All Episodes

September 26, 2025 106 mins
Craig Collins sits in for Dana. Former FBI Director James Comey is officially indicted by the DOJ for lying under oath to Congress. Comey responds with a cringe selfie video. President Trump arrives at the Ryder Cup to raucous cheers. Trump calls Jasmine Crockett, “low IQ” in the Oval Office. Trump claims the US has a deal on Gaza. Kamala Harris goes on bizarre WORD SALAD claiming her rally crowds would constantly "pass" babies around. Remember when the free speech purist late night hosts celebrated when President Trump got kicked off of Twitter? Trump signed a memorandum to take down funding for domestic terrorism. Squad member Ayanna Presley claims, “To be a black woman is to be hyper-visible”. Sinclair changes course and announces they will restart airing “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” on Monday. The FBI had at LEAST 275 plainclothes agents present at the U.S. Capitol on January 6th.

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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.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
My name is Greg Collins, filling in on special assignment.
Thrilled to be with you, d Dana lash Radio on
x on Twitter, great ways to stay connected to her
and all the awesome things that are happening on social
media for her and her team, And honestly, you really
should follow that because there's a lot of great things
that happen there. All right, let's do some stuff. Let's
talk about things. James Comey has to be a topic

(00:24):
of conversation. And I want to do this the best
way I can, because I think a lot of mainstream
media is going to trash this, and then a lot
of far right media is going to praise it without
contextualizing what exactly is happening, or they'll do some version
of it, but I don't think it'll be good enough.
So I really want to go the extra step here

(00:45):
to help you understand what is occurring. The left forever
has told us that no one's above the law. It
doesn't matter what you do. If you break a law,
any law, you deserve to have the book thrown at
your face as hard as it possibly can be. And
that would be essentially their big giant version of we
didn't go after Trump unfairly. We went after Trump because

(01:07):
he deserved it, all the crazy times that they tried
to get him in a courtroom. What I think is
amazing about that is call me. Definitely lied under oath,
and that is something that is against the law. You're
not allowed to do it, you're not supposed to do it, etc.

Speaker 1 (01:22):
Etc.

Speaker 2 (01:23):
Especially not if you're someone who's involved would say the FBI,
for example, let's go ahead and im prove that first
before we do anything else. Call me, who in his
own book has made a certain mentions to things and
also has definitely demonstrated that he was a source that
leaked things to news media while under oath the Congress.
He said, I did no such thing. How dare you

(01:44):
for even accusing me of something like this? You horrible,
terrible people on the right.

Speaker 3 (01:50):
Rector call mey. Have you ever been an anonymous source
in news reports about matters relating to the Trump investigation
or the Clinton investigation? Never have you ever authorized someone
else at the FBI to be an anonymous source in
news reports about the Trump investigation or the Clinton investigation.

Speaker 4 (02:14):
No, I needed to get that out into the public square,
so I asked a friend of mine to share the
content of the memo with the reporter, Okay, with myself
for a variety of reasons, but I asked him to
because I thought that might prompt the appointment of a
special counsel.

Speaker 2 (02:28):
Wait, wait a minute, so you lie under oath and
you're the one admitting it. By the way, James call
Me is the one saying, yeah, I did the thing
that I told you, I didn't do. My bad whoops
to Daisy, how dare I do this? And by the way,
remember everyone was so so happy when they said that
no one was above the law. Everyone deserved to be

(02:48):
in trouble, including I think James call Me, who at
several times during twenty twenty four said that Trump needed
to be thrown in the WHOSCAO and had absolutely no
remorse in believing that Trump was gill of something and
deserve to be imprisoned, even as he was running for
political office and evidently in front of Joe Biden at
the time.

Speaker 5 (03:07):
So a lot of people have suggested that there are
a range of factors that would make it difficult to
put a former the system has not been tested in
this way. Do you agree with that that it would
be difficult or nearly impossible for the law enforcement institutions
to put him in actual jail.

Speaker 4 (03:21):
No, he would just put him in a double wide
somewhere out near the fence, out in the grass, and
he would eat there, he'd shower there, he'd exercise there,
he'd be away, as Donia Perry said, from general population.
But it's obviously doable.

Speaker 2 (03:34):
Obviously doable. We'll throw him in a double white. I
hope James Comy gets thrown in a double wide. But anyway,
all of these things were to demonstrate the fact that
Comy definitely broke the law, and that's what he is
being indicted for, for making false statements and obstructing justice.

Speaker 1 (03:49):
It's that simple.

Speaker 2 (03:50):
By the way, James Comy's son in law apparently has
also resigned. He was someone who helped prosecute the January
six ers. He has left his office as a system
US attorney because the trash is now taking itself out.
As Nick Soordo and others said, which I love. There's
so many versions of this though. That seemed to demonstrate

(04:11):
to us how ridiculously hypocritical a certain side of the
political you know world is the landscape in which we
live today. And actually, this might be another interesting example
that the FBI has finally acknowledged that there were plane
clothed agents in the massive crowd in January sixth. But

(04:32):
you're going to be surprised at the exact amount. A
not surprised meaning you didn't think this was true alllong,
but surprise that they've finally given us a number that
seems to demonstrate how many of the I don't know
if you want to call them conspiracy theorists anymore because
they keep being right about stuff, but how many of
the conspiracy theorists really thought existed? Two hundred and seventy

(04:54):
five plane closed agents were in the massive crowd in
January sixth, twenty twenty one. Two hundred and seventy five.
It's a lot of people. That's a significant amount of
the individuals who are in that crowd, maybe potentially telling
people what to do or how to make something worse
and not better. All of this seems to matter quite

(05:15):
a bit. Again in the grand scheme of things. There's
a lot of people who will forget about it. It's
four and a half years now, who cares, You've moved on? Well, actually,
if you're the left. You haven't moved on from the
idea that January sixth was the worst day in society,
which it wasn't, of course, not at all, and context
definitely demonstrates how far from the truth that actually is.

(05:38):
But more so than anything else, what I think is
important about that idea or about that discussion is it's
just the same old, same old for people who pay
attention that eventually you get the truth. You eventually hear
it at a place when they believe that we're not
paying attention anymore. And that's when we have to pay
attention the most. We have to eventually throw this in

(05:59):
people's faces because we want the truth from jump. We
don't want them to delay it. We don't want them
to try to avoid it and try to push the
goalposts as far back as possible before inevitably, you know,
doing what they're doing. All right, I do want to
play this audio too. This is James Comy talking about
how there's a cost to standing up to Donald Trump.

(06:19):
He's an innocent man, even though he himself admitted that
he lined and a row when he gave a different
answer later on to a question he had definitively said
no to It seems pretty easy in the grand scheme
of things. If you haul this gentleman into court and
just play his audio against his audio, I usually have
an open and shutcase.

Speaker 6 (06:42):
My family and I have known for years that there
are costs to standing up to Donald Trump, but we
couldn't imagine ourselves living any other way. We will not
live on our knees, and you shouldn't either. Somebody that
I love dearly recently said that fear is the tool
of a tyrant, and she's right. But I'm not afraid.

(07:06):
I hope you're not either. I hope instead you are engaged,
You are paying attention, and you will vote like your
beloved country depends upon it.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
You know what's really interesting about this too, By the way,
James Comy is someone who absolutely lied under oath by
his own admission, he didn't say it that way, but
he demonstrated that it's true. And then he goes the
other road in telling you that you need to be
motivated and fight the tyrant every time that they tell
us that we're the bad guys, which Left does all

(07:38):
the time. They claim not to, they claim not to
have supercharged, and you know this version of rhetoric that
does make things dangerous in society. They claim that that's
not them. And every time they say that you're the
bad guy and they're the good guy. You just have
to see stuff like this because it's always about what's
best for them, it's always about what helps them the most,

(08:00):
complaining or pretending that this is a version of you know, dictatorship,
because James Comy is actually going to be held accountable
to something he did that was wrong.

Speaker 1 (08:11):
And remember, nobody is above the law.

Speaker 2 (08:14):
I believe that's something they told us a whole lot
of times, that everyone is, you know, the same, and
we're all supposed to be prosecuted no matter who we are,
no matter what our role is. I think Letitia James
said that multiple times. I think I even have the
audio of that.

Speaker 7 (08:29):
Actually, no one is above the law, no matter how rich,
powerful or politically connected you are.

Speaker 8 (08:36):
Our job is to follow the facts and the law
without fear of favor.

Speaker 1 (08:40):
The fact is, no one is above the law. No one,
not even the president is above the law.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
Yeah, but James Kellmy is apparently according to the left.
But anyway, they tell you you're the bad guy, that they're
the good guy, and then you find another example of
how they are liars, how they are people who are
manipulating and changing anything and every everything for their own benefit.
And by the way, one other quick thing, we're doing
a walk down memory lane.

Speaker 1 (09:07):
I guess to start the show today.

Speaker 2 (09:09):
All the late night hosts who were up in arms
about Jimmy Kimmel and the fact that he was almost
fired and then he was allowed to have his job back.
What I think is amazing about that, And there's two
things actually that I think are really important. First, Jimmy
Kimmel wasn't imprisoned, he wasn't murdered. He was allowed to
keep doing everything that he wanted to do, just maybe

(09:31):
not on network television. That is definitely an example of
the freedoms that exist in our country. If this was
actually a dictatorship and a horrible place where free speech
wasn't allowed, Jimmy Kimmel wouldn't be a man walking around free.
He'd be in jail somewhere, in prison there by a
dictator who didn't want to hear him talk anymore. That

(09:52):
didn't happen. That never happened with Kimmel. But the other
thing that's amazing is the hypocrisy. It's always the hypocrisy people,
because so many times late night media praised the idea
of Donald Trump President Trump at the time, being silenced,
being removed from social media because they thought it served
the greater good. And then Jimmy Kimmel absolutely tried to

(10:15):
pretend as though the person who murdered Charlie Kirk was
somehow a maga Republican. He claimed that absolutely he did.
There's no version of rewatching that where you think something
else happened.

Speaker 1 (10:27):
One hundred percent that's what occurred.

Speaker 2 (10:29):
And then he pretended as though he didn't say that
when he came back in his non apology. But again, nonetheless,
people wanted someone to be held accountable, if it's someone
on the right, or if it's someone as significant as
Trump to things on social media, they wanted them actually
to be removed from society much more than Kimmel was.
His Twitter wasn't shut down, and none of the things

(10:50):
he had access to were taken away other than network television.
And really, because he made a whole lot of people mad,
which he's done for a while, and that doesn't really
help his ratings, it has nothing to do with punishing
him because the people who are upset with him are
in power. It has to do with the fact that
it's bad for television business if half the people in
the country think you're an absolute jerk. But here is

(11:12):
late night media celebrating Silicon Valley and the removal of Trump,
the censorship of Trump, something that they then were up
in arms about when it even sort of kind of
not even all that much at all happened to Jimmy Kimmel.

Speaker 8 (11:25):
Trump has been suspended from Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and even Snapchat.
But don't worry, mister president. There are still plenty of
apps you do have access to. You still have Spotify
to drown out the sound of millions of people cheering
as you leave Google, Apple and Amazon removed the Parlor
app from their platforms. Parlor is where all the right
wingers gather to post q nonsense and misspell.

Speaker 1 (11:49):
The word parlor.

Speaker 8 (11:50):
Trumpers are complaining bitterly that they're being silenced. They, in fact,
they won't shut up about being silenced.

Speaker 9 (11:55):
I love having Donald Trump off Twitter, not to mention
all the other toxic racists and conspiracy theorists that have
been booted off.

Speaker 10 (12:03):
Damn a lifetime Twitter band has got a sting. They
took away his precious twitterism, the only.

Speaker 2 (12:09):
Social Yeah, I'm good, you get the idea. There's a
whole bunch more of this, but it's terrible. It's awful.
And they were thrilled about it when it was someone
they disagreed with, not when it was one of their own.
How dare you do that? That's the end of society?
All right, quick break, A lot coming up. Craig Collins
filling in on the Danish show.

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Speaker 13 (14:04):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Danta's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
That's right, it's time for a quick five on the
Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins filling in. At
least two scientists are telling us the best way to
fight back against.

Speaker 1 (14:19):
AI is to bomb the labs. That's real.

Speaker 2 (14:22):
A couple scientists say that right now, artificial intelligence it
is outpacing human thought at a very scary amount. Essentially,
the computer can think about things in about sixteen hours
that would take the human brain fourteen thousand years to process,
which is bad. According to at least two scientists out there,
they say there's no real way to turn it off.

(14:44):
It'll just figure out how to turn itself back on
to the best course of action, and they think we
should do it.

Speaker 1 (14:49):
Now, bomb the AI lab.

Speaker 2 (14:51):
I think I'm fine with this in all honesty. The
version of AI that I experience on a daily basis
that is constantly annoying is when it tries to finish
my text messages For me, It's never right, It's always wrong.

Speaker 1 (15:04):
I don't want it to do that anymore.

Speaker 2 (15:06):
Stop at AI, let's bomb the labs. I'm all for
that too, obviously. You want people to leave the labs first,
and then we bomb the labs. In case anyone wants
to go after me for saying bomb people, I didn't
say that part. This is a great story. Producer Steven
sent this along. There is a South Bay area woman
in San Francisco who's trying to find love, and she's

(15:26):
doing it in a very weird way. She's put up
a bunch of billboards throughout all of California asking people
to marry her instead of going on the dating apps,
which apparently might not have worked so well for this
young woman, although she's not exactly that young either. She's
now doing it this way, and I think Channel four
News in San Francisco decided to cover this story, which

(15:48):
I thought was ridiculous.

Speaker 14 (15:49):
When it comes to love, some people swipe right. But
one day, area woman named Lisa is taking her search
for a husband to new heights, quite literally, with digital
billboards from Santa Clair all the way to San Francisco
off one oh one.

Speaker 1 (16:03):
I just want to meet somebody, and yeah, we can
tell you. I was just not having any luck any
other way.

Speaker 14 (16:09):
The billboards showcase Lisa's face in her website, Mary Lisa
dot Com, the page she built after too many bad dates,
and there it's where you can apply to be her
future husband.

Speaker 1 (16:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (16:20):
No, everybody should be saying no to every part of this.
This is crazy, This is scary, and in all honesty,
the thing I love most about the ridiculousness of Mary
Lisa dot Com and that is you'd never ever want
to admit to anyone this is how you met the
person you're married to. You want to be like, Wow,
I was driving around one day and your mom put
up a bunch of billboards throughout all of California begging

(16:43):
someone to marry her.

Speaker 1 (16:45):
And I was like, I'll give it a shot.

Speaker 2 (16:46):
She's obviously got some cash because she spent all this
money on these billboards in this website, So maybe that's
what it is for some guy out there. But no,
this is a level of desperation you should not reach
in your life. We all know this, and you would
never want to be again proud of someone eventually meeting
you this way.

Speaker 1 (17:05):
Just talk to people at bars. Lady.

Speaker 2 (17:07):
Men are easier than women, I think in that way
in who you talk to.

Speaker 1 (17:12):
No one's gonna get mad at you. Just try it out.

Speaker 2 (17:14):
No more Billboards, quick Break, a lot more Creig Allin's
filling in on the Danish show.

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Speaker 15 (18:23):
Brighten up your timely news consumption with a Dana Show
podcast where every update comes with a little dash of
not so serious on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get
your podcasts.

Speaker 1 (18:34):
This is the Dana Show.

Speaker 2 (18:35):
My name is Craig Collins filling in d Lash Dana
Lash Radio on x on Twitter. A great way to
stay connected to everything going on for her in this show.
By the way, this is just sort of fun for
me or anyone else out there. The President's at the
Ryder Cup this weekend, which is something I would do
if I were the President of the United States and
got an opportunity to travel to the Ryder Cup. There

(18:56):
was also a really cool flyover that occurred as President
Trump I think, arrived there at the Ryder Cup, which
is a golf competition for anyone that doesn't follow her
isn't aware of that part.

Speaker 1 (19:07):
Which is just sad. You should be more aware of
these things.

Speaker 2 (19:10):
But here we go. Here's a little of that crushed

(19:46):
it by the way, every part of that. You know,
what I love about Trump going to a bunch of
sporting events, whether it's UFC anything, is how different it
is than Biden showing up with this stuff for anybody
on the Democratic side of the because there's two things
that are great about it.

Speaker 1 (20:03):
First, when Trump goes to.

Speaker 2 (20:04):
Certain events, he demonstrates that sports is something that's accessible
to conservatives, which oftentimes the agencies that run these sports,
you know, like the NBA and whatnot, would desire for
you to stop paying attention. They seem to almost hate
you and how they behave on certain things. Golf is
not within that world. I think that's one of the
exceptions YOUFC other things are. But the other reason I

(20:27):
love Trump going to this stuff is that Biden would
have been afraid to be seen in public. It seemed
like very very often. And there are other people in
the Democratic Party.

Speaker 1 (20:36):
Who show up and get boot places.

Speaker 2 (20:38):
But Trump often gets celebrated at a bunch of the
sporting events he attends. Which demonstrates how much of the
actual American people like him, how much they actually do
approve of this man, even if mainstream news media is
going to tell you that he's a horrible, terrible, awful person.
By the way, this is just funny. I'm going to
play this audio too. This is Trump saying that Jasmine

(21:00):
Rocket is a low IQ person. Again, He's been saying
this a lot. The Texas politician does seem to be
a person who's just definitely not up there.

Speaker 1 (21:09):
I would not rank her.

Speaker 2 (21:10):
High along the Einstein's of the world in society, especially
as she becomes more and more of a person that
likes to speak in that weird slang that she didn't
use when she first ran for office, but she definitely
seems to use now. And she wants to be this
tough person all the time, and how she talks about
certain political issues.

Speaker 1 (21:29):
But this was this was pretty funny. Here's Trump jes Crockett.

Speaker 16 (21:36):
Je Remember what I said, is she a relation to
the late great Davy Crockett. I don't think something that's
been Crocket. Let me tell you before you've been asked,
she's a very low IQ person. I mean, if we
ever had to pass an aptitude desk. That's so what
should take one? Because she shouldn't even be in the crowd.
So I have no idea what you're gonna but I
don't think we should waste her time. This is a

(21:58):
low IQ person who I can't even believe is a
congress person. Between her and ilman.

Speaker 2 (22:05):
Omar, okay, I do like that he mispronounced ilhan Omar's name.

Speaker 1 (22:11):
That was pretty funny, Amalia, did you know that?

Speaker 16 (22:14):
And I suggested that maybe he'd like to take her
back and he said I don't want to.

Speaker 2 (22:18):
That's hilarious too, by the way that he's like, hey,
we have someone here in our country that claims that
our country is terrible. Would you like to reacquire this individual?
And Somalia says no, Like now, thanks, we're good.

Speaker 1 (22:31):
You keep that one. She could stay with you. That's hilarious.
By the way.

Speaker 2 (22:36):
Trump did actually touch on something important too. He talked
about how George Soros and others might actually be probe
for how they back left wing terror groups.

Speaker 1 (22:46):
This is absolutely stuff that I voted for.

Speaker 2 (22:49):
I love when someone on the left actually shares their
version of this and says, did you vote for this?
This is authoritarian or a dictatorship again or whatever crazy
Nazi Germany version of things. And I'm like, yeah, I
absolutely voted for the rules to be applied equally to
both sides and not disproportionately applied to just one side

(23:10):
of the aisle. Investigate people like sorows to see if
they have ties to terror groups, and guess what if
they do, throw them in jail for it, that would
be wonderful.

Speaker 1 (23:22):
That is not a bad thing. I hear is Trump
talking about that?

Speaker 16 (23:26):
Yeah, let's see it. Defend them, Jeff, No.

Speaker 1 (23:29):
I'm not defending so that we can explain this in
our stories.

Speaker 6 (23:33):
Can you name it?

Speaker 16 (23:34):
You don't explain it, right though, Jeff, go ahead, let's go.
Maybe let's give you another chance.

Speaker 6 (23:39):
God antifas, what names are we talking about?

Speaker 16 (23:43):
Well, Soros is the name certainly that I keep hearing.
I don't know, but Soros is the name that I hear.
I hear a lot of different names. I hear names
of some pretty rich people that are radical left people.

Speaker 6 (23:54):
Uh.

Speaker 16 (23:55):
Maybe I hear about a guy named Reid Hoffmann. Somebody
is a pretty rich guy, I guess, and I hear
about him. I don't know, and maybe could be him.
Could be a lot of people we hear the same names,
but they're bad and we're going to find out. And
if they are funding these things, they're gonna have some
problems because they're agitators and they're anarchists. These are anarchists,

(24:17):
really bad.

Speaker 1 (24:18):
Okay, Yeah, they're really bad people.

Speaker 2 (24:21):
The Antifa and the individuals will show up and do
horrible things at all kinds of events.

Speaker 1 (24:25):
They're not good people.

Speaker 2 (24:26):
And if you're forking over cash to get them to
show up at things, you in fact a part of
the problem and you need to be held accountable for it.
I love the version of media that tells you that
you can do anything you want to investigate the right.
Any red herring that you want to chase down is
fine if it's in the name of making sure that
everything's on the up and up. That's what mainstream media

(24:48):
will tell you is there's nothing wrong with an investigation.
Let's see what's going on here, except when the investigation
is on the left. And yeah, if nothing gets turned
up from this, but if something does get turned up,
I love this part of it too. Actually, I'll respond
to this idea because I'll have this conversation with a
friend of mine on the left, and they'll say, well,

(25:09):
they'll make something up, they'll investigate, and then they'll create
something that's not real, and then they'll hold somebody accountable
for this fake thing. I've never heard of that before.
No one's ever done that to the right or to
Trump before. But here's the part that I love about
that is it immediately assumes that you're an idiot, or
that I'm an idiot, or that everybody in society's a moron,

(25:29):
because we wouldn't be able to parse out the truth
ourselves given more information. The left is terrified of giving
you more details. They don't want you to even want them.
And as I said before in the show, the fact
that two hundred plus plane clothed FBI agents were part
of the January sixth crowd, even though they denied anyone

(25:51):
being involved quite some time till eventually getting to the
point where, oh yeah, we had almost three hundred people
in that group of individuals. The thing about it is
they always tell you that the information could hurt you.
If it looks bad for us, it'll radicalize you, and
that'll make you a danger to society.

Speaker 1 (26:08):
So we have to keep the secret.

Speaker 2 (26:10):
But also we have to go after anything and everything,
no matter how ridiculous it sounds, as long as it's
going after the other side, because at the end of
the day, all they believe is that they can shape
the narrative. They believe that they can convince you of anything.
And unfortunately, there's a lot of people on the left
who repeat all the talking points that demonstrate to me
that you haven't done enough research, you haven't looked far enough.

(26:34):
I'll tell you this, I have a social media page,
Radio craigc. It's nothing compared to the Dana Dlash radio
pages that you should be following.

Speaker 1 (26:43):
Those ones are way bigger, way more important.

Speaker 2 (26:45):
But I put something up on my Facebook at Radio
Craig Z, and this crazy lefty came after me and
all I said was that I was shocked and needed
to process the death of Charlie Kirk.

Speaker 1 (26:55):
That's literally all I said. I said.

Speaker 2 (26:57):
There's could be a podcast out I'll talk about this
in more detail, but right now, it was one of
the most shocking moments of my entire professional life.

Speaker 1 (27:06):
Honestly, of my entire life.

Speaker 2 (27:07):
Not the most shocking, that would be nine to eleven,
but one of the most shocking and this left person
was so angry that I would actually care about the
murder of Charlie Kirk at all that they came after
me and they said all kinds of crazy things. And
my favorite thing happened within that interaction with this nuts
person who seemed to be overly mad about something that

(27:27):
they shouldn't be anywhere near this mad or mad at
all about if I care about Charlie Kirk and you don't,
which says something about you to me, Why does it
make you mad that I care? Why do you want
to change my opinion of who and what matters to me.
That's a unique thing that makes the left so deranged
and insane. But going back and forth, the person accused

(27:49):
me of not caring about January sixth, and then I
told them that they had the wrong data, and so
I shared a link with them, and I think the
link was from like FactCheck dot org, which is overwhelmingly
to the left, that demonstrated a lot of the things
they were saying were false, And my favorite thing happened.
This is a long story, I promise it has a value.
They shared the same link back, which means they didn't

(28:12):
read my link, and they said we can play the
link game all day long. And then they sent me
back the article I sent them. And this is a
wonderful demonstration of I think what we deal with a
lot when you talk to people on the left. They
are so arrogant, they are so full of their own
opinion that they demonstrate how little research they actually do.

(28:33):
My response to the person who tweeted me back or
this was on Facebook sent me back the link I
sent them disproving their narrative, believing it proved their narrative
simply because of the source and the headline, and they
didn't actually read the article. The only thing I said
back is maybe you should actually read that that thing
that disproves what you're saying and proves what I'm saying

(28:55):
that I cherry picked from the left, even though there's
more of them, because the truth is simply the true
truth in that scenario. But I love the arrogance of that.
And when the left is confronted with the idea that
they've done very little research to have the opinion they have,
they double down even harder.

Speaker 1 (29:11):
They go, how dare you? How dare you say this?
How dare you say that?

Speaker 2 (29:14):
And they continue to demonstrate how little information they actually
have and how little information they want, so of course
their side of the aisle assumes that they're idiots. It's
a unique version of demonstrating how little you care about
finding the truth to do something like that, where you
share something that disproves your point that someone just sent

(29:35):
to you, not paying attention to any part of it.
I know I'm overly harping on this, but it was
such a chef's kiss moment of the stupidity of this
is incredible because if it were me, like let's say,
and I know, I'm sort of a public figure, barely
a public figure. Certainly the fanciest thing I do is
fill in on the show for Dana, who's definitely a

(29:56):
public figure. But let's say that in a scenario where
I'm arguing with someone, I share a link that definitively
disproves my point, the first thing I do is read
the article. Especially if someone had to point out to
me that I hadn't read it, which is uniquely embarrassing,
I would go and read it, and I would actually
sit there for a second and try to process why

(30:17):
I believed something that I accidentally proved to myself wasn't true.
Like there's something about that that desire for more information
that just seems to be the biggest weakness for some
You just should you need more of it? And so again,
to go back to, I guess to make the main
point I was trying to make in this odd rant
of a thing and promoting my social media page at

(30:40):
Radio Craig c If you want to follow, that would
be awesome. It's not really valuable at Dlash. At Dana
Lash radio is better. I probably shouldn't say that about
my own social media pages. But the thing that I
love most about all of this is the idea that
some people absolutely knee jerk away from gaining more information.
I think that's why people hated Charlie Kirk so much

(31:02):
on the left and seem to celebrate someone's death, which
is uniquely horrible. That's a part of our society that
you think you'd never get to. We're even the people
who are doing it. I think if they really searched
their soul, there has to be something, at least I
knock on wood and pray, there has to be something
in them that knows they're doing something horrible. But it's
because Charlie Kirk would disprove people to their face using

(31:26):
basic truth and knowledge and information and did it respectfully.
As Dana said, they killed the nice guy. He was
very nice and respectful. And all these videos you might
be seeing now with Charlie pop up after his death,
which makes him more significant, more impactful in society, continue
to show how respectful he was compared to the average person,

(31:47):
especially a lot of people on the left, and how
they behave in these arguments. But it's just amazing to
me again to watch all that unfold and to watch
someone actually be a useful idiot, you know, in the moment,
showing me how little information truly matters to them and
how that can be weaponized and used. The best thing
you can do left right, middle, I don't care what

(32:09):
you're at, is to actually educate yourself more. And this
is something that Charlie Kirk also said a lot by
being someone who's constantly learning, who learns for your entire life,
who never stops learning, who never accepts the narrative simply
because you heard it once. A dive deeper read more
see if you believe it.

Speaker 1 (32:26):
After that?

Speaker 2 (32:27):
All right, quick break a lot coming up. Greg Collins
filling in on the Data.

Speaker 11 (32:30):
Show and our partners, the people who bring you the program.
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Speaker 15 (33:32):
Get the load down on the latest news with the
side of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to The Dana
Show podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 1 (33:43):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in just for the day, Dana.

Speaker 2 (33:47):
We'll be back on Monday, Thrilled to be with you
a Dlash Dana Lash Radio on x on Twitter, on
all kinds of social media. You should be following The
Dana Last Show. Both Dana and her team, including producer Steven,
do a great yap of keeping you up to date
and giving you a whole bunch of stuff that you
might have missed that you should check out there. The
NFL is going to Brazil, Baby, in twenty twenty six.

(34:09):
They'll be playing a game in Rio. This is part
of I think a five year deal to play NFL
games in Brazil. I think this is abundantly cool. I
think it's cool when baseball does it. I think it's
cool when football does it. When you go play our
sports somewhere else in the world, you give more people
an opportunity to appreciate our version of football, or our

(34:31):
version of anything, not the horrible soccer version that people
everywhere else in the world seem to think is actually football. No, no, baby,
it's the real deal.

Speaker 1 (34:39):
There was an.

Speaker 2 (34:40):
Odd thought that came across my mind, and I don't know,
I'm going to use this as a word vomit section
of the show where I just tell you or thought
vomit section of the show where I tell you stuff.
For some reason, I thought that Brazilian cheerleaders would also
be a big draw. Brazil is known to have very
attractive women. Maybe during the game in Rio they also

(35:00):
get a set of Brazilian cheerleaders to pop up onto
the field for a bit, and I think potentially you
have a whole new revenue stream there.

Speaker 1 (35:11):
But we'll see, but it should be cool.

Speaker 2 (35:13):
I love that they do this again, that the NFL,
that MLB, this is the best thing they're doing. All
the woe, horrible stuff that happens in the world of
sports right now is the stuff that makes me and
I'll never tune out. I like sports too much to
ever turn it off. I definitely will tune out to
the stuff that I don't care about, though, and only
pay attention to the stuff that I do. But this

(35:33):
is an exactly different version of that. And you know,
it's all so funny. You see this anytime they go
somewhere else, they don't preach as much. It's not about
anything other than the product of the sport. There's not
you know, the the woke statement inside the end zone
as often as you see other places, because the other
countries don't care about that, and oftentimes you'd actually be

(35:55):
unpopular in some of these countries for some of these
things you might say and do, which is why I
think they don't do that all.

Speaker 1 (36:01):
Right, other stuff out there.

Speaker 2 (36:03):
There is one other thing that I thought was pretty interesting,
and we'll probably get to it more in a little
bit here, but the UK is going to have a
digital ID for the right to work there, which is crazy.

Speaker 1 (36:14):
I have some audio i'll likely play after the break
about that.

Speaker 2 (36:18):
But the United Kingdom maybe one of the only places
that's an exception of the rule I just said about
how wokeness is unattractive at least for the politicians maybe
not the people. Is blazing this crazy trail that we've
seen again and again fail in other places throughout the world,
but getting further and further away from you having any
rights and freedoms at all as a person. No freedom

(36:39):
of speech, no freedom of all these certain issues, which
is just interesting to see from Afar. How terrible of
an idea. It's been quick break a lot more Craig
Collin's filling in on the Danish.

Speaker 11 (36:49):
Show as we move our partners that he make it happen. Look,
I'm always about diversifying your weapons array. I believe, I
mean I carry, I carry all the time, and I
have no problem in throwing led towards any kind of
threats to me or my family that set. I also
completely understand that you've got college kids that are not
old enough to carry. Although they're old enough to go
and serve overseas and carry fialaudo, they're not old enough

(37:12):
to carry here in defense of their lives when they're
under twenty one, but yet living on their own, going
to college, or maybe you're going to a place where
municipal and local restrictions are disarming you. This is why
I say diversify your weapons are ray burna can be
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(37:33):
CL which stands for Compact Launcher. That's the smaller version
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(37:55):
doesn't care about gun free zones. There's no background checks,
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Speaker 2 (38:09):
This is the Dana Show, Dlash, Dana Lash Radio and
x on Twitter. Bibitty boppity boo some boobs on is
just a great I need that as a bumper sticker
for Dana Lash.

Speaker 1 (38:19):
My name is Craig Collins. That is funny.

Speaker 2 (38:23):
You cannot do that, by the way, nor would you
ever want to boppity boo some boobs on. All right,
let's let's talk about some things. This is amazing. This
is the Secretary of War Pete Haggzeth. By the way,
much cooler name. I would prefer if we had always
used Secretary of War instead of ever getting away from that.
But he called for an urgent meeting for all military

(38:44):
leaders to report to Virginia. They're going to have a
chit chat. A rare urgent meeting, is how it's been
described a whole lot of places. The big question being
asked by some is our woke generals getting fired. And
I think that would also be great. I think there's
no problem with that. Actually, it's funny. Let me parallel
it with another story out there. I'll let me try

(39:06):
to add both of these together. The White House has
said it might lay off some people. This is a
response to a potential government shutdown, which the left is
saying is not their fault and the right is saying
is not their fault. Of course, you know what's interesting
about this too. Whenever the government's about to shut down
and the left is in power, my reaction is, I

(39:26):
don't care, not that it's changing because the right is
in power. I want to make sure that you expect
that going in. I'm not going to change my mind,
but I don't care if the government can shut down
for a little while, for a long while and I
feel like it's not actually going to impact my life
all that much, your life, a lot of our lives,
and eventually, unless you work for the government again, you're
probably not even gonna notice when it gets turned back on,

(39:49):
because it will. They all show should stop, They should
stop paying the politicians who are in charge of shutting
down the government. They never do that, but they should
anytime they shut it down. Only the exception to this
rule is I think it's ridiculous that we stop paying military.
A military always deserves to be paid, should always be paid.
That should be the group of people that's above shutdown,

(40:09):
not the politicians who are doing the shutting down for
all kinds of political and stupid reasons. But anyway, when
that happens, and when the left is in charge, that's
usually my reaction. What I think is interesting is that
people actually react differently now with the right in charge,
who would also say that, They would say, oh, it's.

Speaker 1 (40:26):
Important, or oh the left is being terrible.

Speaker 2 (40:29):
I don't actually care, And to be honest, I'd kind
of like to see it if the White House can
use it as a way to fire people who are
probably far left leaning bureaucratic long time government employees who
don't need jobs. If the Secretary of War can use
it as a catalyst to fire people from that part

(40:49):
of our military slash a political system.

Speaker 1 (40:52):
I'm fine with that too.

Speaker 2 (40:54):
Maybe all of this barreling towards shutdown is inevitably to
actually fire a bunch of people, which again is something
I voted for. I'm totally fine with that. That sounds great,
let's do it. I just think it's funny when people
do flip flop on some of these issues when they're
not intimidated by the idea of it. When Democrats are
wielding power and seem to be doing it on purpose

(41:15):
and for some reason they and I'm not saying who,
but other people less so seem like.

Speaker 1 (41:20):
They're a gung ho about it.

Speaker 2 (41:21):
If the Republicans are in charge, I'm totally fine either way,
shut the baby down and fire a whole bunch of people.
Totally fine with me. All right, other things out there.
I thought this was interesting. President Trump said that he
believes there's going to be a deal in Gaza, a
deal to end the conflict, another conflict that the president
would end, yet even more so, demonstrating that he is

(41:45):
the commander in chief of peace, something that he will
not get credit for here in this country, but may
get credit for on a world stage.

Speaker 1 (41:53):
Let's hear a little bit of that.

Speaker 6 (41:55):
I think we have.

Speaker 16 (41:57):
Maybe it's all in Gaza and Rouge blows to the
ol Gaza Hey wounds.

Speaker 12 (42:02):
I love Zeta.

Speaker 16 (42:05):
Social like we have a deal on Gaza's president.

Speaker 17 (42:11):
It's good President.

Speaker 9 (42:12):
I think it's a deal that will.

Speaker 16 (42:13):
Get the hospites back.

Speaker 1 (42:15):
It's going to be a deal that will end the war.

Speaker 9 (42:18):
Well, it's going.

Speaker 18 (42:19):
To be a deal which it's going to be a sea.

Speaker 2 (42:21):
I think we have a deal that would be number
eight Beeter, not the number eight Beeter.

Speaker 1 (42:25):
He's talking to the Fox News guy. That's number eight.

Speaker 2 (42:28):
As far as the amount of peace deals we've created
during my time, my very short time in office. What
I think is really interesting about this too, And that
was right before Trump headed off to the Ryder Cup,
where he definitely seems to be having a good time.
And I would be too if I was the president
and got to go to the Ryder Cup. What I
think is interesting about the potential for a deal in Gaza,

(42:48):
or a deal anywhere else, or any of that ushering
in of peace is how the left inevitably tries to
change it. They try to somehow discredit it, somehow find
an apt to where this was done wrong, or this
could have been done sooner. Biden not only was terrified
of being in front of media, he did not do
what Trump does on a daily basis, anyone who does

(43:12):
what I do for a living, what Dana does, anybody
who pays attention to media. You can find a Trump
clip every day. And it's not because he did one
thing that's been viral for weeks. It's because Trump is
providing a clip to media every single day. When the
left says that his brain doesn't work, that it's broken,
that he can't pronounce a set of metaphine, which I

(43:33):
don't know that did happen. I'm not going to pretend
it didn't.

Speaker 1 (43:35):
I don't know why.

Speaker 2 (43:36):
Maybe Trump's not a guy who takes tiland all a lot,
so isn't aware of that. But nonetheless, when they point
to those things, they ignore the ridiculous amounts of audio
that exist on a daily basis that disproved that idea.
I would not have said that Biden's brain was broken
if he was doing this many interviews, this well with
media every day. But of course his administration knew that

(43:59):
he wouldn't, so they protected him at all costs from
anyone and everyone in media. And actually it's not like
they could roll out the Vice president. Her word salad
broken crazy things seemed to demonstrate that her brain might
also be broken at a much younger age, which is
probably bad. Case in point might be this. There's a
new viral clip that shows Kamala Harris talking about how

(44:22):
babies would be passed around at her rallies. This is
a weird thing to brag about, by the way, like
not passed to her to kiss them. She just like
would see in the audience a whole bunch of people
just passing around babies. Whether or not that's my child,
and I trust all the people around me to give
the child back to me.

Speaker 1 (44:39):
That's not important.

Speaker 2 (44:41):
We're celebrating the vice president apparently and her run for
office by passing around babies just at any kind of
event for some reason. Here's how Kamala Harris described this.

Speaker 17 (44:53):
You know, one of my favorite things to see in
It would always happen spontaneously.

Speaker 1 (44:58):
At our rallies.

Speaker 17 (45:00):
Thousands of people would come and there it would happen
is invariably somebody would want me to take a picture
of a husbear child and someone in the back would hand
that baby over, threw the crowd up to you people who.

Speaker 1 (45:19):
Would bless the baby.

Speaker 17 (45:21):
Here, past the baby, and then past the baby bed.

Speaker 1 (45:27):
This is ridiculous. It didn't happen.

Speaker 2 (45:30):
By the way, this not only didn't occur as often
as Combla Harris wants to say it did, but if
it did, she should have immediately said no to this, like,
don't just hand your baby to strangers. Don't don't do
that just to get a picture with me and the baby.
This seems ridiculous and bad. Uh, it's insane, And there's
so many different versions of just broken, ridiculous, lying, craziness.

Speaker 1 (45:53):
But that is Harris.

Speaker 2 (45:55):
And she also said it with that you know, twang
in voice that she's trying to use. Depending on who
she thinks her audience is, her speech changes, which is weird.
And it happens for a lot of people in politics.
And I want to say another thing about that, real quick.
I know that's not what this rant is about.

Speaker 1 (46:12):
Per se.

Speaker 2 (46:13):
If you're someone Jasmine Crockett's another name that comes to mind,
and Trump recently called her low IQ again. But if
you're someone who talks like that in your real life,
like when the cameras are off, when you're not in
front of the microphone, and you can say it's because
of your ethnicity or whatever you want. If you're someone
who talks in you know, that weird version of speech

(46:35):
that I don't use as white dude, then do it
all the time. Don't do it occasionally. Do it constantly.
Own who you are, be yourself, don't be performative. In
another way, if your performance is actually the version of
you that doesn't speak like that. I think that that
would be good for society is to be who you
are all the time, because it would make me not

(46:57):
accuse you of being performative when you do it occasionally
when in front of certain audiences. And Hillary Clinton did this,
a bunch of other people did this, And I know
if you're a black you'll couch this in. Well, this
is how I actually am. I just can't be this
way because white people wouldn't like it. Well, that's as
inauthentic as the opposite as pretending that you're something you're

(47:18):
not depending on what crowd you're in front of. Just
be yourself and see if you can get votes that way.
But that's why I don't believe it. I don't think
that these individuals are like this. And actually, what I
most appreciate, I guess this is the last thing I'll
say before I take a break. I most appreciate about Trump,
about Elon Musk, about Charlie Kirk. Very tragic to have

(47:39):
lost Charlie Kirk. I know I didn't fill in for
Dana after that, and she did an amazing job. You
should check out the videos and audio that's out there
Dana who knew Charlie and how she talked about him.
But something that they said about Charlie Kirk that they
say about Elon and Trump, same person in front of microphone,
in front of camera, as they are off camera, off microphone,

(48:02):
exact same, same beliefs, same thoughts, same mannerisms, just identical
individual And that is so rare in our society, especially
in politics. It's so rare that it deserves to be celebrated,
and these individuals who don't do it, who don't do
any form of it, deserve to be told that they
need to behave differently and be rejected by society until

(48:25):
they actually are the real version of themselves, whatever it is,
because the performance is the thing that acts like you
and I are stupid. It definitely does not respect the
audience when you do performative versions of anything. And so
I think it's sort of amazing that we have that
version of defense that comes out whenever someone does throw

(48:45):
in the slang more and then they say, well, that's
who I actually am. But you can't take it as
the white people out there or the whoever out there
in society, so I can only be myself occasionally. That
means you're a liar, and that means you're probably lying
about a whole bunch of other things, if it's even
true that that's the lie, that the lie you're telling
us is actually a fact and not just another lie.

(49:07):
All right, One last thing I do want to play this.
This is an announcement in the UK that a digital
ID will be required to work. There More authoritarian, crazy
Nazi type of stuff is happening in the world. It's
not happening here, It's happening in the United Kingdom.

Speaker 19 (49:23):
And that is why today I am announcing this government
will make a new free of charge digital ID mandatory
for the right to work by the end of this parliament.
Let me spell that out. You will not be able
to work in the United Kingdom if you do not
have digital ID. It's as simple as that.

Speaker 2 (49:46):
Yeah, this is the thing that's happening. More things are happening.
A digital ida is the first step toward Chinese government takeover.
Is what many people are reacting to on social media
because China I use this as a foundation for their
own surveillance, own state surveillance of their people.

Speaker 1 (50:02):
So great job, UK.

Speaker 2 (50:04):
Barreling further and further toward an unrecognizable thing, or at
least it should be unrecognizable to the people here in
the United States and what we deserve to have the
freedoms that we think everybody is entitled to, a right
that you were given by God and not by any
sort of you know, a military or political system. All right,
quick break a lot more. Greg Collins filling in on

(50:24):
the data show.

Speaker 11 (50:26):
As we move. The folks who help bring you the program.
It is the folks over at Superbeat. Superberine is a
product that helps with healthy metabolism and blood sugar support
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(51:28):
to better cardiovascular health support.

Speaker 13 (51:32):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (51:37):
That's right, it's time for a quick five on the
Data Show, Thrilled to be with you. My name is
Greg Collins, filling in. This is funny whenever this happens.
But a rap turned on a microphone during Thursday night
football last night, and just as he was talking and
making a call, a player walked by him instead a
very bad word. Seattle Arizona final score twenty three twenty
This moment probably, you know, as entertaining as a very

(52:00):
good game. Here we go Jackson Smith and Chicka, who
didn't really need to make the hold, is right.

Speaker 1 (52:05):
In front of the bold arier. I can't puff it.
You carefut he even looked he.

Speaker 16 (52:16):
Did, oh yeah, oh yeah, yeah beautiful.

Speaker 2 (52:24):
I love I love all the reactions to it after
they hear the bad word that gets played on television,
mostly because I bet you the player did it on purpose.
I think that, you know, as the MIC's on, you
want your side of the equation to be thrown in there,
and that's what it was. So I like that all
the time. I like when players are miked up. I
like when baseball does it. Everything about it is just

(52:44):
a lot of fun. Let's get more of that going on.
I don't care if bad words happen it's a part
of the game, baby. They're saying a whole lot of
bad things on the field all the time. Amazon has
agreed to pay two point five billion dollars to settle
a lawsuit about deceptive practices and forcing you into certain
things as far as your Amazon Prime membership is concerned.

(53:05):
A deceptive Prime enrollment practices is what it was saying.
The suit was filed in twenty twenty three under the
Biden administration, claim that Amazon created confusing and deceptive user
interfaces that led consumers to enroll in Prime without knowing it.
They have eventually decided they're going to pay a whole
bunch of money. So yeah, yet another company that's big
and terrible and overly powerful in our society doing something

(53:29):
bad and getting hit with a speed bump that they'll.

Speaker 1 (53:31):
Pay even if the speed bump is that significant.

Speaker 2 (53:34):
They'll figure out a way to throw that money in
and just keep going, just keep doing more of the same,
all right.

Speaker 1 (53:40):
Another thing out there.

Speaker 2 (53:41):
Starbucks has announced significant store closures and layoffs. This is
causing a whole lot of chaos on the left. CNN
is one of the places that reported on this and
talked about how it might be because Starbucks has dealt
with a whole lot of employees who have unionized, and
that means that Starbucks is bad, not the other thing.
The thing is that Starbucks is struggling a whole lot

(54:02):
because a bunch of its stores not as popular apparently,
and the amount of money they're paying all their workers
maybe not as great as it used to be. So again,
a big reason why likely this whole thing is shutting down,
or not all of them, but a bunch of Starbucks
are closing, is because you can't force a business to
do something that doesn't benefit the business.

Speaker 1 (54:22):
Inevitably, they just close the whole thing down.

Speaker 2 (54:25):
Not surprised at all, And again I don't think I'll
go into the fear mongering version of this is bad
because because this is how companies react to losing money,
they close businesses. There's a guy that needs to be
publicly roasted. Ticketmaster CEO says concert tickets are too cheap.
Actually that's ridiculous, of course to a whole lot of us.

(54:46):
But the CEO at Ticketmaster would like concert tickets to
be more expensive so he makes more money. Mostly what
he's saying is that they get resold on the secondary
market for more money than actually people pay for them originally,
and it's cutting into his profits. Baby idiot. All right,
quick break a lot more. Creig Allin's filling in on
the Danish show.

Speaker 11 (55:03):
Our partners who help bring you the program. It's our
friends over at All Family Pharmacy. It's a great website
to use if you want to get your everyday medications,
everything that you need, or maybe emergency stuff, maybe antibiotics,
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Speaker 1 (55:26):
I mean they got everything.

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You can get everything in like two to four days
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anything coming from China. At this point, it's affordable, and
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Visit Allfamilypharmacy dot com slash Danta and use code Dana
ten today. That's All Familypharmacy dot com slash Dana, Code

(56:10):
Dana ten.

Speaker 15 (56:11):
The Danas Show podcast. You're fast, funny and informative news
companion for those always on the move. Subscribe on YouTube,
Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.

Speaker 1 (56:21):
This is the Dana Show.

Speaker 2 (56:23):
My name is Craig Collins, filling in for the day
d Lash Dana Lash Radio and x on Twitter. Great
ways to stay connected to her at radio. Craig Z
if you want to follow someone way less successful than Dana,
who's way less active, because I don't have people like
the fancy producer Steven helping. Dana does a lot of
it herself too. I make for some awesome social media posts.

(56:43):
All right, let's talk about call me. It's the topic
of conversation. The left is going to tell you that
this is you know, politicizing the DOJ, weaponizing it against
your political opponents. All the stuff the left did to
Donald Trumpell he was running for the office of president
is now happening to James Comby. This is, according to

(57:03):
the left, again, not someone who's actually significant. Komy is
not going to be running for the president and winning
anytime soon, which is why that narrative is uniquely ridiculous.
But let's first prove that it's a thing that actually
deserves to happen. Comy lied under oath. He is going
to be in trouble for that, most likely in trouble
for all kinds of things, Like you know, preventing obstructing

(57:28):
justice is actually the way to say it, but preventing
investigations from going the way they should go because of
the lying and the dishonesty and the whatnot and the
illegal stuff. Again, always to say it, but here's proof
that Comy actually did the thing that Republicans are likely
to hold him accountable for doing.

Speaker 3 (57:46):
Director Comy, have you ever been an anonymous source in
news reports about matters relating to the Trump investigation or
the Clinton investigation?

Speaker 4 (57:57):
Never?

Speaker 2 (58:03):
I really love how quiet it got after that answer
from years ago, because everybody's like, yeah, no, we know
he's done this.

Speaker 3 (58:09):
Two one relatively related. Have you ever authorized someone else
at the FBI to be an anonymous source in news
reports about the Trump investigation or the Clinton investigation? No
has any classified inform By.

Speaker 2 (58:28):
The way, eventually Commy went on under oath to say
that he did exactly that thing that he just said
he didn't do. So lying under oath all that bad,
not good. These are things that gets you in a
lot of trouble. Call me for his part in all
this is saying, let's have a trial. Let's figure out
if what I admitted to doing is something that I
inevitably did, and you can prove in a courtroom I
did because you can just play tape of me doing it.

(58:50):
And then, you know, disagreeing with myself years later, here
we go.

Speaker 6 (58:56):
My family and I have known for years that there
are costs to standing up to Donald Trump, but we
couldn't imagine ourselves living any other way. We will not
live on our knees, and you shouldn't either. Somebody that
I love dearly recently said that fear is the tool
of a tyrant, and she's right. But I'm not afraid

(59:20):
and I hope you're not either. I hope instead you
are engaged, you are paying attention, and you will vote
like your beloved country depends upon it.

Speaker 1 (59:32):
She does. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (59:33):
By the way, I love the fact when he says
she and then he's trying to refer to somebody loves
because it sounds a whole lot like it's Hillary Clinton.

Speaker 1 (59:39):
That's not my joke.

Speaker 2 (59:39):
By the way, I'm stealing that from Sergio Sanchez of KURV,
a Dana affiliate, who texted me that this morning. He's like, hey, man,
you should just say that it's Hillary that he's talking about,
because it kind of sounds like a Hillary that he's
talking about. But I love the fact that he says,
we're going to fight, We're not going to bend the
need to Donald Trump, this was a person and when

(01:00:00):
he was in a position of power that claimed he
wasn't politically biased, which seems ridiculous and insane when you
watch who the person's been after he thinks the rules
don't apply anymore and they're off and he's allowed to
say and do whatever he wants. By the way, I'm
fairly certain that a whole bunch of people claim that
no one's above the law. So if Comy lied under oath,

(01:00:22):
if he obstructed justice and prevented an investigation from going
the way it should go by protecting himself from getting
in more trouble of it actually causing himself to likely
be in a lot of trouble now, then he deserves
to have the book thrown at him.

Speaker 1 (01:00:35):
That's not my opinion, that's the left's opinion.

Speaker 7 (01:00:38):
No one is above the law, no matter how rich, powerful,
or politically connected you are.

Speaker 8 (01:00:44):
Our job is to follow the facts and the law
without fear of favor.

Speaker 11 (01:00:49):
The fact is, no one is above the law.

Speaker 1 (01:00:51):
No one, not even the president, is above the law.

Speaker 2 (01:00:55):
And not as James Comy above the law, according again
to the Left and their rhetoric, at least as I'm
supposed to believe it. By the way, James Cony, Comy's
son has also quit. He was a assistant US attorney.
He resigned. He said it had something to do with
his dad or some crap. But the reality is he's
probably hiding and running from anything that's terrible that he's

(01:01:16):
also doing. And a part of what I love most
about this, and this is what I'll go back to
in the audio from Camy before I can play a
little bit more of it, but some part of me
doesn't want to. I think that's enough. He said, let's
have a trial, and I agree with him. Let's have
a trial and see how much trouble he actually gets in.
But the thing is, they always have to make it
about you. It always has to involve you. James call

(01:01:39):
me lied under oath about leaking information to the press
that he shouldn't have leaked to the press, and his
version of rhetoric to try to get you to support
him is you're next. You're the next person in the
shopping block. And the Democrats as a whole, the people
who voted for the Democratic Party haven't done that. They
haven't had the opportunity to lie on to wrote themselves.

(01:02:00):
So it's not about everybody. It's about him. It's not
a fight against authoritarianism. It's not a fight against you know,
the dictator that Donald Trump is not, but they claim
he is. It's actually just a person getting their come
up and that they deserve that they were stupid enough
to admit themselves to having done all Right, another piece
of audio that's pretty interesting out there, and more left

(01:02:21):
leaning people or just far left, crazy people that could
get in a lot of trouble involve George Soros and
Reed Hoffman. President Trump who said he doesn't really know
who they are, which I do love that too. I
don't believe it, but I find it amusing when he
says these things. But he's not deeply tied to the investigation,
is what he's trying to get across. They might get
in some trouble for backing some left wing terrorist groups.

(01:02:44):
That would be another no no in our society.

Speaker 16 (01:02:46):
Yeah, so let's see to defend them, Jeff, not defending anyone.

Speaker 6 (01:02:51):
I just want so that we can explain this in
our stories.

Speaker 16 (01:02:54):
Could you name am You don't explain it right though, Jeff,
go ahead, let's go. Maybe let's give you another chance.

Speaker 1 (01:02:59):
Go ahead, Tifa Soros. What names are we talking about?

Speaker 16 (01:03:03):
Well, Soros is the name certainly that I keep hearing.
I don't know, But Sorous is the name that I hear.
I hear a lot of different names. I hear names
of some pretty rich people that are radical left people.
Maybe I hear a buddy guy named Reid Hoffman. Maybe
he's a pretty rich guy, I guess, and I hear
about him.

Speaker 17 (01:03:21):
I don't know.

Speaker 16 (01:03:22):
Maybe and maybe could be him, could be a lot
of people. We hear the same names. But they're bad
and we're going to find out. And if they are
funding these things, they're gonna have some problems because they're
agitators and they're anarchists. These are anarchists. Really bad.

Speaker 2 (01:03:39):
Okay, yeah, they're really bad people. A whole lot of
people are very bad people. In fact, actually in other
news that seem somewhat related to the whole anarchist thing
and the whole funding of terrorism thing. And this is
just something that the FBI, he's finally admitted they had
almost three hundred, like two hundred and fifty plane clothed
agents in the crowd on January sixth, And course, of

(01:04:00):
course those people didn't actually try to push to have
the thing that happened happened that day. Of course, that
wasn't the FBI agents in the crowd trying to make
something worse and not better because they were doing it
for political reasons at the time, of course not. But
they finally admitted this years later that a whole bunch
of quote conspiracy theorists thought was happening that were that
and told and you know, yelled at for being horrible

(01:04:22):
people that needed to be canceled and their social media
pages needed to be removed. And then apparently they were
right all along, because very often now the conspiracy theorists
are actually right, which is why we probably can't call
them conspiracy theorists anymore. And by the way, celebrating Kimmel
this week has probably been one of the most annoying
things the left has done. I don't think they'll be

(01:04:44):
watching long term because Kimmel's just really not that good.
He alienates half his audience, and how hardcore politically he
is something that you know, I really love a quote
from Johnny Carson about this, and I'm about to be so.
I'm not someone who grew up watching Carson, but you
can still appreciate the significance of Johnny Carson to late

(01:05:06):
night television. And one thing he said about not sharing
his own opinion in that world is that if you
do it too often, it starts to become something that
you believe is more important than just entertaining people. You
start to be so full of yourself. This is Carson's
opinion that you no longer are serving your audience, You're

(01:05:26):
serving yourself. And how you throw out your opinions on
a daily basis in the world of late night entertainment television.

Speaker 1 (01:05:33):
And I think he's absolutely right about that.

Speaker 2 (01:05:36):
There are places and forums where what you choose to
go and consume is going to be opinionated, political whatever.

Speaker 17 (01:05:45):
I mean.

Speaker 2 (01:05:45):
This show is a great example of that. Data is
not going to be shy about her opinions on a
daily basis on the show, because that's what this show
is about. But if she were given a late night,
you know, entertainment talk show. I shouldn't speak for Data,
but I think if anybody were given a late night
entertainment talk show, some part of them might say, Hey,
if I can try to lay off the politics a

(01:06:06):
little more in that atmosphere, maybe I'd have a larger audience.
This is something that Kimmel and others seem to refuse
to learn that Johnny Carson knew, is that if you're
not coming to me for political opinion, and when you
used to turn on late night entertainment interview TV, you
weren't going there for political opinion. And a whole lot
of people do not go there for political opinion. Now,

(01:06:26):
that's why they don't watch it. Then you shouldn't add
it you actually you know what I also love It's
something that a couple guys in sports radio talk about.

Speaker 1 (01:06:35):
I won't name them.

Speaker 2 (01:06:36):
I don't want to push you anywhere other than this show,
but I do love when people say that the audience
determines what I pay attention to, not what I think
of it. That's not how the audience gets to tell
me what to do. My opinion will always be my own.
I have to share my own. I have to be
honest about what I think because anything else is going
to fail. Honestly, that's the number one trick I think

(01:06:59):
of me in general. Whatever form you're on is say
what you actually think. It'll be easier than trying to
make up stuff that you don't believe. But as far
as what topics you discuss, absolutely the audience can dictate
which ones you should be focused on because it's the
ones they care about and the ones they probably most
want your take on. And that's something that comes from
sports media too, And I love that when people say

(01:07:21):
that when they push you that road, because it is true.
It is valuable to pay attention to the things that
other people are paying attention to. Now case in point
to get back to something else I was trying to say, though,
is late night hosts celebrated Trump being censored and removed
from all media. Jimmy Kimmel for about a week lost

(01:07:42):
a network talk show. He got it back, but he
lost it for a few days. He wasn't silenced in
any form of social media. He absolutely joked about the
death of Charlie Kirk, and he absolutely tried to point
the finger at MAGA and claimed that the killer of
Charlie Kirk was a MAGA individual, which he's absolute not
no part of that makes any sense. He then came

(01:08:03):
back without apologizing and said that he never meant to
say the things he evidently said, but nonetheless, he wasn't
silenced as much as Trump was. This did not occur
in the same capacity whatsoever. And here is the left
celebrating the silencing of someone that they heavily disagree with, again,
something that didn't even happen to Kimmel. But now Kimmel
and others are pretending as though it's a freedom of

(01:08:25):
speech thing for them and for this one person to
be kept on network television, even though, as I said
a moment ago, he's already alienating half of the audience
in how he chooses to be overly political when they're
really coming there for entertainment, or at least used to
come there for that and not for the political ranting.

Speaker 8 (01:08:43):
Trump has been suspended from Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and even Snapchat.
But don't worry, mister president. There are still plenty of
apps you do have access to. You still have Spotify
to drown out the sound of millions of people cheering
as you leave Google. Apple at Amazon removed the Parlor
app from their platforms.

Speaker 1 (01:09:02):
Parlor is where all the right.

Speaker 8 (01:09:03):
Wingers gather to post QAnon sense and misspell the word parlor.
Trumpers are complaining bitterly that they're being silenced. They in fact,
they won't shut up about being silenced.

Speaker 9 (01:09:13):
I love having Donald Trump off Twitter, not to mention
all the other toxic racists and conspiracy theorists that have been.

Speaker 10 (01:09:19):
Booted off damn on lifetime.

Speaker 1 (01:09:23):
Twitter band has got a sting. They took away his precious.

Speaker 10 (01:09:26):
Twitter isn't the only social media site that wants nothing
to do with our president. He's also been banned or
restricted from a bevy of other platforms, including Facebook, Snapchat, Instagram, Reddit,
and even twitch.

Speaker 1 (01:09:39):
What are you waiting for?

Speaker 12 (01:09:40):
Porn hub?

Speaker 1 (01:09:41):
It's not a coincidence.

Speaker 2 (01:09:42):
Yeah, way to go, Stephen Colbert. Hilarious, hilarious stuff. Anyway, Again,
they all celebrated this, and these are the same people
that are up in arms now saying that, you know,
the right to have a talk show is the same
as the right of a president of the United States
to be left on social media platforms. The silencing of
Trump while he was still in the office of president

(01:10:03):
is absolutely one of the most ridiculous things that ever
happened in our society, and it should be the same
thing where the free speech warrior is up in arms
screaming and yelling, and all of them were celebrating it,
So you reap what you sew. Seems to be an
aspect of that in the world of these individuals being
so proud of something, if it inevitably even remotely close
to the same which it wasn't happens to them, they

(01:10:26):
get to react the way they do. But guess what,
we're not all that surprised that it occurs, and maybe
more of these people deserve to be fired because they
don't have anywhere near the audience that Carson used to
have because no one cares about hearing their political opinions
so much. Let the audience tell you what it wants
to hear you talk about. Don't be defiant in the
face of that when your ratings are terrible. All right,

(01:10:47):
quick break a lot more Craig Collins filling in on
the Danash Show.

Speaker 11 (01:10:51):
So apparently we have to stop falling for the whole
higher thread counting because it doesn't necessarily mean better sheets.
That's fake news. Apparently, it's like believing that you use
like ten percent of your brain. So the secret isn't
thread count, it's thread quality. And this is where Bowl
and Branch has one a lot of folks over at years. Truly,
they use the best organic cotton end of I mean,

(01:11:13):
these are sheets that feel incredible, like the moment you
take them out of the box. So the first night
that you put them on, you can tell right away
that they're softer, they're cooler, and they have a great weight.
It's like kind of having a five star hotel room
in your own house. And I'll tell you something else.
The sheets get better every time that you've washed them.
I've washed mine countless times and they just keep getting softer.

(01:11:33):
You can't do that with cheap sheets because they totally
fall apart Bowl and Branch. They get more luxurious, so
you'll sleep better and you're kind of kind of feel
like a spoiled brat. But it's okay. I'm not going
to go back to the old sheets. Once you try them,
you're not going to either. So if you're ready to
upgrade your sleep and you should visit Bowlinbranch dot com
slash Danish Show because there you'll get fifteen percent off

(01:11:56):
your first set plus free shipping. So that's Bowl and
braik Ranch dot com slash Dana Show for fifteen percent off.
Exclusions apply.

Speaker 1 (01:12:06):
It's his laugh mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida Man.

Speaker 2 (01:12:15):
That's right, it's time for Florida Man on the Dana
Show a d Lash Dana Lash Radio and x on Twitter.
I am Craig Collins filling in a Florida man put
somebody else in his car over a crazy, crazy argument
that happened to the seven to eleven. So a Florida
clerk is working and a dude comes into the seven
eleven in Florida. Of course, the guy I think is

(01:12:36):
forty nine years old. This is in Seminole County where
it happened, and he wants to buy some black and miles.
He wants to buy some cigars, some very popular small cigars. Actually,
he said that the clerk didn't immediately stop cleaning up
to serve him, so he got mad. He started to yell,
and they got into a verbal argument, and at one
point the clerk at the seven to eleven decided to

(01:12:59):
usher the man out of the establishment into his vehicle
and lock him there, which I find hilarious. I also
do think that it's the kind of thing that you're
sort of weak if you allow someone to do. But anyway, nonetheless, yes,
the guy, the defendant, I wound up getting shut inside
a vehicle that he couldn't get out of for some reason.
That's when he called nine to one one to say

(01:13:19):
that he had been detained and arrested. I'd be the
seven to eleven clerk who thought he was being disrespectful
in the first place. This only happens in Florida.

Speaker 4 (01:13:27):
Man.

Speaker 2 (01:13:27):
You only have somebody walk into an establishment, get mad
about the service they provide, and then have that person
who you're mad at decide to pseudo arrest you, which
is illegal.

Speaker 1 (01:13:37):
That is a crime. You do get in trouble for that.

Speaker 2 (01:13:40):
He said the defendant that he was scared that something
else might happen, which is part of the reason he
went along with being locked inside the guy's car.

Speaker 1 (01:13:47):
Come on, dude, just leave.

Speaker 2 (01:13:49):
Just decide not to get your black and mild and
leave when the clerk is berating you for being upset
with them and then also threatening to lock you into
their vehicle.

Speaker 1 (01:13:58):
This story is crazy, though.

Speaker 2 (01:14:00):
Order man, that I do like a guy in Mary
Marion County decided to build a tire fortress around his
property when he thought people were being a little bit
too nosy. This is the kind of thing I just
accept and not even really pay attention to.

Speaker 1 (01:14:14):
To be honest, if I live next.

Speaker 2 (01:14:15):
To Florida tire ford guy, I just think that was
the cost of living in beautiful Florida. I quick break
a lot more. Craig Collins filling in on the Dana Show.
This is the Danish Show. My name is Creig Collins,
filling in d Lash Dana Lash Radio and x on Twitter.
Great ways to stay connected to her. I'm gonna laugh
every time I hear bippity poppity some boobs on that

(01:14:36):
is not something you can do, that something you want
to do. In all honesty, Great show is always for Dana,
Great everything. Check it out on social media. I listen
to this every single day, thrilled to be here today
for let's do this. The President signed a National Security
memorandum that's going to that's going to establish a comprehensive
strategy to investigate, disrupt, dismantle, do everything against organized political violence. Essentially,

(01:15:02):
the people who fund what is domestic terrorism in our country,
We're going to attack it and go after it. This
should be universally praised as a good thing because and
this is kind of crazy that I'm going to say
this as if it's something.

Speaker 1 (01:15:16):
People don't agree on.

Speaker 2 (01:15:17):
Terrorism is bad all kinds, even the domestic kind, even
the kind that causes all kinds of violence and horrible
things in our country based on politics.

Speaker 1 (01:15:26):
Here we go with President Trump.

Speaker 20 (01:15:28):
Hy sir, this is a Presidential Memorandum on countering domestic
terrorism and organized political violence. In recent weeks, months, and years,
we've seen a tremendous upsurge in some highly visible but
also other acts of domestic terrorism and organized political violence
being perpetrated by radical, politically motivated groups all over the country.

(01:15:50):
What this presidential Memorandum will do is set off an
administration wide response to that, ranging from the Joint Terrorism
Task Forces to other components of the Department of Justice,
to the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Treasury.
We're looking at interdicting these groups, preventing them from performing
acts of violence, and also looking at sources of organization
and funding and so import that prop them up and

(01:16:12):
allow them to do the acts that they have been doing.

Speaker 1 (01:16:15):
This is great. Let's let Trump continue to say that.
But this is a good thing.

Speaker 16 (01:16:19):
We're looking at the funders of a lot of these groups.

Speaker 21 (01:16:21):
And you know, when you see the signs and the
real beautiful signs made professionally on you protesters that make
the sign of their basement late in the evening because
they really believe it.

Speaker 16 (01:16:32):
These are anarchists and agitators, professional anarchists and agitators, and
they get hired by wealthy people, some of whom I know.
I guess you know, I probably know them, and you
wouldn't know it. You've at dinner with them. Everything's nice,
and then you find out that they funded millions of
ballars to these lunatics.

Speaker 2 (01:16:50):
Yeah, this is the kind of thing that we should
actually investigate and go after and check. And anyone who
says that this is a slippery slope, that all you're
going to get is a whole bunch of manufactured, fake,
you know, not actually guilty of anything, accusations in order
to go after your political opponents, then prove that when
it happens. That's usually my best response. Let's actually see
what the accusations are, let's react to them in the

(01:17:12):
moment as they're happening. But let's go ahead and make
sure that people can't fund terrorism, even here domestically. That
seems like a good thing, even though somehow this is
something that people disagree on, who are saying that the
DOJ is now weaponized and that James Colly is an
example of it, which is insane in other ways. All Right,
I'm gonna shift gears for a second away from comy.

(01:17:33):
I'll probably talk about it in about twenty minutes or
so before we get out of here today, just because
it is such a big story. Is he has been
indicted by a grand jury, and he's likely to get
in a whole lot of trouble for lying under oath,
something that you can easily verify he did via the
video of him doing it, and then the other video
years later of him contradicting the thing.

Speaker 1 (01:17:53):
He said.

Speaker 2 (01:17:54):
So this should be an open and shut a version
of a thing where Comy gets in trouble for actually
breaking the law. And if no one is above the law,
then it's good right on the left that Comy's in trouble. No,
of course, not all right, let's play this. I have
two pieces of audio that I love. There is an
obsession with talking about race that doesn't need to exist

(01:18:14):
in our society right now, because it seems to be
designed only to get political points. A case in point
might be Representative Presley, who recently said that as a
black woman, she is both hyper visible and invisible, which
doesn't make sense.

Speaker 1 (01:18:29):
That begs the logical.

Speaker 2 (01:18:31):
Question, how are you both of those things? I'll play
this audio real quick.

Speaker 22 (01:18:35):
And there has been such a targeting to be a
black woman is to just walk in this dichotomy of
being hyper visible where you are surveyed, targeted, criminalized, while
also hyper invisition because what contributions are ignored and denied
if not relegated to a footnote and are pain delegitimized,
and that's the dichotomy that.

Speaker 1 (01:18:56):
We're all yeah, no, wrong, I'm sorry.

Speaker 2 (01:18:58):
I don't know how to say this differently, and I
know that you're not allowed to talk about race at
times in some people believe this. I don't believe this.
I'm assuming you don't believe this. I'm a white guy.
I'm going to talk about race. Charlie Kirk would often
debate certain topics with race as a component of it,
and then the left called him a racist, which he
evidently wasn't, not even at all, And essentially they killed

(01:19:20):
it for they being society in general, for being willing
to have these types of discussions as a white guy.

Speaker 1 (01:19:27):
I think that is a byproduct of what happened there.

Speaker 2 (01:19:30):
But anyway, what I think is crazy about this idea
is that saying that you're being silenced because of your
race provides you a microphone. In our current society, there's
a lot of things that provide you a microphones. Saying
this thing that I did is not getting the amount
of recognition that it deserves because of my race, my sex,

(01:19:50):
my whatever. If you're anything other than a white guy,
the odds of someone amplifying that megaphone around you because
they believe that narrative is through the roof right now.
So Presley absolutely has more of a presence in society,
and the things she says and does are focused on
by a whole bunch of people in society because they

(01:20:10):
believe it's somehow a reaction to the racist world in
which they believe they live in. Not the actual society
that we live in, where people are hyper focused on
in a positive way for being people that say they're
being marginalized. That is simply the world we live in now.
Jasmine Crockett is another individual who all the time says

(01:20:30):
that the focus on her isn't fair, or isn't enough,
or it's too much. At other times when she also
says a bunch of really ridiculous and idiotic things. This
is something that Trump reacted to yet again. Someone asked
a question about Jasmine Crockett and Trump did not pull
any punches and how he feels about the representative.

Speaker 16 (01:20:48):
Remember what I said, is sheer relation to the late
great Davy Crockett. I don't think something Crocket. Let me
tell you before you even ask, she's a very low
IQ person. I mean, if we ever had to pass
an aptitude desk. That's so what should take one? Because

(01:21:09):
she shouldn't even be in the crowd. So I have
no idea what you're gonna but I don't think we
should waste that time. This is a low IQ person
who I can't even believe is a congress person. Between
her and ilman Omar and the group, you don't mel
he head of Somalia, did you know that? And I
suggested that maybe he'd like to take her back, and

(01:21:29):
he said.

Speaker 3 (01:21:30):
I don't want her.

Speaker 1 (01:21:30):
He doesn't want her back.

Speaker 2 (01:21:31):
Here's the thing, Jasmine Crockett and a bunch of other
people are going to say that Trump's being a racist,
and then anything I say that's negative about someone who's
in a position of power politically, if they happen to
be a black woman, is racist, Like, oh, it's racism.

Speaker 1 (01:21:44):
That's horrible.

Speaker 2 (01:21:45):
That is a protection that exists in our society. That
wouldn't happen if someone says that Trump's a low IQ person,
and the left obviously says this all the time, no
one would be like, how dare you marginalize a white man?
That's not how they behave in society. So that inevitably
allows you to protect someone who does seem like just
a low IQ person and it has nothing to do

(01:22:05):
with her race, her sex, anything. It simply has to
do with the ability of her brain to think valuable
thoughts and the lack of ability to do that. That's
a Jasmine Crockett, that's some of these other people in society.
But they're protected to a certain extent. They're immune to
criticism because they can pull the race card, the sex card,
the whatever, a marginalized version of a card that they

(01:22:27):
want to try to pull in order to get a
larger microphone, not a smaller one. Which is why it's
ridiculous for politicians to say Pressley and anyone else that
it makes them invisible to be anything other than say,
you know a politician whose thoughts matter most. There's a
reason why Democrats keep trying to bring a woman forward

(01:22:50):
to be the next president of the United States. The
reason why is they think that you would vote for
her because she's a her, not because her thoughts are
valuable or good. They want to do the same thing
they did when they believe Obama got elected because of
his race, even though Obama, I think partially got elected
because he's a very eloquent speaker. Now, granted, he didn't
actually do things that were good for society the way

(01:23:12):
that he might have convinced people in two thousand and
eight he was going to he did all the bad
stuff that people behind close tours do. But I think
the real reason that someone got elected has more to
do with, you know, their capability, at least publicly, more
so than their you know, simple color of their skin
or whatever. But that's not how democrats think. I mean,

(01:23:33):
look at the politicians that they've paired with Hillary Clinton
and with Kamala Harris when they ran them generic older
white dude who's overly woke, overly you know, feminine. The
Tim Walls, the Tim Kaynes of the world are people
that are erally similar because they also think very little
of you. They think that you will vote for someone

(01:23:54):
based on anything other than the content of their character
and the beliefs and the you know, things that they espouse,
the policies and the things that they stand by. Those
things are things that are marginalized on the left instead
of your race, your sex, etc. And yet the left
still complains that somehow those things are what's holding those

(01:24:15):
people back.

Speaker 1 (01:24:16):
That is insane.

Speaker 2 (01:24:17):
Anyone and everyone who's in a position of power because
of DEI type of stuff knows it. They know that
it's something, and they lean on it, and they claim
that it's still harming them when it's done anything. But
and as a white dude saying that out loud, I
can get in trouble and yet I don't care at all.
All right, quick break a lot more Greg Collins filling
in on the Dana.

Speaker 13 (01:24:36):
Show, and now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (01:24:43):
That's right, it's time for a quick five on the
Dana Show. D Lash, Dana Lash Radio and x on
Twitter a great ways to stay connected to her and
everything going on for this show.

Speaker 1 (01:24:52):
Let's do this first.

Speaker 2 (01:24:53):
In elderly care home had introduced robotic dogs and cats
as a way to tackle loneliness.

Speaker 1 (01:25:00):
So I think in.

Speaker 2 (01:25:00):
China right now there are more robot workers than anywhere
else in the world combined. The amount of robots doing
work in China is scary, but elderly people in England
now get to interact with robotic dogs and cats instead
of just getting real dogs and cats, which feels like
the thing you should have done.

Speaker 1 (01:25:17):
I think there's some audio for this story too, fakes.

Speaker 2 (01:25:30):
I'm not okay with the robotic cat, you know, purring
sounds of the robotic dog, barking sounds. All this just
seems wrong. It just seems weird. I'm not okay with it.
Robots are slowly taking over essentially, is the story there?
And a two for both in China and in the UK.
All right, Another story out there that I thought was interesting.
Lincoln Park Lullaby album is dropping today. A Rockabye Baby

(01:25:52):
is the name of a group that turns music into
lullaby music. I have a you know, piece of audio
for this one too, But I think it's hilarious that
Lincoln Park is the latest to get the rock a
Bye Baby treatment. Because if you're someone who loves this
music and you want your kids to love it too,
no better way to start the brainwashing early than to
play it.

Speaker 1 (01:26:12):
As lullaby music as they're going to sleep.

Speaker 2 (01:26:14):
Here's an example, Okay, if you can't tell, that's in
the end by Lincoln Park without any vocals and a

(01:26:36):
lot of lullaby treatments. This is a company that does
a whole bunch of this. I actually kind of like this.
I think This is kind of cool to be able
to rock your kid to sleep with whatever the rock
music of choice or whatever music of choice you have is,
so that you can demonstrate to them how great this
music is and slowly and surely turn them into someone
who's as big of a fan as you are without

(01:26:57):
them even knowing it. You're brainwashing your baby the best
of ways to make their musical taste match yours. That
I'm okay with a lot of brainwashing I'm not okay with.
But the music today is so much worse than that.
I'm not even calling Lincoln Park an example of great music.
You got to go back further than that. But Darnett
so much good music. The ACDC rock Abye album is
a good one to check out too. That's my own suggestion.

(01:27:20):
Miriam Webster Dictionary added more than five thousand terms, which
seems ridiculous and demonstrates how it's not really a dictionary
at all anymore. Among those terms are things like beast
mode and dad bod, which apparently were not defined before.
A dadbod, by the way, as defined by Miriam Webster,
is a physique regarded as typical of an average father,

(01:27:43):
especially one that is slightly overweight and not extremely muscular.
See now this is interesting because my perception of a
dad bod is it's a dad who hasn't given up entirely.

Speaker 1 (01:27:53):
That's what I thought it was.

Speaker 2 (01:27:54):
There's demonstrations of how you still care about your physical fitness.

Speaker 1 (01:27:58):
Well, you might not current be in good shape, That's
what I thought it meant.

Speaker 2 (01:28:02):
I thought that, you know, sometimes hitting the gym was
the version of creating the dad bud that may or
may not be a reflection of even myself now as
I get.

Speaker 1 (01:28:12):
Closer to forty.

Speaker 2 (01:28:13):
You haven't given up entirely, You've just mostly given up,
is a version of it. A dumb phone is another
term that got defined by Miriam Webster. This is a
cell phone that's anything other than smart, something that can
just make phone calls and maybe not do things like
browse the internet. Essentially, you could just call it a
phone and not the computer that's in your pocket now.
And finally, love language is something that's been defined. It's

(01:28:36):
a person specific desire for how they're shown love or care,
meaning that you have a specific love language that people
communicate to you that you like and stuff that you
don't like. I'm not really sure how I feel about
the idea that that's a Miriam Webster defined.

Speaker 1 (01:28:52):
Term, but it is a reality.

Speaker 2 (01:28:54):
There are versions of treating someone a certain way that
they like that other people don't. My wife loves to
be bought gifts. I imagine very few people don't like
to be bought gifts. But my wife says that's her
love language. Buying her things, you know, nice things, is
a great way to show her that I care.

Speaker 1 (01:29:10):
Convenient, I'm sure, of course. For me, it's just anything.
It's just any sort of niceness, any sort of anything
at all. You don't even have to buy me stuff.
I'm a dude. I'm much much easier to make happy.

Speaker 2 (01:29:21):
One final thing her, she's defended a lawsuit claiming it's
Halloween candies weren't spooky enough. Someone brought a five million
dollar suit against her. She's a woman last year saying
that their Halloween candy needs to be scarier. The pumpkin
essentially on the rees shouldn't be smiling, it should be
upset Hershe's actually defended themselves in this lawsuit because they

(01:29:42):
don't want the frivolous suit to gain any kind of
benefit to the woman who brought it way to go.
Hershey's quick break. A little bit more coming up. Greg
Allin's filling in on the Dana Show.

Speaker 15 (01:29:52):
Subscribe to The Dana Show podcast because who says you
can't make fun of people while staying informed on your
own personal time. Subscribe on you too, Aapple, or wherever
you get your podcast.

Speaker 2 (01:30:02):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you. A whole bunch
of stuff to talk about out there in the world,
and yet a big announcement happened today. Sinclair has folded.
They have decided to stop preempting Jimmy kim Alive starting
tonight and air the show.

Speaker 16 (01:30:19):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:30:20):
Sinclair has tried to have some sort of moral victory
or some sort of lesser than actual victory. They lose,
but they're claiming that they didn't completely because they've made
suggestions on how to make the show better, how to
make it something that doesn't alienate half of the people
here in the United States of America with how Jimmy
says and does stuff for his lack of apology. Now, granted,

(01:30:42):
I will say one thing about Kimmel. When he first
came back his praising of Erica Kirk was I think
genuine and also a smart thing to do, an easy
thing to do, because Erica's behavior over the last week
or so has been incredible. Saying out loud that she
forgave the person who killed her husband a mere days

(01:31:04):
after it happened was one of the most christ like
things I've seen in society in a long time, and
so praising someone like that is uniquely easy, even for
the hardcore lefty that is Jimmy Kimmel. But that shouldn't
be enough for Sinclair to quote Ben the knee or
fold or say that, you know what, that's fine, he tried,

(01:31:25):
you know, and so we're going to start carrying the
show again. But here's what I think is really interesting
about this. I'm not exactly upset that it's going to occur,
because the ratings aren't going to be good. Long term,
the ratings are going to be as bad as they've
always been. Kimmel will continue to struggle. We know that,
you know that, I know that, and so inevitably the
narrative won't be that the big bad media outlets like

(01:31:47):
Sinclair prevented Kimmel from having the audience that he's supposed
to have, But his own behavior, his own inability to
retain that audience that may or may not have been
watching for the last couple of days, is in fact
going to be the true narrative, the true story, And
eventually these late night shows will go the way of
everything else that slowly and surely faded from our society

(01:32:09):
because it's just not relevant anymore. He's just not relevant.
The only thing that made Kimmel relevant was him becoming
the news. And that's the worst case scenario for you
as a broadcaster or an entertainer or anyone out there.
You never want to be the news. And on the
off chance that you are the news, it's going to
be the least permanent form of having people pay attention

(01:32:32):
to you. And he made it all about himself when
he actually came back to he did not apologize, etc.

Speaker 1 (01:32:38):
Etc.

Speaker 2 (01:32:39):
But I'm not surprised by this, to be honest with
you too, To be honest with anyone out there, anyone
that's upset with Sinclair or any of those are any
of these other broadcast platforms, because essentially the narrative was
too easy to wield against them, that they're the big,
bad horrible person doing the terrible thing, when the reality
is that, say a year from now, if kimil gets

(01:32:59):
fired like Colbert because his ratings don't you know, wind
up being amazingly better long term because he's as hardcore
to the left and unapologetic about it as he is,
then eventually you won't be able to say that it
was the fault of the conservatives that prevented this from happening.
And also it continues to demonstrate that we do live
in a free and fair society. Well I don't know

(01:33:21):
about fair all the time, but we live in a
free society. Because he is not you know, in jail
and incapable of doing a show.

Speaker 1 (01:33:28):
He's doing his show.

Speaker 2 (01:33:29):
It's fully back and none of the things that were
talked about happened. And if the FCC and Trump actually
go after him, which I know that Trump has made
some more references to that on social media, on truth
social which Kimmel then used to his own benefit to
say that it's still like a silencing of his speech thing.
They still would go to a courtroom, they'd still battle

(01:33:50):
it out in courtroom, and they'd still decide whether or
not what Kimmel is doing is essentially free propaganda media for.

Speaker 1 (01:33:58):
The left, which is absolute what it is.

Speaker 2 (01:34:01):
But the thing that makes me most mad, and I
think it's the thing that I wish we could all
agree on, because just agreeing on it, even if you
don't think that it's, you know, something that should have
happened differently, or you can be upset about it, happy
about it. I don't care, but we should at least
be able to agree that Jimmy Kimmel absolutely made a
joke that not only seemed to belittle the death of

(01:34:23):
Charlie Kirk in comparing the president's reaction to the way
that a baby reacts, you know, not getting a toy
or candy or something, but also said that it was
a mag of person who did the killing. That is
what Kimmel said, and that is what Kimmel should apologize
for in the horrific response to the death of Charlie
Kirk from that show and from that entertainer. If that's

(01:34:44):
actually the word you want to use to describe him,
and that's not a thing that happened. If there were
anything that made me want to have Sinclair in these
other places continue to preempt the show, it was the
inability for Kimmel to tell the truth and to apologize
for the thing that he absolutely did.

Speaker 1 (01:35:00):
And actually, you know, it's really interesting.

Speaker 2 (01:35:02):
Out of all the people who reacted to this, Bill
Maher might have been one of the more interesting ones
to me, because Bill Maher said something to Jimmy Kimmel
that I thought was he said it publicly, He set
it into a television camera and a microphone. He probably
also may have tried to communicate it directly to Jimmy, But.

Speaker 1 (01:35:19):
I don't care.

Speaker 2 (01:35:20):
The thing that I thought was interesting about it, And
I'm certainly a guy who disagrees with Bill Maher on
a lot of stuff. But he said that you're allowing
hate to run your life. More or less I'm paraphrasing,
but Bill Maher told Jimmy Kimmel that he was blinded
by the hatred he had for Donald Trump, for the
right for wishing that people during COVID would die who

(01:35:40):
disagreed with him, all kinds of things that Jimmy Kimmel
has done. He was allowing that to influence all of
his thoughts and behaviors, and that's why he would accuse
someone who killed Charlie Kirk of being a maga Republican
that it's just hate that motivates you that far and
then makes you refuse to acknowledge when hate has pushed
you that far into the corner. Because that's the other

(01:36:02):
thing about the power of hate is it's influential and
significant enough to make you double and triple down on
the horrible things that you say and do and never
repent or never acknowledge the mistakes you're making. And so again,
I just think it's sort of amazing that Sinclair is
going to start airing the show, mostly because he never apologized.
But as I said a moment ago, it does selfishly

(01:36:24):
give me some level of, you know, I wouldn't call
it happiness, but some level of see I told you so,
because I believe that when Kimmel fails, it won't be
something you can blame on Sinclair or any sort of
media that stood up to him. You'll be able to
say that it's just the fact that he's terrible at
entertaining people on television and his ratings actually are awful.

(01:36:47):
This is not an untrue statement when Trump made it
that he gets something like I think like a million
viewers or something, which is horrible for late night network television,
But all of the late night network television people are
fire it with a million here or a million there,
and the YouTubers have way more people. This radio show
has way more people that pay attention to it than

(01:37:08):
late night television does. And that should say something to
the late night television people. Maybe give Dana a show
at some point.

Speaker 3 (01:37:14):
All right.

Speaker 2 (01:37:15):
President Trump also referenced towards Soros LinkedIn co founder Reid
Hoffman as people that might be probe for funding left
wing terror groups. I think this is great. I think
it's weird. Let me say it this way. This is
the best way I can say it. I think it's
weird that the left is now a proponent of violence
in cities because Trump trying to end violence in cities

(01:37:36):
by using the National Guard in places like DC should
be something that everybody's fine with. It feels like a
lot of the traps being set by Democrat by excuse me,
Republicans right now, four Democrats are trying to show just
how extreme the Democrats have become. They are four violence
in cities apparently because they don't like ice and they
don't like the military. There are also four terrorist groups

(01:37:59):
getting money from there, you know, would be giant, rich
financial backers themselves, because they think that this is political
witch hunts or some other version of something else, as
opposed to just being an investigation to see if money
is being given to Antifa, who then riot and loot
in cities with democratic dollars and US thinking that's bad

(01:38:23):
as a society. Essentially, all of these are ways to
demonstrate how far the left has gone from what the
average American thinks simply makes sense.

Speaker 6 (01:38:30):
Here we go, Yeah, so let's see to defend them, Jeff, anyone,
I just want so that we can explain this in
our stories.

Speaker 16 (01:38:38):
Could you name a you don't explain it right though, Jeff,
go ahead, let's go. Maybe let's give you another chance.

Speaker 1 (01:38:44):
Go Antifa, Soros? What names are we talking about?

Speaker 16 (01:38:47):
Well, Soros is the name certainly that I keep hearing.
I don't know, But Sorous is the name that I hear.
I hear a lot of different names. I hear names
of some pretty rich people that are radical left people.
Maybe I hear a buddy guy named Reid Hoffmann. Maybe
he's a pretty rich guy, I guess, and I hear
about him. I don't know, maybe and maybe could be him,

(01:39:09):
could be a lot of people. We hear the same names,
but they're bad and we're going to find out. And
if they are funding these things, they're gonna have some
problems because they're agitators and they're anarchists. These are anarchists,
really bad.

Speaker 2 (01:39:23):
Okay, Yeah, here's my favorite part of what happens very
often in society right now with left leaning media.

Speaker 1 (01:39:31):
The tariffs is a good example.

Speaker 2 (01:39:33):
The Hunter Biden laptop is of course a great example
people still lean on today because of how amazing it
is in demonstrating this. COVID is another example of this.
They tell us the future, they claim definitively to know
the future, and then they're absolutely wrong about the future
they told us was going to happen. They say tariffs
are going to be bad for the economy, and that
doesn't happen the way that they claim it would, as

(01:39:53):
quickly as it would, etc.

Speaker 1 (01:39:55):
Etc.

Speaker 2 (01:39:56):
They claim these things about COVID and the shots, and
then everything that's the opposite that winds up being true
again and again they tell us the future because they
don't want to react in the moment where the actual
information is there. They want to tell you they know
what the information is going to be. You don't have
to pay attention to what it is or what it
ends up being. You have to look away by the

(01:40:16):
time that we know for sure that we get the
receipts to whatever the story was, and that you just
have to trust that they were right all along. The
FBI agent story is another amazing thing. And if you
don't know what I'm talking about, just quickly there were
two hundred and fifty plus plane clothed FBI agents in
the crowd on January sixth. This is something that the

(01:40:37):
left and left leaning media definitively told us could not
have happened, was not true, was absolutely a conspiracy theory.
Years later, we now know that it absolutely was true,
and the FBI has admitted it and acknowledged that it happened.
And whether or not those people were agitators is you
and I's obviously a best guess that they were. But nonetheless,
what's amazing about that is they just assume, you know,

(01:41:00):
no longer care on the left, and so you won't
pay attention to that part. And it's ridiculous and it's
upsetting because it works and it needs to stop working.
The people who pay attention more now to the end
result of a story are the people who are best informed.
And as Trump said a moment ago, when investigating whether
or not left leaning money is going to domestic terrorists,

(01:41:22):
We're gonna find out, is what he said. We're going
to investigate it. We're going to find out, and the
American people are going to be told about the things
that we find in that moment. At that time, you
could then decide whether or not you think it's true.
But media won't give you that opportunity, or at least
they'll discourage you from taking it. When it does happen.
They'll convince you that you need to react now, you

(01:41:42):
need to be sure that there's no way that George
Soros could be funding Antifa. And then when inevitably the
proof comes out, they hope that you've already made up
your mind and.

Speaker 1 (01:41:50):
Will no longer look back.

Speaker 2 (01:41:52):
They count on you to be the type of society
and a whole lot of people who listen to the
show are not these people, but they count on their
supporters to be the type of society that only reads
the headline once and doesn't go back for the real
information later. And I told this story before, but I'll
do it very quickly. Now I had an argument on
my social media page at Radio craigc. This was on Facebook,

(01:42:12):
not Twitter, with someone about January sixth, which was totally
not the context of what I had posted. I had
posted about Charlie Kirk and how impacted I was and
shocked I was that he was killed, and how I
was going to put out a podcasts about my own
feelings about it. And someone came at me and tried
to make it about January sixth, which was uniquely stupid.

(01:42:33):
But then when I tried to share with them proof
that what they thought happened didn't happen, and I cherry
picked out a left leaning source that still told them
that they were wrong about what they believed to have
occurred on that day. The funny thing about it is
they responded back by trying to defend themselves by sharing
the exact same link, which showed me they didn't read
the link when I sent it to them. They googled

(01:42:56):
for what they thought was going to be their opinion,
They found a source that they thought they'd agree with,
and then they shared that back with me. It's the
funniest thing I've seen happen on my social media page
in a while, because it absolutely demonstrates how little thought
goes into the feelings that the left has as strongly
as it does in a wide variety of topics. Because
if they had read the story the first time when

(01:43:16):
I gave it to them, it would have disproved the
thing they thought, instead of when they shared it back
with me believing it proved them right because they only
read the headline, and they only did it once, and
they did it well before the story hit all the facts.
That's what the left wants. That's what the right refuses
to do, and for some reason they get incredibly mad
at us. We know the reason for doing that, for

(01:43:37):
actually caring about the truth. All right, quick break, a
little bit more coming up. Craig Collins filling in on
The Dana Show.

Speaker 15 (01:43:44):
Not Able to catch all three hours of The Dana Show,
Subscribe to the full podcast and get news and laughs
delivered in short, easier to digest episodes ideal for your
busy lifestyle on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 2 (01:43:58):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in for just a few more minutes. Dana is
back on Monday, thrilled to be with you on a Friday.
A couple quick things in the world of sports, college
football has been incredible this year. Week five has a
bunch of really interesting games. Oregon Penn State is probably
one of the best ones. Penn State doesn't know how
to cover spread. By the way, that's just a helpful

(01:44:19):
tip for you for anybody out there. No matter what
the spread is, betting with Penn State is usually a
mistake that you shouldn't make, that we don't want to make.
But anyway, Oregon Penn State, good game. Lots of good games.
College football has been incredible, even as my favorite team,
Notre Dame, has lost a lot more at the beginning
of the season than he would have wanted them to.

(01:44:39):
But those games were interesting too. Also in the world
of sports, Aaron Judge is clearly the MVP in the
American League. It's not cal Raley, it's not the big Dumper.
I know this isn't a sports show. I know that
I can talk about other things, and I will, I promise,
But I love an article in The Athletic about this
for anyone who does care about this out there, because

(01:45:00):
part of the argument being made is that Judge, and
I quote is obviously superior statistically. He was superior to
show Hey Otani in twenty twenty two, he is superior
to Cal Raley this year in twenty twenty five. But
that's not the reason that voters might decide that Cal
deserves the MVP Award. It is quote novelty, at least

(01:45:20):
in some part. The fact that Cal's a catcher, that
he's a switch hitter, and that he's hit sixty home
runs so far this year with three games left to.

Speaker 1 (01:45:28):
Go all make him someone that a lot of.

Speaker 2 (01:45:30):
Voters would like to vote the MVP Award, even if
in fact he's not actually statistically better than Aaron Judge,
which feels like the part that should matter.

Speaker 1 (01:45:39):
Darn it. I'm a Yankee fan, though, so I can't
help it. All right.

Speaker 2 (01:45:42):
Two other things on Nonsports before we get out of here. First,
I thought this was hilarious. A first grader told his
teacher that he was ill. I wonder if this is
a demonstration of woke being an aspect of what is
happening for him at home, or if it's just a misunderstanding,
like a cute kid is one to do. But the
kid told his teacher that his illness was caused by

(01:46:02):
something unique, and here's how the teacher responded to it.

Speaker 1 (01:46:05):
I loved this audio.

Speaker 18 (01:46:07):
Often, you see the reason you cough was with morning sickenens,
morning sickness. So do you have mourning sickness?

Speaker 3 (01:46:14):
Sometimes?

Speaker 1 (01:46:15):
Sometimes?

Speaker 18 (01:46:16):
You know who have more thing sickness? Pregnant women? Are
you a pregnant woman now? So you don't have more
thing sickness? You just got the sniffles, okay, right, morning
signas Okay.

Speaker 2 (01:46:28):
I love everything about that audio because it demonstrates something
about actual people in our society that the left doesn't
seem to understand, which is that we think a lot
of the things the left says is insane. But the
left would think that a man can get morning sickness,
and obviously that teacher doesn't think a little boy can
have that, so it's sort of insane.

Speaker 4 (01:46:46):
All right.

Speaker 1 (01:46:46):
That's it.

Speaker 2 (01:46:46):
That's the show. Thrilled to be with you as always, Dana.
Back Monday, Greg Collin's filling in on the Danish show
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