Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
During his time Brown, Nuevas Valente was enrolled only in
physics classes. The majority of physics classes at Brown have
always been held within the Barrison Holly classrooms and labs. Now,
detailed records indicating where specific courses were held don't extend
(00:21):
back to two thousand and one, but we can say
that physics classes typically require access to specialized equipment, including
demonstration parts, that are a fixed asset in some of
Barrison Holly classrooms. So I think it's safe to assume
that this man, when he was a student, spent a
(00:42):
great deal of time in that building for classes and
other activities as a PhD student.
Speaker 2 (00:48):
Well, we're getting more information about this killer at Brown University,
and there's a lot of stuff to be unpacked still,
some of these Kina lees. So like last night, following
some of the stories about it was insane because the
updates are crazy, and we're going to dive into all
of that. This is our last show of this year,
(01:12):
and I know, so we've I want to make sure
that I get you guys set up with everything that
you that I can. At least now, I'm not going
to be totally out of the loop, you know, I'm
still going to be on social media here and there,
but I'm actually going to try to force myself to
take a sabbatical at some point, so we'll do that.
(01:32):
Uh So, welcome to the program, Dana Lash with you
top of this first hour the latest with this killer
and you were hearing some of the audio there. This
investigation still is a lot left to be desired, to
put it mildly, a lot left to be desired, because
there's I mean, now we're seeing there's I mean, there's
(01:54):
a real pattern here, there's a real you know, this
guy we saw found dead in the storage unit Brown
and MIT suspect and this is I mean crazy, forty
eight year old Portuguese national and one time Brown physics student.
So this comes on the heels of yesterday.
Speaker 3 (02:15):
I think it.
Speaker 2 (02:16):
I think we said yesterday the Israeli government was saying
that they were curious as to whether or not or
they wanted to investigate and see whether or not this
individual was the MIT professor, you know, was he taken
up by an Iranian agent?
Speaker 3 (02:30):
Like what's going on?
Speaker 2 (02:31):
And I feel like all of these questions at this
point are totally fair because everything is so crazy.
Speaker 3 (02:38):
This forty eight year old Portuguese national.
Speaker 2 (02:41):
They saw someone saw him go into this like storage unit,
and they acted on that, and then they found him
shot dead in this storage unit, which is super convenient.
Speaker 3 (02:55):
If you're a.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
She came's taken you? How much tinfoiled you got out
last night?
Speaker 3 (03:00):
Oh my dude.
Speaker 4 (03:02):
When I saw this, I'm like, wait a minute. Now,
they're wrapping up two different, seemingly unconnected situations with.
Speaker 3 (03:09):
One person seemingly unconnected.
Speaker 4 (03:11):
It looks unconnected to me.
Speaker 2 (03:13):
The moment that people were saying, oh, it's a fifty
mile drive from Brown University to the storage. It's fifty
mile drive. I mean, that's not a lot in Texas.
That's a lot, But nowhere else is it a lot
in Texas.
Speaker 3 (03:27):
That's a two day drive.
Speaker 2 (03:29):
But that immediately I thought, ooh, we're setting up some
connections here. This is going to get super interesting. They
said it was a self inflicted gunshot wounding, that the
guy was found dead. Now the timeline of this, I
know that we have some stuff up on the newsletter.
(03:49):
If you are a subscriber, you get it. Lorraine has
the latest up there. Because the guy was responsible for
not just Brown University, but also this MIT professor, so
weird Kane the guy was I'm not going to say
that I went into like this rabbit hole of looking
at plasma weaponry and all of this other stuff, but
(04:09):
I did do that yesterday. Well, I mean, that's a
weird guy to weird thing to target. You know what
I'm saying, it's a very odd Why are you shaking
your head like that like you know something?
Speaker 4 (04:20):
Well, it's just that I so did you see that?
How Obama follows this guy, but he.
Speaker 2 (04:26):
Also follows like five Okay, we're gonna he also falls
like five hundred thousand people. He follows like a million people.
So I'm not going to get super about that coincidence.
I'm sure, Well, he follows a lot of people, and
look if there's if there's a a connection to.
Speaker 3 (04:42):
Be made there, I'm all for it. But you know,
I'm just saying.
Speaker 4 (04:46):
I'm just saying that was what was also fueling the
tinfoil hat action.
Speaker 2 (04:50):
I get that, but I still think he follows a
lot of people. So let me just run this down.
So the both of the guys, the MIT professor was Portuguese.
The first there was some promotion that he was Jewish
and apparently he is not. So a lot of the
initial reporting that was out about.
Speaker 3 (05:09):
This was wrong as all hell. So five day search.
Speaker 2 (05:14):
The guy suspected of killing not only the MIT professor
at his home, but they also apparently attended the same
university in Portugal. The suspect had no current affiliation with
the university. He was enrolled at Brown. I'm reading notes
here from fall of two thousand to the spring of
(05:36):
two thousand and one in a PhD program. Now we're
going to get to the diversity visas and all that
stuff here in a moment. But that's I mean, so
there was a connection there, obviously that connection.
Speaker 3 (05:49):
The killer was also a physicist.
Speaker 2 (05:51):
They both attended the same Lisbon University and then afterwards
the MIT guy went to grad school in London. The
killer was re started as a grad student of Brown University,
and he was enrolled from two thousand to two thousand
and one, dropped out of the program, and the so
there's there's they knew each other. The other thing is too,
(06:13):
is the he switches He drove to the storage and
it switched out his car switched out the plates because
he run into a car and Boston drove to Brown.
People were spotting that vehicle around the area and then
he entered the classroom during his study session, shot the
place up, returned to Massachusetts, and then murdered the professor,
switched the plates on the car, et cetera. What you
(06:33):
want to know what is the craziest? So this case
is this is what we were all doing last night.
By the way, so bear with us. We are like
always studying in Philadelphia when who is it what I'm
what am I uh the always sudden in Philadelphi.
Speaker 3 (06:49):
Charlie work, Charlie.
Speaker 2 (06:50):
Charlie was at the wall and he's got like all
of these conspiracy theorists. That was us last night, trying
to run the story down. So a Reddit post blew
this case open. I can hear redditors going reporting for Doody,
I mean, Jimmity Christmas. Not only did they save us
with the not the dumb progressive ones, not only did
(07:12):
they save us with memes, but also this during COVID,
but also this investigation came, so they blew this case.
It was a guy on Reddit that blew this case
wide open, which is stunning to me. And I'm pulling
up some of this and again Lorraine has this on
the newsletter over at subsect, chapter and verse. So this guy,
(07:33):
this redditor known only as John, just John the Redditorjan
is dying laughing over here. We never really hear Wan
unless he's like snorting with laughter, and then you kind
of because it's so dark over in the corner and
the monitor is like five thousand feet tall. So John
(07:54):
the Redditor, he posted about a suspicious car in the
area and then he went to go speak to the
place about it. Wow, they tracked on the car. It
turned out to be the rental. It was super easy
for them to locate at via cameras, and then the
exact vehicle was spotted near the professor's home. Eventually founded
the storage facility in New Hampshire. So you're telling me
(08:19):
that a redditor and not the police found this out.
Speaker 3 (08:23):
I mean, because we've.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
All been a little kind of critical of the you know,
investigation with Brown because remember yesterday, what was our big
thing yesterday they hadn't even interviewed a single student and
at all of it, they they had not interviewed anybody.
So they found the storage facility in New Hampshire and
(08:44):
he was there. Now, I got to say, because when
Lorraine has her pieces up. Sometimes the bias slips in.
It's funny, she writes, but this is true one thousand percent.
Speaker 3 (08:57):
She said.
Speaker 2 (08:57):
Cash Betel's brag about the FBI sophisticated self phone tracking
system turned out to be useless, which is true. We
heard a lot about that. There's like a number number
of stories. There were little tweets about that, Yester tweets
post on x about that yesterday. So he had switched
the license plates on the car to make it harder
to track, and then he had a Google phone that
incorporated that had an app on this phone that made
(09:19):
it hard that made it harder to find his actual
location and obscured it. And he may have used a
SIM card European sim card to even make it harder.
So nobody knows the motive. I mean, I don't know
if they're going to go through this. I don't know
if there's anything in the storage unit.
Speaker 3 (09:33):
I don't know what that is.
Speaker 2 (09:37):
But you know, I don't know what he could have
in there that might shed some more light on this.
This is such a wild story. So he apparently also
never yelled Allahu akbar the Aloha snack bar, so there
was something. There was a teacher, a student teacher who
(09:57):
was involved in one of the study sessions that told
ABC that the killer had shouted something that was inaudible
or or not inaudible, but they couldn't understand what it was,
and then it kind of exploded from there and then
it ended up. I mean I even heard it repeated
on Fox News. Not only did I heard it repeat
(10:18):
it on Fox News, but someone even said it on CNN, So, uh,
that apparently didn't happen either. So what was this?
Speaker 3 (10:31):
What was this? Do you have theories?
Speaker 2 (10:33):
King?
Speaker 3 (10:35):
This is a weird one even for me. Do you
have theories?
Speaker 4 (10:38):
What he was saying?
Speaker 2 (10:40):
Oh, gorn lover, I don't know, I don't know. I'm
like entertaining everything.
Speaker 4 (10:44):
I mean, the guy was reporting that the witnesses were
saying either they heard nothing from him or they heard
barking noises and that was it.
Speaker 3 (10:53):
He barked.
Speaker 4 (10:54):
I don't understand that, but maybe I aloha snack bar
sounds like a bark when you're screaming.
Speaker 3 (11:00):
It low haw sagmar. I mean, yeah, I can see that.
That tracks.
Speaker 2 (11:07):
So we're gonna come back to this because they got more.
But wait, there's more. With the purchase of one slap
chop you get another. So in Bondai Beach, they've the
group of dudes that they arrested.
Speaker 3 (11:18):
Technically it's yesterday.
Speaker 2 (11:20):
They because they rammed their they were running their car
and trying to use their car as a terrorist weapon.
They all have connections to the Bondi Beach terrorists.
Speaker 3 (11:30):
Shocker shocker.
Speaker 2 (11:32):
Also, it's Epstein file release day apparently, are we supposed
to actually get more? Is it gonna be unredacted? Are
they going to just give it to give already published
information to gullible digital people of the night and try
to act act like they've broke something. I don't know,
but the they're trying to redact thousands of documents hours
(11:55):
before the legally required release today. There's a lot of
photos that are already link leaking out, including some with
former President Bill Clinton. So they're they're they're wondering now.
They're concerned about the rushed workflow. They don't want to
unintentionally release people's social security numbers. Can quick question because
(12:17):
they know we have headlines coming up? Why does an
AI do this?
Speaker 4 (12:21):
Oh god, it's a great question. It seems like a
task a I.
Speaker 3 (12:24):
Should do, can't I mean can't AI do this?
Speaker 2 (12:27):
Can't you just feed this through AI and say can
you redact you know, social Security numbers or victim names
or something like that. I mean, it seems like that's.
Speaker 4 (12:36):
I'm not claiming to have a full numb Yeah, but
you're right, it does sounds like that's something I could do.
Speaker 3 (12:41):
Is there are you?
Speaker 2 (12:43):
Are they not able to use AI to do this
because of the privileged information in it?
Speaker 3 (12:49):
Is that a concern?
Speaker 2 (12:51):
Because I I was thinking and I asked two people
about this and they're like, actually, we don't know. So
is there is that like a whole other set of
legal like you can't feed that into AI because it's
a I don't know.
Speaker 3 (13:04):
I have questions.
Speaker 2 (13:05):
So I have a brillion things for you, including a
really bad endorsement that Potus made in Texas.
Speaker 3 (13:15):
Oh guys, this's a toughie.
Speaker 2 (13:17):
We're gonna talk about this and talk to one of
the candidates involved, you know him as the AK.
Speaker 3 (13:21):
Guy, Brandon Herrera.
Speaker 2 (13:22):
He's gonna be joining us later on in the program,
and then we're also going to do our requisite last
day of broadcast. We got to talk about Jesus's gifts.
Rule in my house is Jesus only got three gifts.
You're no better than Jesus. You're not out there saving
the world. You get three and I'm not giving them
Frankinson's and murr.
Speaker 3 (13:40):
But wait there's murr.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
So we're gonna get into all of that and murr uh,
so don't go any it's never gonna stop.
Speaker 3 (13:46):
We have it's never gonna end. I'm so sorry.
Speaker 2 (13:49):
We have headlines on the way. The folks who help
bring the program to you, it's the uh folks over
at Berna Gunn. I'm always going to tell you to
carry I'm gonna tell you this every single time. I
have zero problem using lethal force FAFO. It's not my problem, matures.
I also understand you have college kids that live in
towns where they got to walk to campus, or they
got to go back to their apartment or go to
(14:09):
a parking garage, and it's not actually it's not, you know,
usually the safest situation. But maybe they can't carre because
they're under the age of twenty one. They could if
they were serving in our armed forces carry full auto overseas,
but nothing to protect themselves at home. Or what if
you have to walk go into a building for work
and you can't carry, you can't protect yourself and there
isn't any good security.
Speaker 3 (14:27):
This is where Berna gun comes in. You know this Christmas.
Speaker 2 (14:30):
It's all about diversifying what you have in order to
maximize your protection in every different scenario, and Berna does that.
The compact launcher is the This is what I'm going
to tell you to look at. They have other things,
but disregard all that right now. Just look at the
cl because this is the for this purpose. It's roughly
the size of a smartphone. Shoots chemical irritant projectiles that
in detur threats from up to fifty feet away. And
(14:52):
unlike regular stunt guns which maybe have two, one or
two rounds, this is a fifteen shot round capacity, so
that's a lot more. You can get all kinds of
different projectiles. They have accessories, but this is about being prepared.
So do everything that you can possible to make sure
that you are defended in every situation, in every scenario,
(15:15):
no matter what. And BURNA can be part of that solution.
You're not giving up anything with two A by diversifying
and getting around some of this other stuff. Because Berna
they don't care about gun forree zones. There's no gun
free zones that can not a gun see no gun
free zones, doesn't.
Speaker 3 (15:30):
Care about that.
Speaker 2 (15:31):
No background checks, no waiting periods, none of that. Visit
Berna dot com slash data. Check out the bernaclby r
in a Berna dot com slash data Ready.
Speaker 3 (15:40):
When you are.
Speaker 4 (15:41):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 3 (15:47):
This is such a sad story.
Speaker 2 (15:48):
A suspect has been arrested in a deadly shooting of
a Salvation Army bell ringer at Kroger. Can I just
say that the Salvation Army is one of the greatest
organizations that we have in the country that goes and
helps people. We did a lot of stuff with them
when we lived in Saint Louis. They are an amazing
group of people. They go where no one goes and
(16:09):
they are so impactful. This just hurts the heart. Police
are still investigating. It happened about six pm yesterday and
the suspect is a teenage boy, so that means some
deadbeat parent had their kid running around in a legal
possession of a pistol. They said it was not a
random occurrence and that the Salvation Army released the statement
(16:30):
that they were heartbroken. Kroger said they were as well,
so our prayers are with them. I went really really
long last segment, and I apologize. I'll make it up
to you next quick five. I also have a crazy
story to make it up to you next as well.
Stick with me, our partners, our friends. Over at Patriot Mobile,
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Speaker 5 (17:36):
Data makes some common sense of the crazy headlines with
a data show podcast, You're on the go guide for
getting up to speed on today's most important stories. Subscribe
on YouTube, Apple or your favorite podcast platform.
Speaker 2 (17:50):
If you are listening terrest. Really it is one of
the best collabs that you will ever hear. Feast nine
ears a bond, the duet, the dulcet tones of one
being Crosby and David Bowie.
Speaker 3 (18:08):
I mean, is there anything better? No, there's not.
Speaker 2 (18:12):
For all the kids who are unaware of those. If
you don't have this track on any Christmas jam list
that you will put in rotation over the festive season,
I'm gonna deport you.
Speaker 3 (18:26):
So what's gonna happen?
Speaker 2 (18:27):
I don't care if you're born here or not. Report
you somewhere because this is a requirement. Yes, Dave of
Bowie's British, I don't care. It's one of the best ever.
Speaker 3 (18:37):
It's so good.
Speaker 2 (18:38):
How weird is it too? That they did it? Isn't
that weird, like they're so great. I love being Crosby,
Being Crosby. Oh my gosh, David Bowie, Oh my gosh,
such a great track. There's so many, So I've saved
the best Christmas tracks for last. Today, see we got
a banging bumper. Steve was like, why are you only
telling me these? It's like, well, because we're saving the
(18:59):
best for last, is why. Like we're going out with
the bank. So welcome back to the program, Dane lash At.
You definitely overly caffeated today and we have a lot
to unpack. I want to get you set up for
the week. I want to basically make you exhausted by
the end of the show. So you're like, I definitely
need a brain from politics. I did not watch the
I didn't watch the live TPUSA thing yesterday because I
(19:20):
was working.
Speaker 3 (19:22):
I had stuff to do.
Speaker 2 (19:23):
I was getting ready for today, et cetera, and then
also getting.
Speaker 3 (19:25):
Ready for Christmas.
Speaker 2 (19:26):
But I but I had I caught a couple of
clips and I was talking to my friend. Ben and
I are friends and we talk. You know, we're not
like best friends where we you know, have house parties
together anything, but we talk. We have known him for
over a decade, actually fifteen years now, I've known him.
We kind of kind of grew up together. He's only
a couple of years younger than me. We sort of
(19:47):
grew up together in this industry, which is weird in
this industry because these are people that I've seen, people
that I've known since they were like thin and war
bow ties, or when they were a lot younger and
less muscly or younger and they didn't have gray hair.
It's just weird to grow. It's weird to be in
an industry like this. So I watched clips of it
(20:09):
and I really liked I mean what I thought what
Benson said needed to be said, and he's exactly right,
and it's not just you know, he's you know, he Well, let's.
Speaker 3 (20:22):
Just play cut one. This is a quick cut. Listen.
Speaker 6 (20:25):
And the people who refuse to condemn Candace's truly vicious attacks,
and some of them are speaking here, are guilty of cowardice, Yes, cowardice.
The fact that they have said nothing, well, Candice has
been vomiting all sorts of hideous and conspiratorial nonsense into
the public square for years is just as cowardly.
Speaker 2 (20:52):
And it's true, but it's more than just cowardice. I
would add, it's a lot more than just cowardice. It's
ruthless ambition because a lot of these people they just
want to slice of the digital pie at any cost,
at any cost, even if that means debasing themselves and
(21:13):
debasing the movement they're grifting.
Speaker 3 (21:18):
Off of for their lifestyles.
Speaker 2 (21:21):
A lot of the people that are trying to weigh
in on this now, these are people who were never
in the streets with us during the days of the
Tea Party. These are the people who don't know what
heavy lifting in politics is. These are the people who've
never gotten the threats and have never taken the arrows.
Speaker 3 (21:38):
Ever.
Speaker 2 (21:40):
That is who these people are. They're opportunists, or some
of them just do commentary, or some of them, you
know they are. That's the difference between I would say
people like myself and Ben and some of these others,
and then some of these other you know, thought influencers,
and I would put Candice in that exact and Tucker
(22:00):
in that exact same category. You know, reading copy that
your producers prepare for you on cable news is not
the same as authoring your own speeches and doing your
own research and getting helping to pass issues, get people elected,
and stop bad candidates.
Speaker 3 (22:16):
There's a big difference.
Speaker 2 (22:18):
And I say that because it's like the people that
have the least amount of skin in the game that
want to control the game, and now that everything is
shifting to digital, it's just ruthless ambition. They realize that
in order to be relevant, they have to be seen
as king makers in terms of the movement, and they
(22:38):
have to somehow create this veneer of having been part
of the movement structure from the beginning, which they weren't.
Speaker 3 (22:47):
It's not about gatekeeping.
Speaker 2 (22:48):
It's about questioning someone's moral compass and their ethical consistency.
And when you have people on your program, as I
have had people on this program, when you're bringing people
on and you're asking them questions, you have to make
the determination what are you doing?
Speaker 3 (23:06):
Who are you?
Speaker 2 (23:07):
Are you an activist serving only your own interests? Are
you there to serve your audience's interests? Because if you're
serving the interests of the audience, you need to be
asking the questions that are going to help inform the audience,
not just manipulate them, you know, going out and saying, well,
you know, I don't know, but I think we might
(23:28):
be having war in Venezuela.
Speaker 3 (23:30):
I don't know. That's just manipulation. You're not informing anyone.
That's just stupid.
Speaker 2 (23:38):
Some of these people are my friends or that I'm
friendly with, and I mean no ill will, but I'm
not going to not say anything about it. I operate
by kind of the book of Matthew. I'll go to
somebody privately first, and we'll have that conversation privately, and
then you know, if they if they're resistant or if
they're nasty, then you know, we'll have the discussion publicly.
(24:03):
But it's just it's incredibly disingenuous. It's all about it
is ambition. It's all about people who are trying to
get a slice of the digital pie. Like when people go, oh, well,
we're just asking questions, you know, they exclaim super defensively
while literally not asking any questions at all whatsoever. How
(24:24):
in the hell do you sit across from a Nazi
twink who basically pleasured himself to Hitler and loves Stalin
and not ask him about that. How do you sit
across from a guy who called the wife of the
vice president a jeet, A guy that would not be
in office had you not helped him and you not
ask him about that. That's what the audience is wanting
(24:48):
to know. They're wanting to know about the moral consistency,
not a well yeah he said that, but no, they
want moral consistency and accountability is part of that. There's
no reconciliation without it either, and that's biblical. Or they
say we don't want to attack our side. I watched
one commentator say, oh, I'm not going to attack our side.
(25:10):
You know, canvas is like my sister, I'm not it,
but then went on like and did three videos attacking
Ted Cruz or goes off on Mark Levin, What do
you mean you don't want to.
Speaker 3 (25:22):
Attack your side.
Speaker 2 (25:23):
You're all about attacking your side if you're attacking the
people that are trying to hold you accountable for the
dumb ass things you're saying. Yes, you are attacking your side.
You traffic and attacking your side. In fact, all of
Tucker Carlson's episodes are about attacking our side. This is
where I'm starting to get mad and where I'm starting
to be like, you know what made the burning bridge
(25:43):
light my path?
Speaker 3 (25:44):
Let's play cut for because this is ridiculous.
Speaker 7 (25:49):
What you're watching now, attacking people on the attacking millions
of Americans because they're Muslims.
Speaker 4 (25:55):
It's disgusting. And I'm a Christian. I'm not a Muslim.
I'm never gonning.
Speaker 7 (25:58):
I know there's a lot of effort to claim on
a secret I'm not. You should not attack people on
those grounds. And you're seeing it from Republic. What the
hell are you doing. What you're doing is trying to
divide the country. And I've lived through fifty years of
this craft, all these fake race wars that they're always promoting.
Speaker 4 (26:15):
Who's that hate each other?
Speaker 2 (26:17):
Who is they? First off, what do you mean who's
they always promoting? Secondly, I couldn't tell you were a
Christian by your behavior, or by the demonstrated lack of
understanding on scripture or the idea of calling people who
interpret revelation differently blasphemous and likening them to the demons
that you fought in bed.
Speaker 3 (26:36):
I don't. I don't. That's what gets me.
Speaker 2 (26:41):
The way that he put that is a disingenuous misrepresentation.
That is the same argument that the left uses when
they talk about deportation. You're just deporting Grandma's and tomato pickers.
Speaker 3 (26:53):
What are you doing? It's the same.
Speaker 2 (26:55):
It's the same formula, disingenuously misrepresenting the number of Islamis
terror attacks and the percentage of you know who are
Islamis terrorists, which by the way, is a way higher
percentage than any other demo, maliciously representing that as race
(27:19):
hate is preposterous and suicidal. So essentially what he's saying is,
if you're upset over Bondai Beach, then you're a bigot.
If you're upset over the attacks on Christmas markets in Bavaria,
in Brussels, in France, in London, in Spain, in Italy,
(27:43):
if you're upset over the attacks on Christmas markets, I
guess you're a bigot. If you're upset about the asset
attacks on women, I guess you're a bigot. If you're
upset over female genital mutilation, you're a bigot. If you're
upset over the Navy yard shooting, you're a bigot. If
you're upset of or fort hood, you're a bigot. I mean,
(28:04):
that's just the logic going all the way through to
its final conclusion. Who is They don't sit here and
talk about people, They want you they.
Speaker 3 (28:13):
Who the hell is they?
Speaker 2 (28:15):
If you're going to present this, then you have not
only a moral, ethical, but also an intellectual responsibility to
define those whom you are accusing. Otherwise, I'm just assuming
he's talking about Jews. Who the hell is they?
Speaker 3 (28:31):
Oh? They with their race hate, they with their race war?
Who is they?
Speaker 2 (28:35):
Because the only people perpetuating a race war are literal Islamists.
This is just doing heavy lifting for the Islamification of
the Western world, that's all that is. They with their
race hate, lecturing the United States about hating Muslims while
you defend Cutter and act like it's a Christian bastion.
(28:59):
You know where you can You can't even worship amongst
their over ninety five percent slave labor population. You have
to go to the outskirts of Doha, where you can't
even erect a cross on the side of your building.
You have to worship very quietly indoors, and you can't
talk to anybody about it. And if you try to proselytize,
oh my gosh, you could be killed. Who is they?
(29:24):
Why wasn't that ever answered? He sounded defensive, and it
was one of the worst things. I mean, I don't
think it was his brightest moment. I really don't. And
I thought what Ben said was correct. I mean, you know,
especially over Nick Fouintas and other things. This is the problem,
(29:44):
you know, having these debates on the right. Fine, no
one's talking about not having a debate, but you're talking
about ideas that were settled in nineteen forty five with
the blood of Americans entertaining. The idea that was entertained
on some of these podcasts was settled by the blood
of our grandfathers in nineteen forty five, and you spit
(30:05):
on that legacy by tickling the jimmies of the people
who traffic this stuff. You're no better than a westernized
Bacca Bazi. And that's an absolute truth. And the sad
thing is is they know it. And that's one of
(30:25):
the things that fuels their resentment. Imagine being reduced to
defending the very thing that would debase you. Imagine being
reduced to defending Islamism, I mean, imagine being reduced to
(30:49):
political dancing for is Lomist masters. And then you had
Owen's that posted yesterday that she thinks Shapiro's oh more
than ever involved with attacks on America et cetera. I mean,
just the insane stuff that she says. I don't even
(31:10):
remember her whole post. She's trying to do everything that
she can to make her money before her gay husband
is disinherited by his father, because then they're going to
be in a world of pain. I don't think the
Macrones are letting up. I don't like the Macrones, but
I don't like Owens either. They're all one and the same.
Somebody has a giant male copulatory organ, and sometimes I
(31:32):
wonder if it's not Brigitte, If you know what I mean.
We have a lot more on the way. Our partners
that help make the program possible. It is the folks
over at Preborn. You can help them meet their year
in goal. They're trying to get ultrasounds in all of
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Since two thousand and seven, they've saved half a million babies.
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Speaker 3 (33:22):
Every gift is tax deductible. Save a life today.
Speaker 5 (33:26):
Get the loaddown on the latest news with a side
of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to their Data Show
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like SAMs through the al Glans.
Speaker 4 (33:39):
So are the days of the United States.
Speaker 8 (33:43):
Yes, I would so much like this better if it
(34:15):
was like Silent Night or something, because that would make
it even like Jesus instead of Frosty.
Speaker 3 (34:20):
I mean, I'm not against this at all.
Speaker 2 (34:24):
It's a CDC, My dude, I am not against this
at all, but I really, I mean, can you imagine
what if it was like a Silent Knight that they
did this song Jude sus right, Oh my gosh, how
great would that be? I mean, I'm not against this,
but I think they could have amped it up instead
of doing like a secular Christmas song, you could have
totally taken a Christian hymn and just like pumped those
(34:46):
numbers up. Man got that rookie beat up. That would
have been sweet, dude. So it's a big thing in Texas.
Do we have time to play the camel kick in
the lady?
Speaker 3 (34:59):
Okay?
Speaker 2 (35:00):
This is a camel that kicked a lady in the
head at Alive Nativity Pressed Baptist Church in Dallas and
she got kicked. Yeah, they took her to the hospital
after she got punched in the head by a camel.
Speaker 3 (35:15):
They kind of go over the top.
Speaker 2 (35:17):
The tickets are well, they've been getting criticized for the
price of the tickets, and I realized that they use
that money for activities and stuff for the rest of
the year. It is a little over the top. How
do we feel about that? Yeah, camels ain't cheap. How
we feel about it? Do we know how we feel?
You're not gonna get struck by lightning? It's okay, you know,
(35:38):
all right? We got a lot more on the way. Shocker,
the guy who literally created Obamacare's governor of Massachusetts once
a Marxist tax scheme for all the latest for Mitt Romney,
we got a whole bunch stick with us. The folks
who hope bring you the program. It's the turmeric choose
you can fight inflammation. I just think they taste light candy.
I mean, look, I'm gonna be really honest with you,
(35:58):
I really don't care that they help. I don't care
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no added sugar in them. So my body's like, ooh,
it's candy, and I just eat it, like tons of it.
I eat tons of these turmeric choos. I'm surprised. I'm
not orange, but they it's not the best way to
sell it. But I'm being honest with you. It's all
about helping your body's healthy response to inflammation. It's from
(36:21):
the same folks who do the super beats hartshchoos. So
the problem with turmeric is that it's not super absorbable, right,
it's not the most you know, it has really great
antioxidant properties, but it's a little hard to be completely beneficial,
totally useful in the way it needs to be to
the body, you know. So that's I mean, that's the
standard turmeric extract. That's an issue that they have. But
(36:42):
with the folks at Human who do super beats, the
turmeric choose. They have They use this clinically studied turmeric
curcuman complex and so what that does is it's made
a They created a complex that helps solve the issue
of utilization by making a highly absorbable form of it.
(37:03):
So they they made it easier to absorb, so it's
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(37:25):
now is the perfect time to get them because the
Sam's Club SAMs Club has five dollars off right now,
So this offer ends however, December twenty ninth, and once
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Speaker 3 (37:35):
So for real legit, go to Sam's Club.
Speaker 2 (37:37):
Just stock up on them, because you'll notice the different
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Speaker 3 (37:51):
Welcome back to the program. Sorry, I'm looking at Christopher
Lee music stuff. I can't.
Speaker 9 (37:59):
It is.
Speaker 2 (38:00):
You know Christopher Le did a sweet metal Christmas album, right, Oh?
I know, right, pretty awesome. The guy died ceremony, but
a great Christmas metal album. Welcome back to the program.
Chats at Rumble.
Speaker 3 (38:12):
This is our last show of this year.
Speaker 2 (38:15):
We come back on January sixth and Substack, Chapter and
Verse podcast over at Apple. So do you guys like
watch a lot of Netflix? I have Netflix because you
have the great British baking show that's on it.
Speaker 3 (38:32):
So I watched that. It's good. That's good. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (38:36):
I used Netflix mostly for comedy.
Speaker 3 (38:39):
But they had a let me just read it.
Speaker 2 (38:46):
Netflix is going to come out with a gay military
series called Bits, not like the radio Kipling Boots Bits.
They it was previously described as woke garbage. Let me
just read it. Hang on, I'm gonna pull this up
(39:06):
because this was the official descript from Netflix before it
totally got canceled.
Speaker 3 (39:11):
It's totally canceled, so it's uh, there's only so oh
my gosh, it's so funny. There's only like a couple
of episodes.
Speaker 2 (39:19):
Oh man, it says Boots follows the story of Cameronkope,
who plays Miles Heizar, a gay tin from Louisiana, his
bullet and finds nitpopass an unexpected brotherhood with his motley
team of fellow recruits.
Speaker 3 (39:36):
That's it.
Speaker 2 (39:37):
The show depicted the character's experience joining under Clinton's nineteen
nineties don't ask, don't tell, which meant you could join
the armed forces. But don't get it up right. You
don't need to go out wake up every morning and
go I'm guy, guy, gay gey. You don't need to
do that. Just you know, you go surf and do
your job. Weird, I mean, because it's like that in
(39:58):
every other job, really, isn't it. I mean, do you
if you're I don't know, if you're a dentist, are
you screaming at your patients?
Speaker 3 (40:05):
I'm gay?
Speaker 8 (40:06):
You know?
Speaker 3 (40:06):
I mean, you just show up and do your job.
Speaker 2 (40:09):
You're not constantly regaling people with how you do to sex, right, Like,
why does everything have to be about how you have sex?
If my mouth washed doesn't affirm which door I enter,
then you know, stone overak in in my life. If
you are so sensitive and fragile that you have to
(40:29):
have inanimate objects with their packaging affirm your life. You
might need help, So they the policy, you know, ninety three,
twenty eleven. I love how they go well. Critics largely
praise the series. Boots are in a ninety percent positive
rating on Rotten Tomatoes. If you don't know what Rotten
(40:51):
Tomatoes is, Rotten Tomatoes is a hellscape of people who
never leave their house. They're miserable, they hate you, they
hate themselves, and they like the crappiest stuff out there. Ever,
So if it has a great rating on Rotten Tomatoes,
chances are it's heinous, especially if it's a horror film,
especially if it's sci fi, especially if it's history, really anything,
(41:15):
all of it. So it shows this guy like, for instance,
he's holding I mean, he doesn't even look like he
has enough arm muscles to hold a gun. Number one,
his hair is way too long to even be in
the military. Number two, I mean, sorry, you're not gonna
have like a South Korean K pop hairdoo and you're
in b in the US military. It's not you're not
(41:35):
an operator, you're ates Now how this is working? So
the press, The Pentagon Press secretary back in October told
Entertainment Weekly that it was woke.
Speaker 3 (41:44):
Garbage and they.
Speaker 2 (41:47):
Critics on Rotten Tomatoes said, it's a likable dramedy that
explores masculinity and querness to powerful effect.
Speaker 3 (41:59):
It's not a war, it's a queer war.
Speaker 4 (42:02):
But do we need to explore it?
Speaker 9 (42:03):
Like?
Speaker 4 (42:03):
What more do we need to explore in this subject?
Speaker 2 (42:11):
I mean, the military is supposed to be about fighting,
not the other effort.
Speaker 3 (42:18):
Stop Kane, I didn't do it.
Speaker 2 (42:23):
But so they canceled it, Boots, because it's nobody's gonna
who's gonna watch that?
Speaker 4 (42:30):
We're going to really miss that show.
Speaker 2 (42:32):
Huh in all of it's four episodes. Gosh, I can't believe.
I mean, how many, yeah, how many? To your point,
how many ways has this been explored?
Speaker 4 (42:42):
It tends to be the way they market these things.
Speaker 2 (42:46):
I I I don't think that you can explore it
any more than it's been explored. It's a gay soldier
in this it's a gay soldier. It's a gay so
another gay soldier. It's a movie, but a gay soldier.
I mean, hell hallmarks gay soldier. I mean everything is
gay soldier. They've had a million of these gay cowboys,
even they've.
Speaker 3 (43:05):
Had a million just stop. What is the point, Steve goes,
it's faking.
Speaker 2 (43:13):
Oh my gosh, I'm reading with Steve Putt and slack.
Steve put fake and gay? Is he serving or serving?
Speaker 3 (43:21):
True? Just like nobody cares.
Speaker 2 (43:25):
I really feel like some gay activists still think it's
a big thing to go I'm gay because most people
are like so like ninety nine percent of people. So
because we're living our lives that we just don't care.
That's like somebody coming up and saying, oh, shake my
armpits today. Nobody cares. Literally, nobody cares. Right, you're talking
(43:45):
about just like nobody cares.
Speaker 3 (43:47):
Stop it.
Speaker 2 (43:48):
Why do people try to make you care about things
that you don't want to care about. I don't like
being forced to care about things I don't want to
care about. Kane, It makes me uncaring. It makes me
a hate bear, not a care bear. The grumpy was
my favorite. He was underappreciated and underutilized.
Speaker 4 (44:08):
The storm Cloud, Yes, he was my favorite.
Speaker 2 (44:10):
I had him when I was a kid. I loved
grumpy Bear. It was the best. He really didn't have
a soft heart, but it was no nonsense. He was
no nonsense anyway. To my point, I didn't There was
no way I was even going to test this out
because the promotional footage enough was bad. So like apparently
there were even gay members of the military going, no
(44:32):
way he carries that gun for any amount of distance
with the I mean.
Speaker 3 (44:35):
They were just shreddy. It just looked bad.
Speaker 2 (44:38):
I mean, I think even when you have to gays
that don't like it because it's too what's the word
I'm looking for, pandering, it's you know, it's just super pandering.
Speaker 3 (44:54):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (44:54):
I'm looking at this and it's just something else. Did
you I didn't watch it. Did you even see it
on Netflix? I didn't even see it on Netflix.
Speaker 4 (45:02):
No any teasers for it or no, I haven't seen it.
Speaker 2 (45:07):
Yeah, I didn't see anything on it, So I don't
know which is weird If it got such a great
rating on you know, right Tomatoes. I don't think that
Netflix promoted it enough. I think they were like, oh,
it's another Megan market type content. Oh and tie this away.
Speaker 4 (45:19):
We don't promote it like. They have algorithms in their
systems too. That just shows when people are consuming similar content,
they're going to push them.
Speaker 2 (45:26):
My Netflix algorithm has no idea what is going on
with me? It's like does she like baking or does
she like anime or K dramas?
Speaker 3 (45:34):
We don't even know. And then here's some serial killer stuff.
Speaker 4 (45:38):
It's like ancient aliens in comedy. It's like they don't
even go together.
Speaker 2 (45:41):
Oh, mine's all it's aliens because I watch all my
westerns like on Amazon and paramounts, so.
Speaker 3 (45:48):
It's aliens baking.
Speaker 2 (45:52):
K dramas, and because K dramas are wholesome. By the way,
this is some of the most wholesome stuff you can
watch K dramas. And was the other one, Oh, serial
killer stuff or not not really seri but like unsolved mysteries.
Speaker 3 (46:06):
The og with Robert Stack.
Speaker 2 (46:08):
That man's voice was terrifying and also amazing, So I
don't even I don't see any.
Speaker 3 (46:15):
Of that stuff.
Speaker 2 (46:16):
So maybe that's why it's never gonna show me. Here's
some gay military stuff. I mean it's literally the tags
for it are gay military. Nobody cares who made this
Like a baby boomer, like a baby boomer like almost
like an old elderly gen xer that still thinks this
kind of stuff is relevant.
Speaker 3 (46:36):
I don't know, just.
Speaker 2 (46:38):
Odd, super odd. So I'm not gonna be watching that.
No one, none of us are going to be watching
that I saw talking about some emigration and media. Let
me tell you, guys this story. I don't know if
you heard saw the story from ABC. It's a great
ABC story, guys, ready for it. Here's the headline. Two
Massachusetts men traffic near seven million dollars worth of benefits
(47:01):
intended for people who cannot afford foods. So it's more
snap fraud. Two Massachusetts men. So crazy, These Massachusetts men.
M these just random Massachusetts men. Just a yeah, just
a couple of people. I hate the AutoPlay ads to
(47:22):
just two of these dudes, like.
Speaker 3 (47:26):
Maryland dads.
Speaker 2 (47:30):
Oh wait, wait a minute, Antonio bonhur and saw a
last may. Okay, all right, but wait Massachusetts men and
nowhere at nowhere in any point in the story. Not
only does ABC not share the photo of the purpse,
(47:52):
but it doesn't tell you that they're actually Haitian. Oh King,
I gotta just quick question for everybody chat check your maps,
Just a quick question.
Speaker 3 (48:06):
Is Massachusetts in Haiti?
Speaker 4 (48:09):
I'm gonna go with no on that one for five
hundred Can we get.
Speaker 3 (48:16):
Yeah, Massachusetts is?
Speaker 2 (48:18):
Or did they mean to say Haiti and they just
said Massachusetts instead? I mean you know Typo, Yeah, I
mean instead of writing Haitian, they said mass and chooth its.
Speaker 4 (48:33):
It's just is there a fine line between typo and lying?
Speaker 9 (48:39):
Mm?
Speaker 2 (48:40):
Yeah, I don't know, but not at any point, And
it wasn't just ABC so four other news agents. None
of the big news agencies even mentioned that they were
literally from Haiti and they were engaging in snap fraud.
Seems like that's kind of important to mention, especially when
we're talking about state after state after state where you
(49:02):
have people who are coming in and they are targeting
these programs, exploiting them and using them to build taxpayers
out of billions of dollars. In fact, to that point,
I was reading that, let me pull this up, bear
with me. So in Somalia, I think they had what
(49:29):
a GDP of something like what is it? Is it
seventeen billion? I have notes on this. Let me look
this up. So essentially, the amount of taxpayer money that
they defrauded taxpayers of in just Minnesota exceeds the entire
GDP of Somalia.
Speaker 3 (49:50):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (49:52):
Yeah, eighteen billion in claims paid out, and that's greater
than the GDP of Somalia.
Speaker 3 (50:01):
That Cain. That seems kind of importante.
Speaker 4 (50:07):
Yeah, I would say.
Speaker 3 (50:08):
So that seems kind of important. That's huge. Think about it.
Speaker 2 (50:15):
Now, you know we're going to find this in other states.
We're only just now finding this in states like Maine
and now Massachusetts and elsewhere.
Speaker 3 (50:24):
It is so unbelievably bad.
Speaker 2 (50:27):
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them Dana sent you.
Speaker 4 (51:32):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick.
Speaker 2 (51:36):
Five airports are bringing back love actually magic and allowing
non flyers to the security lines for the first time
in decades. This is interesting now they said that this
is in Britain.
Speaker 3 (51:50):
Now this is well, actually no, it's in Oakland too.
Speaker 2 (51:51):
Oakland San Francisco Bay Airports the latest airport offering passes
for non ticketed guests to go past TSA checkpoints and
they have to be approved for the Oak Pass.
Speaker 3 (52:02):
Oak That's what.
Speaker 2 (52:04):
The airport announced on Monday. It's the first time since
the nine to eleven attacks that this has happened. They
said that visitors can go through the TSA checkpoint with
their digital pass as well as their real idea or passport.
They said they were trying to boost traffic to the airport,
which is stagnated since the pandemic. And they said it's
you know, it'll generate more people going. They want to
(52:25):
make it the most convenient airport, et cetera. Seattle Tacoma
also did it. They started it back in twenty eighteen.
Detroit began offering a destination pass. Now Philly's done the
same thing. Several other airports have rolled out a guest
pass system like a hangout pass. It's not a permanent program,
and you can get into you can go through and
without having a plane ticket, just as long as you
(52:48):
go through security and you can get into the airport.
So that's actually that's kind of helpful. Like if you've
got like family members that need assistants, especially if they're
grumpy and they don't want assistance from the airport.
Speaker 3 (53:00):
You know, if you have that kind of stuff, it's
super helpful.
Speaker 2 (53:03):
It's helpful, like if you're meeting family members that are
a little younger. You know, we like I remember before
and eleven going to the airport and getting my little cousins.
Speaker 3 (53:10):
So that's that's helpful. In let's see waimo. Oh no,
another Waymo driving down the wrong street, literally on a
busy highway.
Speaker 2 (53:20):
Literally driving in Austin, Texas, down the wrong side of
a highway. It's like planes, trains and automobiles.
Speaker 3 (53:28):
You're going the wrong way. How does he know where
we're going?
Speaker 2 (53:32):
Okay, oh, it drove right by it. I mean apparently
even it blew past the school bus, even right past
the lights, and uh, you know as kids were getting
off the bus.
Speaker 3 (53:47):
We got to figure out this stuff.
Speaker 2 (53:48):
I am just saying every time we I just hear
all of these accidents involving these Waymo cars.
Speaker 3 (53:54):
Right.
Speaker 2 (53:55):
Patriot Games, So the White House is revealing things to
celebrate America's two hundred and fiftieth birthday, including the Patriot Games,
where they're having two Americans from every state compete.
Speaker 3 (54:09):
They're going to have the.
Speaker 2 (54:10):
UFC biggest fireworks display in the world. I mean, they're
going to have a state fair on the National Mall,
all kinds of stuff.
Speaker 3 (54:17):
It's going to be. It's I think I actually may
go there for this.
Speaker 4 (54:21):
Going to be a party.
Speaker 2 (54:22):
I'm saying that would be kind of cool to see
in person, you know what I mean. Also, every New
York City subway station is going to get spikes and
paddles to combat fair evasion. And now they're trying to
say psychedelics might fix your depression. This was the mushroom
thing that they were talking about. I mean, it's not
like getting high on drugs. It's a very clinical thing.
We have a lot more on the way, including our potions.
(54:42):
Master annually joins us.
Speaker 5 (54:44):
Stay with us, keep your finger on the pulse with
a Dana Show podcast delivering timely news with insightful analysis
whenever you want, straight to you on YouTube, Apple or
wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 2 (54:57):
Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash with you. It's
our last show of this year, and you know we
rejoin in twenty twenty six on January sixth. That'll be
easy enough to remember, so welcome back. One of my
favorite things to do this time of year is I
really you know, Kan really shines when he gets to
bring all his potions out and I am looking I
(55:18):
one day we're gonna have a camera on him if
he allows it, We're gonna have a camera on it.
Because he has the boogiest looking warmer for that I
have ever seen, Like it makes my little warmer look
like I don't know, like the great value warmer. I mean,
it's like gold and it has a fancy, it's wonderful lid,
and it's just sitting there just you know, very non
(55:40):
just just sitting over there, and it's burning Franken's no heating,
it's warming warming.
Speaker 3 (55:46):
Sorry, that is a warmer frankincense.
Speaker 4 (55:48):
Fine.
Speaker 2 (55:49):
Now he got into this and I and we like
to talk about, you know, especially you know, the birth
broiler and Savior, the gifts that were given to baby
Jesus from the Wise and as the beach boys. We're
just telling you about coming in with you know, we
three Kings. And the weirdest thing about this is the
frank constons that you have going in your boogie warmer.
(56:10):
I have nothing in my old factory library that I
can compare this to.
Speaker 3 (56:18):
It is so different. Jesus had this.
Speaker 4 (56:24):
Yeah, very clean, unique smell.
Speaker 2 (56:26):
So yeah, I I mean, and it's like was very
expensive back in them days, you know, back in the
days of your So Cain got into this from a
good friend of his who we affectionately refer to, but
I really do think it should be his actual title.
Certified Potions Master and John Launius who does Siahan Wellness
(56:47):
and he's the founder. He does all a lot of
really good stuff for our veterans as well. He's the
director of Community Outreach for the Special Operations Charity Network
and one of the cool things that they're doing as
well because he has this veterans that deal with PTSD
and he looks for ways to help alleviate their PTSD
symptoms and support a network that gets them back, you know,
(57:10):
it gets them back to feeling good and feeling at peace.
Speaker 3 (57:13):
And so part of.
Speaker 2 (57:15):
That network is Speckop's Water, which is not just your
cissy water. This is the water that if you have muscles,
you drink this water. All the other water cissy water,
but it's called Speckop's Water. Hydration is the mission and
it supports veterans, so you know, when you drink, it
makes sure the skulls out, which I love how it
automatically is you don't have to just advertising it. But
(57:36):
he joins us now. John joins us now, and he's
so great. He gives us of some of his time
every year and he joins us now. John always goes
so good to see you, Merry Christmas. I appreciate because
I understand that I have you to thank for Caine's
super fancy warmer over here.
Speaker 10 (57:50):
Well, absolutely, Dana, wonderful to see you again. A lot
has gone on in the past year. When we last met,
we were talking about orbs, we were talking about lights
in the sky. I mean, so much has gone on,
but let's bring it Yeah, right, but that's but we
may come back to that because obviously the lights in
the sky go well with the season. But let's bring
(58:11):
it down to earth. One might say, talking about frankencense.
So when you were talking about frankensense there a moment
ago talking about how there is nothing in your scent
library around that is that that's absolutely true in the
same way that we are now living in a culture
that is riddled with synthetics. We're talking synthetic medication, We're
(58:33):
talking you know, all this, call it, big farmer.
Speaker 11 (58:35):
Call it.
Speaker 10 (58:35):
What you want is that there the pendulum is swinging
backwards to actually bring back some of these these remedies
that we've been using as a human species for thousands
of years. When you know, when you talk about frankincense,
for example, when we talk about the Song of Solomon
three six, you know, one of the lines from that
literally is who is it that that comes perfumed with
(58:58):
Mr and Franknsent. You know, when you talk about they
gave him wine to drink mixed with murr Gospel of
Mark fifteen twenty three, we're talking about fragrances that are
biblical but that are completely applicable today. It is not
an accident that every religion and every culture has had incense.
And so when you talk about the work that I'm
(59:19):
doing with the Special Operations Charity Network, the work that
I'm doing with Lifetime Media as an executive, bringing you know,
media to these things that we're doing, really showing this
across the world. We're taking our veterans and our active
military and our first responders and putting them back where
they need to be, which is centered, so that they
can make an even bigger difference for people.
Speaker 3 (59:40):
Yeah, that's such a great point for those just joining.
Speaker 2 (59:43):
We're talking with our friend John Launius Sheihan Wellness and
he does a lot of stuff with PTSD veterans and
helping to kind of like rehabilitate them to get them
back living their best lives. One of the things that
Ken and I were talking about on break as well
is and I have friends who have been involved in
lobbying for psychedelics in terms of therapies for veterans, which
(01:00:05):
I really wish members of Congress would pay attention to.
It's not like people going out and doing drugs and
getting height. It's not that at all. It's literally about
rewiring your brain and to that point, you know, I
was telling Kine that if you I'm gonna bring a
tugboat to shore. If I smelled Beth Bath and body
Works is what is it? Would I say the cucumber?
I'm immediately transported back to eighth grade. Boom, I'm in
(01:00:28):
my bedroom. I'm in eighth grade. I've got you know,
Sinead O'Connor on the radio, q uh one oh six.
I'm like, you know, hearing you know all of this.
I've got less air in at night. I'm you know,
smelling the Bath and body Works. I am immediately transported
to that time. I can almost see it just from
(01:00:51):
the scent of it. And like my girlfriends and I
joke all the time like oh my gosh, like some
of the old like you.
Speaker 3 (01:00:55):
Know, target perfume that we would smell.
Speaker 2 (01:00:58):
You're immediately transported back to that time, similar to those therapies,
and that makes so much sense in the world.
Speaker 3 (01:01:05):
Talk to me about that.
Speaker 10 (01:01:06):
Yeah, so we're talking about the limbic system. So the
limbic system is our seat of memories and emotions, and
if you haven't figured it out, we're all emotional beings
and so you know that drives everything that we're doing.
So let's get very specific about how I use the
limbic system, especially with our veterans and our active military.
(01:01:28):
I am now actively working with different teams and different groups.
Some of this I can't talk about, but this is
all through the Special Operations Charity network. But we already
know that our soft operators are Special Operation Forces, are
learning how to box breathe. They're using these what might
seem wu wu type things, but it's really but it
works absolutely.
Speaker 4 (01:01:48):
You know.
Speaker 10 (01:01:48):
For me, what I talk about a lot is that
for thirty years I've been taking people from the wo
wo to the wow wow. And what I mean by
that is that when you first get access to some
of this, you're like, oh, you're an in sense master,
you know that must be woo woo. Well, no, if
you suddenly find yourself centered, if you know, like people
that have migraines, I disappear their migraines in moments with
(01:02:12):
the stuff that I do. But that's take specifically, you
know someone with PTSD, and it can it can be
a veteran, it can be someone in business. But the
minute that you've got PTSD, you've got that moment where
when something comes up, it triggers you, it sends you
out of your regulation. Well, if I'm able to take
(01:02:32):
you to a place before the trauma, and you know,
if you grew up on a farm, there are a
myriad of fragrances that you associate with that would take
you back to, for example, your high school, your high
school days with less error and the music and everything
in your room, and that take that actually transports your
mind to a different time in your experience where you
(01:02:55):
can then start to feel safe, you feel centered, and
then you can start the path to hear. In my
hypnosis work, for example, I talk about how the more
relaxed you are, the deeper the healing. So we are
looking at getting very very relaxed. So if we're looking
specifically at frankincense, and I'm talking boswalya sacra, for example,
there are nineteen different varieties of frankencense and two in contention.
(01:03:18):
But bos waallya socra is probably the one you have
in the studio, and it's considered the best in the
sense it has the highest amount of a pinine, which
is a terpene shown to modulate the limbic system and
support emotional regulations and.
Speaker 3 (01:03:32):
So scientific Wait, yeah, but here's the thing.
Speaker 10 (01:03:36):
I live in the Midwest, but I work all over
the world, and so I have to balance both the
scientific aspect of it, the philosophical aspect, the historical aspect.
And I think that's what gives me credibility, because I'm
not walking into the room necessarily floating wearing white robes.
Speaker 4 (01:03:53):
Right.
Speaker 10 (01:03:54):
But it's it's literally, if you want to have a
conversation about the history of Christian incense, I can absolutely
do that. If you want to have a conversation about
Buddhistan sense, all of that. Again, all of this is
from the divine. All of this is from the Creator.
And it's not an accident that baby Jesus was given
frankinsense and mir frank and sense on one level means
Jesus is the king of kings, and so by using
(01:04:17):
these things by regulating our bodies and our minds to
be the best and most optimal way that we can operate.
This is the crux of this and this is what
I'm doing through the Special Operations Charity Network. You mentioned
Specop's water. They give twenty five cents a can to
what we do, and so that's huge. It's not a percentage.
(01:04:38):
It's not like, oh, we promise at the end of
the year. No, every single can that they sell, they
give sock in Special Operations Charity Network twenty five cents.
And that gets me where I need to be in
the world to be able to take people on these
experiences that you cannot explain. I can talk about it,
but it's like going to the moon and talking about
going to the moon. When you're on the moon, it's
(01:04:59):
a completely different experience.
Speaker 2 (01:05:01):
Different, And I love that it's not in plastic either.
Speaker 3 (01:05:03):
I love that. It's my favorite thing. Yeah, you were
the you were the.
Speaker 2 (01:05:06):
One who told me last year the symbolism of giving
MRR because it was a spice or spice that's used
for like annointing and embalming, and that was kind of
like foreshadowing, you know, with Baby Jesus and the Wise
man giving him MRR, which I did not realize that
(01:05:28):
the history of MRR. I mean, I know this, you know,
I know the story of Jesus in and out, and
I'm like, mur that actually is like every aspect of
that story is about Foreshad. That's brilliant. But I didn't
even know that about Murr. I just you know, I'm like, wait,
there's Murr. You know, I'm you know, kind of you know,
jokingly refer to it like that, that is, that's significant
(01:05:48):
because you said because you got into the frankinsense and
the divinity of Jesus and then gold the symbol of
wealth and status is king and then.
Speaker 3 (01:05:54):
But I didn't realize Murr was used in that way.
Speaker 2 (01:05:57):
Let me ask you this, what is in your experience
the most like if kin was going to warm something,
what is the most powerful thing spice or how you
would describe it to warm that has like the biggest
impact in the brain that you've seen in your work.
Speaker 10 (01:06:19):
Yeah, so that's let's take a passive or let's take
a moment from the Bible. So in the Bible they
will oftentimes talk about alo and some people think it's
like the alo plant, not at all, so what we
were talking about. So there is a wood from a
tree called Aguileria, and Aguileia. In some of the more
apocryphal texts, Adam and Eve were allowed to take this
(01:06:43):
fragrance from the garden of Eden. Actually their garments smelled
like this, this particular tree. And if you've ever seen
the play Joseph and the Technicolor dream Coat, it's actually
based on that. And so Adam and Eve were allowed
to take certain fragrances or close from the garden of
Eden that actually smelled like the Garden of Eden. And
(01:07:03):
what this is. This is a plant called aguileia, and
quite literally, it produces the mental clarity of a thirty
minute meditation and a single inhalation. And so imagine if
you if you literally had the being the mind of
a thirty minute meditation and a single inhalation, then you
can commune with the divinity that is always all around us.
(01:07:26):
And this it's that powerful. But Dana, here's the thing,
the really really high quality stuff, not the stuff that
people say they're selling on the internet. What I'm able
to get and source costs anywhere between fifteen hundred dollars
and thirty five hundred dollars a gram. That is a
paper clip. But then you understand why the Samurai, across
(01:07:49):
their eight hundred and nine hundred and fifty year history
depending on who you ask, they were using these fragrances
before they would go into battle. And about three hundred
years in to the Samurai tradition, they figured out that
we cannot just take our elite fighting forces and drive
them into the ground and burn them out and send
them into battle. We have to bring them back and
(01:08:10):
regulate them. So that's where you got things like tea, ceremony, incense, ceremony,
flower arranging, so you could balance that out. Fast forward
to the age we're in now, is this is the
essence the being of what I'm doing with our elite
fighting force through the Special Operations Charity network, and through
all of our partners. You know, yesterday at the White
(01:08:32):
House when President Trump was signing, you know, the reclassification
of marijuana, three of my partners were standing right behind Trump.
And so this is beginning to seep out into places
very powerfully. And so I'm so grateful to you and
your show for allowing me to come on and talk
(01:08:53):
a little bit about this because it's so outside of
some people's orbits.
Speaker 2 (01:08:57):
It's fascinating. It's absolutely fascinating. And not to interrupt you,
but this it's less carcinogenic than if you're going to
burn a candle that you get in the store.
Speaker 3 (01:09:05):
There's no carcinogens on us.
Speaker 10 (01:09:07):
There is because because what I do, there is no smoke.
There's it's pure fragrance. And and so when you get
I mean, you know, you and I both are essentially
in media, and you know, and and and we've met
people that have a lot of smoke and mirrors around them,
you know what I mean. And so when you're able
to get rid of that and just be who you
are and be the essence of what you are under everything,
(01:09:29):
all we want to do is be loved and appreciated
for who we are, nothing more and nothing less. And
so if you've gone into the military and you've had
to do things that on one level, at first glance,
you know, create a cognitive dissonance you by by doing
these types of fragrancies, you know, therapies. I just called
it fragrancies. That's really funny.
Speaker 3 (01:09:50):
I think I just work.
Speaker 10 (01:09:51):
I think I just had a new word. Yeah, sense,
you know this is this is where we begin, and
so again grateful to you for this platform to be
able to speak about well.
Speaker 2 (01:10:00):
Thank you so much for what you do and being
like and explaining it so well, because I mean, when
you read it, you're like, oh my gosh, this is
some bit. You explain it incredibly well. John Launias Shiahan
wellness on Instagram. Make sure you check out specops charity
dot com and also spec ops Water and it can't.
I mean, this is this is the again, this is
(01:10:21):
water for patriots right here. Get all the details on
the website. John, So good to see you. Merry Christmas,
my friend. Thank you so much for sharing your expertise
with us. And now the studio smells amazing and I
feel like we're all real chill.
Speaker 3 (01:10:32):
I was real wired.
Speaker 2 (01:10:33):
Now I'm like real chill. Just you know, appreciate you.
Thank you so much. We'll talk again soon. God bless you.
Speaker 4 (01:10:39):
Merry Christmas.
Speaker 12 (01:10:39):
Thank you.
Speaker 4 (01:10:40):
By Happy New.
Speaker 3 (01:10:40):
Year, Happy New Year.
Speaker 4 (01:10:44):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida.
Speaker 3 (01:10:51):
Man, all right.
Speaker 2 (01:10:53):
So first up, Mmm, we got angry Florida man who
got charged after a golf cart break checked and e
bike rider dragging fifty to one hundred yards on Marco Island. Yeah,
he's facing felony charges, not from this because he apparently
intentionally breaked break checked an e bike rider with a
golf cart.
Speaker 3 (01:11:12):
Why was the e bike rider that close to him?
Speaker 4 (01:11:14):
Though, Wow, there is a story.
Speaker 2 (01:11:18):
Yeah, but it's just like, is it because he was
being a d bag? The e bike rider, Well, they
stayed unfolded. According to the police record, the e bike
writer was dragged behind the guy's golf cart. They had
a confrontation before the crash.
Speaker 3 (01:11:31):
All this stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:11:32):
It would be easier for me to read it if
the stupid pop up ads that were killing my soul
weren't like hiding everything.
Speaker 4 (01:11:37):
Bottom line is they almost hit each other and then.
Speaker 3 (01:11:39):
And they got mad about it, were fighting about it,
and so yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:11:44):
Another man was accused of a dui driving one hundred
plus miles per hour and he was nabbed under floor
to super speeder law. Huh huh, nabbed under the super
that's one hundred plus where the speed limit, by the
way was sixty.
Speaker 3 (01:12:00):
Oh no, it was forty. That's right, it was forty.
That's a lot. That ticket's going to be big. Third
hour coming up.
Speaker 13 (01:12:06):
We expect hundreds of thousands of firearms will be collected
and destroyed through this scheme, consistent with the approach that
was taken in nineteen ninety six. The Governor is proposing
that states and territories will be responsible for the collection,
processing and payment to individuals for surrendered firearms. The Australian
Federal Police will then be responsible for the destruction of
(01:12:31):
these firearms.
Speaker 2 (01:12:33):
So that's the Prime Minister of Australia saying that we're
being in all the firearms again, but we do nothing
about Islamism. I ended up signing Cockney and not Australia,
but you get it. Welcome back to the program, last
show of the year, and of course we're going to
have the top band names fictional band names towards the
end of the program.
Speaker 3 (01:12:50):
And then we got ak guy coming up, Brandon Herrera.
Speaker 2 (01:12:52):
Because there's a story you need to be of which
you need to be aware. This is following this cut fifteen.
So the Deputy Prime Minister under Albanese was asked, okay, well,
what about the Muslim clerics who were all over Sydney
and they're preaching against you know, the infidels, guys. Just
so you know, Infidel isn't just Jews, it's Christians too.
(01:13:14):
For all of those people like Tucker Carlson, I want
to pretend that we have some sort of alliance with
Islamist dimitude and infidel.
Speaker 3 (01:13:22):
Look those words up. See who's historically listed as being
a part of those categories.
Speaker 2 (01:13:28):
But this he I want you to listen to this.
He was asked about this Deputy Prime Minister as to
the hate speech from the clerics.
Speaker 3 (01:13:37):
Listen to this answer.
Speaker 14 (01:13:41):
Do you feel like there needs to be and should
there be a greater emphasis on hate speech from Muslim
clerics in the western part of Sydney.
Speaker 15 (01:13:50):
I think, Look, I think, as I said earlier, what
we've done is criminalized more forms of het speech. And
you know we criminalized us the Nazi salute. Obviously that
that's a a in its own context. But we need
to be looking at all of this and it is
(01:14:11):
really important that we.
Speaker 14 (01:14:12):
Have So should there should there be a greater emphasis
on this hate speech from Muslim clerics, then.
Speaker 15 (01:14:20):
I don't want to we will go through all of this. Wow,
I emphasize that we have we have done more in
terms of criminalizing hate speech than we have seen from
from any other government. But we need to look at
all of this and we need to make sure that
we've got the right laws in place and that we
are doing everything we can to keep safe that the
(01:14:45):
vibrant multicultural society that we have.
Speaker 2 (01:14:49):
Wow, the Deputy Prime minister on a scale of Karmala two, Potus, what's.
Speaker 3 (01:14:57):
Under Kamala, I think we found a new lug. Holy wow,
Oh my gosh. That is literally one of the worst
interviews I've ever that's the Deputy Prime Minister, Richard Malson
or Mall's he's taught.
Speaker 2 (01:15:15):
He can't answer, he cannot answer. So they're not gonna
do anything about the clerics that are out there. Just
so you know nothing about the clerics. But it's gonna
be all about taking the guns to leave you defenseless
in the face of his lomism. Jimmy Christmas, that's heinous.
(01:15:37):
That is honestly one of the worst things I've ever
That's one of the worst I've ever seen. So we
got a couple of other things. Potus is talking about
drug prices. We're gonna we'll get into that with headlines.
I wanted to play this. This is cut seventeen, switching
gears here looking at Minnesota. So after we've seen people
like Letitia James blame manufacturers like Hondai and Kia for
(01:15:59):
making cars that are just too easy to steal, guys
like you know, listen to the Attorney General Keith Ellison
of Minnesota. He's saying the same thing that Letitia James,
the Age of New York is saying. Listen to those.
Speaker 16 (01:16:14):
Instead, Key and Hyundai put their profits ahead of vehicle safety,
in ahead of people. Within months of the Kia Boys challenge,
we had a crisis on our hands, a public safety
epidemic of vehicle thefts, financial harm to consumers, injury, and tragically, tragically,
(01:16:36):
even deaths. Today, I'm pleased to announce that we have
reached the settlement with automobile manufacturers Kia and Hyundai for
their role in this costly, deadly crisis.
Speaker 2 (01:16:50):
Okay, start look at the schmuck behind him clapping like
a seale. So first off, again, Letitia James said the
same thing. So they're they're they're settling. They sued Kia
and Hyundai from for being easy to steal. I'm waiting
for them to sue Nike next for having shoes get
stolen at the foot locker. Every damn time that there's
(01:17:12):
you know, a riot, you know, the foot locker gets looted.
Speaker 3 (01:17:15):
When is that going to happen.
Speaker 2 (01:17:16):
We're going after the foot lockers for making the shoes
too easy to steal. We're going after Nike and Adidas
for making the shoes too easy to steal. Next, they're
going to go after sexual assault victims for being too
pretty and attracting predators. That's the same logic. They could
go after the criminals, they could go after the people
that are doing this, but instead they're going to go
(01:17:39):
after the manufacturers because those poor criminals, it's not their fault.
It's the reason that this criminals done, still them Kars Kane,
is because Kia and Hundai made it just too easy
for them to steal. Did you know that you can't
make this up? It is too stupid. You cannot make
this up. That is one of that is one of
(01:18:00):
the most unbelievable things.
Speaker 3 (01:18:02):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (01:18:04):
So yeah, that's How does our judicial system even tolerate
this and entertain it in any way? I don't get it.
They created a whole system for vaccine manufacturers in the
eighties to prevent you from being able to actually sue them. Correct,
But now they want to go and these are people
(01:18:25):
that are actually creating products that you inject into your veins,
and yet they don't want to They don't want to
do that. They don't want to give you the ability
to sue the vaccine manufacturers. But somehow the car manufacturer.
Speaker 2 (01:18:38):
This is like, listen to this. This is coming out
of Birmingham, UK Cut nineteen. They installed again not going
after the criminals. This is like a current thing. This
is the trend. Don't go after the criminals. In Birmingham,
they put up what they called hostile vehicle mitigation ballades.
Speaker 3 (01:18:57):
Wait what listen to this? Watch these are there.
Speaker 12 (01:19:06):
I'm just beside our new hvm FA laves there on
new streets.
Speaker 4 (01:19:10):
We install them.
Speaker 12 (01:19:12):
To help protect and make our city center safer for
sure that you can go around your business and shopping
and enjoy yourself. We are installing a large m of
these right across the city center as far as another
parts of the city, alongside our NECCTV and other programs
like our new community sexty officers. This is all part
of a push to make sure that people are safe
(01:19:34):
in our city so it really creates a really accessible
space for arthur os vehicles or leaving the extreme.
Speaker 2 (01:19:40):
No why they had to do this because they've had
a handful of terror attacks where terrorists have taken trucks
or SUVs and driven them into people, like in Westminster,
the bridge attack Khaleed Masud who drive an suv into pedestrians,
the London Bridge where you had a terrorist drive van
a van into pedestrians on the London Bridge. The Borough
Market where they they had a stabbing rampage and somebody
(01:20:01):
drove something into a bunch of pedestrians, the Fensbury Park
where you have a man drive a van into a crowd,
the Westminster car another west I mean this goes.
Speaker 3 (01:20:11):
On and on, Liverpool. I mean we can go on
and on.
Speaker 2 (01:20:14):
So they don't actually say why they need them. They're like, oh,
you know because the vehicles the vehicles. No, it's because
the Islamist driving the vehicles over people. That's why they
had to put these things in there. That is why
they had to Who wants to know how much it
costs to create a frankin Penis, Oh boy, cut twenty
(01:20:38):
three please, this is all about the withdrawing taxpayer funds
for gender mutilation.
Speaker 3 (01:20:44):
This is this is doctor Oz. It's a sorry, you
gotta watch it though, because I.
Speaker 11 (01:20:49):
Did vaginal plasty. A vaginal plasty, a procedure a child
does not need, cost sixty thousand dollars. Shockingly, a failoplasty,
the creation of a penis costs, on average in America,
according to this data high quality, one hundred and fifty
thousand dollars per child. I do believe, with doing some work,
(01:21:14):
that these prices have continued to increase with increasing manufactured demand.
And I must point out that the creation of vagina,
in that case of a falloplasty or a strotoplasty where
you add testicles, that's extra.
Speaker 2 (01:21:29):
The balls are extra. Okay they are, Thoughkaine. They're not free.
They're extra. It's an up charge. That's like if you're
getting extra guok, right, it's like, Oh, you want extra guok,
that's going to be extra. Oh you want balls with
your frankn Winner, that's going to be extra Caine, I'm
just delivering the news.
Speaker 3 (01:21:49):
It's the last show of the year.
Speaker 2 (01:21:51):
I mean, this is news because our taxpayer dollars covered
this news. Veterans can't get care for war injuries and PTSD.
Speaker 3 (01:22:03):
But somebody can.
Speaker 2 (01:22:04):
Go mm, I think I want to flame my own
schlong and have a frankin thing happening here. One hundred
and fifty thousand dollars, not including the beans that.
Speaker 3 (01:22:18):
I mean they would be.
Speaker 2 (01:22:20):
I mean a pair of truck nuts does more than
you know, the franken beans that you're gonna put on
a chick that's trying to like craft a you know,
a hobby lobby type of you know, male copulatory organ
from her thigh meat. I mean the truck nuts, actually,
I think they probably serve more of a purpose, Kane,
don't you think so? I would say, just throw some
truck nuts on there, right, save you some money, less
(01:22:41):
of health. But is it how much extra were the beans?
Speaker 4 (01:22:44):
They didn't say how much extra it was.
Speaker 2 (01:22:46):
You know what, I'm going to reduce that cost for
you truck nuts on Amazon just to get some. Do
you guys want to see how you deal with dumb
bigots who trying to follow the trend of harassing Jewish
Americans in the United States of America. May I present
(01:23:06):
to you my new favorite video, talked at it All
audio sound by twenty two.
Speaker 3 (01:23:11):
Please cut twenty two.
Speaker 4 (01:23:13):
Are you just I probably.
Speaker 10 (01:23:17):
What are you talking to?
Speaker 3 (01:23:18):
Do you think orders are racing?
Speaker 9 (01:23:24):
Whoa looking follows? Come?
Speaker 8 (01:23:40):
And then he comes along with the street to carry on.
Speaker 2 (01:23:46):
I recorded this video on my phone and then just
slid it back and forth over and over again. So
he's repeatedly slapping the guy and I'm gonna probably have
that in response to, oh man, that's a beautiful.
Speaker 4 (01:23:59):
Yeah, there it is.
Speaker 3 (01:24:01):
Donna, Donna, Donna done it. I I I.
Speaker 2 (01:24:05):
Dunna Donna, Dunna bam bamam bamam burmham bam.
Speaker 3 (01:24:11):
Oh man, it's so good. It's so good. I could
just oh what, it's just what? And he walks back
hold of it?
Speaker 9 (01:24:18):
What?
Speaker 3 (01:24:19):
He shakes like a woman?
Speaker 9 (01:24:20):
Who what?
Speaker 4 (01:24:22):
This never happens to me when I tweet stuff.
Speaker 17 (01:24:24):
When I tweet things like a badass on the internet,
this never happens to me. I'm gonna have to go
back to my doctor and get more testosterone so I
can step up to this dude.
Speaker 3 (01:24:37):
I love it.
Speaker 2 (01:24:38):
I love how the dude follows him, like, yeah, we
found the new techno Viking. It's the tucks Viking. We
found him here he is. I don't even know who
that guy is, but that as funny as I'll get
out high fives to that guy.
Speaker 3 (01:24:51):
Yeah, double high fives. What all right?
Speaker 2 (01:24:55):
Uh, Potus made a bad endorsement in Texas. If you
have a choice between a constitutionalist or a gun control
championing guy who actually supports amnesty.
Speaker 3 (01:25:11):
Who are you going to pick?
Speaker 2 (01:25:13):
Well, Potus picked the gun controlled champion that supports amnesty
over an actual Second Amendment constitutionalist who does not.
Speaker 4 (01:25:23):
And now all of the news you would probably miss
it's time for Dana's quick five.
Speaker 2 (01:25:28):
I'm fascinated when some influencers go, don't go give into like,
you know, his naminist hate or whatever. In the meantime,
the Bondai beach hero who happened to be a Muslim
who disarmed the terrorist that was shooting all the kids
on the beach. He's branded a trader in arabmedia because
he saved Jewish lives. Not kidding you. All of these
(01:25:49):
Ramala news outlets starting in the West Bank and then
it spread throughout the Middle East, they were calling him
a trader. The guy who's in the hospital after he
saved lives, they called him a trader. So spare me
people who get on stage.
Speaker 3 (01:26:02):
And act like it's all just people are just hating
these poor sweet shut up, not even dealing with you.
Speaker 2 (01:26:08):
Potus is He announced the Patriot Games, two high school
athletes from each state. They're going to pitg it and
pit them against one another as part of a series
to mark to two hundred and.
Speaker 3 (01:26:17):
Fifty years since the nation's founding.
Speaker 2 (01:26:19):
It's a Little Freedom two fifty, an organization that's going
to lead the efforts to celebrate the nation's birthday in
twenty twenty six.
Speaker 3 (01:26:26):
So pretty cool stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:26:29):
Also, Kathy Hokle is going to sign a bill to
make assistant suicide legal in New York. She's turning New
York into Canada. And Canada they have seen these death
rates just skyrocket, and the Virginia Lottery says be aware
of schemes when buying tickets is holiday season, be very
careful where you're getting them from and make sure you
look at your purchases.
Speaker 3 (01:26:47):
Brandon Herrera up next.
Speaker 5 (01:26:50):
The Danish Show podcast You're Fast, funny and informative news
companion for those always on the move. Subscribe on YouTube,
Apple or wherever you get your podcast.
Speaker 2 (01:27:00):
Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash with you. You
can listen in one of the hundreds of markets we
got across the country also digitally YouTube, Facebook channel through
forty seven Direct TV. So if you're a subscriber over
at substack, you got this piece out last night. I
believe title here we Go Trump's Bad Texas endorsement.
Speaker 3 (01:27:20):
This shocked me.
Speaker 2 (01:27:22):
It shocked me because Potus was really quiet when this
matchup first occurred back in twenty twenty four. There was
no endorsement. There was, you know, nothing that came up
in this. It was just you know, these two dudes
duking it out. And it was by the two dudes
we're talking about. Of course, we're talking about the gentleman
(01:27:43):
known as ak guy, Brendan Herrera, and then Tony Gonzalez,
who is the incumbent. And so this is a congressional
district in Texas that is highly competitive. And I say
it's highly competitive because Gonzales nearly lost to Herrera. I
mean it by like I it was just like four
hundred some odd votes, if memory serves, that is super
(01:28:05):
competitive for an incumbent that is supposed to be able
to outraise the grassroots guy challenging him. That is I mean,
if your Gonzalez is campaign, you're freaking out. So now
we have a rematch because they went and they went
to the runoff because they didn't get fifty. So now
we have a rematch coming up in March and both
(01:28:26):
are running. So how did Potis get involved in this
to set it up and how did this all happen?
I'm not really quite sure, But all I know is
that yesterday Potus tweeted or posted on x that he
was backing Tony Gonzalez, which really floored me. And it
floored me for a number of reasons. Tony Gonzalez is
a huge gun control guy. He's not only a red
flag supporter. This dude championed the bipartisan Safer Community Zact
(01:28:51):
that was passed under Biden Harris, and we have fisked
that thoroughly on this program as well as on substack
horrible peace of legislation. Sadly, it was introduced in the
Senate by Marco Rubio. That's a whole other issue, but
this Gonzales championed this and he actually said quote this
was on at eight twelve am June twenty second of
(01:29:13):
twenty twenty two. Quote As a congressman, it's my duty
to pass laws that never infringe on the Constitution while
protecting the lives of the innocent. In the coming days,
I look forward to voting yes on the bipartisan Safer
Communities Act. In addition to that, he blasted Republicans' attempts
to stop the deluge at the border by going after
(01:29:35):
Stollwarts on the issue. He said that any attempt to
stop the abuse of the asylum program was un American.
Speaker 3 (01:29:44):
He I mean, he's this is crazy.
Speaker 2 (01:29:47):
He also previously described January sixth protesters as domestic terrorists.
He's repeated the narratives about deporting grandmothers and tomato pickers,
the left wing media narratives. How does Trump get How
does this guy get a Trump endorsement and a consistent
stalwart like Brandon Herrera the AK Guy?
Speaker 6 (01:30:09):
Not?
Speaker 3 (01:30:09):
Well, let's ask him ourselves. Our friend Brandon Herrera.
Speaker 2 (01:30:13):
You guys know him on YouTube Brandon Herrera four congress
dot com. The primary is coming out March third, and
you also know him as the AK Guy. He joins
us now on video. Brandon, I'm so good to see you.
Thanks for joining me. And by the way, I love
your background.
Speaker 18 (01:30:28):
Well, you know, guys got to have a hobby. Appreciate
you having me on data.
Speaker 4 (01:30:31):
Thank you so much.
Speaker 2 (01:30:32):
Did you have any idea that this was coming, because
I honestly thought and I didn't say anything about it
earlier because I just assumed, and this was bad on
my part. I'm like, oh my gosh, if Trump's going
to weigh in on this race, clearly it's going to
be you.
Speaker 3 (01:30:45):
Did you have any idea this was coming.
Speaker 18 (01:30:47):
We thought it might be a possibility. I will be honest,
it did take us a little bit by surprise for
a lot of the you know, stated reasons. You know,
Tony's going through a few few scandals, and there's going
to be we have a mention what the next few months.
It's been a while. It's he's done a really good
job running against himself in this race, and I guess
whenever he's done with that, I'll just play winner. But
(01:31:08):
it was an interesting move. I don't necessarily well obviously,
I mean, I think that there's a better candidate in
the race. But I do understand the tactics behind it,
because last cycle there was no endorsement. To my understanding
from very good sources, there's no love lost between Trump
and Tony. One of the first things Tony did after
receiving the Trump endorsement in twenty twenty is voted on
(01:31:31):
the Jan six Committee with all of the Democrats. So
I don't really think, you know, Trump, Trump really values loyalty,
and I don't think that that sat.
Speaker 4 (01:31:40):
Very well with him.
Speaker 18 (01:31:42):
Yeah, But the difference between this cycle and twenty twenty four,
the last cycle that I ran against Tony and as
you said, came within four hundred votes in a runoff.
The difference between that is that in twenty twenty four,
Trump wasn't in office, so Trump wasn't relying on Tony's
votes and needing to to make sure that the House
can carry out his agenda. So I could definitely see
(01:32:05):
him doing this as a tactical move, just something he
has to do. There's a lot of endorsements on incumbents
right now this cycle that I think most of the
MAGA movement and the conservative base would not agree with.
But he has to maintain people who can play ball
in the House, and to that degree I understand.
Speaker 2 (01:32:22):
I don't because I don't think Gonzales plays ball in
the House. I mean, when you're going after your key
pieces of legislation on immigration and you're undermining the President
on gun control, by supporting red flag stuff and calling
people who disagree with you on godly and un american.
Speaker 3 (01:32:36):
I have a major problem with that.
Speaker 2 (01:32:38):
I mean, you would be a completely reliable vote for
his agenda.
Speaker 18 (01:32:43):
Oh, absolutely no. I don't think there's any mistaking if
you actually read into his liberty score or his voting
record or anything like that. The man's a terrible Republican.
I don't even call him a conservative. He's also a
very pettyman, though, and I would not put it past
him to have levied threats where if he didn't get
that endorsement, then Trump would not get his vote on
(01:33:04):
any of the agendas. And with the narrow margin we
have in the House, unfortunately tactically, I understand the perceived
need to do so, I really do, but I also
wonder if Trump had been briefed on any of the
things that makes Tony weak and unlikely to win this cycle.
Speaker 2 (01:33:22):
Yeah, you're way more gracious than I would be if
I if I would be in your position. We're talking
with our friend Brendan Herrera, the AK guy, because you know,
I know your positions and I know where you are.
I mean, you talk about this every single day. And
you're you're really consistent on these issues, and it's more
aligned with what they're trying to the Administration's trying to
(01:33:42):
make happen in Congress than the stuff that I've seen,
you know, Gonzales go after. I mean, I'm just and
I put this out here for the folks who want
to go see. It's over at Substack. Everything's linked. I mean,
we've got receipts for everything, you know where he was
describing protesters as domestic terrorists and questioning potuses involvement in
all of it, saying that people who wanted to eliminate
(01:34:04):
the abuse of the asylum program were Unamerican and un Christian.
He went after chip Roy on that, not when chip
Roy went after Trump's people who were champion in some
of his key immigration proposals.
Speaker 3 (01:34:14):
He opposed the Secure Border Act.
Speaker 2 (01:34:18):
How do you I mean, these are just like basic
tenets of being a constitutionalist. How do you get how
do you cosplay as MAGA while you stab Maga in
the back?
Speaker 18 (01:34:28):
I mean, the man is a bad vote factory. There's
no mincing words on that. It's one of the reasons
I never really wanted to run for office. I've always
been involved in politics, and there's a lot of these
things that are very deeply important to me. I never
wanted to put my name on a ballot, but my
congressman was so bad I felt the need to jump
in because I didn't want to see him do another term.
And I'm back at it, and that's why I'm here again.
Speaker 3 (01:34:50):
Yeah.
Speaker 18 (01:34:50):
No, the man just has a terrible record. To add
to that, I think he described being there in the
Capitol during January sixth saying that it reminded him of
his time in combat, which we'll circle back to that
at a future date. And it's an interesting quote from him.
But it's just insane that somebody who has been so
(01:35:11):
unreliable as far as voting with the MAGA agenda is
trying to champion himself. Now, as you know, oh, I've
always been best friends with Trump, but you know I'm
your guy.
Speaker 3 (01:35:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 18 (01:35:21):
Absolutely not. Anybody who takes one look at his voting
record realizes exactly who he is.
Speaker 4 (01:35:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:35:26):
For the people who ever got upset over individual's primary
choices in the presidential campaign in twenty twenty or even
twenty twenty four, I think that intimating that the president
might be culpable for the quote domestic terrorism, I think
that was the word that was used about j six.
That's infinitely worse. You know, going against his key issues
(01:35:46):
is exponentially worse. And I'm not even getting into, you know,
the reporting on the affair that he reportedly had and
then with an aid that later you know, set herself
on fire according to the medical examiner, and killed herself. Well,
that's a you know, both the families are denying the claims,
but that's another whole dark cloud over his campaign. We're
(01:36:07):
talking with our friend Brandon Herrera, the AK guy who's
running in this March third primary. Is it as from
from your vantage point? I mean, it was so close
last time. I think everyone thought you were going to win.
I thought you were actually going to win this race
because it was all the polling.
Speaker 3 (01:36:23):
It was so close.
Speaker 2 (01:36:24):
I know, March third is a little bit away because
we're rolling into Christmas. But are you approaching this campaign
differently than what you did and how you did in
twenty four.
Speaker 4 (01:36:33):
Absolutely?
Speaker 18 (01:36:33):
I mean last time, I had no political experience whatsoever.
I'd never run any sort of race before, and jumping
right into a to a federal congressional race was a
huge jump but I learned a lot from it. We
came very close. I was very proud of our team
for what we were able to accomplish. But now we
have you know, we were outspent ten million dollars to
one by one of the I was about thirteen million
(01:36:55):
I think total, Sophomney included. But it was one of
the best funded in Republicans in all of Texas. And
we put him on the ropes and I was really
hoping he would change his votes, but it just didn't happen.
So I had to jump back into the ring. And
this time, I think we're going to pull it off.
We have better fundraising, we have better team, we have
(01:37:16):
a better volunteer network, everything like, we have all this
stuff established that we had to fight so hard to
get during the campaign last time. You know, we have
better name recognition, we have all the things that we have,
all the advantages that we didn't have last time. And
that's not including him being now a wounded candidate thanks
to his own actions. Yeah, so I truly believe we're
going to be able to pull this off. It's going
(01:37:37):
to go to a runoff again. I'm I was kind
of hoping we would take it out right. But we've
got a couple of other great people in the race
that are just going to help us tell the truth
about Tony because truly, that's all that needs to be done.
Speaker 3 (01:37:48):
And your record speaks for itself.
Speaker 2 (01:37:50):
And I think that's why I think he's afraid to
even criticize you, because you are so consistent not just
some second amendment, but all of these other issues.
Speaker 3 (01:37:57):
And I think you're the only.
Speaker 2 (01:37:58):
Probably the only candidate who loves you know, for instance,
the hierarchy of the ATF and all of the gun
control that's been passed in DC, more so than anybody
else in Washington, d C.
Speaker 18 (01:38:11):
Absolutely, I wouldn't say he's afraid to criticize because he
spent an entire He spent a lot, several millions of
dollars last cycle defaming me where I live, which is,
you know, its own issue. But the thing is he
can't attack on policy. He'll only attack personally, and mark
my words, it's going to happen again where he will
just spend millions of dollars blasting things that I said
out of context, you know, taking a one minute clip,
(01:38:32):
clipping six seconds of it and saying, see, look at
what he said, And it's crazy because I think my
record does stand for itself. I've always been a constitutionalist,
I've always stood by Trump. I've always you know, I've
dedicated the last few years of my life to helping
veterans and veteran charities. I've stood by the Second Amendment.
These are all things that have been very important to
me for a long time, and anybody who's followed me
(01:38:52):
knows that. But unfortunately, it's what you can afford to
tell people, whether it's the truth or lies.
Speaker 2 (01:38:57):
And you don't need to run for office. I mean,
that's I think the difference between you and other people.
You're not chasing a contributorship and you're not trying to
run down a book deal. You're just mad, like a
lot of us, You're just mad.
Speaker 18 (01:39:09):
I think it's that's That's one of my the funnier
criticisms I see where they're saying, like, oh, you're just
doing this for the cloud and the money. Like, frankly, not.
Speaker 2 (01:39:17):
To be sorry, if you have like four million followers
on YouTube, like you have like four million subscribe, why
would you need to do anything for clout That's so stupid.
Speaker 18 (01:39:25):
It's like I have I have the clout, and I frankly,
Congress is like a ninety percent pay cut for me.
You know, I'm just in a position where look like
I don't have you know, I'm still young enough to
have the energy. I don't have children to watch out
for yet and a family to raise. This is the
time for me. I don't have to worry about where
my rent's coming from. I have the resources, I have
(01:39:47):
the backing, the following, I have the friends. This is
where I can make a difference and serve my country
before I have to, you know, focus on starting a family.
Speaker 3 (01:39:53):
I love it well.
Speaker 2 (01:39:54):
I hope everyone goes to Brandon Herrera for Congress dot
com plugs in where they can, because this is a fight,
because I know that your opponent's going to be raising
tons of money and going to be paper in the
airwaves and all the ad buys and everything else. And
you need the backing because this is a seat that
we got to win. I mean, as you were saying,
it's so close right now in Congress, and this is
(01:40:16):
why we're struggling to get anything done as it is.
If we can just get one more seat, and like
with a real constitutionalist, that would make so much more
the difference. Brandon Herrera, thank you so much for joining us.
I hope you have a merry Christmas and a happy
New Year. I know we'll talk with you again soon,
but best of luck and we're going to be watching
this race very closely. Thanks so much for coming on.
Speaker 18 (01:40:37):
Thank you so much, and merry Christmas.
Speaker 3 (01:40:38):
Of course. Take care.
Speaker 5 (01:40:40):
Brighten up your timely news consumption with a Dana Show
podcast where every update comes with a little dash of
not so serious on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get
your podcasts.
Speaker 2 (01:40:51):
The Alison kraus Yo Yoma Wexford Carol is one of
the best Christmas songs done period, Beautiful and you have
to have it as part of your Christmas playlist. It
is gorgeous. Without further ado, the band names of the year.
Speaker 4 (01:41:11):
Came go Ladies and gentlemen. For those who are actually
new listeners of the show, maybe they've never heard us
do this, but at the end of every year we
have fictional band names that we throughout the year have
inadvertently created on The Dana Show, whether they be through
news stories. Oh it's so crazy, so we'll start.
Speaker 3 (01:41:30):
Remember some of those all right.
Speaker 4 (01:41:35):
Number ten, prehistoric vomit prehistoric vomit. That was a story
where they found some prehistoric vomit. Number nine drug added,
drug addicted rats, drug addicted rats. I'm sure that story
came out in New York. Yeah. Number eight wet Backs
from the Future. Sounds like a wet Backs we saw,
(01:41:58):
we heard back and we're like, oh, that clearly means
back to the future.
Speaker 9 (01:42:02):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (01:42:02):
Laser tanks at number seven, laser tank. I'd like to have, yes,
Number six killer Tranny's Killer number six. Number five surprise machete.
Definitely a Florida man.
Speaker 3 (01:42:16):
Yeah, definitely.
Speaker 4 (01:42:17):
Number four guaranteed Goring.
Speaker 3 (01:42:20):
Oh yeah that those people.
Speaker 4 (01:42:23):
Yeah, yeah, No, people at Yellowstone they get out of their.
Speaker 3 (01:42:25):
Dam and they try to pet the bison in your car.
Speaker 4 (01:42:29):
You're guaranteed a Goring. Number three A one Gorillas.
Speaker 3 (01:42:33):
I'm happy.
Speaker 4 (01:42:34):
Number two n Joe related attack. This one is good.
That one I like. And then now the number one
fictional band name it advertently created this year on the
Dana Show Anthrax Feral Pigs of Texas. Alright, I do
(01:42:56):
have one honorable mention. I want to mention from the
chat because they did off this one a different Jeffrey Epstein.
That was good. The Jasmine Crockett situation with the donations
of Lee's Elbert.
Speaker 2 (01:43:07):
Yes, nuclear twinks and drunk raccoons. That's right, honorable mentions, folks.
As we wrap up this year, I want to say
a big thank you to our crew, to Wan, to
Cain and Steve who does such an amazing job and
helping to bring this program to you every single day.
And we got a lot of big stuff planned coming
up in the new year, and so we're grateful for
your support. To Lorraine who does the chat, all the
people who hang out with us there every afternoon, all
(01:43:29):
of the people who subscribe over at Chapter and Verse,
and all of you who hang out with us every
single day.
Speaker 3 (01:43:35):
We are so grateful to you.
Speaker 2 (01:43:37):
We love you, and we hope you have a wonderful
Christmas and a blessed new year. God bless you, and
I will be back with you on January sixth, behind
this mike and behind the cameras. So have a wonderful
Christmas and remember the reason for this season.
Speaker 3 (01:43:53):
Folks.
Speaker 2 (01:43:54):
Thank you so much for your support of this program
and of us. We'll miss you, but we'll be back
January sixth. Tight, God bless, Merry Christmas.