All Episodes

September 8, 2025 108 mins
Craig Collins sits in for Dana. A Ukrainian refugee was stabbed on a train in Charlotte, NC. A woman goes viral at a Miami Marlins game for stealing a home run ball away from a kid on his birthday. West Point cancels an award that was for Actor Tom Hanks as Trump celebrates the decision. Don Lemon gets embarrassed as he tries another man-on-the-street interview with New Yorkers over being fake news. Treasury Sec. Scott Bessent obliterates NBC's Kristen Welker in his Meet The Press interview. Chris Christie ironically goes after RFK Jr. as a bad pick for HHS Secretary. Trump demolishes a reporter for claiming he wants to go to war against Chicago. Trump speaks at the Museum of the Bible to reinforce prayer back in schools. Are DC residents starting to like the idea of the National Guard coming to help stop crime?

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Greg Collins,
filling in for one more day. Thrilled to be with you.
Dana will be back tomorrow. A lot of things to
talk about out there in the world. D Lash Dana
Lash Radio on x on Twitter, the best way to
stay connected to everything going on for Dana. I am
going to start with the sad story the guy who

(00:21):
stabbed Ukrainian refugee in Charlotte. There's a lot of crazy
pieces to this, one of them being that the individual
who committed this crime, who's been arrested like fourteen times
prior to it. I usually don't name the people, so
I'm not going to put this person's name out there.
But he had like a go Fundme available for a
short amount of time. Go fund Me eventually took that down.

(00:44):
President Trump did talk about this, the tragedy of the
woman who was killed stabbed to death a Ukrainian refugee
on a light rail train in Charlotte, North Carolina. Of course,
a bunch of questions as to why, what the motivation
all of that stuff is, but it immediately becomes political
for I guess reasons that exist here in our society.

(01:07):
But Trump acted very presidential in how he spoke about this.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
I just give my love and hope to the family
of the young woman who was stabbed this morning or
last night in Charlotte by a madman, a lunatic just
got up and it's right on the tape, not really
watchable because it's so horrible, but just viciously stabs she's
just sitting there. So they are evil people. We have

(01:32):
to be able to handle that. If we don't handle that,
we don't have a country.

Speaker 1 (01:36):
I just yes, he's right about that. By the way,
if we don't handle this, we don't have a country.
We have to have evil, horrible people stopped. We have
to have them taken off the street. We have to
do everything we can to prevent this type of horrible
action from happening again. Of course, the context to what
President Trump is saying is that if I'm able to

(01:57):
usher in law and order in more places by sending
National Guard troops to help democratically run cities, that's a
good thing. And National Guard troops are not doing the
things that they claim they're doing, as far as you know,
ushering in Nazi Germany and arresting innocent people of no
crime whatsoever. That's not what's occurring. Even if there are

(02:18):
some protesters popping up in DC how too, which is
just amazing, by the way, it's amazing the left wants
to fight the idea of preventing crime. I just I
can't get over that. All right, let's shift to some
other audio.

Speaker 3 (02:32):
Though.

Speaker 1 (02:32):
There's a lot of things that I said to get
to and I do want to have fun. There's a
uniquely interesting and I think kind of fun story to
talk about in the world of baseball, mostly because the
crazy Karen woman who did a horrible thing and I'll
get to it in just a little bit, looks a
whole lot like a Nancy Pelosi. She seems to model
her hair the same way, has the same glasses, so

(02:56):
if you squint a little bit, it kind of looks
like Nancy Pelosi was a crappy person in a baseball game.
And the internet has definitely enjoyed that. All right, let's
do this. This is Treasury Secretary Scott Bessant. He is
talking about April. He's talking about some of the things
we've seen. The sky was falling with tariffs, of course,

(03:16):
all of that stuff, and what's actually occurred on meet
the press. I thought this was a pretty good moment
and a pretty good demonstration of where actually, potentially and
I'll get into this too, the likelihood of economic fragility
is coming from It's not coming from tariffs per se.
It's coming from the challenge of tariffs and a couple

(03:37):
other things.

Speaker 4 (03:37):
Here we go, Let's look back again. When I was
here in April, the sky was falling with the tariffs
that everyone who's leaving the US. Since then, the US
bond market has been the best performing bond market in
the developed world, and from Barclay's Bank to Goldensacks to
others are saying it is the tariff income and the

(03:59):
fiscal improvement that we were seeing. And that's what President's
Trump did.

Speaker 1 (04:03):
Yes doing. He's doing great stuff. The biggest reason that
we're still seeing economic challenges is because of Jerome Powell
and resistance to drop any sort of interest rates because
he's a you know, piece of crap that doesn't want
Trump to succeed. If interest rates had been dropped sooner,
and they're they're going to be dropped, But if they
if they had been dropped more and quicker, I think

(04:25):
we'd be doing even better. As a country. I think
we would not see the stalling in the job market,
et cetera, et cetera. I think there's a lot of
reasons that we could have prevented that, and that it
seems that they maybe did that on purpose. All right,
let's do one more serious topic, and then I will
get to my favorite sport of baseball and the thing
that happened there because I can't help it. Secretary Robert F.

(04:46):
Kennedy Junior was on Fox and Friends talking about CDC,
vaccines and all kinds of stuff. I thought this was
a pretty interesting back and forth. So here, let's play
some of this audio.

Speaker 5 (04:59):
Yeah, I mean that individual actually came to my attention
because early on during the measles outbreak, I promise Governor
Abbott sends money down badly needed money and helped down
to Texas, and this individual blocked that money. For a month,
I couldn't figure out what's happening. I gave the order

(05:20):
on you know, I'm running this agency out come, nothing's happening.
And then we tried to get the vaccine safety data
language is the data that supposedly the CDs he tried
to be used to make good decisions on whether vaccines
are hurting people and our weather side effects or seven

(05:42):
months he stonewalled so that we could not get that data.
He's also the individual and runs the Varrus system, which
is the surveillance system for injuries that captures. According to CDs,
he's on study, fewer than one percent of vaccine injuries
is practice. These people are the people who ordered our

(06:03):
children to walk around in mass There's the people who
closed our schools. They're the people who impose social distancing
with no science, shut down our businesses, and they need
to go.

Speaker 1 (06:14):
We need new blood.

Speaker 5 (06:15):
Yeah, we need new people who are committed to public
health and integrity and gold standard science.

Speaker 1 (06:21):
Yes, I agree with everything he said. He's talking about
firing people at the CDC who blocked all kinds of stuff.
The craziest thing is blocking money that went to Texas
because that seemed uniquely political, that seemed to have nothing
to do with science or anything, not that any of
it does, it's all political, but saying that you're also
not going to let any money go to a Republican

(06:41):
state in Texas. A well stone walling information for being
provided to Robert F. Kennedy Junior, because you know he's
actually going to use it. He's going to do something
with it you don't want. It's not going to get buried,
it's not going to be hidden. Look, I'll be honest
with you. This is the reason that you nominate people
like this for positions of power within government. People who

(07:03):
owe nobody to anything, people who don't have careers in politics,
that you have friends and whoever in certain organizations that
they're going to protect no matter what. All of this stuff,
you know, and actually the way that government typically works
makes me think about the curiosities people have with the
Epstein story and what individuals could eventually be harmed by

(07:25):
the inevitable release of information there, and how significant they
are in the power structure of DC. Because all of this,
in the other places that it's happening, sounds like the
person from the outside is finally bringing some level of
accountability to the thing that hasn't had any accountability forever.
And you name whatever it is, the CDC, etc. There's

(07:47):
a bunch of other things happening. All right, Let's do
the baseball story before we take a break. So a
dad got a home run ball for his son at
a baseball game. His son was there to celebrate his birthday.
It was like two or three days before his birthday.
And so the dad's, you know, where the home run's
getting hit, not actually where his seats are, as very

(08:08):
normally people do this in the world of baseball. When
a home run goes into the stands, you usually fight
to get it and someone achieves the ball. Anyway, there's
a woman standing there who does not catch the baseball
and then seems to think, because it got hit to
her seat, into her section, it's her ball. Darn it,
it's not yours. You can't have it. So even though

(08:29):
the dad actually picked it up off the ground and
got it, he didn't catch it, but he picked it
up off the ground and brought it to his kid.
The woman chased the dude down, grabbed him and yelled
at him, and people captured part of this audio, which
is kind of amazing. So here I want to play
this audio. And just so you know, the woman in
this video also looks strikingly like Nancy Pelosi. It's not

(08:50):
Nancy unfortunately, although maybe it is, who knows, maybe it's
her distant cousin, but she looks a lot like her.
And this kind of thing is exactly what you feel
like politicians sometimes do. They just take stuff that's yours,
your money, whatever it is. They show up and they're like,
it's mine, you can't have it, and then they run
away with it. Here we go, that was in my seat.

(09:20):
That was in my seat. She's yelling, and then eventually
he gave the ball to her. He just put his
arms up. His kid is holding it in his glove.
The young man who seems thrilled that he has a
home run ball just before his birthday. Anyway, there's a
happy ending to this. The Phillies find out about it
because of course television crews capture this moment. They send
a woman up to the stands to wish the boy

(09:42):
happy birthday and to give him a bunch of stuff.
And then actually, in my favorite part, Harrison Bader also
signed a bat for the guy and gave it to him,
which is exactly the kind of thing you expect someone
like Harrison Bader to do. But just absolutely incredible and
fantastic things happening in the world of baseball. But the woman,
she's amazing. And the big video shot that you can

(10:04):
look up and see where she's running from her section
to where he goes with his kid to hand the ball.
It's the kind, it's the stuff of legend. This woman
will be replayed as one of the jerks in baseball
stands for years to come, and she will obviously regret
this moment. Who knows what else happens, but this woman
so upset by what is typical baseball rules. You get

(10:25):
the ball, it's your baseball, all right, We'll take a break.
A lot coming up. Craig Collins filling in on the
Danish Show.

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Speaker 7 (11:38):
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Speaker 8 (11:59):
Now all of the news you would probably miss. It's
time for Dana's Quick Five.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
That's right, it's time for the Quick five on the
Dana Show. This is Craig Collins filling in d Lash
Dana Lash Radio and x on Twitter a great way
to stay connected to her. The Burning Man attendee who
ran over a testleas cyber truck art car is in
the news. Now, this is really strange. Burning Man attendee

(12:25):
decided to destroy an art car in some way. A
Minneapolis man who was nearly killed last week after being
run over by the cyber truck. Excuse me, will meditating
in Nevada's Black Rock Desert was I guess something that
shocked his wife As far as the news story goes
a little bit of confusion with this one. Sorry about
that he's not going to be walking walking for months

(12:48):
is something that his wife said. But we're so lucky
that he's actually okay and fine, and that he probably
won't spend any more time in the desert. He won't
be any more, I won't be doing any more or meditating.
And you're Burning Man. There's so many stories that come
out of that place that make it seem like an
absolute horrible place to go. I would not, in any way,
shape or form, want to send even my worst enemy

(13:11):
to Burning Man at this point, all right, clock botching
is a new term. No one agrees on exactly what
it means, but apparently social media is using this story.
A writer in the UK coined it last month and said,
it's when you work more hours than you should because
you can't get through all of your work in a
typical eight hour work day. That is clock botching. I

(13:33):
think it also means you only take credit for eight
hours of work, but you do more than eight hours.
Other people are saying it's the opposite thing. It's the
thing where you don't have enough work for eight hours,
so you push the punch in punch out further and
you potentially pretend to do things that you're not actually doing.
Whatever it is, whether it's someone who's working hard or

(13:55):
not working very hard at all, apparently all can be
applied in the world of clock which I'm not really
sure why this is a brand new term, but it
is one of many out there. It'll probably eventually pop
up in some sort of you know, online dictionary, and
then they know they've made it. Uber is testing a
new payment method. Cash is the payment method. Uber says

(14:18):
the idea is to expand access to people without bank accounts.
Drivers are concerned they'd be a target for thieve. This
definitely makes sense. Essentially, in this system, Uber would tell
the person jumping in the vehicle that this is what
the thing, this is what the ride costs, and that
they can pay the driver in cash. You can also
choose to accept cash if you're someone who's driving for Uber.

(14:42):
Both of these seem terrible as far as decisions are made,
and I totally agree with the first point being made
by the drivers themselves about the danger of having a
bunch of cash on you. Actually, in Houston, an Uber
driver was killed just somewhat recently a week or so ago.
I'm not sure if he was actually driving at the

(15:02):
time or that just so happens to be his profession,
and I think it happened fairly late at night on
the South side of Houston, in a neighborhood that's not
exactly safe. But nonetheless that's in the news currently within
the last few days, Uber has had a driver that
was shot and killed, and now they're also rolling out
cash for people. That seems like bad timing for this

(15:23):
sort of thing, and there's a lot of people who
seem to think it's not a great idea, although to
be honest, it's just one more infringement on the taxi
industry too, because they took cash forever and still probably
do take cash if you ride taxis at all, and
so Uber trying to do this, I guess, is evening
the playing field. I will say one other thing about it,

(15:43):
and it is interesting, at least to me that sometimes
I think people are skeptical of how much money they
actually get paid compared to how much money Uber is making.
If you do a cash thing, it would be much
harder for you to make less than whatever you're supposed
to make of whatever the split is supposed to be.
So I wonder if that is essentially a thing as

(16:07):
far as all this goes, is is there a way
in which what is actually occurring winds up benefiting the
drivers because they actually get a fair percentage of the
money that Uber charges. I have no idea. I doubt it.
I doubt Uber would go that road for any reason whatsoever.
But we'll see. But yeah, Uber drivers might have a
whole bunch of cash. Is a strange new story that's

(16:30):
out there in the world. All right, Let's do one
more quick five before we take a break. Let's do
I'm trying to decide let's do this one. Here's where
what your drink order says about you. It was a
Reddit post and other things. If you ask for water
at a restaurant, the waiter will assume that you're there
to save as much money as possible, and they might

(16:50):
neglect your table as much as other tables. This is
an interesting point. I don't know if it's true. A
Cosmopolitan is an order that means your extra fancy. Maybe
you're a fan of certain TV shows, but the waiter
is going to focus more on you because they're pretty
sure they're getting a bunch of money at you. If
your coffee, you're there for business. You're gonna be in
and out. You're gonna be quick, that's what they think.

(17:12):
And then finally, hot tea is someone who's gonna take
a long time and also not be very wild worthwhile financially,
I love all those all right, quick break a lot more.
Craig Collin's filling in on the Data.

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Speaker 9 (18:18):
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 1 (18:31):
This is the Danish show. My name is Creig Collins,
filling in Thrilled to be with you. Dana will be
back tomorrow. First I think this is hilarious. Oh at
d Lash Dana Lash Radio on x on Twitter are great.
That's not what I think is hilarious. Great ways to
stay connected to her and everything going on in the
world of the Danish show producer Steven everybody does a
great job. Dana does a bunch of social media herself.

(18:53):
Of course, check that out all the time. This is
what's hilarious. President Trump celebrated west Point canceling in a
award for Tom Hanks. Ah, I already love this story.
So President Trump saw that west Point was no longer
giving an award to the very democratic Tom Hanks, and
he put up on truth Social his social media platform.

(19:14):
Our great west Point getting greater all the time, has
smartly canceled the awards ceremony for actor Tom Hanks. Important move.
We don't need destructive, woke recipients getting our cherished American awards.
Hopefully the Academy Awards and other fake award shows will
review their standards and practices in the name of fairness
and justice. I watched their dead rating surge. That is

(19:37):
Trump talking about how it would be nice to award
people for things other than politics. At West Point, deciding
to go that road and make that decision, and that's wonderful.
That is great. The other piece of audio that's viral.
That's pretty hilarious. Don Lemon, I was walking up to
people on the street and asking them questions and it
did not go well for Don Lemon, which is amazing.

(20:01):
I do love this back and forth interaction where someone
is like, oh, you're Don Lemon, You're a piece of bleep,
and then it goes from there. Let's hear a little
bit of that audio. How you doing, sir? Can we
talk to you? Where you're from?

Speaker 3 (20:14):
Do you live in New York?

Speaker 10 (20:15):
You?

Speaker 9 (20:16):
Don Lemon?

Speaker 3 (20:17):
You're thank you?

Speaker 11 (20:18):
So are you?

Speaker 12 (20:19):
Yeah? That's very nice nice to say, except you've never
heard anything I've had to say, and I've had a
whole bunch of what you I'm glad you okay?

Speaker 1 (20:26):
Here First, I love that an initial reaction to Don
trying to say that some random stranger that he just
approached in the street is as much of a bleep
as he is, because the guy goes, you know what's
funny about you saying that about me is you know
nothing about me other than I don't like you, and
I know a whole bunch of the things you say.
And so Don is now going to do the thank

(20:47):
you for watching me thing, and that's going to go
poorly for him.

Speaker 12 (20:51):
It's me, No, I don't why, but you just get
clipped everywhere I know.

Speaker 3 (20:55):
But why don't you?

Speaker 1 (20:56):
You said you don't watch me, but you yet you
know who I am.

Speaker 12 (20:58):
And I got before I realized CNN and MSNBC with
foolish everyone.

Speaker 13 (21:04):
What are you watching?

Speaker 12 (21:05):
I watch all sorts of stuff?

Speaker 1 (21:07):
But why do you say CNN, ms Oh, why do
you say that they're full of crap? Because they are.
That's how the end part of that audio goes. They
are full of crap and you know it, and I
know it, and everybody knows it. And so it's just
sort of amazing that Don Lemon tries to deny it.
Let me actually readd that audio so I can get
the entire clip to play.

Speaker 12 (21:26):
Let's continue MSNBC with fullish, Everyone's like, what are you watching?
I watch all sorts of stuff?

Speaker 9 (21:33):
Yeah, but why do you say CNN an MSNBC A
full of.

Speaker 1 (21:37):
About what specific? What's everything?

Speaker 5 (21:39):
They do?

Speaker 1 (21:40):
They do lie about everything? By the way, he doesn't
have to be specific. I love the challenge there. Don
went all the typical roads that someone tries to go
in response to not getting the reaction you want from
someone on the street being like, oh, you must watch
me and love me all the time. And absolutely, I
actually believe this guy that says you get clipped everywhere,
because it's true. You played Don Lemon audio constantly in media,

(22:03):
in what we do, in what I do, and what
Dana does, because of how much of a moron he
is and how much they lie about everything. But you
take your pick, COVID the mental capabilities of President Biden.
The list goes on and on about the things they
lied about and got wrong on purpose to try to
endorse a narrative that came from the Democratic Party and

(22:23):
not at all from doing journalism well, which is something
they haven't done for quite some time. All Right, another
thing out there. I thought this was amazing. So I
lived in Chicago for a long time, and I still
have a lot of friends in Chicago. Many of them
are Democrats. I didn't really care who my friends were
in the world of what they thought of politically. I
know that's weird, and honestly, there's a lot of them

(22:45):
that probably until I started doing more radio myself. I
was a producer for a long time and I tried
to work in stories that people didn't want. But once
I started to be on air, probably some of these
individuals found out how I felt politically about things, because
you don't talk about it, especially to hardcore lefties, because
it's going to be a terrible conversation. But anyway, the

(23:06):
reason I'm mentioning this at all is my Facebook over
the weekend lit up with people in Chicago saying they
were going to fight a war against President Trump, and
Trump had declared war on Chicago, and that's not at
all true. Trump is not going to war with Chicago.
He is going to try to arrest people who are
there illegally, even if Chicago tries to prevent it, because

(23:28):
darn it, there's nothing they can do. ICE is allowed
to do their job at a federal level in all
the different states. But here's something I thought was interesting.
Trump was actually asked about this this morning, the war
with Chicago, and he crapped all over the idea of
this story because it is fake news.

Speaker 2 (23:45):
You say that, jarn that's fake news.

Speaker 9 (23:49):
Listen, he's quiet.

Speaker 11 (23:50):
Listen you you're never listening. That's why you're second grade.
We're not going to war. We're going to clean up
our city. We're going to clean them up so they
don't killed five people every weekend.

Speaker 1 (24:02):
That's not war. That's not war. That's doing your job correctly.
And yes, Chicago has a bunch of shootings on the
South Side, West Side, other parts of the city too
from time to time, and many people die every single weekend.
And so doing something there, also sending an ice to
round up a bunch of people who are there illegally.
All of that stuff within the purview of the President

(24:23):
of the United States. He's allowed to do it. He's
allowed to do these things. Chicago can't actually fight it.
The only reason that the war narrative exists is because
of the left and Pritzker and everyone's saying they will
resist anything that Trump will do. They'll fight it, they'll
fight it at all costs. That's the reason that they're
claiming that there's going to be a war between Chicago
and the White House is not because of what the

(24:45):
President has done. And honestly, a whole lot of people
are saying, you really need to just accept this, you
need to accept this assistance, accept this help, because saying
that you're the side of the aisle that likes, you know, horrible,
violent crime occurring, and will get to the thing that
happened in North Carolina again in a minute to demonstrate that.
But you're the side of the aisle that's protecting criminals.

(25:06):
That's not a good place to be with the American people.
I want to quickly play this though, to close this
topic out. CNN is talking about how you really can't
do anything if ICE crackdowns happen if certain federal moves
are made, because they have the capability to do their jobs,
and so you can't go to court and try to

(25:27):
fight this. ICE is allowed to behave like ICE wherever
they see fit, regardless of what the Democratic leaders of
cities say. This was in relation to actually specifically some
stories out of Massachusetts, but it's true anywhere.

Speaker 14 (25:42):
I know that the Mayor of Boston has suggested there
might be a lawsuit seeking to stop some of what
ICE is doing, but there's really nothing that state and
local authorities can do legally to prevent a federal law
enforcement agent like ICE from doing its business. ICE, like
the FBI or ATF or DEA, has essentially nationwide juris
and there's no legal way that the mayor of Boston,

(26:03):
for example, can stop ICE from coming into Boston and
making immigration arrests anymore than they could stop DEA from
coming into Boston and making drug arrests. So I understand
there's political issues here and issues about public safety, but
legally there's really very little that the locals can do.

Speaker 1 (26:18):
They can't do anything, is what he's saying there now. Granted,
when you're actually talking about the National Guard, if they
behave in a way that is similar to how police
are supposed to behave, there's a potential for some conflict
there also, of course, if they don't have a good
reason to activate the National Guard, which is what the
democratic cities will argue. There's legal avenues for debate there,

(26:39):
which will wind up in courtrooms. But as far as
ICE goes, they chance, they have the ability to go
wherever they want. They have the chance to do their job,
regardless of who's saying yes and no. All right, let's
dive a little bit deeper into the story out in
North Carolina, the story of the person who was stabbed
and killed a Ukrainian refugee, someone that the Left obviously

(27:03):
would would normally care about, if they didn't also unfortunately
care about the career criminal that did this. So the
individual who did this is thirty four years old, diagnosed
with schizophrenia, history of violent crime, multiple I think something
like fourteen or fifteen arrests, and the problem is that
they kept letting him out of jail. Even his own

(27:25):
mother said that the man is insane, that he's crazy,
and that he really should be locked up for his
own safety. That's his own mom saying that the longest
they could get him institutionalized was a couple of weeks
because of decision making of democratic leaders in certain parts
of our country. This is an absolute failure for the

(27:46):
American people. This isn't political on purpose, meaning we're not
injecting politics into the discussion about what happened here and
whether or not it was the right or the wrong
thing politically, in which PSI to the aisle, deserves to
take a win here. This woman would still be alive
if this person had actually gone to jail for any

(28:07):
of the fourteen other times that he was arrested for
doing something horrible career criminal, violent crime, schizophrenia, mental health disorder,
everything about him, and the mom saying that he's got
mental health issues for years, she believed what happened Friday
night was a failure by the system and that the
killing could have been prevented. She even said, my heart
goes out to the victim's family. What he did was atrocious,

(28:30):
it was horrible. It was wrong. Over the phone, he
started saying weird things years ago. She also told local
news he started saying that he wasn't in his own body,
that other stuff about him was not right. He became homeless,
whatever it might be. But this is some other excuse me.
The system utterly failed this guy, and that demonstrates for

(28:52):
you exactly what the problem is when you think politics
first and not the safety of the American people. These
individual viduals that run these cities, these democratic leaders, they
only care about what they say in front of a
camera because they think it's a political win for the
people in the suburbs or the people that are going
to vote for them, you know, in the cities, not

(29:14):
necessarily the people who are actually struggling with the problem,
or the people who can see the problem from afar,
like most of the voters in the suburbs actually feel,
or people throughout the country feel. It's just amazing to
me that the political win is more important and has
been for a very long time than the actual health
and safety of our country. And I think this is

(29:34):
why President Trump is pointing his finger this way and
starting this war or whatever you want to call it.
It's not actually a war against crime, because he thinks
the American people will be easily won over as the
Democrats will be exposed for what they actually care about,
which is not protecting you and protecting these cities. They
want them to be as dangerous as they seem to

(29:54):
be because it offers a constant reliance on them. If
they cleaned up the cities, they would have less to
talk about, which I think would be great for all
of us and not so great for them. But anyway,
a horrible, awful story about a man who just went
crazy on a train and killed a woman, stabbed her
to death that should have very much been in jail

(30:15):
a long time ago and for a very long time,
and not out on the street capable of harming more people.
All Right, we'll take another break. We do have fun
stuff as well as serious stuff to get to throughout
the show on a Monday, because darn it, we can't
do serious all day long. So we have more coming up,
including a story about a good news story about ice

(30:36):
cream sandwiches that I promise in no way at all
is tied to Joe Biden. But I'll talk about that
more in just a bit. This is Craig Collins filling
in on the Dana Show.

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Speaker 1 (31:57):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in Dana is back tomorrow, d Lash, Dana Lash Radio,
on x on Twitter are great ways to stay connected
to her. At Radio CRAIGC. If you want to be
one of the very select, very few people who follow
my account on social media that I barely use. I
need to use it more. But at Radio CRAIGC. Because
I've sold it to you now by telling you it's

(32:18):
almost not functioning all right. About half of Americans would
pay a bunch of money if their vacation was scheduled
to include a bunch of sleep. That is a real story.
Several places demonstrated this via a study where they asked
if you were going on vacation and some of the
packages offered included sound therapy, sleep coaching, sleep tracking, aroma therapy,

(32:43):
sleeping sleeping outdoors, or digital detoxing involving a lot of rest.
People are like, yeah, I want to do all those
things because apparently we do not get enough sleep in
our day to day lives. I think the biggest reason
for that is the cell phone. I'm going to keep
keep saying that, and not just the stress of your
life in general. If you put the cell phone in

(33:04):
another room when you go to sleep, all of a sudden,
your bedroom becomes a place that actually lets you go
to bed when you go in there, and not sit
on your phone for a while. So that's the biggest
recommendation I have. And a lot of these vacation things,
maybe people assume they're going to be further from their
phone and they don't even really think about that being
the real cause of all the greatness. But you would

(33:24):
pay extra money about half as much. Half an increase
of fifty percent is an easier way to say it
than how they wrote it here. In order to get
rest while going on vacation. That seems to be a
broken situation in our society, to say the very least
another story out there, and this is fascinating to me.

(33:45):
So Ashijin Ping was having a conversation with Vladimir Putin
about the longevity of human life, and apparently within the conversation,
both men were talking about how humans can easily live,
well not easily, but that could live with their technology
to be about one hundred and fifty years old or
medicine or whatever it might be, that that should be

(34:07):
the lifespan of a human being. And this apparently was
something China did not want public. So after this story,
I think AP and some other places ran it, sent
it to a bunch of affiliate stations. China actually used
their own news media since it's their clip, had to
demand that this get pulled down everywhere and anywhere that

(34:28):
it existed, that it had to be removed, that it
had to be taken down because they don't want this
information to be public. And I don't know why. It
sounds like though a Putin and Xijinping seemed to believe,
or at least Jijin Ping more so than anyone else,
that we are at a point where one hundred and
fifty would not be a big deal if you live
to be exceedingly rare for someone to live anywhere near

(34:52):
close out of that age in our current society. But
nonetheless something that again, for whatever reason, the powers that
be in China desperately didn't want you to know about,
and so they use the ability to own their media
to tell you to take it down and remove it.
And we already know about it now, though, so I
have more questions, not more answers. A one final thing
that I thought was interesting, and this is just a quick,

(35:15):
silly story. In the world of ice cream, some hikers
in Colorado got a nice reward for reaching the top
of a trail near Aspen the other day. Some guy
had hiked up with a sixty pound pack of ice
cream sandwiches and was there handing them out to anybody
else who made it up there. I don't think that
this reward was as good as media said it was.
Mainstream media seemed to be very proud of this, and

(35:38):
several people reported this as a good story. But if
I'm hiking up a giant trail and the only reward
I get is a ice cream sandwich and not more,
I'm a little bit disappointed. I feel like the minute
you hear that someone is giving out something up there.
You're thinking it might be money, it might be cash.
Maybe they're one of the two people who won the
Powerball over the weekend. And by the way, I don't

(36:01):
think this is a real thing, so please don't take
me seriously with this. I definitely mean this silly. But
how disappointing would it be to win one of the
largest power balls in the history of this country and
find out you're one of two winners so you got
to split the billion dollars one point seven billion. I'm
kidding again. Of course you're you're related to make as
many dollars as you're going to make it all this,

(36:23):
but some part of the back of your mind's like
a kind of wish, I want a loan. It's just
how human nature is. So I'm assuming that they both
felt that way. But two winners over the weekend Powerball
finally gave out some money. All right, quick break a
lot more. Craig Collins filling in on the Dana Show.

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Speaker 1 (37:57):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Greg Collins,
filling in, thrilled to be with you. A whole bunch
of stuff out there to talk about. I do really
like two things, two pieces of audio out there, both
from President Trump for different reasons. The first one is
a reference to our creator. How that is something that's
actually also described within the Declaration of Independence, even if

(38:19):
some democratic politicians seem to be unaware of that. Recently,
Trump talked about inviting a lot of faith communities to
pray for our nation together. And this is great. This
is exactly in defiance of all the things the left
is screaming and yelling about how prayers don't matter, or
how dare you send your thoughts in prayers, whatever their

(38:40):
version of a narrative is. I thought this was a
really interesting thing to say and to have go viral
this morning. It is a bit of a troll job
from the President, but I think he also authentically means
that prayer is important, does matter, and is a good thing.
Unlike what they seem to think in the world of
any sort of democratic politician. Again, the ridiculous rhetoric they

(39:01):
used to go after prayer of all stuff and to
pry to protect criminals. These are two things the left
is doing right now here we go.

Speaker 2 (39:08):
When you have, over just a short period of time,
fifty murders and hundreds of people shot, and then you
have a governor that stands up and says how crime
is just fine. It's really crazy. But we're bringing back
law and order to our country. And I began my

(39:30):
remarks today by noting that the reverence for our creator,
we have, reverence for our Creator has inscribed into our
Declaration of Independence, the copy of which I have very
proudly hanging in the Oval office, and original copy, very old,
beautiful copy. Next year we will celebrate two hundred and

(39:51):
fifty years since that declaration was.

Speaker 3 (39:54):
Signed as part of the Grand.

Speaker 2 (39:58):
Well, this is really a commence like I think we're
going to do. We're going to try and do a
commemoration like nobody's ever seen before.

Speaker 1 (40:05):
But you know, by the way, I could fill out
the blanks if we did a mad lib of President
Trump all the times where he says this is going
to be something that no one's seen before. It's the
greatest thing in the history of the country. But yeah,
I'm all for everything he just said there, and the
idea that the creator is an important aspect not only
of the foundation of our country, but in general. It's
where your rights come from. Again, something the founding fathers

(40:28):
seemed deeply acutely aware of when they wrote the thing
that again Democrats seem to now ignore. I can't believe
I just called the Declaration of Independence the thing that
they wrote. All right, let's do this. This is President
Trump talking about the amount of money that's going to
be invested into our country because of the sweet, sweet
trade deals he's been getting which are directly tied to

(40:48):
all the tariffs that he rolled out everywhere throughout the world,
and how people did like the fact that they had
to pay us a bunch more money. And they still
are paying us money. The funniest thing about the tariffs
is there, they're still right now in effect, so we're
gaining even more dollars. And people seem to think this
is a great thing on a world stage as far

(41:08):
as the economy of the United States is concerned. But
here's what Trump said about the trillions and trillions of
dollars that are about to be invested right here in
the United States.

Speaker 15 (41:18):
Happy about that, but I'm really happy when you see
almost seventeen trillion dollars will be invested in this country
over the next few months.

Speaker 1 (41:28):
Actually we started, by the way, sorry about the buzz
there and that audio couldn't fix that. That was the
version we got from c SPAN, or I got from
c SPAN. So yes, that is Trump talking about how
in a few months we're going to have a bunch
of money. And Scott Bessen also talks about how good
things are going and how Democrats seem to be completely
avoiding this topic or just straight up lying about it

(41:51):
on a daily basis. Here's a little bit of that.

Speaker 4 (41:53):
Christ if things are so bad, why was the GDP
three point three percent? Why is the stock market at
a new high? Because you know, with President Trump, we
care both about big companies and small companies, and you're
you're quoting big companies, but the Big Company Index csmp's
at a new high.

Speaker 16 (42:10):
Hasbro says they're going to have to increase their prices.
Goldman Sacks is eighty six percent of the tariff revenue
collected so far has been paid by American businesses and consumers.
So just bottom line, mister secretary, do you acknowledge that
these tariffs are attacks on American consumers? No, I don't,
even though you have companies saying they are going to
have to increase prices, and given the fact that eighty

(42:32):
six percent of these tariffs so far, you're.

Speaker 4 (42:36):
Quoting Goldman Sacks. Yes, yeah, I made it, which I said,
I made a good career of training against Golden Sacks.

Speaker 1 (42:42):
Oh that's so good. By the way, the fact that
he goes, you know, you're not actually quoting some independent
source here, You're quoting a very specific source that I
have done quite well in disagreeing with on a personal level.
And beyond that, But here's what's really interesting to me.
I want to back up this audio for just a second,
because there's a part of this that's so lost on

(43:04):
the everyday American when we talk about it, and I
don't know how, like it's the most basic aspect of
this conversation, and yet it's missing. But one of the
things that Welker says in her trying to attack Scott
for everything he's saying is going well, is a quote
about who is paying for the tariffs, But you notice
there's something in there that she says, and then she

(43:27):
doesn't acknowledge the fact that it's part of the equation.

Speaker 16 (43:30):
As bro says, they're going to have to increase their prices.
Goldman Sachs is, eighty six percent of the tariff revenue
collected so far has been paid by American businesses and consumers.

Speaker 1 (43:40):
So just all right, she says, American businesses and consumers,
not just consumers. She actually says American businesses as well.
So you're going to push as much of that price
onto the consumer as you can. But this is the
part that nobody talks about. We don't have to buy
that stuff, depending on what it is, how necessary to
your life it is. You can decline and choose not

(44:00):
to upgrade your cell phone and keep your older phone
for a little longer if the new price is crappy,
and if you don't like it, and if things start
to be created here in this country with no tariff
costs and the price of them is significantly less, that'll
be good for everybody. It'll be good to create jobs,
good for the entirety of our society, and businesses won't

(44:20):
keep pushing prices to consumers if they can't sell them
things like that. That's how business works. Supply and demand
is a very important part of it, and so if
the demand goes away and the supply is significant, the
businesses will find other ways to deal with the rising
costs of tariffs, which do not involve giving money or
taking money from us. The funniest part of that narrative

(44:43):
from the left is it's absolutely assuming that we're idiots,
that we're dumb and we don't know how to act
as consumers who don't like the price of something as
a collective, and we obviously do. That's basic economic one
oh one kind of stuff, and it's just amazing that
it's not there, because it's just theming. Americans have to
buy whatever they have to buy, regardless of what the

(45:04):
cost is. We are a country that consumes a lot.
I'm not ridiculing us for that. I am very happy
to be in the type of country that we're in.
I don't want us to be anything other than what
we are, but we do. We consume a lot of things.
We buy a lot of stuff. It's one of the
big reasons that Trump is so right in trying to
leverage the American economy to get better deals from everyone

(45:26):
else in society. The American consumer is unique. There's places
throughout the rest of the world that are developed like
we are to a degree, maybe not the degree quite
like us, that consume way less. China, for example, is
a hilarious demonstration of having a lot of people who
consume very little that live in a country that's very
large and has a lot of success. Their economy is

(45:49):
not as valuable to the rest of the world as
ours is, as our society is, because of how much
more we buy, and so if we bought less, it
would make these businesses actually transfer the costs a different
way or demand a lower price from, say, the people
supplying them the product in the first place, to counter
the tariffs. Giving the passing on the cost to us

(46:11):
is a first step move for a business. If it fails,
they'll make other decisions, and we would like to see
those all right, One last thing, I've belabored that point
as much as I can. Chris Christy went berserk about
Robert F. Kennedy Junior. I think this was on ABC
over the weekend. Of course, it was because Christy and
here's what's amazing when you see someone like this blow

(46:33):
up exactly the way he does. And Chris Christy is
not exactly the picture of health as far as a
human being goes. But what I think is interesting is
it shows how over the target Robert F. Kennedy actually is,
how successful he's been outing a lot of the lie
and a lot of the you know, hiding of certain
facts that has been the people in positions of power

(46:54):
and health in this country for a long time. Firing
certain CDC individuals because they're trying to subvert your authority
is a good move, and Robert F. Kennedy Junior is
trying to make some more information public that they have buried.
But here is Chris Christy going crazy talking about how
much of a grave danger Robert of Kennedy Junior is

(47:15):
to our country, which again means that Robert F. Kennedy
Junior is very over the target that people have been
missing for a while, or that they've avoided other people
being over because they had control of people on the inside.
Robert of Kennedy Junior is on the outside, and that
is a very good thing for people in positions of
power in this country. Here we go.

Speaker 13 (47:35):
You looked at that appearance before Congress, and it just
confirms what all of us around this table have known
for decades.

Speaker 1 (47:41):
Robert F.

Speaker 13 (47:42):
Kennedy Junior is a foolish man, full of foolish and
vapid ideas, and that was on display again this week
in front of Congress. And I really don't want to
hear about Bill Cassidy because he is a co conspirator
with the President of the United States for putting this holy,
young qualified man in charge of twenty five percent of

(48:02):
all government spending. Without Cassidy's vote, Robert F. Kennedy Junior
would not be it. And maybe he's feeling some guilt
from what.

Speaker 3 (48:09):
He did, but I'll tell you this, the President did this.

Speaker 9 (48:13):
He knows.

Speaker 13 (48:13):
The President is smart enough to know R. F. K
Junior isn't belonging that job. But after he won, he
wanted to show everybody I can do whatever I want
to do, because this Senate will be compliant no matter
what I do. And I'll put the greatest vaccine and
public health denier of the last twenty years in charge
of public health America. It's a human middle finger, George O.

Speaker 1 (48:36):
One. I want to make sure that This is understood
by Christy and everybody in the back rows of the
seats here. A lot of Trump voters like the public
middle finger to the organizations that have been basically giving
the American people a middle finger for quite some time.
And two, one of the things Robert F. Kennedy Junior
is talking about a lot is just getting transparency with
data that's been buried by the CDC. Christy couldn't be

(48:59):
further from the true in saying what isn't valuable to
the American people about Robert F. Kennedy Junior. What is
isn't valuable to say President Trump or anyone else, Because
Robert F. Kennedy Junior actually does want more of these
studies to be a public that are being buried, that
are being hidden, a specific one and one that's causing
a bit of commotion within certain parts of our country

(49:21):
because of who the subject of it was. I was
a study on young black men that found that certain
vaccines actually did cause a rise in issues like autism,
and that was buried, that was just absolutely hidden from
public health information because the people in charge at the
time didn't like the end result of the study and

(49:41):
they wanted it to go away, and Robert F. Kennedy
Junior has made it something that's publicly available. Now, that's
a good thing, regardless of what you think of it.
A knowing more is never bad and thinking that if
we know too much we make the wrong decision is
uniquely disrespectful to the American people of anybody charge we
can collect more information. We deserve more information all the time,

(50:04):
and that seems to be the main goal of Robert F.
Kennedy Junior with his role in our health as the
health secretary. All right, quick break a lot more. Craig
Collins filling in on the data show.

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Speaker 8 (51:13):
Now all of the news you would probably miss. It's
time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 1 (51:19):
That's right, It's time for a quick five on the
Dana Show. A d Lash Dana Lash Radio and x
on Twitter A great way to stay connected to her
at radio. Craig Z if you want to see me
occasionally tweet about the New York Yankees. NBC had to
cut away from a moment that was hilarious aid an
A's baseball game because a husband seemed to be getting
extra friendly with the misses in the stands. At least

(51:41):
we hope so. I don't think there's any other version
of this that's gone viral where somebody's cheating on somebody else.
But here's a little bit of that audio.

Speaker 3 (51:48):
I go for one of them too. It's it, it's it,
what's that? What's it? It's it? Yeah, on about half
of you are a handful, Chris, let me tell you
all in the.

Speaker 1 (52:04):
Few all right. I love the fact that they're very
awkwardly talking about certain things. There's an ice cream treat
in the Bay Area. It's it is what it's called.
That's what they're talking about first, and then they see
the husband get extra grabby, and then they laugh and
then they turn away from that. So that audio went
very viral. And then also this, I have one other
piece of viral audio. This is a woman who's breaking

(52:27):
down a Target pair of pants that has gone viral
because the nether regions have said pair of pants have
an unfortunate fleat that makes it look like something on
a woman's body in exactly the area it's it's in.
So again, the unfortunate pleat makes people not like these pants.
Here is someone talking about this. I think a doctor,
doctor Marzy on TikTok breaking some stuff down. I would

(52:50):
like to know Rye Champion at Target a center pleat
right when I'm talking to you.

Speaker 2 (52:58):
This is what you see.

Speaker 1 (53:00):
Hey, that's doctor Marcy on TikTok. I don't know if
she actually has a degree, showing you the pleated area
of the pants and how it looks like something other
than pants while you're looking at her. So again, this
went viral as well. Not a great look for anybody,
Champion whoever created the clothing. Not exactly the kind of

(53:21):
thing you probably want to buy, but nonetheless I think
a problem that many people have struggled with. All Right,
another story out there quickly. Gen Z employees need more
praise than other generations. A survey of seventy six percent
of managers I found that gen Z complains they don't
get praised enough, that they like praise, that they want
to know they're doing a good job. I have to

(53:43):
be honest, even though this does feel the same as
a lot of other stories involving gen Z, that it's
such a hassle. Why do you need this? Just get
over it and be a you know, adult person who
works their job and doesn't need to be praised by
others at the same time. And this is my forgiving
of this generation a bit, or any generation. Really, I

(54:05):
do think that praise in the workplace has a uniquely
valuable motivational factor to your mental health or just in
general your ability to do a good job a day
in and day out. I think if you have a
boss that heaps praise on you when it's deserved, not
for any reason whatsoever, that you actually are probably a
more productive employee. So, regardless of if this is a

(54:26):
gen Z thing or not, I do think employers could
do a better job at this in general because it
would help people be more motivated at work and not
lily pad the way gen Z does by quitting one
company to jump somewhere else. But all right, quick break,
a lot coming up. I defended gen Z. Not sure
if I'll get in trouble for that. Craig Collins filling
in on the data show Burner.

Speaker 6 (54:46):
Gunn is a great option from if you're disarmed, really ultimately,
if you're disarmed from protecting yourself, and I mean, there's
all that out there. I would love to be able
to say I don't go to gun free zones. But
I'm a big kid, and I got to do adult stuff,
and I got to do jobs, and I don't have
the luxury of just crossing my arms and saying I'm
not going to go there because I you know, I
got to, but I also don't want to be left
utterly defenseless as well. So Berna shoots chemical irritant projectiles

(55:11):
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It's legal in all fifty states, doesn't require background checks
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can send it right to your door, so it's accessible
for everybody. There's no recoil, super easy target acquisition. And
with the new CL that's the burn A Compact Launcher.
You you have a fifteen round shot capacity per cartridge.

(55:33):
When you compare that to stun guns, you got like
one or two shots and that's it. So this is
definitely you have a lot more options for defense with this.
There's the Burna SD, which is both of these are pistols.
SD's a little bit larger, the CL's thirty eight percent
smaller than the SD, and they've got rifles and all
that stuff. But I think specifically for the purpose of
self defense, y'all want to be looking at the SD

(55:54):
or the CL and college kids that are going back
to school, you're not old enough to carry a pistol,
but you want to be able to protect yourself. Maybe
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(56:16):
by r NA dot com. Slash Data makes.

Speaker 9 (56:19):
Some common sense of the crazy headlines. With a Dana
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 1 (56:31):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you, d Lash Dana
Lash Radio and x on Twitter to stay connected to
anything and everything going on in her world. Great job
of social media done by Dana and her team, including
producer Steven, putting up awesome stuff every single day. All right,
I'll play this audio first just because I find it amusing,

(56:53):
and then we'll talk about a much more serious story.
But President Trump over the weekend said he was going
to go after crime in He wants to do that
by sending in the National Guard. This is something you
know about, you're familiar with. A whole lot of people
in Chicago have decided that this means he declared war
on them. I know that Trump puts stuff up on
social media, but no, the United States is not going

(57:14):
to war with Chicago. That's insane. A reporter actually asked
Trump this question and he called her second rate to
her face, which was amazing. Here's part of that back
and forth.

Speaker 10 (57:28):
To say news, you say that, jarl, and just take news.

Speaker 9 (57:32):
Listen, be quiet, listen.

Speaker 17 (57:34):
You don't listen.

Speaker 11 (57:35):
You never listen. That's why you're second grade. We're not
going to war. We're going to clean up our city.
We're going to clean them up so they don't kill
five people every weekend.

Speaker 1 (57:45):
That's not war.

Speaker 11 (57:46):
That's common sense.

Speaker 1 (57:47):
Yes, it is common sense. It's the kind of thing
we need more of. Absolutely, And I love the way
he speaks about this. By the way, anyone that says
that President Trump's brain isn't working, which is a narrative
coming out of the left now, they're trying to say
that he's not mentally all there. The crazy thing about
that is how often he interacts with media on a

(58:08):
daily basis. He'll take questions even from people that he
heavily disagrees with. Biden was being hidden in a closet
for a majority of the time he was both running
for and then actually the president of the country. That
shows you who actually had a mental decline and who doesn't.
Trump is not struggling with that, but all right on
the heels of that story. So we're talking about Chicago

(58:29):
right now and Trump wanting to send troops there or
maybe New Orleans or all kinds of places, and that
the effectiveness of what he's done in Washington, d C.
Is on display for the entire country to see, and
how much we'd like to see crime go away in
other places. There's another story that's out there, and it's
just a horrific story. I do not recommend anyone watch

(58:49):
this video. There is a video out there that's graphic
in nature that shows a man sitting behind a woman
on a light rail train in North Carolina. The man
is a career criminal in his thirties, someone who's been
arrested multiple times, had gone to prison before, but because
of the democratic policies of the city in Charlotte, in
which he lives, he was out, he was not in jail.

(59:12):
His own mother has described him as someone who is
not mentally well, who is not safe, who's the kind
of person who should be institutionalized. But the system has
failed this person, mostly because Democrat Democrats believe that a
leniency that goes above and beyond any sort of common
sense for people to commit crimes is somehow attractive out

(59:36):
to certain voter blocks, that it somehow makes you less
racist as a political party, or whatever it might be
that they claim. And again, this is just being lenient
to all kinds of criminals and all kinds of horrible things. Yes,
it's a black man. Yes he stabbed and killed a
white woman. So if you want the race narrative to
be there, it is. And maybe it's one of the
many reasons that media is ignoring this story. The woman

(59:58):
is also Ukrainian refugee twenty five three years old, who
was killed. The man sitting behind her just stands up
and stabs her three times, once in the neck. By
the time that authorities arrive, she's gone. And so the
value of this story is to say that people like
this broken, crazy, deranged, evil, whatever word you want to

(01:00:19):
use for it, mentally unhealthy humans who would sit behind
someone on a train and just choose to stab them
for no reason whatsoever and kill them and then casually
get off the train, which you also see in the video.
Stuff like that needs to be stopped. We need to
fight against it, and if that includes National Guard troops
being stationed on or near trains so that a person

(01:00:40):
like this is fearful of this type of action that
they would commit against someone else. Good, That keeps us safer,
That keeps tragedies like this from happening. A bunch of
people are saying that this is being overly politicized, the
politics are being added to it, which of course always
becomes a thing. I'm not going to pretend there's some
version that that's not at least partially true. But politics

(01:01:02):
are the reason this person's dead. Democratic politics, specifically, they're
the reason that someone acts this way as often as
they do in as many parts of our country on
a smaller scale level, And what I mean by that
is national media, liberal media, and liberal politicians are great
at diving into the one off stories that happen in

(01:01:24):
our society. However frequently they do where someone takes the
life of a lot of other people, a mass shooting,
a mass killing. They're great at that. They're great at
discussing those stories and adding politics to it. Not great
as and I agree with them, but they're great at
focusing on it. They are terrible at focusing on the
one off things that happen constantly a Chicago, for example,

(01:01:46):
as Trump said in that audio, there sees multiple deaths
every weekend, multiple shootings in the thirties and forties every weekend.
Of people that get shot, some survive, some do not.
This would be the type of story that would dominate
headlines if it happened all at once, and if media
was believed or suspected that the individual was somehow a

(01:02:09):
Trump supporter who did something. But the fact that it
happens mostly in minority neighborhoods on the South side of
the city of Chicago means that you're not allowed in
mainstream media to talk about it as much or point
to it as a problem. Both the victims and the
people who cause these crimes actually all live in the
same community. By the way, By and large, it's not
quite the version of story you see in North Carolina

(01:02:30):
where a complete stranger kills a complete stranger, which is
just awful and horrible. But again, these stories deserve to
dominate headlines the same way because they back the reason
that Trump is doing what he's doing. And when I
see people in Chicago, I live there for a long time,
I have a bunch of friends still, although who knows,
after I talk about this in this way, maybe some

(01:02:51):
that hear about this will remove me from their social
media accounts. But I saw all over social media over
the weekend how Chicago was going to fight against the
war that Trump was bringing to their city, that Chicago
is going to do everything it could to defy Trump
and what he wanted to do, which was eliminate the
ridiculousness of murder and violent crime that exists in that city.

(01:03:16):
And by the way, one of my other favorite discussion points,
favorite in a dark way, I guess on this entire issue,
is the claim by JB. Pritzker and others out of
Illinois that Chicago actually isn't that violent, that it doesn't
top the list as far as violent cities in our
country when you're talking about murder, it actually does when
you add all kinds of other violent crime, assault, rape,

(01:03:39):
other things. Yes, Chicago falls further down the list then
you might expect although there's still a significant country or
a significant city in this country as far as the
totality of horrible things that happened there, but murder specifically,
they're number one. And if I were going to send
the National Guard somewhere as the president to try to
get a handle on something, I would probably art with

(01:04:00):
the number one place that's dealing with murder, dealing with killings,
and say that, hey, we can probably help you do
a better job of fighting this if you want to
do it. And Chicago says no. The stupidity of the
left sometimes of the ideas that they want their supporters
to rally around and that supporters actually do it is

(01:04:20):
sort of the most amazing thing to me I've ever seen.
And I was so tempted to comment on more of
these posts I saw on social media. I may have
commented on some that defending crime itself seems like a
weird position for people to be taking, because, no, the
innocent individuals are not getting arrested in DC, but people
are doing a lot less harming of others because of

(01:04:43):
the presence of an authority, a group of people that
make individuals like the guy in North Carolina more fearful
of being an absolute piece of crap and taking the
life of a twenty three year old woman because he's
a giant. You know what, I can't say that word
on the air, even though I want. But yes, this
is the kind of thing that we should talk about

(01:05:03):
more because it further demonstrates the need for something to
happen in our society that isn't happening. It is simple
common sense, as Trump calls it. And it's just amazing
that these are the kind of debates that we even
have in our society. To be totally honest, I feel
like this is a narrative that a lot of people
in conservative media say often. And I'll play some audio
that proves another version of this in a second. But

(01:05:26):
I am sometimes floored when prepping for a show like this,
filling in on a nationally syndicated a radio show for
someone like Dana Lash, a big name in the world
of media, that I'm going to talk about whether or
not Chicago should accept the help of the President to
fight horrific crime that happens there, And then you have
the backdrop of the North Carolina story, Like I'm dumbfounded

(01:05:47):
that these are some of the conversations you have, and
I assume the vast majority of this audience of this
giant show utterly agrees that it's ridiculous that we have
these discussions and see these things in our society when
we could easily them by allowing authorities to help. All Right,
I want to play one last piece of audio and
then we'll take a break. This is Chris Christy complaining
about Robert F. Kennedy Junior. It's a similar version of

(01:06:10):
we don't like how over the target they are, so
we're going to bash them and attack them as much
as possible. When Robert F. Kennedy Junior has been putting
out information that the CDC had tried to bury and
has been firing people that were subverting his desire to
have more transparency at the CDC, both bad things and
both good things for us that Robert F. Kennedy Junior

(01:06:31):
actually values them telling us more about vaccines and whatever
else is out there. It's good to have a skeptic
in a position of power sometimes because of how it
makes the entire industry or the entire organization validate itself,
which is something that I think the CDC is struggling
to do in response to Robert Kennedy Junior. But here's

(01:06:51):
Chris Christy going nuts.

Speaker 13 (01:06:53):
You looked at that appears before Congress, and it just
confirms what all of us around this table have known
for decades.

Speaker 1 (01:06:59):
Robert IF.

Speaker 13 (01:06:59):
Kennedy th Junior is a foolish man, full of foolish
and vapid ideas, and that was on display again this
week in.

Speaker 3 (01:07:09):
Front of Congress.

Speaker 13 (01:07:10):
And I really don't want to hear about Bill Cassidy
because he.

Speaker 1 (01:07:13):
Is a co conspirave.

Speaker 13 (01:07:14):
I don't want to hear the President of the United
States for putting this wholly unqualified man in charge of
twenty five percent of all government spending.

Speaker 1 (01:07:21):
No, I don't want to hear about anybody. I don't
hear about anything. He goes on to describe Robert F.
Kennedy Junior in his position of power as far as
the health of our country goes as a middle finger
to that industry. Will A lot of Americans would feel
as though many industries, many people in Washington have been
giving the middle finger to us for a very long time.
So why not throw it back a little? Is probably

(01:07:42):
the response of many. All right, quick break a lot
more Greg Collins filling in on the Danish.

Speaker 6 (01:07:46):
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(01:08:09):
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Speaker 1 (01:08:51):
Essentially, it's his laugh mission to make bad decisions. It's
time for Florida Man. That's right, it's time for Florida Man.
On the Danas Show d Lash Dana Lash Radio on
x on Twitter. A great ways to stay connected to her.
My name is Craig Collins, filling in. First, a wild

(01:09:12):
boar got into somebody's home in Florida. You actually hear
a deputy on his camera talking about how it's crazy
to see a boar in somebody's house. You actually also
hear the woman who called authorities saying she's never seen
this before. The giant boor is just standing in the
living room, just kind of chilling, hoping not to be bothered.

(01:09:32):
And the deputy has to actually bother this boar in
Lee County. And this goes about as well as you thought.
But I do love some of the audio for this.

Speaker 3 (01:09:40):
He's bringing a kid. I've never heard of that. Yeah,
g ash rights, they mean in just came through, bust
them through the back door.

Speaker 7 (01:09:52):
Four just advise Aggie and it's hey, it's like a
three hundred pounds sol.

Speaker 3 (01:10:00):
Oh my gosh, easy, easy, easy, you better start. Hey,
bring me that rope.

Speaker 1 (01:10:13):
It's crazy. This is what the deputy has to do
this day in Lee County. He's like easy, easy is
the boys going nuts and attacking him, and then he's like, hey,
bring me the rope. I need to get him. But
I just I love the beginning of this video and
how he walks in and he's like, gee gosh, the
minute he sees what he's going to have to handle,
he's bringing a kid.

Speaker 5 (01:10:31):
I've never heard of that.

Speaker 1 (01:10:33):
Geeh right, yeah, exactly right. This is crazy. That's a
feral animal that broke into the back a door of
your house and is just kind of standing there and
it doesn't go well. But honestly, this is the reason
that police deserves so much praise everywhere in the country,
I maybe even uniquely in Florida, is that they show

(01:10:54):
up for this stuff and they have to handle everything.
A Florida man was accused of placing cameras in a
victim's home attracking devices on the victim's vehicle. This is
a crazy story. Jared Levi McDaniels, thirty eight years old,
was overly obsessed with somebody that he lived near, so
much so that he put a multitude of cameras into

(01:11:14):
the woman's room and into the woman's home and has
been charged with a whole bunch of stuff. In reaction
to this, there also were stalking complaints. The dude looks
uniquely creepy by the way, his social media photos and
his inevitable mugshot have all went viral, and he looks
like an interesting dude. Inside was a scary dude. Inside

(01:11:35):
the guy's home, they also found a bunch of crazy
things LSD, crystal meth, mushrooms, THHD, gummies, various inhalance. They
found a bunch of guns and whatnot. The dude just
seems to be insane. He is going to be charged
with a bunch of different crimes. Installation of tracking device devices,

(01:11:56):
video voyeurism, a possession of psychedelic possession of crystal MeV LSD, substituted,
other things like just crazy, dangerous inhalent chemicals. You would
not want to live next to this guy, is, I
guess the end result of this story. Florida has a
unique amount of people that you probably would not want
to live next to. This is one of them. If

(01:12:17):
I had to pick between a wild boar breaking into
my home for a small amount of time, and this
guy being next door neighbors with me, you pick the
boar every time you pick it. Multi He could break
in a couple times a year, and I'd still rather
that than this other dude. A Florida man living underwater
won't resurface even after breaking a record. This is another
story out there from Key Largo, Florida. A university professor

(01:12:39):
who broke a record for how long he has lived
underwater in the undersea lodge, which is bad for you,
by the way. There's certain things that happen to your
body when you're underwater for that long, and pressurized containers
and whatnot. He should leave. The previous record of seventy
three days, two hours in thirty four minutes, which was

(01:13:01):
set by two Tennessee professors, has now been broken, and
the guy's like, I'm not giving this up. I'm staying
down here. I want my record to be unbreakable, even
if it means that my body becomes very easily breakable
once I eventually resurface. At least that's the story so far.
A weird record to be proud of breaking, and weird

(01:13:21):
that it's university professors who all want to be the
ones to do it. They want to test themselves as
opposed to run other tests and other things, which is fine.
I'm good with that. Go ahead and keep testing yourself.
But Joseph to Tori, he's seventy four days underwater, proud
of his accomplishment and going to keep going. Whi's crazy
about this story is I actually think it was sent

(01:13:42):
to me recently, but I actually think the original version
of it is actually kind of older, excuse me, And
so I wonder if actually this guy did eventually come up,
So I'll put that out there. I know that this
was sent as far as some prep stuff that we had,
and so I definitely wanted to cover it. But I
just noticed the headline for it says May of twenty

(01:14:03):
twenty three, and I feel like I remembered this story
about this guy, so I'm curious if maybe he has
actually resurfaced. Otherwise, it's definitely a heck of a record.
But all right, quick Break a Lot More. That was
a Florida man from the past. Why not do one
of those quick Break a Lot More. Craig Collin's filling
in on the Data show.

Speaker 6 (01:14:21):
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Speaker 1 (01:15:28):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you at d Lash,
Dana Lash Radio on x on Twitter, great ways to
stay connected to her and all the many things going
on on social The way that she producer Steve and
a whole bunch of people share info is awesome. And
then at Radio craig Z. If you want to see
what it's like to be a one man band who

(01:15:49):
does very little on social media and has a very
small following, you can follow me at Radio CRAIGZ. Thank
you for anyone that's been doing that the last few days.
I'm not doing better on Twitter. I promise I'll try eventually.
All right, let's move on. America has always been a
nation of prayer, a nation of believing in the Creator.
That is according to President Trump, who right now, I

(01:16:13):
just want to do this quickly before I hit play
on any of this audio, is trying to make Amerius,
make America, excuse me, Amarus, America is safer, and trying
to make America a country that believes more in its creator,
which is in the Declaration of Independence. These are good
things he also wants health systems to be more transparent.

(01:16:35):
That's a good thing the CDC and I have audio
of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Uniquely talking about how they
were trying to prevent transparency. Those things are all good.
They're not one sided good. It's not like there's a
political side of the aisle that should say these things
are bad. And whatever your faith would be believing in
something I think in and of itself has been demonstrated

(01:16:57):
to be a valuable thing for your own mental health.
This is something Trump has talked about recently. It's just
sort of amazing that these are the back and forth disagreements.
It feels like if you were President Trump, if you
were to imagine yourself living a life for a day
in the body of Trump, and you woke up and
you're like, man, what could I go after today? That

(01:17:18):
would be uniquely odd for people to say I shouldn't
be trying to do whether it's crime or you know,
trying to connect more with the faith in the country,
whatever it might be. And watching as Democrats say this
is the newest worst thing they've ever seen in society,
because it does feel that way, regardless of what the
goal is to remove and crime is a thing that

(01:17:39):
most people in this country should be anti. There's somehow
a group of people that rise up and say, no,
leave this thing alone. But here's Trump announcing that seventy
faith organizations and churches have joined together to participate in
America Praise, which is something that does seem to be
a shot at Democrats and what they've said about how
prayer isn't port it doesn't matter, which is just a

(01:18:02):
very weird thing to do. But here is President Trump
announcing that he in fact cares as we get closer
to the two hundred and fiftieth a birthday of this
nation and the Declaration of Independence that actually specifically references
the Creator.

Speaker 2 (01:18:16):
And I'd like to ask a very good friend of mine,
Secretary Scott Turned, to come up and say a few
words about some of the things we're doing. And Scott,
please take it away.

Speaker 1 (01:18:26):
By the way, he does also bring in Scott's all
go ahead and play that audio too of Scott making
the announcement as well.

Speaker 17 (01:18:30):
So grateful to be here, What an honor it is
to stand with this commission and with our President. Yeah,
we're in the nation's capital, we're at the Museum of
the Bible. We're together and we're talking about faith. Did
anybody else pick up on that? I wouldn't want to
be anywhere else. We're right here, So thank you, miss

(01:18:51):
the President. It's an honor to serve under your leadership, Sir.

Speaker 3 (01:18:56):
And to be a part of this tremendous cabinet.

Speaker 17 (01:18:59):
How many know we have a godly faithful cabinet.

Speaker 1 (01:19:03):
And it is amazing the smile of Secretary Turner as
he's talking about this, the nineteenth secretary of the US
Department of Housing and Urban Development, Who's like, hey, faith
matters again in Washington, it matters to politicians, and this
is a nice thing. He goes on to announce how
many organizations will be involved in it, and again President

(01:19:25):
Trump himself says that we are a nation that believes
in the power of prayer.

Speaker 2 (01:19:29):
America has always been a nation that believes in the
power of prayer. And we will never apologize for our
faith ever, ever, never, never, We will never surrender our
God given rights. We will defend our liberties, our values,
our sovereignty, and we will defend our freedom. And with

(01:19:49):
the help of amazing faith communities across the land, so
many are represented with us today. We will truly make
this the golden age of America. That's what we're doing.
And we're at a golden age where it's the very
beginning of a golden age.

Speaker 1 (01:20:03):
Hirai, that's great, Sir no. I absolutely agree with him though,
that this is the kind of thing that matters. You
know what's interesting about this too, there are people in
certain communities. The Secretary of Urban House Development, a black man,
who might be speaking to specific communities in his mind
when he's talking to all of America that actually respond

(01:20:23):
well to this discussion that are typically thought of to
vote democratically on other things. The black community specifically does
seem very responsive to the idea of faith, to the
idea of prayer. And so I think it's very interesting
to watch this happen, to watch this be discussed by
the president, and to focus on it at a time
when a bunch of people are yelling out loud, how

(01:20:45):
dare you offer thoughts and prayers after a horrible tragedy
happens to kids in a church and kids that I
think families would actually value prayer in the families. Ask
jd Vance, the Vice President, to request prayers from the
American people. Well, all of that is just trying to
go after the narrative that the left wants to make

(01:21:06):
the most popular reaction to a story like that, which
is how they won't help restrict gun access because they
actually care about God or faith or something, which is
a weird thing for them to be anti in trying
to go after your right to bear arms. All Right,
Another story out there that I thought was interesting, a
National Border Patrol Council President Paul Perez said that they're

(01:21:28):
actually enforcing the law and that some politicians in certain
cities are trying to fight them, like Karen Bass, from
enforcing the law, and it needs to stop because it's
hurting agents, it's hurting the country in a lot of ways.
And as the border is finally much safer than it's
been in a while, these ice agents, these Border patrol people,

(01:21:48):
they're just trying to keep that going. And the people
that are fighting them now are exactly the same people
who discourage cops from doing their job. Well, I just
think if you're a police officer in one of these
cities real quick, and you would like to go fight
whatever the crime is wherever it exists, even if it's
in a minority community in your city, and you know

(01:22:09):
that the minute you do that, the optics of it
would cause you to be bashed. Even if you do
everything exactly right, you have the bodycam footage to prove
that you were the picture of what is expected of
someone to put themself in danger long before actually fighting
whoever a criminal is that they're around. As you do
all that, you know that the politicians are just waiting

(01:22:29):
to turn on you to use it as a political
points thing. This sounds like what the National Border Patrol
Council president is talking about in saying that we shouldn't
be fighting authorities when we're just trying to do our
job and trying to enforce the law.

Speaker 18 (01:22:43):
They're enforcing immigration law as it is on the books.
You know, these are targeted enforcement actions. You know, we
use a number of factors to determine where we're going
to go and who we're going to go after. And
many of these people they run as soon as our
agents and officers get there, so that as well is
an articulable fact that can be used for reasonable suspicion

(01:23:05):
and we can go after them, We can chase them down,
and then our investigation begins to determine whether this person's
legally or illegally in the country, and then we take
them into custody based on, you know, the answers that
they give. So, you know, Karen Bass and those other
Democrats that are demonizing our agents, they need to stop
because it makes it a lot more dangerous for our
agents to do the job that they were trained and

(01:23:27):
swore to do.

Speaker 1 (01:23:28):
Yeah, they're just upholding the law. The weirdest thing about
this is if you don't like the law, if you
don't like what's going on in society, the way to
fight it isn't to try to demonize the actual people
executing that law so that they get harmed and they
try to get to a point where they're discouraged and
afraid of doing their job, which is the whole goal,
and it's been the goal the whole time, and it's
what the Democrats would like. They would like cops to

(01:23:51):
stand down by the way that some feel like they
have to in cities like Chicago because they know if
they go into the wrong neighborhood and simply uphold the
law that they'll be used as a scapegoat and called
a racist or anything else. All Right, one last thing,
and this is Robert F. Kennedy Junior defending firing a
guy who was the chief CDC vaccine officer because he

(01:24:11):
was one of several people subverting the authority of the
person in charge of the you know, health department. So
it makes sense that you would fire somebody like this.
Of course, people are going to demonize Robert OF Kennedy
Junior and say he's a moron, which is crazy because
he's an outsider with different perspectives than our health community
typically has, who is willing to add transparency to the

(01:24:35):
certain decisions he makes to fire people. This is a
good thing. Let's en him talk about it. This can't
be bad. And honestly, the Left saying it's bad is
demonstrating how very much over the target Robert F. Kennedy
is in the administration or the you know, the department
that he's been put in charge of.

Speaker 5 (01:24:53):
Yeah, I mean I had individual I actually came to
my attention because early on during the measles break, I
promise Governor Abbott sends money down badly needed money and
helped down to Texas, and this individual blocked that money
for a month and I couldn't figure out what's happening.

(01:25:13):
I gave the order on you know, I'm running this
agency out come, nothing's happening. And then we tried to
get the Vaccine Safety data language is the data that
supposedly the CDs he tried to be used to make
good decisions on whether vaccines are hurting people in our
weather side effects or seven months, he stonewalled so that

(01:25:38):
we could not get that data. He's also the individual
and runs the VYROR system, which is the SERVI system
for injuries that captures according to CDs, he's on study
fewer than one percent of vaccine injuries.

Speaker 1 (01:25:52):
Yeah, he's terrible at his job and intentionally so. And
also preventing money from going to Texas seemed to be
just and trying to make a measles outbreak worse, to
try to point to it as somehow a problem of
policy politics instead of being a thing where Robert of
Kenney Junior was trying to help. It's amazing that these
individuals are in all these positions of power through every

(01:26:14):
part of our government, that the bureaucratic versions of our
government are so one sidedly political, politically motivated doing horrible
things that hurt the American people. And that putting outsiders
in roots out that corruption and then it attacks itself
the media people saying how horrible he is for rooting
out corruption that exists, because that's the end goal. More

(01:26:35):
so than say, you know, getting every single decision right.
You would like to see people that are actually from
the outside that aren't beholden to whatever the power structure
is that exists, for people who rise up from the
bottom that can actually remove people who are doing terrible
things for the American people. Yeah, this guy's crazy, horrible, ah,
the worst according to left leaning media, and I'm thrilled

(01:26:57):
that he's in the position of power that he's in, genuinely.
All Right, quick break a lot more Craig Collins filling
in on The Dana Show.

Speaker 8 (01:27:04):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's quick five.

Speaker 1 (01:27:10):
Right, It's time for quick five on the Dana Show.
D Lash, Dana Lash Radio and x on Twitter. A
great way to stay connected to her and all the
things that she puts up on social media and that
producer Steven does as well. Awesome job by both. A
guy broke down the different types of women based on
ice cream flavors I'm going to get to that in
a second. I don't want to do that first, but
I like that a lot before I get there, though,

(01:27:31):
And the reason i want to do this story first
is I'm curious who the Phillies Karen will be as
far as ice cream flavors go. In your opinion, if
you don't know anything about this story, A woman now
being dubbed Phillies Karen was crazy. At a baseball game
the other night. A dad very fairly got a baseball,
a home run ball that was hitting into the stands
I landed on the ground. He picked it up, he

(01:27:52):
brought it over to his kid, who was there to
celebrate his birthday that was in a couple of days,
and the Karen runs from her section over to him,
a very upset that the ball got hit in her direction,
that she did not catch it, that it landed on
the ground, and she's claiming that it's hers even though
she didn't get it, and that he took it from
her somehow, which means that she doesn't go to many

(01:28:13):
baseball games and doesn't understand the rules of the home
run and she's also a horrible Karen person. But anyway,
the dad and the son talked about the experience, the
dad eventually relented, gave the home run ball to the woman,
and then the Phillies gave him a whole bunch of
stuff in response to it, including even a signed bat.
Here is part of that story, though, and the way

(01:28:33):
that son Lincoln and dad Drew reacted to being interviewed
by NBC affiliates and Philly about their experience at the game.

Speaker 10 (01:28:41):
As soon as it cracked off the bat, it was
starting to head our way a little bit. It fell
and kind of bubbled between the two armrests, and I
picked it up, and I just walked away and held
the ball up high and put it in Lincoln's glove.

Speaker 1 (01:28:52):
And then she showed up.

Speaker 10 (01:28:54):
As she reached from my arm, she just yelled in
my ear, that's my ball, like super loud, out of
my skin. Then she's like, those are from our seats.
I said, there was nobody in that seat. I pretty
much just wanted her to.

Speaker 3 (01:29:05):
Go away and be dad and show him how to
de escalate the situation. So that's where I went. I
wasn't very happy that we had to give it to her,
but we can't win.

Speaker 6 (01:29:15):
She was dead it anyway.

Speaker 1 (01:29:17):
Oh, my god, I love the kid. He's like, I
wasn't happy that we had to give the ball away,
but that woman was nuts and crazy and I got
to learn from dad how to handle something. But again,
the team actually gave him a lot of other stuff,
including a sign bat by Harrison Vader, which feels like
a pretty good win. The other funny thing in this
story is the amount of people who've been misidentified as
Philly's Karen so far. There was a woman who was

(01:29:39):
identified as Phillys Karen that is not her, that was
not at the game, that said she's actually a Red
Sox fan, and then also a teacher at a Jersey
who was also misidentified as Karen. The school decided to
defend this one by saying that anyone who had gone
to the game from our school would have caught the
ball bare handed, avoiding the situation entirely, which is hilarious

(01:29:59):
because if a baseball isn't caught in the fly and
it lands in the stands, it's fair grabs. Anybody who
gets it, gets comes away with it, gets to keep it.
This is something you know whenever a very important home run,
say one that's gonna be worth a bunch of money,
I gets hit into the stands and somebody comes away
with it after a scrum. Philly's Karen completely unaware or
at least doesn't care about those rules. Terrible persons. One

(01:30:22):
last thing. I just thought this was funny and I
set it up a second ago. This is the guy
talking about different ice cream flavors and how he thinks
that some women are best described via ice cream.

Speaker 3 (01:30:33):
And she eats tied in knots. She wears nothing but
Lula Clemon, and she is very classy. If your girl
eats Ben and Jerry's, she's a stoner, hands down, may
feel and briars. If she's eating these these two, then
that means that she has come from a spot now
place in her life where she's trying to do better

(01:30:56):
and she's letting go of that negative energy she's in herself.
Girl er, she's hitling right now. Anytime you see this blue,
we got you a sluthern girl, good old Southern girl.
She's gonna colick fight you. She gone clean.

Speaker 1 (01:31:08):
I love that the preference and the brand of ice
cream describes the type of woman that you're getting. And
to start it off, he said, Hoggendas is the fancy
Lululemon type, which apparently I think would best reflect the
Philly Karen types out there. All right, quick break, A
lot coming up. Craig Collins filling in on The Dana.

Speaker 9 (01:31:23):
Show makes some common sense of the crazy headlines. With
The Dana 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 1 (01:31:36):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you. A bunch of
stuff out there to talk about. South Korea will bring
home three hundred workers that were detained in a massive
Hyundai plant raid in Georgia. All three hundred people at
the very least overstayed visas, done a lot of other
things here illegally. South Korea immediately went up in arms

(01:31:58):
about how you know, they were being unfairly treated or something,
YadA YadA, YadA. Now they're gonna take everybody back because
they're not allowed to be here and they probably should go.
This is the kind of thing where you talk about, man,
these people are victims, they were unfairly treated or well,
I don't know if you talk about that. Somebody does
and yet now three hundred new jobs exist in Georgia

(01:32:21):
at a Hyundai plant that didn't exist before for people
who work here or live here legally. So it seems
that there might be some good that comes to this
inevitable story, and South Korea is also taking all of
its people back. That's an interesting story out there to
me for sure, and just how sizable that whole bust
wound up being. I wonder if going in they knew
it was going to be that big, or if it

(01:32:41):
just started to roll into something more and more significant
as they kept going. Another story out there that I
thought was funny, The Spectator World put a article out.
They put out a magazine and the cover is Trump's
Drug War. It actually has a President Trump or a
drawing of him at the machine gun in a Humby

(01:33:04):
with a bunch of other masked members in the military
around him. Ice loves this. They put up their own
version of this photo, saying that this is a way
to recruit people to Ice. Several different other people seem
to react saying how cool the photo was or drawing
was not for the reason they wanted it to be cool,
but because they think it's uniquely patriotic and demonstrating that

(01:33:26):
Trump is anti drugs, anti a lot of things that
probably everyone should be anti. My favorite was someone who
tweeted that not only will they be hanging it in
their home, they'll also have it be a focal point
when people walk into their house. They'll make sure to
have dinners under this framed photo, and they also will
be romantic with the misses with this photo hanging in

(01:33:47):
the balance. So pretty awesome, pretty hilarious. Response. Is not
what the spectator wanted in reaction to their thing they
put up there. But it is cool. His tie is flying,
his hair is flying, and the guy is standing at
the top of the turret being like, I'm taking down drugs.
How is this beat? CBS News put out a poll
of what Americans think about the National Guard being deployed

(01:34:10):
in both DC and other cities. As far as the
value of it, I think Yugov helped them build this.
There's something very interesting in this data which you'll notice
very quickly. First, as far as d C, forty three
percent of Americans favored the idea of National Guard troops
being deployed there, fifty seven percent opposed it. Other cities,

(01:34:31):
it was forty two percent that favored it, fifty eight
percent that opposed it. Here's what's really interesting, though, when
you look at Democrats, ninety three percent of Democrats oppose
this thing that's happening. The reason they oppose it is
because mainstream media has told them to oppose it. That's
why they hate it. Independence it's sixty four to thirty six.
Sixty four percent of pose, thirty six percent approve. That's

(01:34:53):
you know, two to one odds, which doesn't seem so bad.
And then as far as Republicans go, it's eighty five
percent and improve fifteen percent disproof of the idea. I
think what matters is the context of what happens, which
very often mainstream media doesn't care about. They care about
telling you what they believe is going to happen. They

(01:35:14):
care about sensationalizing a story as much as possible to
get your eyeballs on it right when the first moments
of something occur, But then as it progresses, the job
of journalism is to find out the truth, and that's harder.
That's harder than instant reaction then predicting something. If you
actually have to tell me the details of what occurs,

(01:35:35):
where you have to do work that a lot of
people seem in media to not want to do for
a variety of reasons, mostly political, but probably laziness among them.
Two what I think is amazing is DC has seen
a tremendous benefit from the National Guard being deployed there
to help crack down on crime. And if your city
were to experience this, if something like the horrific story

(01:35:57):
out of North Carolina from over the weekend where a
woman was stabbed by a man sitting behind her on
a train that had a long rap sheet, should not
have been in public in the first place, should have
been in jail still or at least institutionalized, but's out
in the streets because of Democrats and capable of taking
the life of someone a Ukraine refugee, by the way,

(01:36:18):
there's a lot of aspects of the story that you
think mainstream media would would gravitate toward. But they don't
like the optics of a black man with mental health
issues stabbing a white woman, so they're not talking about
it as much as they should and killing her, which
is crazy. But again, if you live in a place
like that and the National Guard comes in and makes
things safer for you, Americans are going to overwhelmingly approve

(01:36:39):
of it. They're going to be very very happy about it.
What I thought was interesting about all of these studies
and surveys is they didn't keep it specific to the
people in Washington, d C. They asked you what you
think of Washington, d C. You know, having more troops
in their area, not with the people who are living
there and seeing the impact of this decision actually believe.

(01:37:00):
And what I think is even more interesting about it
is the idea that our men and women in our
military who are supposed to be supported celebrated. There's so
many different versions where and I think veterans might say
this to you, or at least maybe some veterans have
said this to me. I don't want to put it
on them necessarily, thank you for your service can fall hollow.

(01:37:21):
If that's the extent to how you actually say thank
you to military men and women for the sacrifices they
make to protect our freedoms, that might not be enough.
A society needs to do more. There's a lot of
ways that veterans are neglected and treated poorly by our government,
by our people once they come back home, which is
tremendously sad, but I couldn't think of a more harmful

(01:37:43):
way of also demonstrating what you actually think of our
military by behaving as though they would institute martial law
if they were sent to a city to fight crime,
if they were sent to help fight crime in whatever
capacity that would be. It is amazing to have that
level of distrust for the military men and in wins
that we're all supposed to patriotically support, because it couldn't
be further from the truth for me to feel that way.

(01:38:05):
If the National Guard were activated in Houston, where I live,
I would be thrilled. I'd be buying these people cups
of coffee at Starbucks, the way I do for police
officers sometimes because I know what they'd be doing would
be hard, and I would think that they're good people.
I know that there's exceptions to every rule out there,
and honestly, whenever someone does something bad in uniform, the

(01:38:27):
other people who wear that uniform are usually the most mad.
If something happens in the world of military, the military
men and women I know are the ones who are
most upset with the decision making of someone that winds
up in the news. The same for police. So I
feel like this is one of those moments where a
cliche thing from the Internet can be used to demonstrate
a point. Tell me how you feel about the military

(01:38:49):
without telling me how you feel about the military. Is
the version of what's happening right now where people are
saying they'd hate to see the National Guard activated somewhere
because it would somehow be bad for the American people.
That means you don't have a high opinion of the
military men and women who serve this country. And even
more than that, you're saying that you believe they'd follow
in order that they think was wrong and they think

(01:39:10):
would hurt civilians and innocent people, which I don't believe
the military would follow, not that they're going to be
given an order like that, but the idea that they'd
follow it is something that's I think absolutely not true
for almost anyone I've ever met that served any sort
of role in the military. These are honorable people who
are volunteering to defend the freedoms of this country. They're

(01:39:31):
not going to harm those people in that process. And
so it's just amazing to see the comparisons to Nazi Germany,
because it's ridiculous, all right, One last thing that I
thought was really funny Brian Castenstein Crassenstein, excuse me, I
like to mispronounce his name. Be guys, a moron is
one of several people out there who annoy you with

(01:39:53):
his political take. So he tweeted something at the vice
presidents at JD. Van's trying to attack the vice president.
And what's hilarious about this back and forth is eventually JD.
Van said exactly what he thinks of the individual, and
for some reason, the social media whatever you want to
call him a person, seems to think that this is

(01:40:14):
an impeachable offense. So I'll tell you exactly what occurred.

Speaker 11 (01:40:17):
JD.

Speaker 1 (01:40:18):
Van said, the killing cartel members who poison our fellow
citizens is the highest and best use of our military,
meaning if you have a boat from another country that's
trying to haul drugs into the United States, we're going
to blow it up. Crassenstein responded to that by saying,
killing the citizens of another nation who are civilians without
any due process is called a war crime. Again, I

(01:40:38):
don't necessarily think that anything he says has value, as JD.
Vance also feels this way. JD's response is, I don't
give a bleep what you call it, because I don't
care about you. This is when Crassenstein started to go crazy,
claiming that Jade Vance deserves to be impeached and that
he would testify before Congress for the mean tweet that
was sent his direction. Talk about a fragile human being

(01:41:01):
with a twenty four hour meltdown all over social media
because the sitting vice president told him exactly what he
thinks of his opinion, which is fantastic. Again, these are
the reasons that I think we put certain people in
positions of power versus how Democrats do this sort of thing,
because man, oh man, does it seem great when someone
like this, some moron trying to get a social media clicks,

(01:41:23):
gets put in their place and then cannot handle it,
which is exactly what's happening right now for Brian Krasenstein.
He cannot accept the idea that his opinion means absolutely
nothing out of the vice president and he wants some
sort of ridiculous amount of harm to be the byproduct
of a disagreement where someone was not exactly nice to
him about it is. It is hilariously fragile and probably

(01:41:44):
one of the must watch things on social media right now.
Going on one last thing for you. As far as
a roundup of other news, Chicago is quote fighting back
against having the National Guard I sent into that city
to clean up crime. Chicago is number one for murder
in our country as far as highly populated cities go,

(01:42:05):
so obviously a place that would deserve some assistance. But anyway,
New York and Mom Donnie are also out there saying
you better not come here, you better not help us.
It's going to be an interesting mid cycle election. It'll
be an interesting set of elections happening throughout this country
to have some people say, hey, I don't like crime

(01:42:27):
and I would like crime to go down, and having
Democrats in a lot of these races in the midterm
elections say I love crime, essentially by telling you that
I don't want to do a better job of policing
it through a police force and or the use of
the National Guard. I hate the military and I love
crime is essentially what Democrats are saying out loud. Just
listen to them. Is I think what I'd be saying

(01:42:48):
to a bunch of constituents throughout the country when they
tell you what they really think, you need to listen.
This is one of those moments for sure, for Americans
to say, hey, wait a minute, I'm not a fan
of crime, and I am a fan of our military.
I think that's a very small ask of a lot
of us, and I think we can do it all right,
quick break a lot more. Craig Collins filling in in

(01:43:10):
The Dana Show.

Speaker 9 (01:43:11):
Not Able to catch all three hours of The Dana Show,
Subscribe to the full podcast and get news and laughs
delivered in short, easy to digest episodes ideal for your
busy lifestyle on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 1 (01:43:26):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you. A bunch of
stuff to talk about out there, very little time to
do it. This is all stuff I should have gotten
to today that we didn't cover yet. Undersea cables cut
in the Red Sea are disrupting Internet access to Asia
and the Middle East. Microsoft said the Middle East may
experience increase latency due to undersea fiber cuts that happen

(01:43:51):
in the Red Sea. It's interesting to think how easily
the Internet can be knocked out for people. We forget
about that sometimes, and then stories like this occur where
it's like, oh, yeah, if you have the technology to
go underwater and cut a cable, you can actually knock
out the Internet for a whole bunch of people cut
a few cables, I guess is a probably more accurate
way to say it. But that's a thing that happened

(01:44:12):
that seems weird and definitely a reminder of what else
could occur other places in our world. Postal traffic into
the United States is plunged by more than eighty percent.
This is after the Trump administration ended in exemption saying
that certain low cost shipping of goods isn't necessarily impacted

(01:44:33):
by tariffs the way that a larger value items would
be anything eight hundred dollars or less in value, you
might actually still have to pay a tariff. The reason
this is shut down is the Postal Office didn't have
a way to process this, meaning that the government once
again demonstrates that just because they run stuff doesn't mean
they run it well or efficiently or do anything good

(01:44:54):
with your money. Because all they had to do is
institute a way to calculate tariffs for lower cost items,
and they wouldn't have had to shut down eighty percent
of all the items that were being trafficked by them.
But that has happened. Their traffic has plunged because they
have no system in place to do a thing that
you would think they should at least have a system
in place to try and do. But darn it, who

(01:45:16):
cares about that stuff? Other things out there that I
thought were funny a nineteen nineties cars or skyrocketing and value.
There's a few different ones that collectors are specifically interested in.
This was an article that popped up a couple places.
Mostly I think it's just nostalgia. You have people around
my age I am almost forty years old who very

(01:45:38):
fondly remember some of the vehicles they had in the
nineties in the two thousands and would want those ones back.
Some of the ones listed here are in nineteen nineties
to early two thousands, Mercedes AMGC forty three, a nineteen
ninety Toyota land Cruiser, which is an awesome car, and
then finally a Chevrolet Caprice. I was also listed here

(01:46:01):
the classic station Wagon from the mid nineties, but several
other cars that have become collector's items, including an early
nineties Ferrari that I think is pretty cool. I would
very much like to get my cars back, ones I
owned when I was younger, including a jeep Cherokee that
actually I recently had and then lost because it definitely

(01:46:22):
needed to go the way that it had to go
for a long time, in ninety six cheap Cherokee that
I loved. But yes, some of these cars just feel
like they're not made anymore, and you'd definitely love to
have them, And so I get it, and I'm not
alone in that. I know Producer Kine and others sent
me notes to some of the cars they'd like back.
I think that's a part of the rise in the

(01:46:42):
cost of these cars is just that we're the right
age now to be buying vehicles that we remember fondly
from years ago, and we're paying more for them than
we should, which is what my wife said to me
several times every time I fixed on my ninety six
cheap Cherokee, that I shouldn't have fixed as much as
I did because I was paying more than I should.
Another story out there that I like. If you're mean

(01:47:04):
to other people, it might be a sign of high intelligence.
According to a new study, there's got to be a
good reason for you being mean, and quote, judging or
hating others, it's because you believe that they can actually
change the thing you hate about them. If you hate
people because of the color of their skin, that's low intelligence,
according to this study, because they can't change that about

(01:47:25):
themselves and it really doesn't matter. But if you hate
people based on certain things that you believe you could
actually convince them to think differently on, like say they're politics,
this actually is a sign of high intelligence, which I
love the idea that thinking that someone can change and
being mad at them or hating them because they're making
a bad decision when you think more information could make

(01:47:46):
a better decision is way different than hating someone who
looks or acts a different way in some sort of
way they can't change. I just love that study that
hating people can in fact be a demonstration of high intelligence.
Being rude, it can be a demonstration of high das
eligence too. There you go, definitive proof that people like
me are great. Quick break, We're done, actually, Greg Gallin's

(01:48:07):
filling in Dana back tomorrow
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