house now?
Adam Curry
No, it's not for. No. The idea though. That's not the idea.
John C. Dvorak
That's what I read.
Adam Curry
No, the idea is that you have gas station like facilities.
John C. Dvorak
Yes.
Adam Curry
That you drive to and you stick it just like a guy in a. In a normal gas station. The big advantage, we don't have a. I don't keep gas here at the house. House. I go to the gas station and within five minutes I fill up a tank of gas. The idea is that you should be able to do the same thing with an electric car as opposed to nowadays where you stop at one of these charging stations. You have to wait a half an hour to, for the car to get even a 300 mile, even a half charge. It takes an hour to two hours sometimes to get a full charge.
John C. Dvorak
I understand.
Adam Curry
So they want to make it so you don't have to charge at home.
John C. Dvorak
I understand. But are you going to get a megawatt at gas stations? How is that going to happen? One megawatt, that's a pretty big jolt. I mean, yeah, yes, you're absolutely right. But that means you need a whole bunch of infrastructure to do what you just said.
Adam Curry
You're right. They can't even affect Biden for the whole four years. If you recall, right at the get go in 2020, he says we're going to build 300,000 charging stations or some outrageous number. It was at least 50,000. I'm not sure what the number is now because I've forgotten. But he was going to build and he built one.
John C. Dvorak
So BYD has a deal with Shell in Shenzhen and the airport has 258 public fast charging ports. I don't know if these are the.
Adam Curry
No, they're not the. No, no. This five minute thing is brand new. There's no way that they're going to have that many online right away. It's going to take forever.
John C. Dvorak
So basically.
Adam Curry
But if it takes a megawatt.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah.
Adam Curry
You know, you're going to have to have some serious juice going in there.
John C. Dvorak
So they, so they say that. So this is near the airport. Solar panels installed on the roof could generate about 300 kilowatt hours of renewable electricity electronically used to charge the vehicles. I'm skeptical of that too. So I mean a kilowatt hour, especially.
Adam Curry
In China or around that airport. I've been to China to know that. Smog, there's no sun.
John C. Dvorak
Exactly. So I'm skeptical about this announcement.
Adam Curry
And to make, and to get that amount of power you have to have these coal burning, you know, power stations making the, making this smog worse.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, yeah. So I'm very skeptical about all that.
Adam Curry
Yeah, I am too. I mean I think the tech, they may have the technology, but they don't think they have. Well, sure, sure.
John C. Dvorak
I mean I, I could but even.
Adam Curry
By, by the way, I'm skept. Skeptical about the technology too.
John C. Dvorak
If I could get a megawatt of power, I'd be mining bitcoin. Come on man. I'm going to charge my car. I'll stay home and print money. That's a lot of power. Power. One of the news girls, you, you'll recognize who it is. I Don't know if it's cbs, the NBC girl. I talked to Warren Buffett about the tariffs and he had some interesting answers.
Pam Bondi
How do you think tariffs will affect the economy?
Adam Curry
Tariffs are actually, we've had a lot.
John C. Dvorak
Of experience with them. They're, they're an act of war to some degree.
Pam Bondi
How do you think tariffs will impact inflation over time?
John C. Dvorak
There are tax on, on goods. I mean, you know, what.
Adam Curry
Is that Nora?
John C. Dvorak
I think it is Nora, yeah.
Adam Curry
Yeah.
John C. Dvorak
Well, it's a highly edited piece, but she's talking about inflation. He's talking about inflation, but he's talking about money printing inflation. As far as I'm concerned on goods, I mean, you know, the tooth fairy doesn't pay up. You always have to just. And then what?
Adam Curry
You always have asked as that question.
John C. Dvorak
Economics always say, and then what?
Pam Bondi
So is there an answer for that? When people say, you know, inflation persists, consumer prices keep going up, when's the end in sight?
John C. Dvorak
No, prices will be higher 10 years now and 20 years from now and 30 years now.
Pam Bondi
And what do you think about what's happening in Washington right now?
John C. Dvorak
That's because of money printing. Of course it'll be more expensive 10 years from now, 20 years from now.
Adam Curry
It always has been.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, we also, we used to buy our Toyota trucks for 5, 59, 99. That efforts. That's Washington. Yeah, it's, you know, technology changes things, all kinds of things, but Washington is Washington. And the problem with politics is that it tend to have to make tiny compromises as you go along. There you go. So they got, they got him to say prices will go up, but I don't think he was in the same conversation. And we'll see, we'll see what happens. I mean, it all comes down to what do you want to buy? You know, he's not taxing avocados. No tariffs on that. On a car. Well, when's the last time you bought a car? 26 years ago.
Adam Curry
I bought a car. I buy this last car. Used, of course.
John C. Dvorak
Of course.
Adam Curry
Bought it about seven years ago, maybe.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, that's what I'm saying. It's not like, oh, oh, no one will buy cars anymore. We'll see. In general, though, the economy of certain states is pretty bad. Really bad. In California, this was a shocking report, John. Shocking.
Pam Bondi
Several businesses along the famed Sunset Strip have closed in recent months.
John C. Dvorak
Others are on the verge and there is a community effort underway to save one one of them. KTLA's Andy Rose Ramos live in West Hollywood with more on that. Andy Rose Good morning. Hey, guys.
Pam Bondi
Good morning to you both. Yeah, we keep on hearing about this happening over and over again. We counted a total of five businesses and restaurants that have announced their closing just in the past two months.
John C. Dvorak
Okay, so she's on the Sunset Strip. It's a big story. An important restaurant is closing. Which one is it? You've been up and down the Strip. You've been to La Dome. It's not the Dome, by the way. You've been to Sunset of the, the cool places on Sunset Strip. Which one is closing?
Adam Curry
Probably some place I never heard of. No, you've heard of this one on the Sunset Strip?
John C. Dvorak
I've been to this one many times.
Pam Bondi
I don't know here on the Sunset Strip. Including the restaurant you see behind me, beloved Le Petit 4. It has been around.
John C. Dvorak
Le Petit 4? Le Petit 4, that's where all the, all the Russians in tracksuits hang out.
Adam Curry
I've never been there.
John C. Dvorak
You've never been to Le Petit 4? Oh, no.
Pam Bondi
For over 40 years. And now some community members coming together to make a last ditch effort in order to try and save it. Take a look. Here they are posting this GoFundMe page.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. With $6,000. Good luck keeping your restaurant going, especially on that property. Yeah, but that's just. Maybe the Strip has just died. It probably has.
Adam Curry
Last time I was down there, it wasn't that it didn't have the same vibrancy that it used to have. That's for sure.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, man, when I lived there, it didn't have that vibrancy. It was already horrible compared to like late 80s, early 90s, when we go out to LA to film stuff. No, it's no good.
Adam Curry
Yeah, there's a depressing aspect to LA at the moment. Like San Francisco. It's just a. It's depressing because of all the homeless and the just. And it's got nothing to do with the California economy. Has to do with the policies regarding the homeless encampments and the allowance. And crime, a lot of crime.
John C. Dvorak
Well, but who, who lives in California? Just poor people and a bunch of rich people.
Adam Curry
I'm just middle class in California.
John C. Dvorak
A lot of middle class in the Valley, in the porn industry.
Adam Curry
It's not generalized.
John C. Dvorak
Okay, all right, you've got.
Adam Curry
Why would we do that?
John C. Dvorak
You've got several series here, so I'm going to let you choose one.
Adam Curry
Let's see what we got.
John C. Dvorak
Because, you know, unlike you, when I, when you have a series, I just step back and let you go.
Adam Curry
Yeah, there's some of this let's do the, let's do the. The order on. This is a quickie. This is the order on elections that didn't get any play at all.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, I thought it was pretty big.
Adam Curry
Trump on the elections. I didn't think it. I didn't hear much about it.
Pam Bondi
President Trump signed an executive order yesterday that aims to make sweeping changes to elections and voter registration, including a proof of citizenship requirement. Legal experts are calling it an overreach of presidential authority and warned that the provisions could block tens of millions of eligible Americans from voting. Joining us now with more is NPR's Jude Joffe Block. Hi, Jude. Hello. Hello, hello, hello, Hello. So what exactly is in this, once.
John C. Dvorak
Again, no time or expense spared for this program?
Pam Bondi
Executive order. Right, right, right. Well, there's a lot in here. And so it lays out a number of new requirements and says if states don't comply, they will not get federal funding. So one big change is this new proof of citizenship requirement to register to vote in federal elections. So you'd need to show a copy of a citizenship document, like a passport to a local or state official in order to register to vote, vote, or whenever you update your registration, like if you move. Another change, the executive order, aims to stop states from counting mailed ballots that are postmarked by election Day but arrive after. This is something that a lot of states allow. Wait, legally, can the president make all of these changes simply by executive order? Well, that's really the key question. So Trump is trying to assert that he, as president, has authority over elections, and that's not been the case. We have a decentralized system where states make a lot of their own election rules. But this order seeks to expand the president's power and test how far it can go.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, I don't think he's going to get that through. I like it, but I don't think that's going to happen.
Adam Curry
I agree. I really going to happen.
John C. Dvorak
I did learn that in Title 18 of the US Code that if you vote in a general election as a non, non, resident and not non citizen, I should say, and you're caught.
Adam Curry
You.
John C. Dvorak
Will not be prosecuted as long as you believed you were a citizen, which is very interesting. I don't.
Adam Curry
That's interesting.
John C. Dvorak
I don't know.
Adam Curry
That's in this report.
John C. Dvorak
No, no. I don't know when that snuck in, but that is like, oh, okay. So you can do it if you get caught. Oh, well, no problem.
Adam Curry
I thought I was a citizen.
Pam Bondi
Huh? What we've already heard from Voting Rights act advocates that Lawsuits are going to challenge this. And normally an overhaul like this would be something for Congress to take on. And in fact, Republicans have been backing a bill called the SAVE act that includes a lot of the same provisions as this order.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, man, that thing's been around for years. The SAVE Act. That's not new.
Adam Curry
It goes nowhere.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, no.
Pam Bondi
That bill likely faces an uphill battle in the Senate. So instead, some critics are saying Trump is forcing through that legislation by executive. Well, what has President Trump said about why he's pushing these changes? Well, he says it's necessary for election integrity. Here he is yesterday when he signed the order.
John C. Dvorak
We've got to straighten out our election. This country is so sick because of the election, the fake elections and the bad elections.
Pam Bondi
You know, of course, Trump touts the results of the last election, which he won, but it's long been part of his brand to make false claims, false claims about voter fraud, most notably when he denied the results of the 2020 election. And in the lead up to this past election, he and his allies made baseless, baseless claims about the threat of non citizens voting in large numbers, which we know from audits and studies that such cases are really rare. Yet that's what they're targeting here.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah.
Pam Bondi
Okay. Well, I'm curious. How are voting experts reacting to this order?
John C. Dvorak
You know, I just had an idea. Exit strategy does require work, but we could get people to help us. We could just do NPR remix and it's just doing exactly what you do. All those, those strange things they put in there, all of the, the little NLP tricks, all the hyperphoras, all that stuff could just be NPR remix and it would be a popular stream. You know, put it to some music and we can get a couple of our end of show mixers to put a beat under it.
Adam Curry
Yeah, it would be. I'm sure NPR would take offense and we'd get a cease and desist for. Well, for what? Well, you know, I think there's an argument that could be made that you could say it was for entertainment, humor purposes.
John C. Dvorak
Parody. Parody under. Parody under. What's it called?
Adam Curry
I don't know. Fair use.
John C. Dvorak
Fair use, yes. Parody under fair use. Totally appropriate.
Adam Curry
Yeah. Well, until then, I'm doing these.
Pam Bondi
Well, I spoke with UCLA law professor Rick Hassan, and he brought up how very rare these cases of noncitizen voting are, but that a proof of citizenship requirement would have a big impact and could disenfranchise millions of voters.
John C. Dvorak
So you'd be using a very strict rule to prevent a Very small amount of fraud. The intention seems likely to be to suppress the vote rather than to try to make our elections filled with greater integrity. Of course.
Pam Bondi
And, you know, people are already asked on voter registration forms to attest under penalty of perjury if they're citizens ineligible to vote, and they can face prison or deportation if they try to vote illegally.
John C. Dvorak
Okay.
Pam Bondi
See more.
John C. Dvorak
No, that's not true. Unless if they believe they were citizens, then there's no problem.
Adam Curry
In fact, that should have been in the report.
John C. Dvorak
Should have been right in there, but it wasn't incorrect.
Pam Bondi
And you know, people are already asked on voter registration forms to attest under penalty of perjury if they're citizens and eligible to vote, and they can face prison or deportation if they try to vote illegally. Okay, say more about how Rick Hassan told you if this order stands, millions of voters could be disenfranchised. Like, how would that happen exactly? Right. Well, past studies have found that almost 1 in 10Americans doesn't have a proof of citizenship document or doesn't have easy access to one. And this order is also a bit vague about even which documents would be accepted as proof of citizenship. It doesn't explicitly name birth certificates. It does name passports, but only about half of Americans have those. They cost money and take a while to get. So this rule would likely upend voter registration drives as well and other ways that Americans are used to signing up to vote. This would really be a sea change.
John C. Dvorak
Did I just hear an iPhone go? Was that on the clip or was that you?
Adam Curry
It wasn't me. I don't have an iPhone.
Pam Bondi
The upend voter registration drives as well, and other ways that Americans are used to signing up to vote. This would really be a clip.
John C. Dvorak
I was going to say, like, wait a minute, John has an iPhone.
Adam Curry
No.
John C. Dvorak
So annoying that npr, they just never have anyone on from the other side. They are, they are just, oh, this is no good. Oh, this is. Oh, this is bad. Oh, he's not going to make it through.
Adam Curry
The PBS is worse.
John C. Dvorak
Never, ever.
Adam Curry
One side there was brought up during the congressional hearings. I'm surprised you didn't have that clip where they asked this ma or woman. You know, you realize that they, they challenge the reporters you had. You had 87 reporters. They're all registered Democrats. There's not one Republican that works in the newsroom.
John C. Dvorak
87%, wasn't it? That was 80.
Adam Curry
No, it's a total number. Yeah, 87 to nothing.
John C. Dvorak
Thanks for saying you're surprised. You should email me with that. I'm surprised you didn't get that clip.
Adam Curry
I'm surprised you didn't get that clip because that was, I thought was a key element.
John C. Dvorak
Surprise. Big surprise. No Republicans at npr, huh?
Adam Curry
I know. And she was like, whoa, that's interesting. And she acted like she didn't know. Yeah, that was the funny part about it. What?
John C. Dvorak
Whoa. Gambling.
Adam Curry
Gambling. I can't believe that she's a spook.
John C. Dvorak
I. Okay, I want to. I have a couple of clips here. That means a series. Don't go to the. The end. You used the word splash earlier. I can't remember. I did, yeah. You said make a splash or something.
Adam Curry
Well, I think it had to do with Trump's approach. Yeah, maybe.
John C. Dvorak
Maybe. Well, because this is a word that I've heard that we heard about a week ago and it's back. And you could say splash or you could say splash for the Hague summit. What I hope coming out of the summit is that it will really be a splash. A splash, a big splash. This is the splash. This is Mark Rutte. He is the head of the NATO and he is. This is the big Hague summit, which he wants to be a splash. Projecting the collective NATO power and therefore also American power on the world stage. Yes, he's working for us still, of course, defending the Euro Atlantic, but I would even say the world stage, because it's not extending Article 5 to the Indo Pacific, but working together as NATO also to make sure that we keep the Indo Pacific safe. And that means spending more, it means producing more.
Adam Curry
What does NATO stand for?
John C. Dvorak
North American North Atlantic. North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
Adam Curry
What's that got to do with the Indo Pacific Pacific? It's North Atlantic is a very specific area.
John C. Dvorak
It does not make a difference.
Adam Curry
Atlantic Ocean, no, northern part.
John C. Dvorak
You can make a splash in any ocean. So it does not matter where the splash is, as long as it's a splash and it shows American. American power. And that means spending more. It means producing more, spending more. On worsted. It means a fair distribution between. Between the US and other NATO allies. Yes, it's fair. We need you. Not fair. You not fair. Europe. And as I said, it will be about the lethality. Lethality. Lethality. Yo, where we kill you with this stuff, man. The NATO kill your lethality. And. And as I said, it will be about the lethality. Lethality of NATO showing that, yes, we will never be an offensive organization. We are defensive organization. We are defensive. We're not making any troubles.
Adam Curry
Tell that to the Libyans.
John C. Dvorak
We're not making trouble.
Adam Curry
Can somebody explain to me why they attacked Libya.
John C. Dvorak
Why do you ask these questions every time he's saying that we're defensive. Just shut up. Lethality. Lethality of nature. Showing that, yes, we will never be an offensive organization. We are defensive organization. But don't, don't dare to attack us. Don't you dare to attack us because you will not see the light of day again. And I hope that will be. This guy is the biggest warmonger in the universe. Don't you dare attack us. The real outcome of the Hake summit, a splash showing that reinvigorated alliance standing together. One for all, all for one. We are the three, three musketeers. One for all, all for one. But, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but don't. This is not, we're not doing this because USA wants it. This is not about usa. Except you don't want to cross usa first of all by understanding that we do not do this because the Americans want us to do it, but because we need to do it because of Russia. We don't do it because the Americans it's. Remember, I will change my story at the end of this clip. But it's not because Americans want it. And the threat, by the way, by spending more you will also have a fair burden sharing with the US because the US rightly is irritated about the fact that in Europe we have collected the peace dividend and I myself as prime minister was part of that and that was wrong. Luckily the Netherlands, France is now spending over 2%. Luckily. But collectively we have collected the peace dividend. This was not. And, and rightly the US is irritated so by spending more because of the Russian threats. The effect of that is also that you have a fair burden sharing with the United States. But it's not, it's not because America wants this. Just so you know, it's not about that. And a few countries not yet at 2%. I would love to say that since I came in on the 1st of October, things started to change. That was not true. But there happened something on the 20th of January in the US and since then, look what happened. It's amazing. It's not about America, what America wants or Trump who became, who became president on January 20th. But it's amazing. The Belgians have been saying we want to get to 2% by the summer. Spain now is saying they want to get to 2% this summer. We know that Portugal, Italy, the all have these debates now and I tell them that, well, now I am calling you to ask you to deliver the 2% by the summer. So that collectively we can move considerably north of the 2% because we have to spend much, much more than 2%. But this is not about America. This is not because America wants it. But now I'm calling you, but you might get a very patient man from Washington on the line if you don't listen to me. And I would love to listen into those phone calls, but let's hope they are not necessary. And at this moment, I must say that all these non 2 percenters are having genuine debates to move to the 2% before summer. So all the non 2 percenters, it's not about America, but if you don't step up, you might get a call from Washington and you don't want to get that call. That's exactly what he said.
Adam Curry
That's exactly what he said.
John C. Dvorak
And so now, now we have to make sure that we all understand that this is long term. This is not just a Ukraine issue. We are never, ever, I don't care what kind of peace deal is made. It's never going to end.
Pam Bondi
It's the result of 12 hours of behind closed doors talk.
John C. Dvorak
I'm sorry, wrong one. Here it is. This is the one. Well, there will be no normalization of relations with Russia when the war is over. That will not happen. This will take decades because there is a total lack of confidence. The threat is still there. As I said in my speech, even if the war comes to a conclusion, the Russian threat is still there. They are building a war economy. They are spending so much money on defense. It's a war economy. They are producing in three months in ammunition what the whole of the alliance is producing in a year. We are ramping up our ammunition production. Luckily, we have to pick it up. So there's no way that we can normalize relations with Russia after the war in many decades from now. And, and post Putin that there might be some. But I mean, I'm not optimistic. Post Putin, this was the, this is the most outrageous thing you can say, well, even, even if we have a total truce there in Ukraine, nothing's going to normalize with Russia in ever until no post Putin. Post Putin. Post Putin. And guess what? Zelensky said. Ukrainian President Zelensky has claimed that his.
Adam Curry
Russian counterpart Putin will die soon. The remarks came amid widespread speculation about the Russian president's health. Russia has strongly rejected all speculations and.
John C. Dvorak
Maintained the Russian leader is fully fit.
Adam Curry
The Ukrainian leader made the bold claim while speaking to French journalists in a.
John C. Dvorak
Televised interview after meeting French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris. Zelensky said Putin hopes to remain in.
Pam Bondi
Power until his death.
John C. Dvorak
And his ambitions are not limited to Ukraine. He added that the Russian leaders death would bring an end to the war between the two nations. There have been continued speculations over Putin's deteriorating health.
Adam Curry
Videos have survived surfaced of the Russian leader with puffy face and making jerky movements.
John C. Dvorak
He got puffy face and making. He's gonna die. He's got puffy face. Videos have surfaced of the Russian leader.
Adam Curry
With puffy face and making jerky movements.
John C. Dvorak
Some videos also showed Putin coughing continuously. Just last week suggested that Putin suffered.
Pam Bondi
A mini stroke with video showing his.
Adam Curry
Legs shaking unconventional, uncontrollably.
John C. Dvorak
This was during a conference and interview and other times. So kind of a dipshit report was that. Well, it seemed.
Adam Curry
And he has restless leg syndrome, I guess.
John C. Dvorak
So he said it in Ukrainian and all the clips France 24 Franz von Katra does not have any report of this even though he said it in France. So I found that to be somewhat odd. But all the reports had. The mix was no good. Zelensky speaking in Ukrainian and the English translation is equally loud is very hard to understand. But he says, that's what he says. Oh, Putin's going to die soon anyway and then it will all end. Which is in my mind a veiled threat. Oh, he's going to die, don't worry. And if he dies, no matter how he dies, then it's all going to be over.
Adam Curry
How does that work?
John C. Dvorak
Well, because it's the same thing. That's why they wanted regime change. That's why the CIA said hey, if you're living in Russia and you want to become a spook, let us know. Here's our. Here's our email address. They've always. It's only a Putin. You never hear the Russian. The Russian citizens are no good. Never hear that. It's only Putin. Putin. Putin. Putin. Putin. Putin. Putin. Putin. Putin. Putin. Putin.
Adam Curry
Putin.
John C. Dvorak
Putin. Putin. The only baddie they have is Putin. And now, oh, the unthinkable has happened. We seem to be making headway with a peace deal. Oh no.
Pam Bondi
It's the result of 12 hours of behind closed doors talks in a series of meetings over three days in Riyadh. Two statements from the White House outlining separate agreements with Ukraine and Russia to ensure safe navigation in the Black Sea and to implement a ban on attacks by the two countries on each other's energy facilities. Both sides agreed that third parties could oversee the truce. Separately, the United States also agreed that it would help restore Russia's access to the world market for agricultural and fertilizer exports, an incentive to Moscow blasted by Volodymyr Zelensky.
John C. Dvorak
We believe that this is a weakening of the position and a weakening of sanctions, in our opinion. We do not yet know the details of this item and we were not.
Pam Bondi
Present at this meeting, but this was.
John C. Dvorak
Not on our agenda.
Pam Bondi
Nonetheless, Kyiv said it would uphold its end of the agreement while calling for more talks to settle the details. The Kremlin, meanwhile, declared that the agreement could only come into force after the lifting of restrictions on its agricultural exports. Earlier, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Moscow didn't trust the Ukrainian president to uphold a ceasefire.
John C. Dvorak
We need clear guarantee guarantees. These guarantees can only be the result of an order by Washington to Zelensky.
Pam Bondi
The limited truce on energy and sea came about after Vladimir Putin responded to the originally proposed full 30 day ceasefire with a long list of conditions. The White House said Tuesday it would continue facilitating talks on both sides in a bid towards achieving a sustainable peace.
John C. Dvorak
So not quite the end the war in 24 hours that we were promised. I'm sorry, that was.
Adam Curry
Sarcastic.
John C. Dvorak
Sarcastic. He was being sarcastic. So they're starting very, very slowly. We need to make peace profitable again. I don't know how to do it.
Adam Curry
Let's bring these clips in. These are Trump versus the EU on npr.
John C. Dvorak
As we've reported before on this show, US administrations, at least as far back as George W. Bush's, have been pushing European nations to increase their defense spending. But throughout the US has remained committed to the principle of NATO's article, which says that an attack against one ally is considered as an attack against all allies. That commitment appears to have ended with President Trump.
Adam Curry
I think it's common sense, right? If they don't pay, I'm not going to defend them.
John C. Dvorak
No, I'm not going to defend them. It's common sense. You don't pay, we don't defend you. NATO shmato is no good.
Adam Curry
Yeah, they go on with this. This one.
John C. Dvorak
Now, for the record, Article 5 of NATO has only ever been invoked once, and it was by the United States. Bronislav Slev teaches military and war studies at the University of California, San Diego. When Article 5 was invoked after 9 11, the Europeans responded. Canadians, they went and they died. The British went and they died. Everybody responded. Wait a minute. Didn't the French say that they didn't like it? Didn't we have freedom fries for that whole Russian reason?
Adam Curry
There was something. Was the freedom fries derived from it had something to do with it?
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. I thought the French were like, nah, Nah, no, no, we're not going to do that. I'll look it up. That includes the French, by the way, who supported the US by sending troops to Afghanistan, 89 of whom died and more than 700 of whom were wounded.
Adam Curry
Iraq war.
John C. Dvorak
Public scorn for these sacrifices is just one barb on the Arab pierced the heart of the European American religion relationship and shredded trust between them. And it's galvanized European governments to make themselves independent of the US when it comes to their defense. But Fenella McGurdy says Europe was already ramping up its defense spending long before Trump came into office.
Pam Bondi
Fenella is a senior fellow for Defense.
John C. Dvorak
Economics at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London.
Pam Bondi
In 2024, we saw record defence spending growth, already 11.7% in real time terms, and that was itself an increase. So an acceleration from the level of growth we saw in 2023, which reached 5.2%, and that was an acceleration from the growth the year before.
John C. Dvorak
The EU plan announced last week will likely break new records. It advocates a massive ramp up of defence industrial production capacity and it unlocks a combined $866 billion in military spending over four years. That's a bite what the US spends in a single year on defense. So Branislav says it's not even close to a con into a war economy, but it could still be good medicine for Europe.
Adam Curry
You know, there's a funny phenomenon I've noticed. It goes, goes basically like this, well, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump. But we're going to do that anyway. Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump. Well, we're going to do that anyway. So it's not important. This is the same phenomena you see with the NPR thing. And there was other, there's other examples I've had on the show. They say, well, it's only, it's only 1%. Doesn't you know, oh, they're taking all our money away. But what's only 1%? Yeah, yeah, it's only 1%, but still. Or the park services, like, oh, the government is making a great investment. The $10 billion on national parks generates 70 billion. What do you need the 10 for? I found this on and on this, this idea. You complain about something but then back it off and say, well, it's not important. Just doesn't make any sense. Now further on this, by the way, this goes on forever. The third clip is deep into the conversation. Near the end, I just thought I'd put drop that in.
John C. Dvorak
Everything is changing right now. This current war, things have evolved dramatically initially. For instance, everybody was Talking artillery in tanks, that was a big thing. Then the tanks turned out not to be super effective. Now everything is drones and the missiles. Right. And everything then is. Why is he laughing about. About that is because they're so cheap. It's like drones. Now everything is drones, the missiles. Right. And why is that funny?
Adam Curry
That is an interesting. I didn't notice this, but you're right.
John C. Dvorak
Why is it.
Adam Curry
It's a laugh tell. But why.
John C. Dvorak
Why drones? Drone. I don't know.
Adam Curry
Drones. Oh, missiles.
John C. Dvorak
Everything is drones and the missiles. Right. And everything then is related to how you can keep electronic warfare from. From the interference. Do you have eyes in the sky? So the satel. So these are the kind of capabilities we should not be building to fight. In other words, the whole thing is a farce. I think that's why he's laughing. War has become a farce. It's like, it's just. It's like a. It's like a video game. We just push this, we just push that. We got eye in the sky, we got drones, we got missiles. It's not really like fighting in the trenches anymore. The last three wars, we should be building to fight the next one. Europe can do all sorts of things to move quickly, or at least more quickly than it usually does. It can convert old factories to make arms and reconfigure existing ones to become dual use civilian and military production hubs. It can develop supply relationships with other arms providers like South Korea or Israel. But whatever it does, it'll take time. Fenella says, and because of that, the US will likely remain part of the European defense equation for the foreseeable future.
Pam Bondi
It takes decades for a lot of these programs. So I think that there's some level of dependence will always be there, certainly in things like heavy lift transport and things like that, because those capabilities do take time to develop. And I think Europe could get there, but not in perhaps in the time frame it needs. So there's always going to be that some level of reliance on the US and hopefully some partnerships going forward which ultimately is good for US defense industry as well.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, Eric Schmidt is a smart guy, man. I remember we played clip of him all about drones. Drones is the new warfare. This is where it's going. And there it is. There it is. It's all cheap technology to blow people up. By the way, food has been renaming food in time of war is not new. So freedom fries. Freedom fries was indeed changed the name of French fries in 2003. France's opposition to invading Iraq, which in hindsight of course they were correct.
Adam Curry
Yeah. So we punished them.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, yeah. We're going to show you Frenchies. World War I sauerkraut was renamed in America to Liberty Cabbage. And frankfurter's and hot dogs were changed to Liberty Dog. Liberty Dog. We need to. We need a. We need an anti Russian kind of thing. But the thing is, Russian, Russian foods.
Adam Curry
Russians.
John C. Dvorak
Well, vodka. We could change vodka.
Adam Curry
Vodka. You could change that to Freedom Juice.
John C. Dvorak
Freedom Juice.
Adam Curry
Freedom Juice.
John C. Dvorak
I'm writing it down. Yeah, Freedom Juice. What else? Liberty SAP. I mean, there's all. All kinds.
Adam Curry
Liberty SAP.
John C. Dvorak
Hey, man, hit me with some Liberty SAP, neat. Okay. Nice. Oh, man, the people are crazy. The world has gone nuts. It's gone nuts, I tell you. The world has gone nuts.
Adam Curry
Well, I do have a couple of. I got. These are clips. I want to get out of the way. This is the D E I D O A clips. There's only two of them.
John C. Dvorak
Okay. All right. President Trump has called for an end. Wow. You got to warn me. You got to warn me about that kind of stuff. You got. You can't just launch into shush, suffer and succotash. I'm Scott Simon. President Trump has called for an end to what he calls illegal diversity, equity and inclusion efforts. So he has revoked a 1965 executive order that has guided generations of federal contractors and how to comply with non discrimination laws. As NPR's Andrea Hsu reports, that's leaving federal contractors who employ one in five workers in the U.S. scrambling.
Pam Bondi
The end of Lyndon B. Johnson's Executive Order 11246 has kept Matt Cammardella busy. His whole practice at the law firm Jackson Lewis is helping companies that do business with the government comply with that order and with other federal laws. Since Trump's return, he's been fielding questions nonstop.
John C. Dvorak
This is pretty much all I've been doing for the last six weeks.
Pam Bondi
The 1965 executive order required most federal contractors to take steps to and address barriers to employment for anyone, but especially women and people of color. Cammardela says his clients took those responsibilities seriously. Every year, they'd analyze their hiring and pay practices to try to figure out, for example, if women were getting paid less than men. They'd plan out how to recruit a diverse workforce so that their hires reflected the pool of available workers around them.
John C. Dvorak
There was real risk in not doing this properly. Properly or at all, for that matter.
Pam Bondi
But now things have gotten complicated. Not only has Trump revoked Johnson's executive order and halted its enforcement, the president has also issued his own executive order Requiring contractors to certify that they're not engaging in illegal dei.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, well, you know, it.
Adam Curry
I didn't realize this went back to Lyndon Johnson.
John C. Dvorak
No, I didn't know that either. But it doesn't surprise me, strangely enough. But it really, I mean, the thing that people forget about DEI is it was a part of esg. And the reason why companies all got on board with it is because if you were, they had a score and it was, I think it was the blackrock guys, didn't they, didn't they come up with some board and this board determined Larry Fink. Yes, the Finkelmeister. And they had a score system and depending on your environmental, social and governance score, you became less or more investable by pension funds mainly. That's why everyone got. It was a, it was a real, real evil thing they did.
Adam Curry
Yeah, but they pulled the plug on it finally.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, yes, they did.
Pam Bondi
Of course.
Adam Curry
Mainly because the investments were bad. The high scoring ESG guys weren't good.
John C. Dvorak
Company lose your pants.
Pam Bondi
A court has blocked that part of Trump's order for now. Still, Cammardella says the problem is nobody.
John C. Dvorak
Really understands what illegal DEI means.
Pam Bondi
He says nothing about federal anti discrimination law has changed. In fact, he believes there's nothing wrong with a company carrying on with what it had been doing, looking at its pay practices or its hiring or its outreach to ensure it's complying with the law.
John C. Dvorak
However, there may be a pursuit perception that somehow that smacks of illegal dei. I'm very concerned.
Pam Bondi
Jenny Yang headed the Labor Department office that enforced the 1965 executive order under President Biden. That office investigated employers in all kinds of industries. Tech, manufacturing, construction. In 2020, Princeton University agreed to pay more than a million dollars in back wages and salary adjustments to about 100 female female professors after the government found pay disparities. The university denied it had discriminated against women, but agreed to look more closely at its pay practices. Jenny Yang says the Office of Federal Contractor Compliance Programs, or ofccp, can claim many successes. So in the last decade, OFCCP recovered, for example, over $100 million for women who were victims of discrimination. Now, under Trump, that office is expected to be largely dismantled since its primary task is gone. The Labor Department has not confirmed when that's going to happen. Trump says ending illegal discrimination will allow people to compete based on merit.
John C. Dvorak
Speaking of dei, the Canadian Transportation Board released the data from the black box of the. Was it the Delta flight? The.
Adam Curry
The one that flipped over?
John C. Dvorak
The one that flipped over. And so they have not yet Released the cockpit voice recorder, which would be. Which would be important to hear. So. So just on the pilots. So indeed, the first officer, the female, the co pilot was a. She had just about the. I mean, she graduated from the Wright Academy and it's all within the rules. Then you don't need 1500 hours, but 1000 hours. So she racked up another almost 500. She'd flown 56 hours that week and she was piloting, which is very normal, particularly when you note that the captain, the pilot, the one actually in control of the entire flight, not only a very high amount of hours, but a trainer on simulators and real world. So that is exactly the scenario you want. You want pilots to be flying and learn how to fly and learn all kinds of scenarios when you have an instructor there next to her. In the. This case, there was nothing wrong with the aircraft, but there were wind gusts and this was a very hard landing. The landing gear is rated to a drop onto the tarmac with a sink rate, I think 760ft per minute. They headed at over a thousand. So what happened was, as I said, is the. And it. So the full weight came down on the right rear landing gear. It snapped off and that's why the wing hit the ground. And then they were very fortunate how that all ended up. So it's not necessarily a DEI issue. There's female pilots out there who yell at me when I say this. This could have happened to any pilot. But really, the male pilot in command was in charge. He should have had his hands on the yoke. He should have been following through the whole time. So we'll see exactly what was said. But I think this could have happened to anybody. But it wasn't good. It was clearly human error. And that's your updates from the air BBC World Service aviation update. Speaking of illegal dei, there's another good. Another term that popped up in regards to the GLP P1, or as we say, who. I went to my. I got my haircut in Austin the other day. What. What is it? Glute. Glute. What's the name of the. The compound? Gluta.
Adam Curry
Glutamate. Glutamine. Glutamine.
John C. Dvorak
Glutamine. No, it's not glutamine.
Adam Curry
Glutatide. Gluti. Gluti tootie.
John C. Dvorak
Gluti tootie. No, she pronounced it in a French way and it sounded kind of good. Oh, semi. Glutidase. Semi. Because now every single hair salon hands out little flyers, little cards for the injection nurse, which we learned just a few weeks ago. And you get your Botox, you get your lip fillers, and you get your GLP1. Your semiglutates kind of a place are you going to. Every place has that. Now, by the way.
Adam Curry
They.
John C. Dvorak
Yes, yes.
Adam Curry
You're going to some sort of a screwball place. Some sort of a. Please. With the. With the upper crust of Dallas or whatever. Who in Austin?
John C. Dvorak
Okay, so first of all, it's a women's hair salon, mainly.
Adam Curry
Well, that would make sense.
John C. Dvorak
Although the former New York banker also goes there. I've been going to her for 15 years. So I. When we left Austin, I was not going to give up on my hair relationship. But it's good because she is definitely libtard adjacent. But she has no problem with my views. And we always have really nice conversation. And she always. Because she has no one to talk to about how crazy people. No one in her life. Not her partner, nobody. She can't.
Adam Curry
She can't just say she's a lesbian.
John C. Dvorak
No, no, she's not a lesbian. She's a deadhead, though. She goes to Vegas to sit in the sphere three nights in a row when she loved John Mayer. But, you know, like, she. She has no one in her life.
Adam Curry
How old is this woman?
John C. Dvorak
She is 47, I think. 47.
Adam Curry
47.
John C. Dvorak
Yes. What does that have to do with anything?
Adam Curry
I just want to know why. Who would go to Vegas and sit in the sphere for three days unless they were a young stoner?
John C. Dvorak
Thousands and thousands of people.
Adam Curry
Young stoners.
John C. Dvorak
Yes. And so she. And Vegas is now legal to be stoned everywhere. Walk around. The whole place smells like weed.
Adam Curry
You can drink, though, on the street.
John C. Dvorak
Yes, you can smoke weed on the street, too. But now the hotels, the casinos, everything smells of weed. Anyway. It's horrible. It's nasty to get to the point of the story. So she can't just say, oh, I enjoyed watching Trump on Rogan. She can't say that to anybody in her world. World in Austin, despite the fact that.
Adam Curry
Rogan is in Austin. He's a local.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, no, that's. That is not done. And. And she said that she had a client the other day and she would, you know. And these are just, you know. Yeah, maybe. Maybe upper crust. I'm not sure. But Austin white Austin women. And. And she. And the. The topic of Tesla came up, and Elon, she's like, yeah, well, you know, and. And her customers said, you know, he's a Nazi, right? And my girl was like, no, he is a. So these people, these Are educated people actually believe he is a Nazi? Because like a literal Nazi, not just like a name you call someone. No, he's a Nazi. He is an actual Nazi. Exactly. Anyway, back to the. It was a fun trip. It's worth the drive, trust me. Back to this illegal term when it comes to the semi glutides. Listen to this.
Pam Bondi
A new report reveals illegal ingredients in knockoff weight loss drugs that are flooding into the United States. Shabir Imber Shaftar is the executive director of the Partnership for Safe Medicine Medicines and the co author of this new report.
John C. Dvorak
He's joining me now live.
Pam Bondi
Hello to you.
John C. Dvorak
So illegal ingredients. Now when you hear that, what is the first thing you think? Apparently nothing. You walked away. You walked away during my report. Are you peeing?
Adam Curry
You just like I always forget that I have speakers.
John C. Dvorak
Do you have something else to do?
Adam Curry
Yeah, the phone was ringing off the hook.
John C. Dvorak
Well, we've been doing the show for over 17 years. Take it off the hook already.
Adam Curry
And, and I listened to the clip and the clip was going on and on and I said, well, this clip is going to go on long enough that I can walk over to the phone and take it off the hook. And you can hear it beeping back there.
John C. Dvorak
Yes.
Adam Curry
And then you come on with a question out of the blue.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, no. I thought we were doing a show, but oh, no, no. Okay. Did you understand the question? Would you like me to restart the clip and do the question again and we can end up.
Adam Curry
I heard the clip. I could hear the clip. The question was vague.
John C. Dvorak
I'll play the clip again because you.
Adam Curry
It was about. No, it was about what, what ingredients? No, they're illegal.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah.
Adam Curry
You said what ingredients were illegal.
John C. Dvorak
No, I said when someone says an ingredient is illegal, what is the. This is a news report. What do you think that means? Means.
Adam Curry
And that what you just said is different than what I just said that you contradict and said I didn't know what you were talking about.
John C. Dvorak
Answer the question.
Adam Curry
Go what do I think that Mark Levin. And so go the. What do I think it means? It means that something's toxic.
John C. Dvorak
Yes, that's, that's my point. Thank you for answering the question correctly. You go on to our second round.
Pam Bondi
Of this new report.
John C. Dvorak
He's joining me now live. Live.
Pam Bondi
Hello to you. Hello. And thank you for covering this critical safety information.
John C. Dvorak
I'm clearly a PR guy. He's not a doctor, he's a PR dude. The information, of course, you know, let's.
Pam Bondi
Start with what you found and what your report reveals.
John C. Dvorak
When it comes to these illegal weight.
Pam Bondi
Loss drugs that are coming into the country now.
John C. Dvorak
All sense, the whole thing is illegal.
Pam Bondi
So in our report we studied shipments of semaglutide and tirzepatide, the activated active ingredients in these very popular weight loss medications that were coming into the country.
John C. Dvorak
And found that there were shipments that.
Pam Bondi
Were declared as being made in factories that the FDA did not even know of, were not registered with the FDA.
John C. Dvorak
And certainly never inspected. And some of them were marked as for compounding, which is a great concern of ours because there's been some issues with compounding these medicines and safety. So it's not that they were toxic ingredients, ingredients, they came from labs that the FDA had never heard of. So this is a PR move because it's just semaglutide, which is a non patentable peptide. But. Oh, they came from, they came from labs. The FDA's never. It's illegal, it's illegal.
Pam Bondi
Okay, so are these legal ingredients getting in.
Adam Curry
Oh boy, she really punches that one up.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, she punched it up, didn't she? I like that. Which is a great concern of ours.
Pam Bondi
Because there's been some issues with compounding.
John C. Dvorak
These medicines and safety.
Pam Bondi
Okay, so are these illegal ingredients getting into the legal.
John C. Dvorak
It was in her script. I think it was italicized in her script like. And really punch this one up because this is. This guy's paying to be on.
Pam Bondi
Okay, so are these illegal ingredients getting into the legal supply of these drugs? If that makes sense.
John C. Dvorak
It does make sense. We don't actually, because FDA does not publish where the shipments went.
Pam Bondi
We only know that There were nearly 200 shipments that came in that were made in places that could never have.
John C. Dvorak
Been safe even if they'd been known to the fda.
Pam Bondi
One was a JW Marriott. There was another one at a health fitness club and another one at a high school in Canada.
John C. Dvorak
And none of those could possibly even believably be legal and legitimate or safe facilities. And then he adds safe, legal or legitimate or are safe. So the message is get your brand name drugs, everybody get them now. Because all of your Congress people have been paid off by him. According to RFK Jr today, over 100 members of Congress support a bill to fund Ozempic with Medicare at fifteen hundred dollars a month. Most of these members have taken money from the manufacturer of that product and a European company called Novo Nordisk. As everyone knows, once a drug is approved for Medicare, it goes to Medicaid. And there is a push to recommend Ozempic for Americans as young as six, over A condition obesity that is completely preventable and barely even existed 100 years ago. Since 74% of Americans are obese, the cost of all, all of them, if they take their Ozempic prescription, will be $3 trillion a year. This is a drug that has made Novo Nordisk the biggest company in Europe. It's a Danish company, but the Danish government does not recommend. It recommends a change in diet to treat obesity and exercise virtually. Novo Nordisk entire value is based upon its projections of what Ozem is going to sell to Americans. For half the price of Ozempic, we could purchase regeneratively raised organic agriculture or organic food. Every American, three meals a day and gym membership for every obese American. Why are members of Congress doing the bidding of this Danish company instead of standing up for American farmers and children? Because Novo Nordisk is one of the largest, largest funders of medical research. The media and politicians and the medical schools all go along with them. I like the calculation. I think we should give away organic food, three meals a day to everybody and a gym membership. I'm all for that. Put it on Medicare. Here's my Medicare card. Give me my beef. Talk is cheap. Bobby. Get on the stick already. This, you know, I think there was.
Adam Curry
Yeah, actually did. I'm with you on this. Talk is cheap. Get on the stick. The main thing is, let's get these advertisers off the TV for starters. Which he's been threatening to do. Now, he came up in the conversation just recently, but there's still no action. The media, of course, won't be too happy about it.
John C. Dvorak
Why not?
Adam Curry
That's where half their income comes from.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, the media. I thought you said Mimi. I'm like, why would Mimi be upset with that? I have screaming Mimi's in my brain ever since you said it.
Adam Curry
Screaming me. Me is a. Is a phrase.
John C. Dvorak
Yes. I'd never heard it. I've learned something. There's. There's been a rumor going around and people like. I think Zero Hedge even published it. No, unusual. Unusual Whales. There you go. There's a rumor that he's. He's going to do it. He's going to do it. He's going to do it.
Adam Curry
He's going to do it.
John C. Dvorak
He's going to do it. He's going to ban Big Pharma advertising. But I think that started with a parody account on X, which a lot of people.
Adam Curry
Well, he promised he's going to do it.
John C. Dvorak
Was it a true promise?
Adam Curry
It's one of the three, but let me just.
John C. Dvorak
Okay. One. What was it? Advertising. Let's listen to it again. I'm not intimidated by the agencies. I know how they work and I know how to change them. And most of those changes, you do not need companies. Congress for the president, President Trump could have done it, had the power to do it himself and President Biden has the power to do it himself. And I'll give you an example. With a stroke of the pen you can change back the rule that allows pharmaceutical advertisers to do direct to consumer ads on television. That's one of the big problem. That's why one of the reasons we have this intrens to agency capture not only of Congress, because they control the airwaves, they control the evening news. 75% of the revenues for those evening news shows are, you know, Anderson Cooper is coming from Pfizer and other pharmaceutical companies. So. And those companies are dictating content on those shows and they dictate the official narratives. And I have another clip here where he talked about it on Rogan. You know, ambitions have completely subsumed the regulatory function of those agencies and that has to end. You know, one of the things that we need to do too is to get rid of pharmaceutical advertising television. There's only two countries in the world that allow it. One is New Zealand, the other is our country. Everybody who is knowledgeable is against it. And it not only has compromised, you know, has compromised public health, we now we tend take largely because of that advertising. We take three or four times the amount of drugs as Europeans take. And drugs are the number three killer in our country. Pharmaceutical drugs, the number three killer after cancer and heart attacks. They're not making us healthier. We have, we spend more on health care. 4.3 trillion country in terms of our health outcomes, they're insufferable. Oh, all of these drugs. The pharmaceutical industry is not making us safe. And you know, we changed the rule in 1997, prior to 1997, like cigarettes and liquor, you couldn't advertise on TV. We changed those rules and FDA allowed the pharmaceutical companies to advertise and they not only now have a platform from which they can tell everybody you're sick, you, you need this, you need that. But also they are able to dictate content on television. So they can dictate content on the, you know, on the local and on YouTube. Yeah, of course. Yeah. Okay, well, get to it. Bobby.
Adam Curry
Yeah, we're waiting.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, because then we can finally get some big pharma ads on the podcast. Oh, John, I just got My got my Ozempic. I'm feeling great. I'm down £8,000. I heard a drug advertised on the radio the other day, like Restora or something.
Adam Curry
They have some. The more recent ones. I would. Guys are recording some of these because they're pushing a lot of drugs onto the TV that I've never heard of. They're all new and they got the worst side effects.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, well, sorry.
Adam Curry
And the worst names. The names are really bad in the city. Side effects are just off the off. They're wild.
John C. Dvorak
Let me think what this was called. It restores your muscle mass when you're on GLP1. Drugs.
Adam Curry
Wow. It's called steroids.
John C. Dvorak
No, no, no, no. It's. What was it called? I think it was called. It was something like Restora. Do you like being thin but your legs are breaking? We've got restoration Stora. Oh, man, it's so bad. And. And that. That was kind of my point when I saw the card, you know, I was like, yeah, get your Botox. Get your. Get your lip fillers.
Adam Curry
They gave you a. Okay, this is like a shaggy dog story.
John C. Dvorak
I should have taken it with me.
Adam Curry
We're back at. You didn't take the card with you?
John C. Dvorak
No. It's got a cute woman.
Adam Curry
Oh, wait a minute. You go on and on about how great it is to go to Austin. It's always worth the price of admission. You give me grief or just even suggesting anything, and then you leave the card.
John C. Dvorak
I know. I feel very bad about that. You should inject here. Maybe I can find her injection nurse. Austin. This. But this. So they put it.
Adam Curry
There's an injection nurse at your hairdresser.
John C. Dvorak
Well, she comes and here, 63 nurse injector jobs available in Austin, Texas. This is. This is. Wow. 29 to $56 an hour injection nurse jobs in Austin. Now hiring. Wow. It's called an aesthetic nurse.
Adam Curry
So they come in and Botox you or give you some GLP1 in the gut.
John C. Dvorak
Yep, that's the.
Adam Curry
What else could they give you? Shoot you up with steroids or can they do anything else? It's worthwhile.
John C. Dvorak
Well, I think that's the upsell is the beer. The nurse. The Austin nurse is an ex. This is the Austin nurse concierge Injection special specialists. It's concierge.
Adam Curry
I love that.
John C. Dvorak
Here we go. The Austin nurse is an experienced injection specialist committed to providing excellence in concierge injection administration and training. We provide help with fertility medications, anticoagulants, semaglutides like ozempic, blood glucose and insulin injectors and more. Yeah. So she'll come to your house. She's got a blog. Nice. Yeah, but this is the thing. This is what people are doing. You've heard of botox parties, certainly.
Adam Curry
No.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. Women actually talk in mls. How many mls did you get? As in milliliters?
Adam Curry
Yeah, It'd be milliliter.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. How many mls? Oh, I got 10 mls. What do you charge per. Per milliliter? Oh, it's only $79 per milliliter. It's sad. All women are fake. Not a single one is unbotoxed. I'm just guessing.
Adam Curry
I think there's plenty of unbotox gals out there.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. What do you think about Pam Bondage?
Adam Curry
Oh, she's definitely got botox in the forehead. You ever see her raise her eyebrows ever?
John C. Dvorak
Nope. Even when she said top guy, the eyebrows did not move. Top gu. Yeah, top guy. And with that, I want to thank you for your courage. Say in the morning to you, the man who put the sea in shaking the chain, say hello to my friend on the other end, the one, the only, the legendary Mr. John C. DeVora.
Adam Curry
Well, in the morning, you m k more ship sequencing, graphing the air subs in the water, the dames and knights out there.
John C. Dvorak
In the morning to the troll control room. We may not make another four years, John. Only 1890 today.
Adam Curry
That's average.
John C. Dvorak
To me, your numbers are off because ever since you started giving me crap about it, I started tracking it.
Adam Curry
Is the classic 24 on Sunday?
John C. Dvorak
No, the last 100 show average is 1904.
Adam Curry
Yeah, well, that's not the number I've ever heard.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, but I'm looking at the numbers, baby. I got the numbers.
Adam Curry
Yeah, you got numbers, but they're not the numbers you've been reading for the last 10 years. Yes, when you do the numbers, you can go back and listen to the past shows. It's 1600-1700-1800-1800, 1800. The number of times you said 1900 for a Thursday show is so low. It's like maybe once. Once every few months, but somehow it's the average. I call bogus.
John C. Dvorak
You can call whatever you want bogus. Speaking of. Speaking of. Of old shows, I have a. I have a throwback. You want to do a spread? A special bonus clip?
Adam Curry
Sure.
John C. Dvorak
And this is. Well, and then I have to play this two clips. I have to play the setup clip first. And the setup clip is something that we all probably heard about a year from now.
Pam Bondi
23Andme will be a year from now.
John C. Dvorak
23Andme Will be growing and thriving.
Adam Curry
Five years from now.
Pam Bondi
23 will transform health care.
John C. Dvorak
That was Anne with Jackie, CEO of.
Pam Bondi
The genetic testing company 23andMe. She told us that back in November. And now there's word that Anne has resigned and 23 and me has filed for bankruptcy protection.
Adam Curry
Nancy Chin is here with what this means for customers.
Pam Bondi
Nancy, when I woke up to this.
John C. Dvorak
News this morning, I was so sad and disappointed.
Adam Curry
Disappointed here because I know how hard.
John C. Dvorak
Ann worked and I know how much she loves this company.
Pam Bondi
And there's a lot of customers who have also loved it for a long time. So big surprising news for, for many. But the DNA.
John C. Dvorak
No one, no one. No one loved the company for a long time. I love 23andMe.
Adam Curry
I love. I use their services all the time, every couple weeks.
John C. Dvorak
I love this company.
Adam Curry
No sense.
Pam Bondi
And there's a lot of customers who have also loved it for a long time. So big, long time for many. But DNA testing company 23andMe has been facing serious financial challenges for months now. Last fall it announced major corporate restructuring. And that's when concerns of what could happen to users data started surfacing. On Friday, the Attorney general of California, where 23 and me as headquarter, urged customers to request their information be purged. He says they should consider invoking their rights and directing the company to delete their data and destroy samples of their genetic material. He said if 23 and me were involved in a bankruptcy, merger or sale, personal data may also be sold or transferred.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, say it ain't so. Really? Episode 599 of the Best Podcast in the Universe. September 29, 2013 is when we gave our first of many warnings about this. Here's what I want you to be cognizant. Cognizant of. When you sign up for 23andMe and you get on your little, you know, social network and sharing, you know, your little genetic defects, be wary as to who else has that information. And at some point in the future, Bill Gates might be going well.
Adam Curry
Is that you?
John C. Dvorak
Yes, that's me.
Adam Curry
What a muddy mic.
John C. Dvorak
Dangerous. Well, it was, to be fair. It was 12 years ago. You know, I didn't have the great Mike that we soon will be. You walked right into that one, pal.
Adam Curry
I did. Why don't you just throw here, Let me get a couple more softballs here to toss you.
John C. Dvorak
How about a book? How about a book? Or just the website since we're doing a donation segment. Dvorak.org NA is not where you want to go. You Want to go to.
Adam Curry
You can go there. It's got stuff.
John C. Dvorak
It's got outdated links. It's got. The PayPal links don't work anymore. Come on.
Adam Curry
Okay, I'm fixing that site tomorrow.
John C. Dvorak
If you don't.
Adam Curry
Thomas.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, there you go. I will stick my finger in the holes if, if it's not fixed, I'm not doing a show. That's it. I'm done. I'm, I'm boycotting the show if you don't fix the website. Thank you. Trolls who are hanging out in the troll room. Everyone's writing it down in their own red books. Yeah, there you go. The trolls are listening at Trollroom IO or perhaps they are even on one of those modern podcast apps, which are quite, quite swanky. Indeed you can. They're very swanky. People are like, wow, what app is that? Oh, that's my modern podcast app, of course. Oh, that's beautiful. What does it do? Well, it alerts me when my favorite shows go live, including on the no Agenda stream. And you can listen to it live in the app. What? You can do that in that app? In a podcast app? Oh, yeah. And when my favorite podcasts, when they publish a show within 90 seconds, I know exactly that it's there. Boom. I get an alert. What? I'm on Apple. And it sometimes it takes hours. That's why you want to go to podcast apps.com, everybody. It's enhancements brought to you by the Friendly folks@podcastindex.org value for value is how we continue to somehow muddle through the, through our last four years. Four more years, I should say. People send me links like you said that when Trump won the first time. That's correct. But now we mean it for real. Four more years. And so we, we, we don't have ads. Although people have found some interesting loopholes in our system, which is.
Adam Curry
They have loopholes indeed.
John C. Dvorak
Some really good loopholes. People like, hey, hey, man, I'm making a killing of my business through that no agenda show is fantastic. Here's what you do. You become an executive producer or sadly, cheap associate. Executive producers.
Adam Curry
Cheap associate. Yeah, yeah.
John C. Dvorak
The loophole is phenomenal. I love it. Now the way you can support the show is multi pronged. You, you can support us with your time, your talent or your treasure and time and talent. You know, people send clip ideas. It always helps when they send time codes. That's really highly appreciated. People do organize meetups, they do jingles, end of show mixes. There's tons of stuff that people do run servers for us everywhere. Servers are running everywhere, like noagenda, artgenerator.com which is where you can upload. And it's had its ups and downs throughout the years, but generally, I mean, I don't have to maintain it, but I'd say it's a good deal for us. We don't have to hire someone to maintain it. And then we have the artists themselves who create this artwork for us. And then we use that to draw attention to the show. It makes us look fresh every single time. And we look funky fresh. With the artwork for episode 1749, we titled that show Gynocracy, or as I like to say, Gynocracy. And it was Sir Suge, AKA Faux Diddley, who came in with the winning piece that we picked, the Flexiblize Live from Ursula Studios, which was. It was a poppy piece. You know, it was definitely related to the show. And it popped all kinds of, you know, boys and girls dancing. You know, there were flips.
Adam Curry
Did you get the note from the woman who used to be a jazzercise person and sent the original art?
John C. Dvorak
No.
Adam Curry
Oh, yeah. One of our producers had something to do with the original art, which was jazzercise.
John C. Dvorak
Really?
Adam Curry
So it had the same dancers, only they were kind of different. Slightly different.
John C. Dvorak
No way.
Adam Curry
And the same basic logo. This is where it came from.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, so it's a ripoff.
Adam Curry
It's a ripoff. She thought it was a compliment.
John C. Dvorak
Well, of course it's a compliment, but that's so cool.
Adam Curry
But it was a ripoff. But I'm wondering whether Sir Suge developed it by. Because to do a ripoff, you had to have the original, and you develop a kind of a copy of it, or AI actually copied it.
John C. Dvorak
Could be. I got an AI story for you for later. Yeah, I saw you have AI couple AI clips. Good. I mean, you do your clips. I'll bring the story.
Adam Curry
I don't know about that.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, I do. I mean, I'm in control. Who's driving? You're like the DEI hire on this show.
Adam Curry
I'm the shotgun.
John C. Dvorak
You're the DEI hire.
Adam Curry
I'm the DEI guy. Shut up. No laughing.
John C. Dvorak
No laughing. So we appreciate that. Of course, we use many of the pieces of art for our chapter artwork, which Dreb Scott diligently does for every single show. We appreciate that very much. We looked at a couple other things. Creepy was helmet hair by Blue Acorn, which was Ursula. That was an AI job. But that was pretty interesting how it turned out. Yes. Everybody like to harangue me About. Oh, the Hague is the new Dutch capital capital. It's not Amsterdam. That's actually contentious. We. We talked about it after the show. It's not a pure capital.
Adam Curry
Was.
John C. Dvorak
It was like a.
Adam Curry
No, it turns out that there's two capitals of Holland.
John C. Dvorak
Yes.
Adam Curry
And it turns out that we also did a little research after the show, and it turns out that there's about 10 countries that have dual capitals, because.
John C. Dvorak
The technical description of a capital is where the government has its seat. Oh, that was the term. It was a strange term.
Adam Curry
Yeah, we looked it up. I think we used AI to do the research.
John C. Dvorak
Really? Well, then I don't use chat.
Adam Curry
GPT. You. What you talking about? You're always doing that.
John C. Dvorak
That's exactly what I talk about when you play your AI clips. There was a term. I can't remember what the term was.
Adam Curry
Yeah, so, yeah, Holland has two capitals.
John C. Dvorak
The origin of this capital confusion goes back to the Middle ages. Back then, the Hague were the seat of the government for the country of Holland and the courts of Holland. Amsterdam was just your ordinary up and coming center of trade. Anyway. Fine. All right, fine. Everybody do funny artwork. I'm good. I'll say I was wrong. I'll say I was wrong.
Adam Curry
But you weren't wrong.
John C. Dvorak
Text. Technically, the capital is where the government seats. What else did we have? There was deep fake nudes. No, there was E meter girls got a nice note. We got a couple of notes from Scientologists. Hello, Scientologists.
Adam Curry
Yeah, we have a number of Scientologists that were chuckling about our email.
John C. Dvorak
Even the producer who gave us. Who gave us the E meters. He still listens. I love that.
Adam Curry
Yeah, I think that's funny.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah.
Adam Curry
The thing is, he. Turns out we didn't mention this necessarily, but I forgot about it.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah.
Adam Curry
He says his dad was a big shot in Scientology and he had a bunch of these E meters and he couldn't sell them, get rid of them after his dad died, because if you try to sell them on ebay, the Scientology community goes after you and makes life miserable.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, no.
Adam Curry
They knock on your door and say.
John C. Dvorak
Hey, don't give away our technology.
Adam Curry
Hell with it. I'll just send them to these two bozos. And so he sends us a couple of these E meters.
John C. Dvorak
Still have them.
Adam Curry
We still have them. Within reach. Right. I'm using them all the time.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah.
Adam Curry
So I got another note from another Scientologist who made the point. He said, you should charge the E meter to make the battery last longer because we probably haven't charged the thing Ever.
John C. Dvorak
No, I have not. Oh, I should do that. Also, I got another note from. And I shouldn't say he's a Scientologist, but people who. Who are members of the Church of.
Adam Curry
Scientology and said, so that would be a Scientologist.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, well, that's not how he introduced himself. And he said, you have a lot of. Okay, I'll use your term. You have a lot of Scientologists listening to the show because there's a big crossover with you guys between your stance on vaccines, etc. Other pharmaceutical products. Then there was something else. Your desire to have tax free income, I think was the other thing.
Adam Curry
I'm not sure it was some.
John C. Dvorak
Something like that.
Adam Curry
It makes sense.
John C. Dvorak
So. Hello. Hello, Scientologists. You're welcome, everybody. Everybody. Everybody's welcome here. Yeah, yeah. We've never had a problem with anybody.
Adam Curry
We don't. At least any. We got some free E meters.
John C. Dvorak
Hey, it beats a punch in the head. Free.
Adam Curry
Like I said to the guy, I got the E meter, but we didn't get the pretty girl with it.
John C. Dvorak
That's what it was. So thank you very much, sir Suge, AKA Faux Diddly. We appreciate your support of the show as always. And that brings us to our executive and associate executive producers. We'd like to thank them separately, just like Hollywood does. You know, I watched. I watched another movie. I watched Flight Risk, which is Mark Wahlberg. And this is another movie you watch.
Adam Curry
Without Tina, because she doesn't watch these kinds of movies.
John C. Dvorak
No. The last Wahlberg movie we watched was pretty dumb. So I think if I had suggested another one, she might not have gone for it. But it was really good. And a lot of it was, it took place in a Cessna airplane. And at the end, boom. Credits executive producer and director Mel Gibson.
Adam Curry
Like, wow, he's running for governor of what state? California.
John C. Dvorak
Really?
Adam Curry
Yep.
John C. Dvorak
That would be.
Adam Curry
I think he might be able to even get the job.
John C. Dvorak
Wow. Wow.
Adam Curry
Because if Kamala Harris runs, there's going to be a backlash against her because nobody likes her.
John C. Dvorak
No. And.
Adam Curry
And people always like, yeah, you know, let's give him a shot. What's it going to do? How bad could it be?
John C. Dvorak
It's Mel. He's pret successful with movies.
Adam Curry
Yeah. He knows what he's doing.
John C. Dvorak
So we thank everybody $50 and above, so you can keep track at home if you feel. If you feel called to do that. But we really just like to thank people and show and share with you the support that they have given because it does keep the show going for four more years. $200 or above. You get a credit like Hollywood, an associate executive producer credit. And that is good for your lifetime. You can use it anywhere, put it anywhere. If anyone questions that, we will vouch for you. You can use it on your resume. As example $300 and above, we will give you an executive producer credit and in both cases we'll read your note if it's within reason and not too long. Oh, we got a long one here today. I see. And that gives you the same credit which you can then use on IMDb.com so we'll start off with our first and top, top guy. Top executive producer. Executive producer of episode 1750, the Archd of Central Florida. I don't remember his, his actual pre duke name, but he lives in Winter Park, Florida and he came in with a. Actually he gets a double credit for this because he also gets a show number. Donation 1750.
Adam Curry
Yeah, that was a good one.
John C. Dvorak
Which he says heretofore known as the Blofeld donation from Archduke of Central Florida. Keep up the Queen Ursula clips. Very informative. Five more years, he says. Oh, he's, he's skimping. Five more years. Five more years.
Adam Curry
Well, if we get more people that donated 1750 every show, we'd probably do five more years.
John C. Dvorak
Explain the Blofeld donation because I don't, I forgot.
Adam Curry
I don't know. I don't remember.
John C. Dvorak
What is Blofeld?
Adam Curry
Blofeld was one of the evil characters in the early James Bond movies.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, okay. Well, now it's Davros Blofeld.
Adam Curry
He always used to have a white cat and he would wear this gray outfit and he had a scar on his face and he was bald and he was nasty.
John C. Dvorak
Thank you very much Archduke of Central Florida. And yes, we will now call this The Blofeld donation. 1750.
Adam Curry
Clifford Reimer.
John C. Dvorak
I would say it's Reimersma.
Adam Curry
Remers Ma Reimersma in Milton, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 350 93. Just bought a pair of work boots for $330.
John C. Dvorak
Wow.
Adam Curry
I figured it was time to invest in another luxury that helps me through the workday. That's the show, the no agenda show. That's 333.33 plus fees. Two thirds to the knighthood. Two thirds of the way to the knighthood. Could I get a relationship karma, please?
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, absolutely. He totally understands the system.
Pam Bondi
You've got karma.
John C. Dvorak
That's exactly how you should see the show. He got something out of it and he put it right back in. That's the value from value model right there.
Adam Curry
Yeah, he looked at his shoes. He said, these are 300 bucks and they're gonna protect, but he probably has steel toes. And he said, well, you know, this is protecting my brain.
John C. Dvorak
I have one rule which I. Which Tina and I adhere to. If you're using anything on a daily basis, you should might as well get a good one. So if it's a mattress, if it's a pillow, if it's your cutting board, if it's a things that you use every single day, and if you're listening to a podcast twice a week for a total of six over six hours, you might as well make sure it's. It continues. You want it to be the best podcast in the universe, so you need to support us. That's. That's my logic.
Adam Curry
I think that's a good one.
John C. Dvorak
3. 3. 3.33 from Meister Chit Chat in Russellville, Ark. Arkansas. And he has a very complicated note. Good evening or morning salutations. Amazing, gentlemen. Okay. More brevity is appreciated. Thank you for your service. I'd like that. It's courage. I'd like to clarify. My previous donation was a 333.33 switcheroo with fees included. So is this one Ms. Eclectic Chit chat of Harmony Homestead. This donation is also a switcheroo for the same Ms. Chitchat.
Adam Curry
Okay, so let me put Mrs. Chit.
John C. Dvorak
Mrs. Mrs. Chit Chat. Let me put in Mrs. Chitchat. There we. I must make it clear that we engage corporately without prejudice for our firstborn to be named after you. Without prejudice. Our son will be named Gabriel Nolan of God, a hero or champion thanks to you and four more years, he will be instrumental in bringing more souls to the creator during this time of turmoil.
Adam Curry
Is your name Gabriel?
John C. Dvorak
I guess. Adam Gabriel Curry. Thank you both and all of know Agenda Nation. We can begin the next phase of our parentage after four years of IVF and. Oh, wow. All right. Expensive and tedious. Yes. No success until we underwent a de douching. A de douching. Did it. And Lupron endometriosis treatment. I think it was the de douching. My wife is now over 1/3 of motherhood and 2/3 damehood. If you're an Alaskan needing dental work, check out mustachiodds.com mustachioedds.com mustachiodds.com we're making.
Adam Curry
Guessing he's got a mustache.
John C. Dvorak
We make your teeth look good. Needing psychiatric help. RPI or looking for off grid or gardening help. Harmony Homestead on Facebook or snapchat wow, that is a broad spectrum of services. Sorry for the obtuse note. Use it on the phone for a stackable 10% discount on total treatment plan at Atkins Dental Clinic. Whoo. No jingles, no karma. Everything above was long enough, he says. Yes, Sir Meister Chit Chat of Harmony hosted Homestead. Thank you. Thank you, Sir Meister Chitchat. Great note. Very entertaining.
Adam Curry
Well, let's contrast. Contrast that with Chap Williams in Edmond, Oklahoma, who came with 333.33. That was a check with no note. And so they he gets a double up. Karma.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, and here we go. Double up for the karmas.
Pam Bondi
You've got.
John C. Dvorak
Karma and 3:33 from Sir Tanley. Sir Tanley, Port Orange, Florida ITM Jen, so much to say, so little time, so I'll keep it short. Keep up the good work, boys. You've kept me listening twice a week since 2016. And this donation is a switcheroo for my wife, Stormy. All right, Switcheroo has been engaged. Happy 17 anniversary, babe. You are my ride or die. A family that no agendas together stays together. And the weather app we've been working on has finally hit the Apple. Apple App Store. You want to try your hand at predicting the weather in your hometown? Then install weather champs, win forecast coins, enter sweepstakes and be crowned the weather champ. Use code weather friend for 50% off an annual subscription coming to Android in the next few weeks. No jingles, no karma. Sir Tanley, the weather champ. Oh, well, when it's on Android, let me know. I'll try it out. The weather champ and I can win forecast coins. John.
Adam Curry
Yeah, good, you can use them. Eli, the coffee guy's up. He's in Bensonville, Illinois, $203.20. And he says, well, news agency railed against the administration for deporting an innocent pro Palestine activist for exercising his free speech. You guys called out Mahmoud Khalil for being a spook. That's a type of deconstruction that makes no agenda. Truly the best podcast in the universe. Thank you for the insight jingle. Spot the spook. George Clooney's a spy for producers, by the way. Spooks or otherwise in need of great coffee, visit gigawatt coffeeroasters.com and use the code ITM20 for 20 off your order. Stay caffeinated. Eli the coffee guy A Spot the spook, Spot the spoke.
John C. Dvorak
Everybody wants to spot the spook. George Clooney. George Clooney is a spine. Man, I really get them today, don't I? Dame mary moon. Prairieville, Louisiana.
Adam Curry
Everyone. This is the best day ever.
John C. Dvorak
200 associate executive producership for her. And it's a switcheroo for my hubby, Sir Juclaw. Okay. All right. Sir Juclaw. All right, so we'll put Sir Juclaw in there. Perfect. Welp, good job on the no Agenda artwork you picked on Sunday. Oh, we were just talking about it. It prompted my donation. See, this is why Time Talent Treasure works. It works for so many different in so many different ways. Sometimes unexpected. I'm not sure if you realized it or not. Possibly it will be discussed on Thursday, but the graphic is clearly a knockoff of. Oh, this is the note of the original Jasmin Jazzercise artwork. Jazzercise. I'm sending you the original so you can compare the similarities. I'm not mad about the similarities. Quite the contrary. I have been a Jazzercise instructor for 15 years, and I own two Jazzercise studios in south Louisiana. It is the best workout program around. Ladies of know, Agenda Nation, head over to your local Jazzercise studio. We have 8,000 locations. Where what I need to get the Fredericksburg franchise license. We have 8,000 locations and we're in nearly every state in over 110 countries to experience the original dance fitness workout. I've been making people dance, sweat, and smile for over 55 years. By the way, guys, you too can take our classes. We don't discriminate. We're not the gynocracy. Thanks, John and Adam. And the artists who donated their time and talent for making my morning a little sunnier. When I saw the artwork pop up. That's from Dame Mary Moon. How about that? There it is. That's why I never saw the note, because I didn't get it. That's what happened there.
Adam Curry
It's amazing the people that listen to this show we have and produce it.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, we do. We do have.
Adam Curry
Including Linda Loop Atkins, who's in Lakewood, Colorado, and she's once she came with 200 bucks and asks for jobs Karma. And says for a competitive edge with a resume that gets results, go to ImageMakers Inc.com for all your executive resume and job search needs. That's Image Maker with a K. And work with Linda Liu, duchess of jobs and writer of resumes.
John C. Dvorak
Jobs, Jobs, Jobs and jobs.
Adam Curry
Let's vote for jobs.
John C. Dvorak
And there it is again. Another long note with a switcheroo. This is crazy. This is crazy. Switcheroo. This is from Caitlin Meyer of Los Angeles, California. And switcheroo for Lady Linda of Los Angeles. Mira Kebura. Happy birthday. And that is today. So on the list, your cara de Chucho face of a brother and his wife are putting in the big one for you. So don't ever say we did nothing for you. We're taking a note from Linda Lou, duchess of jobs and writer of resumes, and Eli the coffee guy, and giving you a big shout out in front of the best podcast listeners in the universe. That's interesting. Now we have people who use a service or a product. Advertising. Yeah, this is great.
Adam Curry
That's a switch. Double switcheroo.
John C. Dvorak
And Caitlin Meyer asks, have you got money money on your mind? Why? Let Linda, lady Linda get your money to work for you. If you. If you peruse Instagram for your next overseas adventure, flip those magazines in the waiting room and see for yourself on that tranquil shoreline. And get your finances in order, the money you have today can start working to send you there tomorrow. Contact Linda. She cares and she's Good. That's Linda Gatam.com Linda Gata. G A E T A at N M. Wow. I might have to withdraw the money from Horowitz and give it to Linda because she cares and she's good. We request jobs karma for the birthday girl. Here's to another great trip around the sun. Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
Adam Curry
Let's vote for jobs Karma.
John C. Dvorak
Wow, that was pretty amazing. Very, very interesting executive and associate executive producers, thank you so much for supporting the no Agenda show, episode 17. We appreciate that. And as of Sunday, you'll be able to go to dvorak.org anay and set up your recurring donation. But just in case, remember this noagendadonations.com that's where you can support us. We'll be thanking people who support us. $50 and above in our second segment. And yes, you can do a recurring donation. Any amount, any frequency. It's up to you. You determine the value, make the number matter to you. Because we love numbers numerology here on the best podcast in the universe, no Agenda donations dot com. Thank you again to our executive and associate executive producers.
Pam Bondi
Our formula is this.
Adam Curry
We go out, we hit people in the mouth. Order.
John C. Dvorak
Shut up, Slade. Shut up. All right, two little quick, fun, fun clips. Two little quick, fun clips. Quickies. Little quickies. Little quickies.
Adam Curry
Sure.
John C. Dvorak
Little AOC gaff.
Pam Bondi
And this isn't just about Republicans. We need a Democratic party that fights harder for us, too.
John C. Dvorak
Your future president, ladies and gentlemen.
Adam Curry
Yeah, she's thinking, and that's what's on her mind.
John C. Dvorak
And then this one from Jasmine Crockett. Everyone's losing their mind over this, and I. I think this is way overblown. A congresswoman from North Texas is causing.
Adam Curry
Controversy over recent comments she made about Governor Abbott. Fox's Stephen Dial explains.
John C. Dvorak
Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett is being called out by other elected officials for her comments last Saturday at a human rights campaign event. Y'all know we got Governor Hot Wheels down there.
Pam Bondi
Come on, now.
Adam Curry
And the only thing hot about him.
John C. Dvorak
Is that he is a hot mess. Referring to Governor Greg Abbott as Hot Wheels. Abbott was partially paralyzed when a tree fell on him decades ago. I think this is stupid. It's actually a cool name. I think Governor Hot Wheels is pretty funny, everybody. Oh, outrage. Oh, I can't believe she said that. She made fun of the man in the wheelchair. How. How hypocritical is that? Like when. When Trump makes fun of people's ears and eyes and height and their. Whatever. Oh, it's great. This is actually, I have to say, I. As a nickname, I think it's pretty cool. I'm gonna call him Governor Hot Wheels from now on.
Adam Curry
Okay.
John C. Dvorak
What did you think? Did you think anything of this at all? You didn't. I know. You lost.
Adam Curry
I know. I've. Everybody talked about this. I thought it was. I think you're right. It was overblown. I do think it was kind of at the. She gave it a human rights convention, which I think that was the wrong audience.
John C. Dvorak
Well, there's that.
Adam Curry
I mean, it was like, you know, ableist kind of thing, so.
John C. Dvorak
Wow. You are the DEI hire. You use the term ableist.
Adam Curry
Yeah, I'm just. Because that's the nature of when she says it. I think the venue was wrong, and so she wasn't thinking, but she's a dummy, so who cares what she's says?
John C. Dvorak
It was. It still was funny.
Adam Curry
It is funny. And I think High Wheels is a good nickname for the guy.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. From now on.
Adam Curry
I never see him moving very fast on that thing.
John C. Dvorak
Well, that's kind of the funny part. It's like, this is what you do. You. You. You give people nicknames based upon their physical appearance. We do this all the time on the show.
Adam Curry
Yes, we do it all the time.
John C. Dvorak
Okay. So.
Adam Curry
But we're not in front of a human rights convention. We do.
John C. Dvorak
Well, we are in front of Scientologists. I mean.
Adam Curry
Yeah, it's true. The Scientologists. We haven't really given anyone grief.
John C. Dvorak
No. Do they really donate the Scientology or. They don't. They. Do they?
Adam Curry
You know, it's. We'll have to take a look, and I have to go back to some research. Let's do a little couple. I got a couple of clips which got a. Have a kind of a little gotcha in here that I think is worth talking about. This is about religious quitting. This is on nd, a special on people that are. They're brought up in a religion and they quit.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, no.
Pam Bondi
People around the world are switching religions or leaving religion altogether. A new study from Pew Research finds that large portions of adults no longer practice the faith in which they were raised. Pew surveyed nearly 80,000 people in 36 countries. NPR religion correspondent Jason DeRose reports.
John C. Dvorak
Switching is especially common in East Asia, Europe, and the Americas. Kirsten Lesage is the study's lead author.
Pam Bondi
Out of the 36 countries that we surveyed, in the three countries with the highest rates of religious switching are South Korea, Spain, and Canada.
John C. Dvorak
In South Korea, Pew found that 50% of respondents had changed religions. In Spain, 40% said they'd left their childhood faith. In Canada, the number is 38%. By comparison, in the U.S. 28% switched. LeSage says two religions were most affected.
Pam Bondi
The religious groups that have had the largest losses from religious switching are Christianity and Buddhism.
John C. Dvorak
Lesage says the change is particularly acute in parts of Europe.
Pam Bondi
For example, Italy has the highest ratio of people leaving to people joining Christianity.
John C. Dvorak
For every one person who becomes Christian, about 28 Italians are leaving the religion. The biggest gains were among those who have no religious affiliation, which is a group that includes atheists, agnostics, and those who describe themselves as nothing in particular.
Pam Bondi
So it's not the case that people are necessarily switching from one religion to the next. For example, there's not a lot of switching from Christianity into Islam.
John C. Dvorak
Rather, Lesage says most switching is people leaving religion altogether. Yeah, well, this is an interesting choice of words, but maybe I should hold my white Christian nationalist perspective until the second clip.
Adam Curry
Yeah, I would say, because I have the sense that they're trying to slam the Christians here in some funny way. And I think the second clip has an exemplification of that, and it's a tricky one. And we'll listen to it, and then I'll ask you a question.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, a question. Well, let me go and walk away from the microphone, so at least we're fair. Meanwhile, specific religions in some countries appear to be stickier than others. Pew found very small percentages of the overall adult population have left or joined Islam in most of the countries surveyed, and nearly all people who were raised joined or left Islam.
Adam Curry
Very few people leave Islam Very few.
John C. Dvorak
Found very small percentages of the overall adult population have left or joined Islam in most of the countries surveyed. And nearly all people who were raised Hindu in India and Bangladesh still identify as Hindu today. Judaism's retention rate is also high. In Israel, 1 100% of people pew surveyed who were raised Jewish still identify religiously as Jewish. In the US 76% of those raised Jewish still identify that way today, with most American Jews who've left the faith now identifying as unaffiliated. Pew also found that 19% of US adults raised as Christian now identify as religiously unaffiliated. Jason DeRose, NPR News. All right, interesting report from Pew.
Adam Curry
So I'm going to ask you the question.
John C. Dvorak
Okay.
Adam Curry
Why do you think more Christians have become unaffiliated in the United States than Jews?
John C. Dvorak
Oh, I can answer the first question, but the second one, well, you are a Jew. This not just a religion. They consider themselves to be part of a population group and also not white.
Adam Curry
Well, wrong, according to Pew.
John C. Dvorak
What did Pew say?
Adam Curry
Pew said that more Jews than Christians have left the faith in the United States. But you heard it differently, didn't you? I sure did. The fact that you could answer that. Try to answer a question that was a misleading question based on what you thought, thought you heard, wow, do I.
John C. Dvorak
Need to listen to that again to hear it correctly?
Adam Curry
I'll explain what they did, and then you can listen again. What they did was they did the old switch where they gave you the wrong side of the equation and you had to do the math in your head to understand what the leaving rate was. And then they gave you the right side of the equation. This is npr, by the way. And then they gave you the right side of the equation for the critical Christian part of it. In fact, if you listen carefully, 24% of the Jews left and 19% of the Christians left the faith.
John C. Dvorak
Let me hear the. It's in the second clip or in the first clip?
Adam Curry
It's in the second clip right at the end.
John C. Dvorak
Let me move it forward a little bit. That was. Wow, I got duped. You surveyed who were raised Jewish still identify, I guess, to go back a little bit, still identify as Hindu today. Judaism's retention rate is also high. In Israel, 100% of people pew surveyed who were raised Jewish still identify religiously as Jewish. In the US 76% of those raised Jewish still identify that way today, with most American Jews who've left the faith now identifying as unaffiliated. You also found that 19% of US adults raised as Christian now identify as religiously unaffiliated. Jason DeRose, NPR News. Good catch. Wow.
Adam Curry
This is why I teased this early in the show.
John C. Dvorak
Half a decade with the half a decade.
Adam Curry
Yeah, this is the kind of stuff that, that NPR pulls. There's no reason for them to do it that way. To say 76% and then stayed and then 19% left for the, for the Christian side, it gives you the nut. It gives you the sense that the Christians are bailing out. And in fact, the opposite is actually true. And that's why you, you thought you answered a question that really was, was a faulty question based on the bull crap.
John C. Dvorak
Wow. Well, thank you. That was very good. That's, that is media deconstruction at its finest. I tip my hat to you, sir.
Adam Curry
Thank you. Thank you very much.
John C. Dvorak
I will say the thing that I was focused on is the term religion. Religion. I am not religious. I do not belong to a religion. And also when they say, well, all these Christians in Rome, well, you know, their religion is Catholicism. It is, in fact, and I do track this and I talk to different pastors about this. We are seeing record numbers of people leaving the Baptist Church and the Catholic Church and they're going non denominational or just are believers and have faith. So I think the whole study is somewhat skewed because if you actually look at the zoomers, they're buying Bibles like no one else's business. It's up over 20% in the past year.
Adam Curry
Yeah, I think that's veering off the, what the topic was. I think they were specifically talking about religion.
John C. Dvorak
Religion. I know, but when you, but people who are atheists or non believers, they, when they hear religion, they think, oh, church people. But I, I'm not, I'm, you know, I go to a church, but it's not a religion. Organized religion, if anything, is a problem, in my opinion, and it's not been good for the Pope.
Pam Bondi
Italian doctor who led the hospital team that cared for Pope Francis is giving new insight into the seriousness of the Pope's recent health battle. Professor Sergio Alfieri told an Italian newspaper that doctors considered ending his treatment. The critical moment came on February 28th when the Pope had a breathing crisis. The choice was whether to stop treatment and let him pass or try more more aggressive drugs and therapies that come with a very high risk of damaging other organs.
John C. Dvorak
Man, we didn't hear that report that he almost died. It was all like, oh, he's gonna be okay. He's just, he's just, he just inhaled some puke it's okay. It's all right. We're. He's hanging in there. He almost died. They almost pulled him off the system.
Pam Bondi
The Pope was aware that there was a chance that he might not survive the night, according to the doctor, who was then instructed. Instructed to try everything and not give up. Back here at home, Dr. David Manoff @ Temple University Hospital Gene's campus says this type of scenario is not uncommon.
John C. Dvorak
Once you are really, really sick and.
Pam Bondi
In an ICU sometimes some of the.
John C. Dvorak
Things that we really have to do are to prioritize what the most life threatening organ failure is going to be.
Pam Bondi
At that time, even if some of the things that we do potentially come.
John C. Dvorak
At the potential for injury to other organ systems.
Pam Bondi
So Dr. Manoff says the Pope has a long road to recovery. Pope Francis was discharged on Sunday after 38 days in the hospital.
John C. Dvorak
Man, that was pretty serious. Gives me more time to think about the next Pope.
Adam Curry
Yeah, that's a good. Just a break for you.
John C. Dvorak
I'm narrowing it down as three candidates. Three candidates. I'm getting close.
Adam Curry
I'm not even going to ask you to tease it. No, I have international news.
John C. Dvorak
Just a little bit international news, everybody. Wait a minute. I'm guessing maybe it is the BBC World Service. Yes.
Adam Curry
This is good stuff. Now this is the. This. The South. All hell is breaking loose and we're not being told about. It's amazing, actually. Let's start with South Sudan.
John C. Dvorak
The UN Mission in South Sudan has warned that the arrest of First Vice President Riak Machar has brought the country to the brink of another civil war. The renewed political violence between began last month. Paddy Maguire reports. The arrest of President Salva Kiir's long term rival at his residence in Juba is a dramatic escalation. In a statement, the head of UNMISS said rising tensions between factions loyal to Mr. Machar, a former rebel leader and the forces of Mr. Keir were jeopardizing the 2018 peace agreement. Nearly 400,000 people died in five years of devastating civil war before the power sharing deal was signed. As that deal unravels and the violence, violence escalates, some 50,000 South Sudanese citizens have already been displaced. Oh, will they be passionate at the universities about this?
Adam Curry
No, of course not. They don't care. Nobody cares about this stuff. So here we go. The other one is Pakistan.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, I also have an Africa clip, actually. Pakistan. Okay. Senior police in Baluchistan say at least six people were killed on Wednesday in a spate of coordinated attacks in Pakistan's restless southwestern province. According to the French news agency, police accused gunmen of targeting bus passengers on the basis of their ethnicity. A member of the security forces was among those killed. Local press reported explosions and trucks being set on fire in various parts of the province. Separatist insurgents have stepped up their activity against Pakistani security forces in recent weeks.
Adam Curry
No protests about that either.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, no one cares about that except us.
Adam Curry
And the Sudan thing's even funnier about people not caring. 400,000 people killed.
John C. Dvorak
No. Who cares? Who cares? Interesting. Do we have the same clip here? Because I have one Africa clip because you know, manga make Africa news. Great. Again, this usaid, Uganda BBC.
Adam Curry
Well, let's try it.
John C. Dvorak
As a federal judge in the US.
Pam Bondi
Blocks the Trump administration from taking further.
John C. Dvorak
Steps to shut down the US Agency.
Pam Bondi
For International Development, we'll be asking what that means in practice for people on the ground running health programs in Uganda.
John C. Dvorak
Ah, well, I happen to have an answer.
Adam Curry
Well, there you go.
John C. Dvorak
Yes. And this answer in the Africa news segment from the no Agenda World Service, we should, we should do our own thing. Now from the no Agenda World Service, we go to Africa and what do we learn in Africa? This is from the former African Union ambassador to the United States. Her name is Arikana Chihombari Kwao.
Pam Bondi
You need to understand the real reason.
John C. Dvorak
Why USAID is in Africa and not just USAID, but other NGOs. You look at DFID, which is the.
Pam Bondi
British equivalent, and many other smaller ones.
John C. Dvorak
Their sole purpose was to act as if they're coming rescue Africa.
Pam Bondi
They are coming in claiming that they.
John C. Dvorak
Are introducing grassroots initiatives that are going to help the people. And so they use that as a way to go into the most remote parts of Africa. When you look at it on paper, it all looks really good, but they.
Pam Bondi
Are actually wolf in sheep's clothing.
John C. Dvorak
They are using that open access sounding humanitarian to constantly destabilize governments. I can tell you right now the majority of African leaders, and not just African leaders, but leaders in the developing world are celebrating the exit of usaid. If you think about it, their sole purpose, for example, filling in the gaps in health care and education.
Pam Bondi
Where is the change?
John C. Dvorak
Show me one country that USAID was in and education improved.
Pam Bondi
Show me what country where USAID was.
John C. Dvorak
In and health care improved. The social services they're bringing is peanuts. The American peanut taxpayer needs to know the billions of dollars that are being given to usaid.
Pam Bondi
A fraction is making it to the people.
John C. Dvorak
Now there you go, straight from the horse's mouth. Not like we didn't know that.
Adam Curry
No, we knew It. We had a note from one of our producers. I wish I could find it because I was going to discuss it.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, I remember the. We actually got a couple of good notes. We got some good notes.
Adam Curry
The guy says, he says he was in Africa and the USAID guys came in with a bunch of mosquito nets.
John C. Dvorak
Mosquito nets?
Adam Curry
Mosquito nets. And they took a bunch of pictures of them with, you know, here's the pictures of us with the guys. And then they left and left them high and dry, saying they was only there for a photo op.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, do your AI clips because then we can. We'll. We'll wrap today.
Adam Curry
This is the, these clips. I don't know if this is going to work with what you have to talk about, but maybe this is about AI in libraries and, and the benefit that it could provide. And I think this is accurate stuff. And this is mostly brute. The first clip is Brewster Kaylee, who is at the. Who's the head of the archive dot org.
John C. Dvorak
Hey, is it Kaylee Kale?
Adam Curry
I think it's pronounced. I. I know the guy, but he won't, he won't.
John C. Dvorak
He won't take your call anymore.
Adam Curry
No, he won't take. Because you're typical for your podcast.
John C. Dvorak
Your podcast.
Adam Curry
Yeah, I went from important writer to podcaster and that was the end of that.
John C. Dvorak
If you were an important writer. Award winning.
Adam Curry
Yeah, it was important.
John C. Dvorak
Award winning. I won awards. Yeah, of course you did. I know you did.
Adam Curry
Yeah. Instant bestseller.
John C. Dvorak
Yes, instant.
Adam Curry
Here we go.
John C. Dvorak
You're right. We're digitizing all of these pest reports from Africa for over the last century.
Adam Curry
And people are probably not going to.
John C. Dvorak
Be the primary readers of this, but our machines can. So not only just search engines for.
Adam Curry
Going and helping people find it, and.
John C. Dvorak
Then using digital interlibrary loan, which is fantastic.
Adam Curry
And it's going on now, but we.
John C. Dvorak
Now have these technologies, the AI technologies.
Adam Curry
That allows these to be put in.
John C. Dvorak
New and different ways to go and correlate information across texts that have spanned over centuries. And to be able to try to.
Adam Curry
Make that more digestible, more learnable, more.
John C. Dvorak
Browsable, more interactable than ever before. The opportunity of our digital libraries coming and being useful to people because of these new technologies is just fantastic. Oh, was that Brewster?
Adam Curry
I think so. It goes on and on with part two. There's a three parter. They're not much I can say.
John C. Dvorak
And are you talking about your own AI engine or using somebody else's? Well, lots of people are down loading. Hold on. What it sounds like to me. Is he pitching selling archive.org to AI companies. Is that what I'm hearing here?
Adam Curry
I didn't hear that in the clip, but it's quite possible.
John C. Dvorak
And are you talking about your own AI engine or using somebody else's? Well, lots of people are downloading lots of things from the Internet Archive and.
Adam Curry
Putting them in the big commercial systems.
John C. Dvorak
But pretty much just the open materials because of all the copyright and lawsuits problems that we have in the United States. In Europe, they've specifically encouraged cultural heritage institutions and research organizations to work together.
Adam Curry
To use these for new and different things.
John C. Dvorak
So that's why I'm in Amsterdam right.
Adam Curry
Now working with these research organizations to.
John C. Dvorak
Make use of these materials, because there's regulatory clarity in Europe towards having a blossoming of our library collection collections and bringing them to life. He's got an agenda here, for sure.
Adam Curry
Well, his agenda is he's getting sued left in. Right. By these. Yeah, yeah.
John C. Dvorak
Well. And I can't say it's. I mean, whenever. Here's a little trick. I have a. This is a tip of the day. I have a browser plugin. It's called Archive Page, and I have it on my browser. Bravo Browser. And so whenever I hit a Wall Street, Whenever I hit. Whenever I hit a Wall Street Journal article or anything like that, I hit my. My Archive Page browser plugin. And it will immediately find that page, which has then been archived by someone who apparently paid for it or archived it before it was behind where whatever, paywall, and boom, you got the whole page right there. You can read it, no problem.
Adam Curry
That is a good tip. Somebody else sent a similar tip that I'm not going to use today, but maybe we should gang him up and do the two tips in an upcoming show. Let's wrap it with the third of these clips.
John C. Dvorak
I want to look at another aspect of this, which is that we shouldn't forget that libraries preserve and make available many things other than books or magazines. For example, at the US Library of Congress, less than a quarter of the objects held are books. So what about web pages, for instance, Brewster? They do tend to appear and disappear with alarming speed, don't they? The average life of a web page is about 100 days before it's changed or deleted. It completely changes how we go and build our collections. We have to do it preemptively, just in case that might be useful. We collect over 1 billion URLs every day. The number of web pages in the Wayback machine is now 900 billion. The scale of it is a little hard to understand, but it's just trying to record what's going on out there just so that we can basically have our own history just requires a different view of how we see our old fashioned trade of archivists and librarians. Huh. Well, I certainly think he has an awesome index. He has a very crappy way to search. I mean, unless you have oh, it's.
Adam Curry
Just out of the search is no good.
John C. Dvorak
It's no good.
Adam Curry
But this is in fact, if you could really search that thing, there's a lot of value in that. In fact, they also have the thing about that collection is he has a collection of 78s.
John C. Dvorak
Yes. And we've talked about this.
Adam Curry
Unbelievable. And not only that, but he has a bunch of these nut balls out there who have fixed a lot of these. I mean, using modern technology software, fixed a lot of the 78. So there's no pops or crackles or. And the fidelity is better. Yeah, it's a lot of work to do any of those, let alone a lot of them. And there's two or three guys that have been doing it just kind of consistently. I, I guess maybe they do a few every day. Well, you know when the collection of 78s is unbelievable.
John C. Dvorak
Do you remember when the MTV News webpage just went off the air?
Adam Curry
Yeah.
John C. Dvorak
I downloaded the entire archive of the MTV News website from archive.org There's a couple of really good scripts out there. I mean, because it's basically an open source resource, it would be fantastic for anthropic or someone to really put a good search engine on top of that. In fact, this is the trend as Google is about to do this very thing. Google has introduced a new feature and this of course is a story about AI read by AI called AI Mode, which is an advanced chatbot designed to answer search queries. This update is seen as Google's direct response to competitors like Chat GPT, which have been gained gaining popularity. When users ask a question in AI mode, Google's Gemini 2.0 AI model generates a detailed answer. This AI system allows users to ask follow up questions or request additional links for more information. Google explains that AI mode is designed to simplify complex topics by organizing data and presenting it in a clear and easy to understand format. The company is making major improvements to to its search engine by integrating the latest version of its artificial intelligence. This change is part of Google's effort to provide faster and more expert level answers to users. Competition in the AI search industry has been increasing with smaller companies creating innovative ways to deliver search results to stay ahead. Google has decided to enhance its search engine with more powerful AI capabilities. The Gemini 2.0 AI model will now be used to answer complicated questions, especially those related to subjects like computer programming and mathematics. And there it is. So, first of all, yes, I just said it's an AI voice. Everyone's like, this voice is AI. Okay, are you listening to the show? So I decide. I decided to use multiple AIs, including chat, GPT. I did not try Copilot because I had a project. I had a grok. No, I had a computer coding project. And this is what it's supposed to be good at. And so I, I run a little streaming radio station called HelloFred FM and I run it on, on a, on a radio program called Station Playlist. And. And then so it streams and you can schedule, do clocks, you know, when you want a jingle or different format of music, all that stuff. And I was really interested in putting this on a UNIX server and using something called Liquid soap, which is a very, very extensive program. It has this whole complete programming language. It's all open source. Thousands of people have worked on this. There's extensive documentation. All the syntax is very well documented, very well known. And so I'm able to set up the server and get a basic system where it just plays one song after another. But then I want to script and have transitions work a certain way. I wanted to pull, you know, want to be able to put in a format, weigh which songs, you know, how many song separation, that kind of stuff. And I just can't figure it out. So I go to the AIs and it's very friendly. Oh, sure, Adam, I can. And it calls me by my name. Adam, I can help you with this. No problem. I spent almost all of Monday and Tuesday trying to just get this thing to do a different type of crossfade. And I think I must have over 300 prompts and replies. And I keep putting the error and they kept getting an error and then another error and then all of a sudden, well, you have the wrong version of ffmpeg. So I'm recompiling FFMPEG from source. And then it's like, well, you need to recompile the kernel. None of these things could actually help me write a successful script. It's sucks. This is the whole point. It's supposed to make people be able to code, mathematics, code. They said it right there, it was good, it does a horrible job.
Adam Curry
Walked right into it.
John C. Dvorak
And I even said, here's the document. Oh, yes, I'm very aware of this documentation. And then it'll be like, oh, no, it seems like we have a problem. You're using a different version of what Time to step down from FFmpeg 5.5.1 to 4.4.7. It sucks. It is a time waste. I could have learned the language in the amount of time I put into it. What a horrible experience. This is going nowhere.
Adam Curry
And welcome to the no Agenda grievance section of the show. I'm gonna show my support by donating to no Agenda.
John C. Dvorak
Imagine all the people who could do that. Oh, yeah, that'd be f. I missed a semicolon somewhere. Yeah, that's right.
Adam Curry
And by the way, this is all about grievance. I have a grievance with today's donation segment. It's. We had a total of 30.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah. This is crazy. This is really crazy.
Adam Curry
It's the shortest list we've ever had, I say for at least two years.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah.
Adam Curry
And I'll read the ones from starting with entry number 10, actually, and take it to entry number 30. And that would be the total for the day.
John C. Dvorak
Wow.
Adam Curry
Mark Lay in Houston, Texas, starts us off 199. And John W. Schumann in Madison, Wisconsin. 184. 29. Sir ever of the watt in Linwood, Michigan. $100. $130.03. Kevin McLaughlin. There he is right away at 8008. He's the Archduke of Luna, lover of America of boobs.
John C. Dvorak
Boobs.
Adam Curry
Tim Kwan, 75. He actually came in with a weiss. Somehow he managed to get wise through.
John C. Dvorak
Wise is a weird app, but it basically does an ach transfer somehow.
Adam Curry
Well, if you do it, set it up at your bank. If you do it the other way around, where you have to. Where you put the onus on the show. We can't get it.
John C. Dvorak
No, of course not. We can't get anything.
Adam Curry
I'd like to know. I'd like Tim to tell me what his process we.
John C. Dvorak
You can't get anything done with our bank.
Adam Curry
No, I love our bank, but the bank is just like, hey, we'll take the cash.
John C. Dvorak
We'll take your cash.
Adam Curry
Take a check with the cash. What else you got?
John C. Dvorak
You can write a check. You want gold bars? All right, shut up already. That's exactly right.
Adam Curry
Jose paredes in Wichita, Kansas. 69, 33. He needs a de douching. You've been de douched. And he's got a birthday coming up and he's on the list. Bruno Freitas das san something. I don't have it on here.
John C. Dvorak
Hold on. Brunos Freitas Dos Santos.
Adam Curry
Dos Santos in San Francisco, 5272, which is $50 donation. Kevin Adam in Clover, South Carolina, 5272. Tom Flynn in Beaverton, Oregon, 5272. And he says, great show. Eric Hochul, our buddy in Mulrose. Mulrose Deutschland. 52. Now we have the 50. We're already at the 50s. And here we go with. Starting with Brett Denton in Boise, Boise. Melissa Alvarez and Ponte Verda Vedra Beach, Florida. Christopher Haynes in Spring, Texas. George Ushet in La Vernia, Texas. Jacqueline Connolly in Green Bay. Go Packers, Wisconsin. Richard Gardner. I think he's in New York. Aaron Wise Gerber in Bend, Oregon. Christopher Haynes in Spring, Texas. A lot of people in Spring, Texas. Michael Myers in Mandeville, Louisiana. Alan Bean Baron Allen Bean in Beaverton, Oregon. And last on our list, a Baroness Knight in Edmonds, Washington. And that's the short list for today's show. Want to thank them for helping us out on show of all shows, 1750, a landmark show.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, well, we did have. Thank God we had one show number donation man. Step it up, people. And please check your recurring donations because they've fallen off dramatically as they expire when your credit card or something else.
Adam Curry
Lost a lot of those. I think that makes a big difference. And we do have to give. I don't know why he did this, but he came in at 49.99. But he wants. This is Dennis down below. He's just had hemorrhoid surgery.
John C. Dvorak
Ouch.
Adam Curry
He says it's been six weeks of five hours of diffusing pain after I poop. I mean, the pain is unbearable. I'm honest.
John C. Dvorak
Oh, my goodness.
Adam Curry
This and that. He says that he's not cutting it. I know I'm not a big donor under 50 every year, but if you guys can give me some health karma, that would be great.
John C. Dvorak
Yes, I'm going to give him some health karma right now. Because, man, especially after you poop. That's no good. Here you go, buddy.
Pam Bondi
You've got karma.
Adam Curry
He's in Puerto Rico.
John C. Dvorak
All right, thank you very much to these donors, $50 and above, including our executive and associate executive producers. Please help us out by going to noagendashow.com and donating something to us. Support the show. We have no other way of making this continue for four more years. Noagendadonations.com thank you all very. Caitlin Meyer says Happy birthday to Lady Linda. She celebrates today. Michelle Neva says happy birthday to Nora Neva. And she turns 21 on what's on Saturday. Jose Paredes on the 29th. That's also on Saturday. And some health karma for Denise Denies. Oh, that's not a birthday. But I will add that in just a moment. But first, let me say happy birthday to these people. On behalf of everyone here at the best podcast in the universe, let me do that health karma for her right away.
Pam Bondi
You've got karma.
John C. Dvorak
There we go. Because we do have a title change here. I'm gonna read the note first. This is Richard of Tasmania. He says thanks for accepting. He says, adam and John, thanks for accepting Australian dollary dues as real money. You do a better job than our useless government by respecting our dodgy currency that way. I'm a recurring prod in your show and have earned enough to experience to be a level 2 knight. Benefits include a healthy amygdala, increased resistance to propaganda, and improved ability to detect gaslighting. Thank you very much. So he becomes a. Well, it says layway title change. So I'm not sure what he becomes. Oh, baronet. There we go. He becomes a baronet. So let me just. Let me. Might as well give you the jingle. I could have done the whole thing in the music anyway. Thank you very much. Sir Richard of Tasmania. Congratulations. You are now baronet Sir Richard of Tasmania. And we do have a commodore coming in today. This would be the Archduke of Central Florida who stepped it up once again. So we say congratulations, you are now a commodore and you are a regular driving sir. Very nice, commodore. Go to noagendarings.com and there's a tab there, a menu item. You can give us the address and the actual title. But I think it will be Commodore Archduke of Central Florida. Let us know for sure. We'll get it out to you as soon as possible. They're very, very handsome. We got the North Georgia monthly meetup at 6:00 today at Cherry Street Brewing in Alpharetta, Georgia. We have the Columbia River Basin monthly Tri Cities meetup 7:00 tomorrow at Ty's Bar and Grill in West Richland, Washington on Saturday one every single day. The Magic 33 Toverland meetup. Oh, this is in safe and in the Netherlands it's. Is that during the. Oh, that's at 10:00 in the morning. Bring your. Bring your alcohol I guess to for land toverlam 2 in Safenem, the Netherlands. Okay, 10 o'clock in the morning. Also on Saturday, this time in California. All aboard the flight of the no agenda meetup number 61, Leo Bravo is organizing at Santa Fe Express Cafe in Fullerton, California. The hipsters, trolls and producers. A no agenda Brooklyn meetup in Brooklyn, New York at Wing Bar. Definitely check that out on Saturday, 3:33 Eastern Time. Also on Saturday, the central OHIO really late St. Patty's Day meetup. That's very late. 5:30 at Dempsey's in Columbus, Ohio. And finally on our next show day Sunday, the TMI Evac zone crossword puzzle meetup. You'll be doing crossword puzzles apparently. 3:30pm at Evergreen Brewing in Camp Hill, Pennsylvania. And I got a promo here, dad.
Pam Bondi
What? And a six letter word for party like experience.
Adam Curry
Hmm.
Pam Bondi
Try meetup. Speaking of meetups, there's a TMI Evac Zone crossword puzzle meetup Sunday, March 28th.
John C. Dvorak
At Evergrain Brewing Company at 3:33pm Hope to see everyone there to solve this no agenda crossword puzzle. What's a nine letter word for father.
Pam Bondi
Who exploits his human resources douchebag?
John C. Dvorak
Okay, thanks. For the promo, go to noagendameetups.com that's where you can find the entire overview of all meetups. Calendar view list view. You can search by zip code. It's all over the world. They are producer organized. This is where you get connection that gives you protection. Because everybody you meet at a no agenda meetup is going to be your first responder in a crisis. No agenda meetups dot com. If you can't find one, you start one yourself. It's always a party. Sometimes you want to go hang out with all the night nights and days. You wanna be where you won't be triggered on Hell's Flame.
Adam Curry
You wanna be where everybody feels the same. It's like a party.
John C. Dvorak
Yo, yo. So are you back to regular ISOs now? You're no longer doing the AI stuff, are you?
Adam Curry
This time it's a split. Let's see what you got.
John C. Dvorak
Okay, hold on a second. I gotta correct some of the volumes on these because some of the volumes are way off Y. Here's what I got.
Adam Curry
Yeah, that's a great one.
John C. Dvorak
Yeah, I got this one. One for all, all for one. Thought that was kind of cute. And then this one. Bye, Adam. Bye, John. Not really an ISO, but no. Okay, what do you have?
Adam Curry
Well, I got. Here's a real one. This is the A. Too much.
John C. Dvorak
It was too much.
Adam Curry
It was too much. It was like too much.
John C. Dvorak
It was not good enough. It's not too much.
Adam Curry
And then here is the A meta.
John C. Dvorak
Meta.
Adam Curry
Yeah, this is a meta clip. And you hear why.
Pam Bondi
I may be fake, but that show was real. And Great.
Adam Curry
I may be fake, but that show is real. And great.
John C. Dvorak
I'm so torn about this.
Adam Curry
Oh, oh, oh, no. He's torn.
John C. Dvorak
It is time for John C. Dvorak's tip of the day. Hey, everybody, great advice for you and me. Just the tip with JCD and sometimes Adam. I'll use it, though. Created by Dana Burnetti. I'll use it. I'll use it.
Adam Curry
Okay, this is. I got this from two different people.
John C. Dvorak
Oh.
Adam Curry
And. Which is always like a sign. First time I looked at it said, no, no, no. Then I started really looking at it, and I said, holy mackerel. This is actually pretty phenomenal. But you have to dig. You have to go down, because all the top. This is called. This is a. I don't even know where they got this. This top level domain, but the. The site is TV Garden. TV Garden. I want you to go to this now. It has. It has TV shows from every country. Country in the world, and it has almost everything that you can imagine. You can click on the map, you can scroll down. There's a lot of different ways of doing it. The map. You can spin it around the globe. And most of the stuff at the top, like, for example, you go to the United states. The first 10 things at the top are all religious programming. I'm thinking this is a bunch of religious stuff. But no, you dig down, you'd go down. There's thousands, Lots of stations, including Buena Park Television, for example. But I want you to do this. Go to hit. Either. Go to the map.
John C. Dvorak
I'm at the map.
Adam Curry
Okay. Hit Canada.
John C. Dvorak
Okay. I'm gonna hit Canada so hard they won't know what hit him. Yep.
Adam Curry
Okay, now go to the. On the side. You see, there's two things in Canada. One is Afghan. Nobel movies. There's a bunch of movies. Afghanistan, because it's alphabetical. So everybody. Every country's got F. Yeah. Click on the second one. Afghan Noble tv.
John C. Dvorak
Okay. Hacked by Cyber Dragons team.
Adam Curry
It says. Yeah.
John C. Dvorak
What is that?
Adam Curry
The page has been hacked. The whole page overrun by some group.
John C. Dvorak
Interesting.
Adam Curry
Yeah.
John C. Dvorak
Barney the dinosaur. Wow.
Adam Curry
This.
John C. Dvorak
This is pretty cool.
Adam Curry
It's unbelievable.
John C. Dvorak
Wow. How do they even get away with this?
Adam Curry
Therein lies the rub. I do not believe this site is legal.
John C. Dvorak
I don't think so either.
Adam Curry
They have everything from every country. Every imaginable TV feed is on this site. So you can watch. They have Milwaukee's local station. They have everything in Canada. I didn't even know half the stuff exists. They have every BBC channel, plus stuff in England. I never heard of it's just a great site. This is a fabulous tip.
John C. Dvorak
Do they have Korean. The Korean news lady.
Adam Curry
North Korea? That's a good question.
John C. Dvorak
I don't know if that's North Korea. We got North Korea. Here we go. North Korean Central tv. I got bars and tone on Pyongyang. That is an amazing tip. I, I'm now, now. You thought I was deep into my code. I'm going to be playing with this for the rest of the day.
Adam Curry
That is amazing. Korean Central Television.
John C. Dvorak
What a great tip. Another fantastic tip. John, you have outdone yourself. I mean, every single time. It just keeps on getting better. You're like a fine wine, my friend. Yeah, the fine wine of tips it is. John Cvorax, Tip of the day tipoftheday.net no agenda fun and sometimes Adam created by Dana Burnetti. Well, now you've outdone yourself on that one. And of course, the question is, did you click on all the A's and the B's before you finally got to Canada to find that hack channel? Is that what you were doing?
Adam Curry
That was just a random walk. I hit the hack channel by accident.
John C. Dvorak
Wow. Amazing. That concludes our broadcast day for today, but we will be very delighted to come back and do it all again for you on Sunday, clearly with more stuff. More stuff. There's lots of stuff. And your favorite place for world news. No Agenda World News Service will return on Sunday. End of show mix is coming up from Professor J. Jones. We got oh Bo's music. He's got a cool little diddy here hacked together. And up next on the no agenda stream patrolroom IO the modern podcast apps, it's Grimerica. This is their 700th episode. Support those guys. Their value for value. Coming to you from the heart of the Texas hill country here in Fredericksburg in the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
Adam Curry
Now from northern Silicon Valley, where I remain. And it looks like it might rain. I'm John C. Dvorak.
John C. Dvorak
Remember us@noagendadonations.com and make it great for Sunday. We'll see you then. Until then, adios, mofos and such.
Pam Bondi
The strength that we have is in this moment.
John C. Dvorak
What are you doing in this moment? Elon Musk is a Nazi.
Adam Curry
Oh, the. In this moment?
John C. Dvorak
There's some kind of mental illness thing going on here because this doesn't make any sense.
Adam Curry
What is this all about in this moment?
John C. Dvorak
Bullets are being fired. Charging stations are put ablaze.
Adam Curry
Teslas are being put ablaze. What is the op here? What are they trying to Accomplish?
John C. Dvorak
I don't feel good in this moment. How do you feel in this moment?
Adam Curry
Are you guys that lost? Does it really come down to the basic.
John C. Dvorak
Really with this? Comes down to.
Adam Curry
It baffles me. Is that what it comes down to?
John C. Dvorak
What is the best way to avoid war?
Pam Bondi
Europe must get ready for war.
John C. Dvorak
These people are trying to kill us.
Adam Curry
She's making this up as she goes along.
John C. Dvorak
It's grassroots, too. Grassroots, grassroots, non violent. There is no conspiracy. There is no well funded cabal. Volkswagen is retooling one of their closed factories. I mean, like really friendly fire. All out warmonger. It's what this moment requires. You got that part right.
Adam Curry
Does it really come down to the basic.
John C. Dvorak
Really what this comes down to?
Adam Curry
It baffles me.
John C. Dvorak
Is that what it comes down to? Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Meanwhile, while bad people will do bad things, stay in your home. I repeat, stay in your homes. Your personal safety, the safety of the entire city depends upon your full cooperation with the military authorities.
Adam Curry
Dope show, dope, Dope show, dope. Dope show, dope. Dope show, dope. Yo, yo, yo, what up? Yo, yo, yo, what up? Yo, yo, yo, what up? Yo, yo, yo, what up?
John C. Dvorak
Yo, yo, yo, Dope show. Yo, yo, yo. Dope show, dope. Yo, yo, yo. Dope show, dope. Yo, yo, yo.
Adam Curry
Dope show, dope show, dope show, dope show, dope show. Yo, yo, yo, what up? Yo, yo, yo, what up? Yo, yo, yo, what up? Yo, yo, yo, what up? Yo, yo, yo, what up? Yo, yo, yo, what up? Yo, yo, yo, what up? Yo, yo, yo, what up?
John C. Dvorak
Which is incredible. Incredibly white of you, but okay. I digress.
Adam Curry
Yeah, of course it is. I'm white. Hello.
John C. Dvorak
Dvorak.Org na.
Pam Bondi
I may be fake, but that show was real and great.
No Agenda Show Episode 1750 - "SPLESH!" Summary
Release Date: March 27, 2025
In episode 1750 of the No Agenda Show, hosts Adam Curry and John C. Dvorak, alongside guest Pam Bondi, delve into a myriad of topics ranging from high-profile arrests and political scandals to media deconstruction and economic policies. This episode is marked by incisive commentary, engaging discussions, and critical analysis of current events.
The episode kicks off with a discussion about the recent arrest of a 25-year-old MS-13 gang leader in Virginia.
Pam Bondi provides details: "One of the top leaders of MS-13 was apprehended. He was the leader for the East Coast... living half an hour outside of Washington D.C." ([02:44])
John C. Dvorak comments on the media's portrayal: "The timing of this and how much time there was before the reaper drones... clearly suspicious of a setup." ([20:24])
Adam Curry expresses skepticism: "It just seemed to be showboating if you ask me." ([02:02])
The hosts question the authenticity and motives behind the arrest, suggesting it might be a media stunt aimed at discrediting law enforcement efforts.
A significant portion of the discussion centers around "Signalgate," relating to Hillary Clinton's mishandling of classified information.
John C. Dvorak emphasizes accountability: "Mishandling classified information is still a violation of the Espionage Act. It started with Hillary Clinton." ([05:18])
Adam Curry critiques media narratives: "They don't seem capable of keeping the American people safe." ([05:26])
Pam Bondi shares official perspectives from congressional hearings, highlighting the severity of the breach and calls for accountability ([07:11]–[07:31]).
The hosts argue that continuous lapses in handling classified information undermine national security and question the administration's commitment to accountability.
The conversation shifts to the funding of National Public Radio (NPR) and the political implications surrounding it.
Pam Bondi presents NPR’s defense: "Depending on how you count it, it's less than 5%." ([33:54])
John C. Dvorak criticizes the dependence on federal funds: "The Public radio satellite system is an anachronism. This thing should immediately be shot out of the sky." ([32:22]–[33:28])
Adam Curry mocks the rationale behind praise: "She said, well, if we don't give the little people some money... you're just shutting them down." ([37:58])
The hosts suggest that NPR’s reliance on government funding compromises its independence and question the efficacy of public radio in fostering genuine local journalism.
A detailed analysis is provided on President Trump’s announcement of a 25% tariff on all imported cars into the United States.
John C. Dvorak explores the potential fallout: "It could increase prices per car by thousands of dollars and impact jobs." ([52:11]–[52:49])
Adam Curry expresses doubt about the feasibility: "You can't just double production overnight." ([68:34])
Pam Bondi reports from international perspectives, highlighting concerns from Canada, Mexico, and other countries affected by the tariffs ([57:01]–[58:32]).
The hosts debate the practicality of implementing such tariffs without disrupting international trade relations and the domestic automotive industry.
The hosts discuss a Pew Research study on changing religious affiliations, noting a higher rate of Christians becoming unaffiliated compared to Jews in the U.S.
John C. Dvorak challenges the interpretation: "The study is somewhat skewed because... zoomers are buying Bibles like no one else's business." ([170:27])
Adam Curry critiques NPR's reporting: "They gave you the wrong side of the equation and you had to do the math in your head." ([168:11])
The conversation highlights concerns over how media representations can mislead public understanding of demographic shifts in religious adherence.
Adam Curry shares frustrations with integrating AI into podcast production, particularly with scripting and technical setups.
Adam Curry recounts: "I spent almost all of Monday and Tuesday trying to just get this thing to do a different type of crossfade... It's a huge mistake." ([178:18]–[180:07])
John C. Dvorak sympathizes with the technical hurdles: "It's time waste. I could have learned the language in the amount of time I put into it." ([178:31])
The discussion underscores the limitations of current AI technologies in handling complex, creative tasks essential for dynamic content production.
The episode concludes with acknowledgments of donations and support, emphasizing the "value for value" model.
John C. Dvorak urges listeners: "You can support us with your time, your talent or your treasure... It's up to you." ([157:19]–[158:27])
Adam Curry highlights the importance of listener contributions: "Make it great for Sunday. We'll see you then." ([204:16])
The hosts encourage their audience to contribute financially to sustain the show's operations, emphasizing a community-driven support system.
Adam Curry: "Now I found some stuff outside of signal gate." ([00:53])
John C. Dvorak: "Mishandling classified information is still a violation of the Espionage Act. It started with Hillary Clinton." ([05:18])
Pam Bondi: "We have been out since about 4:30 this morning." ([01:38])
John C. Dvorak: "The Public radio satellite system is an anachronism. This thing should immediately be shot out of the sky." ([32:22])
Adam Curry: "Get your brand name drugs, everybody get them now." ([24:25])
John C. Dvorak: "Everything is drones and the missiles... War has become a farce." ([202:05])
Adam Curry: "I have a grievance with today's donation segment. It's... it's the shortest list we've ever had, I say for at least two years." ([188:38])
Episode 1750 of the No Agenda Show offers a thorough exploration of pressing issues such as gang-related arrests, political scandals, media funding, economic policies, and the evolving landscape of religious affiliations. Through sharp analysis and candid conversations, Adam Curry and John C. Dvorak deliver a compelling narrative that challenges mainstream narratives and encourages listeners to engage critically with the information presented.
For support and to contribute to future episodes, visit noagendadonations.com.