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We are pledging an extra $1 billion to this cause. We witnessed a new version of Bill Gates, someone unfamiliar to you.

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Speaker 0 is asked if he accepted bribes and if he would comment on the arrest of the former president.

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We will continue to hear more about Jeffrey Epstein in the coming year.

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He allegedly lied when asked if he was talking to other people. When a dozen people asked if he was talking to anybody, he allegedly said he did not have a roster and was not talking to anybody.

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The speaker asserts that Texas lied to prosecute the T-Mobile whistleblower and that the case exposes information Americans aren’t supposed to know. A key claim is that a conservative constitutional judge from Collin County was replaced days before the trial with a retired liberal judge from Dallas, which the speaker suspects allowed a juror to be planted in the jury. During jury selection, defense and state weeded 50 people down to eight, but the judge ultimately selects the jurors. The state prosecution allegedly lied about the gated community entry, claiming a security guard was present and that the speaker snuck in, a claim the speaker says is false and used to portray him as a dangerous stalker. The T-Mobile executive allegedly stated he feared for his life and his family’s safety, yet the speaker notes the executive flew to Bellevue, Washington, to T-Mobile’s headquarters the next day, arguing it contradicted the notion of a genuine threat from the speaker. The state prosecuted by obtaining all of the speaker’s social media from Ex Twitter, Instagram, Substack, and the speaker learned of this only when Instagram notified him. The state and T-Mobile labeled the speaker a violent threat for discussing his guns in self-defense, with a cited tweet and related materials used in the case. The speaker claims that his communications—tweets, videos, a long-form website—were censored, and that he then went guerrilla with flyers and a self-defense stance described as “staccato for self defense.” During sentencing, the state subpoenaed a police officer who arrested the speaker sixteen years earlier for a felony marijuana charge, with deferred adjudication and probation completed in 2008, to portray the speaker as a still-active drug dealer. The state reportedly shared some of the whistleblower story but downplayed that T-Mobile violated Texas Health and Safety Code chapter 81 d by discriminating against the speaker for being unvaccinated. The speaker concludes by urging viewers to share the story, claiming it exposes corruption among elected officials and corporations.

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The king and I talked about the situation in Rafa. Our military operation there is the major one.

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Speaker 0: The officer tells him to get a life, but the journalist insists that investigative reports are important for the country. Speaker 0 questions the journalist's credentials, but the journalist continues to ask questions. The journalist offers to provide all the material via email.

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I spoke to one of the hiccups who was in the line yesterday. He informed me that he resigned.

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We went to DC to meet with the congressional delegation and the White House to address this.

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John was given the opportunity to speak to the press about cooperation and a string of something.

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He's doing well, but it's hard to predict what will happen next. He has some strong ideas for Marco. Did you sign the tech talk over? Yes.

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I see him right there. What's happening? Look, there he is. We have media and media officers.

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I spoke with the mayor about our ongoing commitment to reopening the pause and ensuring the safe release of hostages and delivery of aid. We are working together towards a deal that will allow us to achieve these goals.

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I would like to thank everyone for their behavior during that incident. It was truly appreciated.

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Speaker 0 presents Connecticut memoranda series, volume one, describing a notice sent to Connecticut state officials (Attorney General and others) by certified mail and hand delivery through the governor’s office and Department of Public Health channels. The notice centers on acute renal failure (AKI) and argues it aligns with hospital homicide concerns. The speaker says the cover letter urges officials to seek personal legal counsel because if the state attorney represents the state, a conflict arises when citizens are harmed by state officials. The document allegedly provides detailed factual information drawn from official Connecticut records, intended to undermine any future “ignorance of fact” defense and to show that thousands have died from AKI and related conditions. Key claims and content: - The memorandum warns that described AKI deaths and related pulmonary embolism and thrombocytopenia are occurring in hospitals, and officials have a duty to act; failure to act after being informed could render officials criminally liable. The notice asserts sovereign and qualified immunity do not apply to criminal acts. - It asserts there are no statutes of limitations for most homicide crimes, and that inaction in the face of an imminent danger constitutes a legal duty to act. An inaction with knowledge of harm is framed as a criminal act. - Named recipients copied on the notice include Ned Lamont (Governor), Susan Bysiewicz (Lieutenant Governor), Eric Russell (State Treasurer), Sean Scanlon (Comptroller), William Tong (Attorney General), Manisha Juthani (Commissioner, Department of Public Health), A Orifice (Chief of Staff, DPH), and H Sultan (Special Counsel, DPH). The speaker claims these packages were signed for. - The memorandum is titled: “Memorandum notice of required action to thwart hospital homicides and acute renal failure deaths that are currently occurring and were occurring for the last three years, three and a half. Evidence compels immediate investigation and correction of injurious federal and state health protocols and mandates.” It cites a death-records study and a climate-related health data study obtained with approval to examine regional effects of temperature and humidity on heart disease. - It describes a data-driven investigation process with collaborators, including using discrete cosine transforms and discrete Fourier transforms to analyze signal-to-noise ratios in death data to determine seasonality and age-related patterns. The speaker reports that AKI deaths in CT rose substantially in 2020–2022, and notes a divergence from COVID death trends (AKI rising as COVID declines). - The speaker presents comparative state tallies for excess AKI deaths since 2015: Connecticut 1,721; Massachusetts 3,493; Minnesota 2,412. They claim thousands of AKI deaths across states, with CT showing a large increase in 2022 (and 2023) and assert that AKI was not adequately addressed by public health authorities. - The speaker discusses a pattern showing AKI deaths rising after December 2020, with a December 2020 inflection coinciding with a program (NCTAP). They claim hospital protocols and NIH COVID-19 treatments (remdesivir, baricitinib, ventilators) may have contributed to AKI and multi-organ failure, describing a two-signal theory: one signal linked to hospital protocols and the other to gene-based vaccines. - Graphs are described showing AKI versus COVID trends, with AKI not consistently correlated with COVID, and an observed spike in AKI deaths in CT beginning in 2020, peaking in 2022. The speaker notes a reduction in the proportion of AKI deaths that also test positive for COVID after March 2022, while AKI deaths continue to rise, suggesting a vaccine-related signal. - The speaker cites NIH COVID-19 treatment guidelines (final update dated 02/29/2024) and notes a planned website shutdown (08/16/2024), arguing a lack of updated protocols. They allege data manipulation or suppression by public health authorities. - In the recommended actions, the speaker proposes an investigation plan: verify CT data, investigate younger age groups first (examples: 94 deaths, ages 25–44; 184 deaths, ages 45–54 in CT 2020–2023), obtain entire hospital records (without notice) including vaccination status and treatment timelines, determine whether vaccination influenced treatment pathways, interview families, review DNR decisions, and publish results so the public can decide on consent to vaccines and NIH protocols. - The conclusion asserts an AKI epidemic in Connecticut that allegedly claims more life years than COVID and rivals other major past diseases in impact. It states there is no statute of limitations for murder, and that qualified and sovereign immunities do not shield officials from criminal charges. It calls for immediate investigation and potential prosecution of officials who knowingly refuse to investigate AKI deaths tied to NIH/CDC/FD&C protocols, framing this as a public health and civil liberty issue. The speaker closes by inviting questions and urging action to ensure accountability, expressing a desire to be involved in cleaning up public health governance.

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The media is at the next corner. They will be called down. The bus is acknowledged.

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The Department of Justice directed multiple steps to be slow walked, which was a new experience for the speaker.

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No comments will be made on the specifics of the case or any concerns regarding the deal prosecutors arranged that ultimately fell apart.

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The bomb in the building started clearing up.

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There was talk of a commission to investigate the negative effects of vaccines, led by a person named Robert.

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The press conference ends and the leaders leave. Please remain seated.

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The president has done over 40 unscripted interviews and more than 500 gaggles this year. He likes engaging with the public and will keep doing so.

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They offered serious subjects of conversation about cabinet positions, lower positions, and paying off campaign debt. These conversations could lead toward some real "gotcha" moments.

a16z Podcast

a16z Podcast | Modernizing Government Services, From Food Stamps to Foster Care
Guests: Jimmy Chen, Todd Young
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In this a16z podcast episode, Senator Todd Young and Propel CEO Jimmy Chen discuss the intersection of government and technology, focusing on modernizing social support systems. Senator Young highlights his motivation to improve the foster care system, particularly in response to the opioid crisis affecting children in Indiana. He emphasizes the need for a streamlined, transparent interstate system rather than the current paper-based approach. Chen shares his background and interest in addressing food stamp issues through technology, advocating for a holistic approach that integrates public, private, and nonprofit sectors. Both guests stress the importance of measuring outcomes in social programs and the potential for social impact partnerships to enhance effectiveness. They argue for leveraging technology to improve access and understanding of social services, ultimately aiming to empower low-income individuals. The conversation concludes with a call for collaboration between industry and government to tackle these pressing challenges effectively.

PBD Podcast

NEW Epstein Files, Trump's Chicago Take Over, Putin & Xi's Hot Mic Moment w/ Jillian Michaels | PBD
Guests: Jillian Michaels
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From leaked Epstein files to a high-profile clash over how history is taught, the episode threads power, media narratives, and accountability into a single conversation. The House committee released 33,295 pages of Jeffrey Epstein related records, including videos from the 2005 Palm Beach investigation and an DOJ interview, with redactions to protect victims. Nancy Mace left the briefing overwhelmed as lawmakers weighed what the victims described as a case far bigger than anticipated, naming rich and powerful people who should face consequences. Jillian Michaels joins the hosts to discuss CNN coverage of slavery and a Smithsonian installation that includes contested exhibits, including a piece about gender testing and sports. The conversation expands into the broader claim that nothing in the installations is solely about slavery, while acknowledging two separate conversations: the ethics of memory and the complexity of history. Amid the Jubilee chatter, there is a push to separate personal experience from political manipulation, with the hosts arguing that stories about the arts and history deserve a fuller, balanced dialogue, not a one-sided retelling. Over the weekend, Chicago faced seven killings and 54 shootings, prompting the discussion of federal help and the possible deployment of National Guard. Governor Pritzker resisted such a move while President Trump joked about the situation and later urged action, arguing that big cities face crime and must address it. The debate widened to the political tactic of calling for cross-state partnerships, and the hosts explored Pritzker’s reactions, as well as Mayor Brandon Johnson’s stance. In parallel, a CBS poll suggested Cuomo could beat Mamani in a New York City mayoral matchup if other candidates dropped out, with Cuomo leading 52% to 41%. The panel reflected on how the race could hinge on affordability and governance, and they discussed the possibility that Trump’s endorsements, media narratives, and public appearances shape the race. As the Jubilee segment delved into education, media, and the purpose of elections, the conversation circled back to accountability and the role of leadership in keeping communities safe.
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