Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Dana Lashes of surd Truth podcast sponsored by Keltech. It's
his life mission to make bad decisions. It's time for
Florida man oh Well. Wild brawl broke out amongst swimsuit
clad boaters at a Florida lake in front of families, kids, pets, everybody, nature, everything.
(00:25):
A big old fight broke out amongst a bunch of
boaters at a Florida lake over the weekend. A man
was knocked unconscious and left floating face down in the water.
According to a video. It happened at Lake winter Set
in Polk County in front of kids. They were relaxing
lakeside with their family. According to Polk kind Of Sheriff Office,
seven men and a seventeen year old boy were arrested.
Sheriff Grady Judd announced yesterday that he was going to
(00:45):
make an example out of the hooligans. Uh and uh,
I mean it's one. I mean I watched one fella
get knocked face out, just knocked out and he went
face down on the ground. Another was face down in
the water, Punches flying at random. A woman in a
pink bikini tried CPR on one knock out man. The
chaos very like I mean, I don't even know if
we can play the video. Can you show some of
the screenshots. I don't know if we can actually play
(01:07):
the video because there's so much cussing in it. But
they were showing just like some b roll and all
the men are in their late teens or early twenties
except for one forty year old man. And the sheriff
said that they're gonna crack down on delinquency. But they
were fighting and are brawling, and nobody actually even knows
what over that's the you know, I'm yeah, I'm just
(01:29):
say they don't even know. A Florida man is accused
of giving his grandfather a drug cocktail to quote ease
up his death. The man said, I helped him out. Okay, yeah,
it's euthanasia and it's also murder. And that's not helping
nobody out. That's not what that is. Oh my gosh.
So now he's uh, I can't get this open. Now
he's gonna he's gonna be sentence and he's gonna be
(01:50):
going into jail for that, and then well I'll get
I'll get you tomorrow. The guy he was arrested, he
said he'd drank too much. On the body cam footage
and yeah, he very evidently did stick with us more
in story.
Speaker 2 (02:04):
These women aren't friends out for a run, they're actually
undercover police officers taking to the streets in Surrey as
part of a new operation trying to stop people cat
calling and harassing female runners. When you get pulked at
the staring, the hanging out of the window just to
look at us, and it just it's so so so prevalent.
(02:26):
Police teams are ready to intervene the moment the officers
are beat up, followed or shouted out, pulling people over.
Speaker 3 (02:37):
Those kind of behaviors may not be criminal offenses in themselves,
but they still need to be addressed. And of course
the people that are likely to commit those kind of behaviors,
you know, they may then go on to commit more
serious offenses or more serious behaviors.
Speaker 1 (02:52):
This is the stupidest stuff I've ever seen in my life,
and it's actually what they're doing in Britain. Welcome back
to the program, Daniel ash with you the top of
the second hour. They're actually doing this in Britain. Did
you hear you? You had the fella he said, Well,
it's not actually a Krayn in a pi se. We
can't actually arrest them for cock cooling, but you know,
we're still gonna try to stop it. We're gonna use
(03:13):
a lot of tax pay a fund of resources. So
I feel like that Drake Meme, you know, oh grooming
gangs and Rotherham, you know, but cat calling, you know,
like an entrapment. That's that's the thing. That's the This
is insane. They're spending taxpayer dollars and I'm sorry they're
not sending us their best. Can I just be honest
for a moment, because this is why you guys are
(03:35):
really Ultimately you're like, just do it, Dana. I know
you just say what you think, and I know what
you're thinking in your head. I mean, how many people
actually believe that all these dudes were turning these heads
over that one of them, one of them was like
some big fun you know what I mean, Like from Heathers.
I'm just saying, uh, I think that they look goofy
(03:58):
because they're running around in a vast and my first
thought would be like why are you I would be
looking like why are you in that? That's far it's
not you know, that's just dumb. But the fact that
they decided to Actually they're actually like baiting people like
like I'm I'm just can't even believe this, So they did.
(04:18):
They had these British cops like go running, just go jogging,
and they Now, you know what the article didn't get into,
who are the people actually cat calling them? Would? I mean,
are they the same type of people that were getting
the girls and the grooming gangs and Rotham? I'm just
curious and honestly, what are these broads? Should be? Should
(04:41):
just be happy that she can still elicit some attention.
If I'm being honest, let's just be real about it.
If you're gonna sit here in shame men like those,
then I feel like, you know, turnabout's fair play. But
they said that they created the Sari Police Department came
because they, for lack of anything else to do, they
created a trial task for an entire month cane and
(05:03):
it led to eighteen rists. Well, that's completely different from
cat calling. Why are you comparing men who are cat
calling two? By the way, I've seen women cat call
the heck out of dudes. I have seen in my
lifetime more women cat call men than men ever cat
(05:25):
call women. It's just not something I get offended by.
It's I mean, it's one thing if someone's like screaming
abuse at you, which I've had happen, but it's entirely
different if someone's like paying you an audible compliment by
either whistling or something else. And I don't know why
women feel like I've got a way to give myself power.
(05:48):
So I'm just gonna pretend to be offended and be
a victim and like claim that I was my power.
That's just lame, and then they're gonna complain later. I
just don't know why I can't get any dates. Well,
maybe because you've like turned some being innocent like that
into something horrific. So they they go. They were wearing
tight fitting clothes. They're wearing exercise clothes. You absolute morons.
(06:10):
That's how it was described in the British press. They're
wearing legings and like T shirts for crying out loud. Hope,
but it's not a boca. But they said they were
sent to rush hour hotspots and they pretended to be joggers. No,
they were joggers. They were jogging. And they said one
(06:31):
person was honked at in ten minutes. Oh no, killo.
They honked at her. Yeah. Meanwhile in Rotherham for fifteen
years they were sexually abusing, molesting and trafficking minor girls,
even like as young as like twelve. But hey, they
honked at one of your uh, one of your cops
(06:53):
and legings. This is just so goofy, Just just just
so goofy. They're like people slowed down to stare. Do
a lot of people jog in that area because that
might be weird, right, I don't know, It's just I
don't know. This whole thing is I will absolutely stare
at someone if I see them jogging, especially if they
(07:15):
look dumb while they're doing it. Because every now and
then you have the person who either runs like what's
his face in a ruto? Or you got somebody that
they they're just like an arm swinger. Have you seen those?
I look at it because it's strange. It doesn't mean
I'm cat calling. I will look at them and be like,
that person is running like a loon, look at them.
(07:36):
Or if they're like slapping their feet on the pavement
like a duck, you know, I'm like, look at that
person's form. Absolutely, they have no idea they're signing, especially
the people who are standing, they're signing motives to them.
Maybe they got honked because they weren't abiding right of way.
You never know. This is the stuff that they do
over there. They created an immediate Trial task force for this.
(07:57):
But Rotherham abuse an entire an entire city where thousands
of young girls were trafficked by Pakistani men for almost
two decades and all of people like in high up
positions covered it up. That's you know, can't rush to
(08:18):
create a task force for that. But for this, Oh yes,
we're going to create a task force. I and then
this this little the inspected John Vale, I feel harassed
just by this. Can you claim that like I feel
these people's like ridiculous reaction is harassing me. I feel harassed.
(08:41):
Where's my relief? That's what I just just Britain man,
I don't even know what's happening in Britain. Case in
point so this, Uh, they have a lot of immigration
coming in from Northern Africa, a lot. And they had
a Nigerian man and I'm not don't know if I
should try his name Aomid Fama kind who is from Nigeria.
(09:05):
He sexually assaulted a young woman. But because he had
a troubled whatever that means, a quote unquote troubled background.
He wasn't given jail time. The judge felt sorry for him, saying, oh,
the prison sentence would be too severe, so he just
gets eighteen months of community service and he was left
to go. And it was a teenager, And basically they
(09:31):
were like, oh, he doesn't know that. It's you just
can't go around like raping women, same country. You just
can't go around. He doesn't know that, you just can't
go around raping women. So we just feel so bad
for him that he just doesn't know that he can
do that. Yeah, he was. He targeted and sexually assaulted
a teenager. The victim says that she's terrified to go
(09:51):
anywhere alone and that he ruined her life, and she
tried to fight him off, and he just he pulled
her to the ground and he was going to brutally raper.
You can't tell me he wasn't. I mean, he pulls
her to the grounds, pulling off her close. Yeah, and
then someone pulled another individual intervene and pulled him off
of her. But the judge said, well, it was a
(10:13):
momentary aberration. He has a very troubled background. You see,
he had a very difficult life. You see, he's a
gym instructor from South London, so he's able to come
to the UK Kane and figure out how to get
a job, how to apply for a job, how to
get a flat? How did you do all of these things?
But he didn't know that you just can't go around
right being women. Yeah, they said no, no, no, a
(10:37):
custodial sentence would be too severe for him. I mean,
screw the victim. I mean, you know, not literally in
case he gets the wrong idea. But yeah, they the
girl was at the beach with her friend. They were
walking back. They were walking back home, and that seems
(10:57):
like normal, right, you're at the beach with your friend.
You're a young woman. Shouldn't you be able to go
to the beach in your country and if you live
by the beach, walk home from the beach. But that's
when they were walking home together and he approached them,
and the victim said that she first realized that somebody
had put an arm around her waist, and she was
talking and looking at her friend, and then she realized,
all of a sudden, this guy appeared and then he
(11:20):
started shoving his hands down her pants and knocked her
to the ground and they called police right away. All
the people at the scene identify this guy. There was
DNA evidence that linked him. He was found guilty of
sexual assault and the victim goes, I didn't see him
coming and I certainly did not ask him to ruin
(11:40):
my life. He left me crying and injured on the ground,
asking for help, and she's like, I'm terrified to walk
alone in the street, and the judgees like, well, you know,
he expresses remorse. He's upright, young man with clear potential.
So we're gonna now, if you can't call a woman
and you're a British person, you're going to have, you know,
(12:01):
the book thrown at you. But if you come into
the country from somewhere else and you, you know, apparently
are you can go out and get a job. But
then you want to claim ignorance when you realize that
you can't just go grabbing women like you apparently can
in your home country. Oh, then it's oh, don't repeat it.
You know, you get a little tap on the wrist,
not even a slap. Britain is conquered. They conquered themselves.
(12:25):
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sent you and now all of the news you would
probably miss. It's time for Dana's quick five fun fact
playing a little bit of Queen and David Bowie under
pressure on our way in as bumper. Once when I
(13:32):
worked at a record store backtor in m college days.
I played that and someone thought I was playing Vanilla Ice,
and I kicked them out of the store. I made
them leave, and I said, you have a one month
ban until you get better tastes. I mean, I don't
not that I dislike Robbie and Weigle, but the fact
that you didn't know what that was sampled from Get
out of My Get out of the store. All right,
so true story. Let's see this is from the hill,
(13:52):
ma'am Danny. I have to say it the way that
they say in Gloria's Bastard's Nancy. Ma'am Danny. He's leading
the New York City a race by nineteen points. In
the latest Siena Research Institute pull. He's at forty four.
Couomba's at twenty five, Silva is at twelve, Eric Adams
is at seven. I mean, this is a skitttin. I
(14:15):
don't know. Here we go. This actually surprised me. NFL's
heaviest player four hundred and sixty four pounds, he's deemed
too fat to play and yeah, and he's forced to
watch from the sidelines until he loses weight. Desmond Watson,
they have no idea when he's going to be able
to return. He's the heaviest, he's on track to be
(14:38):
the heaviest in history. He's Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He's got
to lose a lot of weight. Apparently, they said they
have to get the number down. He still has a
lot of work to do. They said he's doing a
solid job. That's all I'm gonna say. So, man, a lot.
That's a lot. So on the off season, he had
to gain a lot, I guess, or else he wouldn't
have been signed if they knew physically wasn't able to play. Yeah,
(14:59):
I think so. I think something happened over this break.
I mean, I think someone wasn't eating healthy, you know,
And I get it, you know. I mean you're in
the you're in the grocery store and you're walking by
them star crunches. My kids did not know what a
star crunch was.
Speaker 2 (15:12):
I haven't had one of those decades.
Speaker 1 (15:14):
First off, but I know I got other headlines. That's
a test to determine whether or not someone is worthy
of being in your group during an apocalypse. Do they
know what a star crunch is? They don't get out,
go to jail, right to jail. That's where you got
us major airline warrants it's gonna shut without a cash boost. Well,
I don't know. Maybe if we allowed things to be
privatized and you know, I don't know, we had better
(15:36):
service and we weren't treated like cattle. Spirit Airlines. Isn't
that where all the fights happen. Isn't that the waffle
house of the skies? Spirit Airlines, it's the waffle House
of the Skies. They'll just slap you out of the plane.
You don't even need to like, you know, deboard, They'll
just slap and he slapt you right off. They said
that they they don't have a lot of money and
they need help. Okay, let's see. I mean it was
(15:59):
a I said, if you're breaking into a Redmond auto shop,
he had to get get his phone back. I mean,
I understand you want your phone back, but isn't there
a way that maybe you could wait or maybe try
to get a hold of the own It was at
one thirty pm, so it was in the middle of
the afternoon. But the way that he did it though,
(16:20):
he threw a rock right through the front door, that's
not the way to do that, right, So I don't know.
Maybe they were out for lunch, whatever it was. But
you could have waited. You didn't need to throw a
rock and bust their door in. That's just and then
enter it while it was unoccupied. That's target cookie recall.
Thousands of popular sugar cookies recalled because they got wood
pieces in them. I mean, do you know what Cellulus is?
(16:43):
Number one? Number two? Why are you? I don't. I
will not buy cookie dough. I'm not gonna buy the
cookie dough like that. Make it. It's so easy, especially
sugar cookie. It's like the easiest cookie to make, and
it's so much better. It tastes better. Your kids will
think you're amazing. They love you. Don't buy this stuff.
Don't buy it. It's junk. Best part. No wood. Yeah,
(17:06):
and there's no wood in it. That's right, no wood,
no bug legs, none of that stuff is in there.
Ooh yeah, that's what Celluls is. But our friends over
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you know what I'm actually getting ready to look at
because I get my emergency kits. I'm gonna do this
right now. I get my emergency kit. I got two there,
(17:28):
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Like I said, they have absolutely you know everything. I'm
looking right now at their stuff for motion sickness because
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order and check out their full list as well. Now
they're going to examine a review Smithsonian exhibitions what they
(18:54):
want to sell. I mean, it's shouldn't be about celebrating
American exceptionalism. One of my favorite museums was the Smithsonian,
the American Museum Americana, and the World War II exhibits
specifically gone there. I've taken my kids there. They're amazing,
and I'm a huge World War II history buff and
I loved just, oh gosh, it's just amazing scene some
(19:17):
of the stuff that they have there. The White House
posted a letter on its website that read, quote letter
to the Smithsonian Internal Review of Smithsonian Exhibitions and Materials.
They wanted to have a quote broader vision of excellence
that highlights historically accurate, uplifting and inclusive portrayals of America's heritage.
(19:41):
So they want to make sure that it's aligning with
this directive to celebrate American exceptionalism. This is all from
the letter, Remove divisive or partisan narratives, and restore confidence
in our shared cultural institutions. That that doesn't sound bad,
(20:02):
I mean, does that sound bad? I mean, yeah, that's
all good, right, nobody wants a historical divisiveness. We want
to all have confidence in our shared cultural institutions, right, yeah.
So they want to have public facing content, a review
of the exhibition text, wall, diet arctics. They want to
have educational materials, digital social media content. They want to
(20:25):
they want to quote, assess tone, historical framing, and alignment
with American ideals. Then a curatorial process to talk with
the curators and seeing your staff. I'm reading from the
letter that understands the selection process, exhibition approval workflows, et cetera,
et cetera, exhibition planning. Because we have our two hundred
and fiftieth anniversary for the Declaration of Independence coming up,
(20:47):
America's founding, et cetera. They want to evaluate how existing
materials and collections are being used or could be used
to highlight American achievement and progress, and whether or not
they can digitize or convey to other institutions certain materials,
and they want to make sure that they have curatorial
(21:09):
guidelines that reflect their original mission. Here's David Axelrod quote,
gonna make my David Axelrod face. The White House plans
to conduct a far reaching review of Smithsonian Museum exhibitions, materials,
and operations. The guy who declared their independence from a
mad king two hundred and forty nine years ago would
(21:30):
have lots to say about this. What what Mother Jones?
Big Mother Jones is like the charman of editorial toilet paper. Okay,
not even Sharman. It's a one play. They wrote. The
White House is pressuring the Smithsonian to eliminate political influence.
That's Orwellian. What's Orwellian is the political influence that you
(21:54):
have already infused and infested the Smithsonian with. That is
what is orwell And then the Daily Beast Trump's initiative
to make history great again is now threatening to bulldoze
Smithsonian exhibits. Oh oh wait, here's Politico. White House announced
(22:19):
the Smithsonian's review amid Trump's cultural reckoning. What the left
tried to do was Mao's color Revolution, rewriting our history
trying to shame us and shame our founding, trying to
(22:42):
only focus on the sins and without any grace and
ignore the excuse me, the amazing journey of reconciliation and
redemption and the story arc of our country, of any country.
(23:03):
I mean, that's that is, that's the Orwellian aspect of it.
That is what they did. They wanted to rewrite history
and wanted to denigrate our founders so that we would
somehow divorce ourselves because we did not want to have
our characters impugned by association. If they can make you
think that something is bad, you will voluntarily separate yourself
(23:24):
from it so as to not be stained by it.
You will remove yourself from association. So it was a
chilling effect. They wanted you to think this thing was bad.
They want you to think the Founders have faults and
thus are imperfect, and that the Founders are imperfect and
our nature's founding is void. That's the whole goal. That's
the whole goal of CRT. To make you lose faith
(23:47):
in the very fabric of this nation and the very
pillars of our institutions, so that if we believe that
these people are faulty, then the entire purpose of the
New the premise of this nation can be called into question.
I mean, it is a very graceless, punitive, maliciously dishonest framing.
(24:12):
It also ignores Old and New Testament. I mean, let's
not look at, you know, Jesus's family lineage, shall we
if they want to have these applied arguments. But I digress.
But that's the whole purpose of it is they wanted
you to feel shame. Therefore you would voluntarily divorce yourself
from this without and then you would you would distance
(24:33):
yourself from that. You wouldn't be maybe as excited to
talk about George Washington as excited to talk about Thomas Jefferson.
You know, these people who themselves have commit no sin
in their own lives. I mean, that's just stupid. I mean,
by that measure, then you would have to question Jesus
because look at David and look at everyone who came
(24:54):
in that family line before him. I mean, it's an
absolute rejection of God equips. The called doesn't call the equipped,
it's a total rejection of it. And it's a rejection
of that grace and the whole purpose of that story
(25:14):
because it's all about magnifying God's greatness and not mankind's.
It ignores all of that, and so it is a
bastardization of it. It is evil and malicious, but that
is the whole purpose of it. And they have infested
the Smithsonian with us mentality, and so all this is
is removing the infestation. That's not Orwellian. It's removing the Orwellian.
(25:41):
It was Orwellian to demand that we rewrite history books.
It's Orwellian to demand that we somehow blame ourselves for
having a free and prosperous nation. It is Orwellian to
demand that our freedom isn't really a just freedom because
our founders were were in were fallible. Well, everyone is
(26:03):
at least they're honest about it, where the left isn't.
So I think this is high time that it happens now.
The Smithsonian gave a statement to USA Today saying they
were not asked by any administration or any government official
to remove anything, and they said they they put USA
(26:27):
Today noted that Smithsonia puts Trump's name back in the
museum's impeachment display with changes, and I guess it has
a caveat. I keep seeing that they just did. That's
just like stuff to be petty. You know. If they
really wanted to have like a legitimate exhibition about that,
they would compare that impeachment to Clinton's impeachment, or they
(26:51):
would look at Nixon and then Clinton and then maybe Trump,
and then they could compare, Okay, well, what criminal charge.
Let's look at the criminality involved in this case with
Trump and in this case with Liton, because there were
criminal charges involved with Clinton that was based on a
criminal case. And part of the reason why it was
so further compounded is because the Clintons did everything they
could to try to hide it. It all started with
(27:13):
Whitewater and went from there Paula Jones, and then it
just kept adding up. And with Trump there was no
actual criminality, and even if there had been, it would
have been a misdemeanor. And that's where you hear the bookkeeping.
(27:33):
This is the New York case, a misdemeanor bookkeeping error
that was actually years past the statute of limitations. And
then they fabricated a charge for which they never actually explained,
and they advised the jury to discard it just to
(27:54):
accept the fact that there exists another charge for another crime.
We're not going to tell you the nature of it.
But the whole reason that they wanted there to be
the existence of some unexplained crime was so that they
could dredge back this expired accusation and then in New
York's weird twisted law, combine it to elevate it to
(28:16):
a federal a felony level. There were a lot of
attorneys in New York that are very rapidly progressive that
would not even touch it because they thought this is
so stupid. But Alvin Bragg, well, he's there there, uh
whipping boy basically, I don't know how you call him.
He's They get him to do everything. He was like,
I'll do it. He has more ambition than since the
(28:40):
only other person who maybe outmatches him is Hillary Clinton.
But they had Alvin Bragg do it. And then he
brought this case and there was no criminal conviction. They
just had the opposite of a homecoming contest. It's an
unpopularity contest. That's what he won with Democrats. Ooh, and
then they had all these different processed charges just because
(29:02):
they wanted to up the number and make it look
like there were a lot of crimes that he was
convicted of because they knew nobody was going to go
in there and look, oh, what is this thirty thirty
six different charges. Every time you send an email, that's
another charge. You reply to it, that's another charge. I mean,
it was all the same case, but it's like every
little bitty ancillary thing related to this one thing there
just they'll feather up another charge. That's what it was
(29:23):
all about. If they really wanted to have a very
educational exhibit, they would explain that in detail, but they
don't because it's all partisan. So yes, we're removing that.
That would that's actually the opposite of we'rewellian. Thanks for
tuning into today's edition of Dana Lash's Absurd Footh podcast.
Speaker 3 (29:43):
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