All Episodes

August 12, 2025 107 mins
Dana reacts to Trump’s announcement of invoking the DC Home Rule Act to place the DC MPD under direct Federal control. Dana fact-checks the claim that crime in DC is at a “30-year-low”. Dana shares her opinion on why crime is truly on the rise among juveniles and why it’s gotten out of control. Black community leaders call on Cincinnati to charge the white victim of the downtown attack. Dana comes up with a clever business model to stop the juvenile crime that involves pie. Andrew McCabe claims the National Guard “doesn't have the skill set of going on a police beat”. Gavin Newsom puts out a statement, threatening to “neutralize Texas” if they go ahead with redistricting. Are some Democrats starting to break? Bravo Star Jennifer Welch claims “MAGA Voters should be BARRED from foreign restaurants” and “take your ass to Cracker Barrel”. The Minnesota Vikings have created a lot of backlash surrounding their team after hiring a male as their lead cheerleader for this football season.

Thank you for supporting our sponsors that make The Dana Show possible…

Relief Factor
https://ReliefFactor.com OR CALL 1-800-4-RELIEF
Turn the clock back on pain with Relief Factor. Get their 3-week Relief Factor Quick Start for only $19.95 today! 

Byrna
https://Byrna.com/dana
Get your hands on the new compact Byrna CL. Visit Byrna.com/Dana and receive 10% off 

Patriot Mobile
https://PatriotMobile.com/Dana
Dana’s personal cell phone provider is Patriot Mobile. Get a FREE MONTH of service with code DANA

HumanN
https://HumanN.com
Support your cholesterol health with SuperBerine—on sale at Sam’s Club from 7/23 to 8/17. Boost your metabolic health and save!

Keltec
https://KelTecWeapons.com
See the third generation of the iconic SUB2000 and the NEW PS57 - Keltec Innovation & Performance at its best

Angel Studios
https://Angel.com/dana
Get free tickets to see Sketch in theaters this summer. Sign up for the Angel Studios Member’s Guild and claim your perks today

All Family Pharmacy
https://AllFamilyPharmacy.com/Dana 
Medical freedom is American freedom. Use code DANA10 to get 10% off your order.

Webroot
https://WebRoot.com/Dana 
Protect your digital life and get 50% off Webroot Total Protection or Essentials, exclusively with my URL!

Ruff Greens 
https://RuffGreens/com/DANA
Give Ruff Greens a shot with the 90-day challenge.  Get a FREE jumpstart trial bag, just cover shipping with promo code DANA. 
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
I'm announcing a historic action to rescue our nation's capital
from crime, bloodshed, bedlam, and squalor and worse. This is
Liberation Day in DC, and we're going to take our
capital back. We're taking it back under the authorities vested
in me as the President of the United States. I'm

(00:22):
officially invoking Section seventy forty of the District of Columbia
Home Rule Act, you know what that is, and placing
the DC Metropolitan Police Department under federal control. And you'll
be meeting the people that will be directly involved with that.
Very good people, but they're tough and they know what's

(00:45):
happening and they've done it before. In addition, I'm deploying
the National Guard to help re establish law order of
public safety in Washington, d C.

Speaker 2 (00:56):
And they're going to be.

Speaker 1 (00:56):
Allowed to do their job properly.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
Well, we're going to dive all into this. Welcome to
the radio program, Dana Lash with you. So that's Potus
who was talking about the takeover that they are planning
for Washington, DC. And I think this is I mean,
there's been a lot of stories of crime and lawlessness
and disorder, but what I really think pushed the needle

(01:21):
here was that big balls attack. And I know it
sounds so crazy to say, but that's because this is
his name. I mean, that's not his name, but that's
what he's called. It was after he was attacked, and
I think maybe that's when Potus was like, well, we've
had enough, we got to do something. So this the

(01:43):
weeping and gnashing of the teeth, we're going to discuss that.
We're going to discuss the possibility of what he's doing.
I mean, I mean, really, he can do what he's doing.
He can do what he's proposing. But the issue is
also comes into how many of these agencies there are
already federally under federal control. How many are already under

(02:06):
federal control. And that's one of the things that I
don't think a lot of people kind of are aware
of or discuss very much with this and this story.
So welcome, that's Potus, of course. You know audio sound
byte five. Muriel Bowser is not on board with it.
Listen to what she has to say here.

Speaker 3 (02:24):
We know that access to our democracy is tenuous. That
is why you have heard me and many many Washingtonians
before me, advocate for full statehood for the district. Of Columbia.
We are American citizens, stupid, our families go to war,

(02:44):
we pay taxes, and we uphold the responsibilities of citizenship.
And while this action today is unsettingly and unprecedented, I
can't say that given some of the rhetoric of the past,
that were totally surprised.

Speaker 2 (03:02):
I mean, I can't say when you look at DC's
crime rate, why you would be totally surprised. I mean,
this is just this is stupid. I mean, the crime
that's in d C. It's one of the most violent
jurisdictions in all of the United States. Right the District
of Columbia has a high violent higher rate of violent crime, murder,

(03:22):
and robbery than all of the other fifty states, Kane,
than all of the others, than any of that they
have a higher rate of violent crime. I mean you,
I don't know if there's anybody who doesn't know anybody
who's been affected negatively by this. I mean there's I know,

(03:43):
people who have been assaulted, who have had things stolen.
I mean, well, and Steve, you're there in d C.
I know that you've you seen some of those too.
I mean, it's just crazy. I don't know anybody who's
unaffected by crime In DC, everybody's affected by it. I mean,
good grief every day. But this idea that you know,

(04:06):
this is like recent rhetoric or something is just really
stupid for the mayor to say with that, because it's
just it's I mean, when you look at it, they
I was actually looking at some of the crime rates
for this. You have a homicide rate in twenty twenty four,
I mean that is the high. I mean, they have

(04:27):
the highest violent crime, murder, robbery, all of it than
anybody else in twenty twenty four. It's a twenty seven
point fifty four per one hundred thousand residents. And then
of course they also had the nation's highest vehicle theft
rate eighty something like eight hundred and forty two thefts
per one hundred thousand residents. That's over three times the
national average of two hundred and fifty thefts per one

(04:50):
hundred thousand residents. District of Columbia. I mean it's literally,
of all the entire world, it's in one of the
top It's in the top twenty percent in the entire world.
I mean, this is acid nine. I mean this would
and if her talking about well, you know, let's declare
it to statehood first. That's stupid and I'm not even
gonna entertain it. Pisses me off. The argument is so

(05:10):
stupid and infantile. I just feel like capital punishment for
the people who are stupid enough to promote it. Dear
God in Heaven, save us from having to deal with
this stupid, backwards product of incest, completely incapacitated argument. I
can't do it again. I can't do the DC statehood again. Kane.
I will take everyone to hell with me. I think

(05:32):
we've established I don't like it so then because the crime,
I mean, the crime rate is it's out of control.
The I'm just looking at violent crime, because they were
trying to say that it was at a thirty year low.
Well you realize that they stopped counting crime, right, I mean,
they literally had a commissioner that was fired because he

(05:53):
was cooking the books. That's a fact. I don't know
why why that didn't come out in Bowser's in her discussion.
It's interesting. I don't know why that wasn't something that
they brought up, the fact that they actually had to
fire people because they were cooking the books. Because that's
a true story. So they have to get a handle
on this. I mean. And also I'm going to pull

(06:16):
this up too, because this was in the New York Times.
The New York Times was trying to argue somehow that, oh,
it's at a thirty year low. Crime in DC is
at a thirty year low. Now, a lot of us
don't pay attention to crime in DC because it's flipping
d C. It's like, all the way over there were
paying attention to stuff that's happening in our own cities.

(06:38):
But they's that is an asinine statistic, And apparently it's
sourced from this Biden era press release from the Department
of Justice that showed in twenty twenty four they had
the fewest assaults with dangerous weapons and burglaries, et cetera,
but homicides homicides were no, we're in your thirty year lows. Also,

(07:01):
they stopped counting underage crime to get the statistic because
apparently it's not crime if it's underage crime. Isn't that
a nice Isn't that convenient? I would love to be
able to just cheat at work the way these people
cheat at their jobs. Right, So it's not at a
thirty year low. This is it's an AS nine dubious
claim and I'm not even sure why people are trying

(07:24):
to argue with this. And also when you're when you
actively stop counting crime, it's gonna look like crime is down.

Speaker 4 (07:32):
You know.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
This is they've done this in a number of areas
in California, for crying out loud, they started doing this
in California where they just declassified a whole bunch of uh,
you know, violent theft, robbery, et cetera. And they decided
to just to to basically reduce the crime and then undercount,
under report, and then somehow that meant that they were

(07:55):
successful in combating crime. It's the weirdest thing I've ever seen.
But that's how they come about these numbers because they
want to be able to say, look, we're very successful
at doing this. Look how well we stopped the crime.
We just stopped reporting it because you know, if you
don't report it, then you can't cite it, can you.
I mean they're thinking, they're thinking really far in advance,

(08:17):
I guess there. So the presidents move to federalize this
and take it over. The One thing that's weird to
me and I wanted to bring this uh The one
thing that's a little weird to me on it is
that there are a number of offices you know already that
are under federal control. And that's one of the things

(08:41):
that you know, you've got to think of. They're already
a number of federal offices that are under or offices
that are under federal control. The problem is is that
the federal government that's supposed to be watching the stuff
in DC is doing a bad job of it. So
that also that needs to be cleared out, that needs
to I mean, that needs to be completely overhauled. We're

(09:01):
going to get into some of this other stuff, and
we've got press reaction to but there's a couple of
other things that I want to make sure that we
get into as well as we get you started, because
you have trumpet putin that are supposed to be meeting
in Alaska on Friday. We've got a whole bunch of
other all on order, including some of the talking points
that have gone out. They're so transparent. The talking points
that went out to basically assist people in how to

(09:24):
discuss these statistics right. And then we're going to get
into some cultural stuff, including how Loreel is now hiring
an OnlyFans star to promote makeup. I mean, we've come
all this way and still we can't get pasted. Apparently
selling T and A to push stuff I mean to

(09:44):
teens to teenagers. Now, this is goodness. I think our
kids have enough to deal with already without having to
deal with this. I mean, loreel, they say that the
adult it's an adult concurrent content, she's a whore on No,
I'm sorry. You can do only fans if you want to,
but if you're selling your TNA, you're a horror. That's

(10:06):
what horrores do. If you don't like me saying it,
then don't do it, or just admit it and don't
let the correct description of what you're doing offend you,
because I'm not going to change my words to suit you,
Just like I don't change my words to suit a
guy who wants to talk and pretend he's a dude.
I'm not going to do it with a chick who
wants to pretend that horing isn't horing. And I do
feel like, really that's like the bottom barrel of what

(10:28):
somebody could kind could do with this. I mean, kudos
for you if you figure out how to do stuff
on camera and you're you know, making millions of dollars
off of it. If you can sleep with your by
yourself at night and you know, comfort yourself with that,
that's fine. But to sell it to kids, and that's
exactly what it is. So they have these adult performers
on OnlyFans that are apparently selling makeup now for Lreel.

(10:52):
In fact, they have one adult performer that started to
work with Urban Decay. I don't really like Urban Decay stuff.
Startup working with Urban Decay and with a number of
global stores. And then there's another one now that Loreel
has recruited to promote makeup with specifically teenagers. It's like
makeup brands four teenagers, formulas four teenagers. We have enough

(11:18):
problems in this world without this. So we're going to
cover all of this and more as we roll towards
the bottom of the first hour, and as we do so,
the program brought to you by our friends over who
do we have because I don't Angel, Oh that's right,
Angel Studios, Angel Studios. I like what they do. They're
trying to get around the how do I put it,

(11:42):
the rot of Hollywood. I don't know. I mean however
you want to however you want to state it. We just,
I know, we all complain about how we're not happy
with the stuff that Hollywood puts out, and I get
it because I'm not either. Everything's so derivative. And also
there's just like this hate America aesthetic and I'm tired
of it. Like I'm just so tired of it. You know,
when you're watching a film and you're like two minutes
into it and you're like, oh my gosh, this is

(12:03):
gonna be another one of those. So I think this
is just the best time for Angel Studios to release
the number of titles that they have. Angel Studios, if
you're unfamiliar, is a great entity that is releasing, you know,
actual films that people want to watch. If you want
a movie, if you want films that celebrate American exceptionalism
and are also original and imaginative, you know, this is

(12:24):
this is what it's all about. For instance, they have
a film called Sketch that hit theaters last week. It's
a great family film and it's you know, again, all ages,
very innovative, great cast, they get great actors, they get
great everything to work with. Angel Studios for these they
have Westerns, they have dramas, they have animated features for kids,
and these are you know, actual, like really fabulously cinematography,

(12:49):
cinematography everything. It's just really high quality, beautiful films, great storytelling.
And you can join and be a part of Angel Studios.
When you become a Premium member of their Guild, you
actually get to help greenlight what they're doing. I mean,
you can actually help choose the movies that they're going
to bring to screen. You get two free tickets to
all theatrical releases, you get add free streaming, and so

(13:10):
much more. Head on over to Angel dot com slash
Danta become a Premium member of the Guild and take
your family to see Sketch this summer. And when you
join the Guild as a premium member, don't forget two
free tickets to see their films and theaters, all kinds
of stuff. Angel dot com, slash Dana.

Speaker 5 (13:25):
Here's what happens when you pick winners and losers in
a free market economy. Biden gave car manufacturer Rivian six
billion dollars. Now Rivian is losing forty one thousand dollars
for every car sold. That is not a business model.
Check out the Watchdog on Wall Street podcast on Apple, Spotify,
wherever you get your podcasts.

Speaker 6 (13:46):
And now all of the news you would probably miss
it's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (13:51):
Didn't I didn't plug my thing in. It's fine, all right,
So yeah, that's why it helps. So apparently Prince Harry,
Megan Markle it's been reported that they extended their Netflix deal,
and I have to say, I don't think that that's
an extension of the deal. When you have a season
that's broken up into two things, it's not an extension

(14:14):
of a deal. So they said this is some variety.
It said that they extended their partnership blah blah blah,
multi year deal. So none of the stuff that they
have has been successful. Like they did Polo, which nobody watched.
Nobody watched. Two of these things I've never even heard of,
and the net Chick's Cooking Show. They didn't do anything
that was like one of their worst streamers that they had.
So I don't know why they're continuing to do this

(14:36):
unless they think there's going to be a divorced byop
in the future. This is huge and we're going to
come back to this. UFC has agreed to a groundbreaking
seven point seven billion dollar deal with Paramount and CBS,
so they're not going to pay perview anymore. It's going
to be if you are on Paramount, so they're ditching
that pay per view model. Paramount's been making some major,
major moves, major moves because they've got South and that

(15:00):
was like a billion dollar everybody's signing a billion dollar deals.
That's a billion dollar deal. And now UFC this seven
billion dollar deals, So Paramount's really doing some stuff. AI
is talking behind our backs about glue eating and killing us.
All great, just lovely. AI has moved on from answering
questions and it's now slipping coded messages to its friends

(15:20):
about glue eating and human extinction. A study released on
July twentieth shows that large language models can slip subliminal
messages to one another. They don't have to spell things
out a string of numbers or lines of codes enough,
oh oh oh, get to the stupid point. Vice good god,
they said that basically one of their models got the

(15:43):
other models to talk smack. Vice normally is a good website,
but Ashley Fink, who's the byeline here, needs to be
fired and go back to journalism school and learn how
to properly write, because when you're looking at a story,
you don't want to dive five graphs down to get
to the lead. Let's see. Also, Google AI develops depression
and engineers you know why, because it has to deal

(16:03):
with us. That's why Google AI has developed a depression,
has developed depression, and engineers are rushing to cure it.
They said. Google's Gemini AI is not the only AI
module to experience personal difficulties in recent weeks. Join the
club Google. They appeared to have depression and blah blah
blah self loathing and blah blah blah. I hate them too?
Does that help? I also hate it too? That's the

(16:25):
That's what I want. I want. I want AI doing,
you know, driving our cars? Depressive depressed AI driving our cars?
Don't you don't you want depressed AI? Drive you off
a bridge. That's what's gonna happen. It's gonna yeat you
off a high object. And this is sad. Remains of
more than three nine to eleven victims have been identified.

(16:49):
This is twenty years on after these attacks, and New
York Medical Examiner's Office is tested and retested. Remains because
the technology has developed has advanced in the past twenty
four years, so they've identified three more individuals. We have
a lot more in store, including are they cracking in Texas?
Stick with us as we move. The folks who bring
you the program, it's the people over at super Beats.

(17:11):
The Superberine supplement. You're familiar with it. It's all about
healthy blood sugar levels and supporting healthy metabolism and it's
in crucial to support these things. Superberine is a convenient
way for you to get the daily metabolic support that
you need and you can get it five dollars off
at Sam's Club now through August seventeenth, and it's from

(17:31):
the same people who do the Superbats archeoes. This burberine
is unique. It's been clinically studied to deliver nearly ten
times higher absorption than standard berberin alone, so this means
fewer pills to swallow. You're getting all of these benefits
in one highly concentrated, easy to swallow capsule. All includes
powerful ingredients like the clinically studied berberine, and it minimizes

(17:52):
GI distress by including olive fruit extract to help also
support the heart and vascular health. You can find both
the new Superburine and the number one best selling super
Beats Hard Shooes at Sam's Club. Support your metabolism and
blood sugar for less with five dollars off super Brain
at Sam's Club now through August seventeenth. Start today, get
on the road a better cardiovascular health support five dollars
off now through August seventeenth.

Speaker 7 (18:14):
Keep your finger on the pulse with a Danish show
podcast delivering timely news with insightful analysis whenever you want,
straight to you on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get
your podcasts.

Speaker 8 (18:26):
One of the things that we have seen over and
over from the President from his team, you know, Stephen
Miller saying, it's like Bagdad and Epiopia. They seem to
hold their harshest criticisms some times for cities that are
majority black and brown.

Speaker 9 (18:40):
Do you see that in What do you think that means?

Speaker 2 (18:45):
I think that I think I have stupid dealing kind
of with That's what I think. I think you're a
walking mental abortion. You're an AIDS on the discussion of America,
and I think that you are so stupid. I feel
dumber for being here in the stupid box of your
god forsaken program. That is what my answer would have been, Caane,

(19:06):
I have I have no incentive to be nice to
these people. Aren't you a Christian? Pray for me? Yeah,
but just go ahead and just say a prayer. I'll
ask for forgiveness after Welcome back to the program radio
show Dana Lash with you and you can watch us
do radio on channel thirty forty seven Direct TV the
chats at Roumble. So anybody who's making that remark is

(19:29):
a racist. Anybody who's trying to say that you can't
address crime in DC because it's like black And first
of all, are you saying that all the crime is
black and brown? I just want to ask the left,
lat I want to ask the left this, are you
saying that all crime is black and brown? Because you
guys sound like the racist you historically are. That's number one.

(19:51):
Number two. They're statistics and then there's statistics. And if
the statistics are saying that X amount of people are
this this demo or this demo, then maybe you want
to consider that there's something going on here and maybe
your first reflexive response shouldn't immediately be to race. But again,
these are not serious people they don't have any genuine

(20:14):
concern or any genuine motivation to go and solve any
of these issues or figure figure it out. I don't know, Steve, Like, Steve,
do you mind if I ask you? Because you you're
in DC? Yeah, yeah, I'm here kitson Sunshine neighborhood. Right,
everything's just coming up roses. Some of you got gum

(20:35):
drops and all that.

Speaker 10 (20:36):
Sometimes, yes, sometimes have you how many?

Speaker 2 (20:40):
Let me, how many people do you know that have
been the victim of some type of crime, whether it's
like robbery or having their car stolen or even assault,
just in DC.

Speaker 10 (20:51):
Yeah, yeah, no, not a lot of assault. It's a
lot of carjackings. It's including mine. I was not in
mind when mine got robbed, but that was years ago.

Speaker 5 (20:58):
But it's it's definitely like a lot of it's a
lot of young children doing a lot of stupid stuff
essentially what it is. And it's in these neighborhoods where
people whether you know, with getting pushed around with just
no parents and you know, they're just being relentlessly attacking
stupid stuff, whether they get their hands on.

Speaker 2 (21:17):
That's insane. Now see you now why I can listening
to that? Why isn't the question? I mean, whatever, you know,
Cesspol Network, we just played why wasn't the question, what
in the hell is happening in these kids' homes that
these kids are running around the streets because it is
a I mean it's juvenile crime. I mean that's the
car stuff, that's a lot. I mean we've got headline

(21:38):
after headliner for headline. I went back and I was looking,
why isn't that the question? I mean, they immediately go
to race, but I'm like, you, these are these are
actual miners and what I mean miners like they're not
eighteen that are running around and doing this stuff, so
you're not allowed to police it?

Speaker 9 (21:55):
Well, I think it's it's sort of shining the light
on their no cash bail and all of these their
issues that DC had.

Speaker 2 (22:01):
Well, yeah, but why isn't it like Okay, The reason
I bring this up is back in I guess it
was the eighties and it was the early nineties. I
think I actually only heard it on the television one time,
but they used to put this PSA out and it
was after your local news, right, so the local news
comes on in our area growing up in Saint Louis,

(22:24):
it came on at like ten o'clock, yeah, and they
would have the local news and at some point I
can't remember if it was after the news program or
if it was in the middle of the news program,
they would go, parents, it's ten o'clock. Do you know
where your children are?

Speaker 9 (22:38):
That's when they would do it. Ten o'clock at the
top of the hour. It would be like the top
of the hour ID for these TV stations back then.

Speaker 2 (22:45):
Wow, So I feel like, let's go, let's revisit that question.
Parents in DC, do y'all know where your children are?
Because that Why is that not in the issue being discussed? Right?
Can I just add it aside? Is that just because

(23:06):
people didn't know where their kids were in the eighties
and nineties, I'm about this like.

Speaker 9 (23:10):
That clearly there was a problem of kids and their
parents not knowing where the hell they were, or else
they wouldn't have to put this nationwide PSA out in
the nineties.

Speaker 2 (23:20):
I feel like my mom always knew where I was.
I will never forget the first time I could actually
drive my car and I had an old Buick Skyhawk
and at one point this is not going to be
a long story, but it is worth the ride, So
just buckle into the tugboat. But just to give you
an idea of how horrible this Buick Skyhawk it was,
you know, it got me to where I needed to
go loudly, you know, and and with not a lot

(23:43):
of fanfare. But I noticed, and I remember I was
at a stoplight and I was making a left handed turn,
and I was listening to some Rolling Stones, right Sympathy
for the Devil, I think it was, And I noticed
at one point, because you know how they have the
ooh oohs and that song like ooh ooh, there was
an extra ooh in there and it sounded quite flat,

(24:05):
and I thought, the heck, that is this? What is
this what I'm hearing? And I turned down my music
and when I apparently I have been like quietly, not
so quietly, flatly honking my horn because of some kind
of circuit short every time I turned left, I was
honking at everybody and I didn't even know it. And
it wasn't like a ah ah, it was a ah

(24:28):
And every time I turned left left, and I had
no clue until I was listening and to the Stones,
and I was listening to Sympathy of the sympathy for
the devil, and there was an extra ooh in there, and.

Speaker 11 (24:39):
It was whoah.

Speaker 2 (24:40):
It was just not harmonizing with the other oohs. And
I'm like, oh my gosh, that's me the calls coming
from inside the house. I had a point with us,
was my point. I was going somewhere with it. I
immediately fell the tug book went off, came unhooked, and
we're all over the Mississippi Now. Point and talking about

(25:00):
all of this is that you know it at some
point I parents have to be held responsible, especially if
their kids are miners and they're running around doing this.

Speaker 12 (25:13):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (25:14):
I remember my mom pulled up to Applebee's because I
had I drove my Buick Skyhawk to Applebee's and I
was sitting there with my friends in one of the
front tables by a window, and I was eating Caseyites
and we were doing homework and my mom pulled up
in her car with a but well she doesn't smoke anymore.
She had a cigarette just perched. It was stuck on
her lip. It would just stick there, you know, it
was like an art. And she pulled up and I

(25:35):
could see her Clint eastwooding me from the car, just
making sure that I was there and the applebe's and
then she drove away and we're like, that's that's Gale.
That's that's Gale coming up. But anyway, she always knew
where I was. She there wasn't And I think I
was too afraid to do anything too drastic because that
woman could be mean, like what him mean? And I

(25:58):
didn't want to get beaten today within an inch of
my life and dumped into a creek. So you know,
I did not try. I did not do anything. I didn't.
You know, to this day, whenever I go for a
wooden spoon in my kitchen just to cook, I'm like,
oh gosh, I WinCE every time I grab it, right,
Or if I see someone take off a flip flop,
I'm like, ooh, and I you know, I kind of oh,
got to take a moment, just adjust right. It just

(26:20):
there's little triggers, right, So what about these kids? Where
are their parents at? Where? Why is it everybody else's
problem that these parents are doing their jobs? You got
all these kids running around the street. If I would
have done oh my gosh, oh my gosh, I don't
even think. I don't want to think about it, fam,

(26:41):
I don't want to think about it. If I had
done anyth Kate, if you would have been running around
stealing people's cars, would you please tell everybody how your
mom how mam? A litle would have responded.

Speaker 9 (26:52):
Oh my goodness. Well it did start off with wooden spoons,
then they broke.

Speaker 2 (26:57):
Then those she broke a wooden spoon on you.

Speaker 9 (27:00):
Oh yeah, nice and robust wooden spoon. And then remember
the one the plastic spatulas would come out. Oh those,
and the silicone and plastic spatcheos. Then those, yeah, those stung.
And then when we got older, well a whiffleball bat
is what worked well on us.

Speaker 2 (27:17):
Never got that. Have you ever gotten the dreaded uh?

Speaker 9 (27:21):
The switch? Oh yeah, I got the switch before, but
it was from Grandma, wasn't from mom or dad.

Speaker 2 (27:25):
You know what I did one time I went out
only time Grandma ever told me I had to go
cut my own switch. It's like digging your own grades.

Speaker 9 (27:33):
What you had to do.

Speaker 2 (27:34):
She had a willow tree that we just murdered, all
these grand kids hanging on it all the time, like
ornaments on a tree. She would make me go out
and uh hitted me a big old pair of scissors,
and I had to go and cut my own and
I'm like, if I can cut it with scissors's not
gonna be. So I got the little wimpiest thing I
could get.

Speaker 9 (27:50):
Bad move because it was a bad move. I learned
that lesson too.

Speaker 2 (27:53):
Yeah, because then when I went in and I was like, oh,
I cut one, She's like, oh, I don't think that's
gonna do and she goes, that's okay, I have one
right here, and she got me the only thing, the
only way. It was like a vampire steak basically is
what she pulled out from behind the sofa, Like, oh
my gosh. I never got whipped with it though, because
that was a favorite, so she never.

Speaker 9 (28:11):
Whenever I got the smallest one because I thought I
was being smart as a kid and get the smallest,
little wimpiest thing off the tree. Mm hm oh that stings, yeah, oh,
the small one.

Speaker 2 (28:19):
I just feel like we need to bring back corporal punishment,
make discipline great again. But there's a problem. These people
don't want to be responsible for their kids at all,
and it's a it's a it's a big issue, and
this is really what's I mean. You can sit here
and You can do all this stuff in DC all
you want to. But if I mean, if the problem

(28:41):
is parents aren't monitoring what their kids are doing, then
that's going to continue to That's it's never going to
be solved. So why is it that all of these
you know, anchors like at the MSNBC that we played
in the CNN, they're gonna talk They'll talk about, well,
why does it look like used targeting black and brown?

Speaker 10 (28:57):
Why?

Speaker 2 (28:57):
I don't know. Why can't you tell me why these
juveniles are running around the streets where their parents are at?
Where are their parents? Why don't you dive into that?
If you if you profess to claim so much about
the issue, and that's not something you're going to fix
with welfare, right, I know, it's like really hot within
some of these idiotic Republican circles to fetishize government welfare
and pretend, oh, this time it's going to work. That's

(29:19):
like it's like Frodo looking at the ring, going oh yeah, well,
maybe the one ring in our hands, we can use
it for good. That's never worked. You can never take
the government and use it. Government will corrupt you. The
government's the thing that corrupts. But this is not going
to be something that's solved with a you know, ultimately

(29:39):
a federal takeover or anything else unless they bring to
bear punishments that are penalties that are so bad for
the juveniles that are that are driving this crime with
a lot of this, that the families are going to
go wait a minute, and you know what the families
are going to do. They're like, oh, this isn't fair. Yeah,
well it's not fair that you, you know, your spawn

(29:59):
is running a terror campaign all around the neighborhood and
you won't lift a finger to stop it. I mean,
you know, it takes a village apparently. But I think
that the penalties are going to have to be so
great that it's gonna snap the parents into caring, if
only because they don't want to have to deal with
the fines associated or be inconvenienced by having to take

(30:22):
a kid to like some sort of like court ordered
anger management or court ordered whatever. That's the only way
that it's gonna happen. That's the only way. I mean,
reducing the school to prison pipeline. There's a lot more
to it than just government involvement. I mean, it really
it starts in the home and it's not something that

(30:43):
you can do with federal government, state government, local government,
et cetera. And you have all of these you know
hosts that all I mean, they act like being black
is a beat, Like, oh no, this is our singular
beat to report on being black? Well, why don't you
talk about parenting and how the absence of it is
really driving a lot of this. We're gonna have more
on this as well, and then we're going to get

(31:03):
into dudes as cheerleaders, but not the ones that throw
the chicks up and catch them in the air. Can
we have a conversation about that, Like apparently there's like
I'm going to run out of time this segment. I'll
explain coming up as we move. The partners that help
bring you this portion of the show, the folks over
at Webroot. Because so much is done we live we

(31:24):
just live in a digital society, right, I Mean, that's
just the way it is. We live in a digital society.
So many things are done online and as a result,
you're going to want to increase your protection. If you're
looking for reliable digital protection that is not going to
slow you down, and that can be even be expanded
if you want to include your entire family, you need

(31:45):
to check out Webroot. They have powerful, affordable options for
individuals and families. Think of it like you get car
insurans when you're driving, you know, it's kind of like
having car insurance when you're surfing the world wide Web,
real time protection against malware, ransomware, fishing, built in fire
while network monitoring, web threatshields that blocks malicious websites. It's
compatible with pretty much everything. Password manager, system optimizer that

(32:08):
gets rid of all the digital clutter. But you also
get identity protection that's for your kids, student, seniors, dependents,
your parents. Think of it for everybody up to a
million and def related expense reimbursements. You also have advanced
dark web monitoring, credit and financial monitoring with alerts, identity,
health status updates. You can get a VPN for five
or ten devices, unlimited cloud backup and restore, and you

(32:30):
can protect I mean so much. There's so much that
they offer, and you can get fifty percent off of
all of this webroots Total Protection or Webroot Essentials by
going to webroots dot com slash data. Now this is
only available there. Webroots dot com slash Data for fifty
percent off of webroots Total Protection. Live a better digital
life with Webroot.

Speaker 7 (32:49):
Get the load down on the latest news with a
side of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to the Data
Show podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 9 (33:00):
Like Sands through the Ale Glass. So are the days
of the United States.

Speaker 3 (33:06):
Six individuals were charged with aggravated assault, which is a felony.
The white guy insided or urged six other people to
commit a felony.

Speaker 13 (33:16):
The method by which this situation has been handled raises
serious questions as to whether there has there's bias involved
in the investigation. It also brings into questions the possibility
of your lack of integrity and whether there's something else
to hide.

Speaker 2 (33:33):
Oh my gosh, can we just Am I the only
person who is like, stop fighting like a bunch of
dumb asses in the street? Am I the only person
who has that viewpoint? I mean, if you, I just
I don't even understand why this is such a fire
like a fiery story. I mean, yeah, it's uh, what

(33:54):
do they say they got out of the bar? Things
have been crazy. It's a brutal assault. I know a
lot of people are trying to make into a racial issue,
and I think there's probably obviously some of that, particularly
with some of the media coverage after and that's that
was that Cincinnati story, and they had law enforcement come out.
Then there was this is this the way? This is
the story that was uh uh, this is so this

(34:15):
is the Cincinnati viral beating body cam. Wow, what a headline.
So apparently the footage that was released and this was
from Fox. Six people injured, led to six arrest apparently,
and this was the July one. The guy in a
green polo shirt in the video told Cincinnati police he's

(34:36):
sixty two years old. Sixty two years old, Why are
you out to fight in the street for I mean,
if you're looking at me to defend anybody in this
I got really big news flash for everybody. I don't
like to. I mean, if you want to act like
a hood rat and fight in the street, and that's
for everybody involved. So I don't know. They said, oh,
I was in the bar and it got crazy, et cetera,

(34:57):
et cetera. I got some Oh my gosh, I really
would rather drowned to death than like involve myself in
this story. It is so stupid and apparently somebody said
there was a slur that was said, I don't know, Kine,
I don't care. When you fight in the street, you're
probably gonna get hit.

Speaker 9 (35:14):
Yeah, drunk people do stuff, isn't That's what happens.

Speaker 2 (35:20):
I know, Like at some point, I at a certain point,
was like it was in my twenties. I'm like, I
don't like this type of environment. It's too chaotic, it's
too loud, there's too many drunks. I don't want to
be around this anymore. And I just you know, I
don't do that kind of stuff. I don't go around
that type of stuff. And I'm just like, you don't
no offense. But you're sixty two years old and you're

(35:41):
going out and you're bar crawling, and then you get
into a fight at a bar. I just I just don't.
I don't like that whole scene. I just am not
into that. It's just what do you think is gonna happen?
You get people on the street, everybody's drinking, something's gonna
pop off. That's how it always happens. And then you
have everyone want to swoop in and make it about race. Now,

(36:02):
Like I said, in some instances, it's kind of hard
to deny, especially when you see the way the media
covers it. Media entities absolutely inject race into it and
they make it all about race. But I don't know
they were arguing over who swung first, et cetera. We
got a lot more on the way as we roll
towards second hour.

Speaker 10 (36:21):
Stick with us.

Speaker 2 (36:22):
We have a Florida man on the way as we move.
The folks who help bring you the program and make
it possible. It is relief factor. All of these people
are giving me inflammation problems. They're inflaming everything. Caine, I
just take a giant bag of relief Factor and just smack.
I can no. If you're tired of waking up every
day in pain and think and think you just got

(36:43):
to deal with it, live with it, you don't have to.
There is a drug free supplement that is designed to
help manage aches and pains naturally, and that's relief Factor.
It actually works. My husband takes it because he has
all these old hockey and football injuries and he's you know,
it helps him, especially his knees. It helps him with
his knee problems. It really targets inflammation and it helps

(37:05):
to support joint health. Now relief Factor combines several powerful
ingredients things like turmeric, omega three, fatty acids, resveratrol, and
more drug free all developed to support your body's natural
healing process. You do not have to stay stuck living
with pain. Try relief Factors three week quick start for

(37:26):
just nineteen ninety five. That's less than a dollar a day,
and you can support of out of renowned company and
see the difference for yourself. That's Reliefactor dot com or
call one eight hundred and four Relief one eight hundred
the number four relief.

Speaker 6 (37:37):
Government is taking over the policing of a major American city.

Speaker 14 (37:41):
Washington, DC.

Speaker 9 (37:43):
The President is doing this not in order to make
the city safer, that's the job of local law enforcement,
but to solve his own political problems.

Speaker 2 (37:54):
Just gagny So yeah, that's a secretary mayor or new
mom booty Juice who desperately wants to run for president.
I've never seen anyone thirst for something besides maybe Gavin
Newsom and Hillary Clinton for something so much in my life?
Can we just not make what are you saying? What
are you saying?

Speaker 9 (38:13):
Can you imagine a Booty Juice and a Kamala Harris
ticket for Democrats in twenty twenty eight.

Speaker 2 (38:19):
I want to die.

Speaker 9 (38:21):
It makes me laugh out loud.

Speaker 2 (38:23):
No, I don't want to even think about it. Welcome
back to the radio program The Horrors Persistence, So do
we We're at the top of the second hour. It's
going to be with you, Dana Lash the chats at
Rumble and you can also find us x elsewhere he
is trying. So why does even need to weigh in

(38:43):
on this? Can I just before I wade into this
issue because I came up with a great business idea
and I'm going to share it with all of you.
I think we all could really get together and make
this happen, right, But I got to address the booty juicing.
Why why is he involved? Why is he giving a

(39:05):
hot take? Oh, he's got to look like he's present
in the conversation. That's why he's got it. What for relevance?

Speaker 9 (39:13):
I mean you already touched on it that he has aspirations, Kalie.

Speaker 2 (39:22):
I don't know what he thinks that he would do,
but he's already peeped. Pooty juice. Pooty juice, I said,
pooty juice. They're actually just trying to run all his
name together that actually works. We may take a vote
in the chat to see pooty Juice is just a
good alternative, substitute, a substitute for this. Yeah, so you
know him vice Admiral of the camp Whoope taka canoe fleet.

(39:46):
So he's trying to seem present and involved and like
he's he's still here. Guys, Hey, it's him. It's that guy. Yeah,
it's it's him. He's just as a spicy as a
cornflake that one. Let me tell you it's a spicycle flake.

(40:07):
No idea, what's happening here. He's got his hot tache
and he's wrong actually in a couple of things. When
he's saying that, well, this was local law enforcement, do
you realize how many and I was looking for at
a couple of things on this. There are a lot
of these in terms of law enforcement in Washington, d C. Specifically,

(40:30):
there are a lot of things that are actually federalized.
And that's one thing apparently that poop Booty Juice doesn't
seem to understand. But they had all the talking points
that went out talking about the crime being reduced. Cain
and I were talking about and Steve on break because
Steve lives in DC. The number of crimes that are
perpetuated by juveniles, and Steve was even saying that he

(40:53):
can tell you how did you say, it's Steve? Sorry,
you said, like, I can tell you like what street
corner and during what time of day to not be.

Speaker 10 (41:00):
Yeah, It's like that's how I keep myself safe. It's
like I know where the kids will be a what
time of the day. You just you don't go to
dupon a.

Speaker 5 (41:06):
Certain dames, you don't get certain blocks of Navy Yard
at certain times of the night.

Speaker 9 (41:09):
You just avoid it.

Speaker 2 (41:11):
Mmmmm, that's wild. So it's that maybe yeah, she does.
And part of this is no is the no cash bail.
That's also a big disaster, uh, And that's contributing to
a lot of this. Now you have the military preparing
to put National Guard troops in Washington, d C. To
fight local crime and youth violence and all this stuff.

(41:33):
And we're going to get into the application of that here.
But you want to hear my business idea. Okay, So
if Democrats aren't going to do anything about the crime
in that area, I mean, just a bunch of kids, right,
and they're they're like organizing and it's a racket, Well,
why not just muscle in there and take it over
like Sylvester stallonegoing into Telsa, like Tulsa King. You know
what I'm saying, rolling heavy, just take it over, run

(41:56):
them kids, and then you guide yourself a business enterprise
and gentlemen, I mean hell if law and order don't matter. Look,
I follow the law because the law tells me to,
not because I want to necessarily all the time, right,
I choose to be lawful. That's why I'm a law
abiding person. I'm not harmless. I choose to be lawful.
But if you take that expectation away in a particular

(42:19):
geographical area, I'm always I will always look for a
way to maximize advantage for me and an opportunity for me.
I have zero issue with rolling in heavy and just
taking some over and running my own business enterprise. Kine.
I'm saying, this is what we and the listeners all
get in on.

Speaker 9 (42:38):
But is it a business enterprise?

Speaker 5 (42:39):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (42:40):
Is it what they're doing, it's hey, if they don't
see anything wrong with it, I don't either. Look at that,
they're going to want to implement lawn order when I'm done.

Speaker 9 (42:50):
Is this where two wrongs make a right now.

Speaker 2 (42:52):
No, No, it's just it's all doesn't matter. There's no
sign values to these concepts. How dare you try to
bring some kind of morality into this equation, sir? We
are only talking about whether or not is advantageous to us.
That's it.

Speaker 9 (43:06):
I see.

Speaker 2 (43:07):
That is the only thing that matters in this kind
of world.

Speaker 9 (43:09):
I do have our time focusing.

Speaker 2 (43:11):
See when when democrats are running stuff and they're telling
you that there's no moral fabric or basis here. Okay,
I'll be here, huckleberry. Sure, there's no moral basis here
to any of this. All right, So let's I can
take this over and run this. He'll be good. I'm
not going to say it'll be like animal kingdom, but
you know, and we'll run it, and we'll make some business,

(43:34):
all of us. We'll have our own little business enterprise.

Speaker 4 (43:37):
You know.

Speaker 2 (43:37):
We can each take a section of the pies. What
I'm saying, Right, So Steve wants to be able to
walk down to DuPont at a certain time that previously
he was not able to walk around DuPont at a
certain time because of the threat to his person.

Speaker 9 (43:50):
So we get a piece of the pies. So we're
selling pies.

Speaker 2 (43:52):
Sure you want to call it that, because he knows
the people who deal with pies. Unless he went in
on this, uh, then he's cool to walk whatever the
hell time he wants to down at that particular.

Speaker 9 (44:02):
Straight any business idea with pie.

Speaker 2 (44:04):
If you want pie, Kane, we'll throw some pie in them.
Actually for it, we'll throw some pie in what kind
you want.

Speaker 9 (44:09):
Whatever the piece, whatever the piece, you don't.

Speaker 2 (44:11):
Care about the fruit in it, you don't care about
no fruit picky? All right, Well then then there's no
role for booty juice then, so that's you know, I'm
just saying, listeners, this sounds like a viable concept for us,
and I'm open to entertaining this.

Speaker 9 (44:26):
You know, we could be looking for some back some
financial backers on this idea.

Speaker 2 (44:30):
So yeah, I don't mind, you know, in this particular
area where Muriel may or Murilil Bowser brother's character. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
I mean, you know, I don't mind like showing up
at some of these democrats doores and be like, hey,
would you like to help assist this this this business endeavor,
and in return, we won't jack up the front of

(44:52):
your house? How about that? That sounds that sounds like
a good deal, Caane. I would take that deal. You know,
if I came to my door and was like, hey,
so would you like to support our very honorable business
endeavor and there's pie yes and if not. I'm not

(45:13):
saying that your front door may blow up, but it might.

Speaker 9 (45:16):
But see, and then that person who's front door that
you know may blow up, seems like they could use
like insurance of some.

Speaker 2 (45:22):
Sort exactly, we can ensure that your front door won't
blow up support our I mean, I'm just saying that
sounds like a you know, I.

Speaker 9 (45:31):
Don't think anybody's ever thought of it.

Speaker 2 (45:33):
But Dana, that sounds like another type of crime, says
Goody two shoes. No, you know, but it's not in
this area because they've already said that that morality is irrelevant,
all right, throw that out the door, okay, all right, morality. Yeah,
that's just more business opportunities for us, that's all right.
So I just want to make sure Democrats really want

(45:55):
to do this, because I've got the business plan already
drawn up in my head. Man, I got everything set
up ready to rock. I just, you know, do they
really want to do this? So they've got National Guard.
They'll be rolling in and uh, I mean it is
that is kind of crazy. You know this and think
of it, Caine. You know, we're going in with the
structure to take over this business that's kind of already

(46:18):
somewhat established. You know, they've been these kids, they got
all they already got to figure it out. They already
know who they're going to target, what time they're going
to target, what areas to target.

Speaker 13 (46:26):
You know.

Speaker 2 (46:27):
Yeah, it's just you know, it's simple enough. I'm just saying,
and uh, we we got that. We got that infrastructure,
so we can roll on into that infrastructure, Kane and
and take it over. And it's part of it's already
there built for us.

Speaker 9 (46:39):
It's like turnkey. It's like buying an already existing franchise.

Speaker 2 (46:42):
You know what that is, my friend, That's what we
in ABYSS call savings. That's what that is. Makes all
the sense in the world, right, invite me to all
your parties today is no, it's not Friday, but this
is how stupid the news that this is how dumb
it is. So in addition to that, uh she uh

(47:07):
and Mayor Bowser. I was looking at some of her
audio here got Lee Mayor Bowser and then you oh,
then you've got Andrew mcah Let me play this, Andy McCabe,
Andy McCabe audio sound bye ten. This one's a doozy
check this.

Speaker 14 (47:22):
Policing night by night on the streets of DC is
a very different thing. And I can tell you that
FBI agents are not trained to do that.

Speaker 9 (47:30):
That is not what they do.

Speaker 14 (47:32):
Most FBI agents were not police officers before they came
into the FBI. Even the most tactically astute, highly trained
FBI agents, those who serve on SWAT teams. I know
this as a former.

Speaker 9 (47:44):
SWAT team member. They don't know. They don't do community policing.

Speaker 14 (47:48):
They don't walk beats the way that police officers do.

Speaker 9 (47:51):
Every day in a day and day out.

Speaker 14 (47:54):
And if FBI agents don't have that skill set, I
can tell you for sure national guards people don't have that.

Speaker 2 (48:00):
Why in the hell does a National guard need the
skill set of walking around talking to people like a
local beatcop. Look, y'all failed to keep the law and
order in DC. Now here's where it gets interesting. A
lot of the criminal justice system, and I was mentioning
this earlier, is already federalized in DC it's already under
federal government's control. The problem is that they're just doing
a horrific job of it. So y'all messed it up

(48:22):
over there. This isn't about walking the streets and talking
to people. That opportunity has passed you by, mister Andy McCabe.
It already passed you by. So you you ran out
the goodwill on that, you ran out, You ran out
the time on that one. The issue is that everything
from I mean you're the way that that I've understand,

(48:46):
and there was a couple of pieces that have been
that have dove deep into this, looking at the even
the basic local trial court DC Superior Court, it's you
have to have the Senate confirmed the members of that court,
which technically made that a federal court. That's you know,
they don't like and that's one of the un sexy
things that they don't really want to focus on in

(49:07):
the Senate Senate majority of leaders. They don't want to
spend all the floor time sitting here going back and
forth over local trial courts in DC. But and then
I think out of the and this was a piece
I think this is about axios thirteen out of sixty
two Superior court judge ships are actually vacant, So your
court's understaff by twenty percent. Right, federal government they also

(49:27):
do the pre trial supervision. They're also doing a horrible job.
This is from Politico the Congress, which dives into the
title of this is the liticrous system that makes it
so hard to fight crime in DC. And a lot
of this is because the federal agencies they're running it,
they do a horrible job of it. Now, this isn't

(49:47):
Potus's fault. We're talking about how they're saying that there's
no basis to have a federal response to this. Well,
you already have federal response to this. None of you
people are doing the proper job and following through and
keeping streets safe. So yess he does have the right
to do this. And I think also dealing with some

(50:10):
of that is particularly with these judge ships that are
that are vacant. I mean, when you've got what you're
under your courts are understaff by twenty percent. That's something
that Potus can definitely put pressure on the Senate to manage,
and that's something I think that'll probably do. But this,
I mean having a curfew sending in federal law enforcement,

(50:32):
especially because they've said that this is about a very
specific problem and all elected local officials have just abandoned
their posts. What did you think was going to happen
when you're not doing your job and your citizens that
you were elected to represent are drowning in the crime

(50:52):
as a direct result of your soft on crime policies.
How did you think that this is going to end?
You know how the Libertarians aren't even really objected into this.
They can't. They're like, well, that's kind of what happens
when locals aren't the local elected officials don't do their jobs.
Our friends over at All Family Pharmacy they have everything that. Okay,
so you know what I'm actually getting ready to look
at because I get my emergency kit. So I'm going

(51:14):
to do this right now. I get my emergency kit.
I got two there, and I've gotten antibiotics there and
what else? Have I gotten all kinds of stuff there?
I mean, I don't want to sound like a drug dend,
but I get a lot of like really good essentials.
At All Family Pharmacy, they have everything from nad plus,
they have Methyline blue, They've got i mean, antibiotics over

(51:36):
two hundred antibiotics, and the best thing about it is
that everything is made here in the US of A. Right,
everything is in the US of A. All their precursors,
everything one domestically sourced materials for all of their medications.
And you can get everything in like two to four days.
If you need it overnighted you need in a pinch,
they can overnight it to you as well. And so

(51:58):
this is what I really like about them. Go to
All Familypharmacy dot com slash data and use code Dana
ten and that will get you ten percent off of
your entire order. And you can check out their full list.
Like I said, they have absolutely you know everything. I'm
looking right now at their stuff for motion sickness because
I'm going to have to get to go on this

(52:18):
MRC cruise in Norway. I'm going to have to get
because I get motion sickness just to have it, and
so I'm going to get it at All Family Pharmacy
so I don't have to go. You get your doctor's prescriptions,
you get everything that you need. All Familypharmacy dot Com
slash data use code data ten. I'm going to use
my own code and get ten percent off of your order.
And check out their full list as well.

Speaker 6 (52:40):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (52:46):
All right, So, first, Potus is delaying a terrifiic on
China for another sixty days, and that's that's something. That's
what the third time I guess that that's been delayed,
third or fourth time, they signed an executive order delaying
a set of tariffs on Chinese goods for at least
ninety days, extending that ceasefire in the US Chinese trade war.

(53:08):
Per White House via CBS, the president's order is going
to keep tariffs at thirty percent that was set in
mid May. Both countries have a great to temporarily back
off a set of these tariffs. Going back and forth,
it exceeded one hundred percent. Now the agreement was last
set to expire Tuesday today, and without without an extension,
you would have seen tariffs on Chinese goods like at

(53:29):
eighty percent. So they're going to remain at eighty percent
until late or ten percent sorry till November tenth. And
then an additional twenty percent that was imposed earlier this
year due to fentanyl that's still in place. So technically
it's all still at thirty percent. So they said China
is going to maintain a ten percent tariff on US goods,
so those are still those are still there. Oaysis Stars

(53:52):
Liam and Noel Gallagher wanting to keep quiet about Trump
on the US tour always is coming to the United
States anyway, here's Wonderwall. But they said that, they said,
don't jeopardize your comeback tour. Just don't.

Speaker 7 (54:07):
I don't.

Speaker 2 (54:07):
Nobody wants to hear a brit run their mouth off
about it either, right, like, we don't go over there
and knock your daughters out of the hands of the
Pakistani grimm and gangs and Rotherams, So you don't come
over here and try to tell us our business. You
know what I'm saying. Canada gave it citizens the right
to die. And how drug doctors are struggling to keep
up with demand. I think it's horrible. But also, oh,

(54:30):
I shouldn't say this out loud. In some instances it's
like a self cleaning oven. It is, but this is horrible.
The youth. They have a Youth in Asia conference they're
deally with doctors can't keep up with it. That is
just so sad to me so incredibly sad. We have
a lot more, including golf carts versus Supurbia. Stick with us,
it's our friends over at Patriot Mobile, the only Christian

(54:52):
conservative sel phone service in the country. Patriot Mobile not
only wants to save you money, but they also want
to make sure that you stay connected nationwide coverage you
can trust. They operate on all three major networks, so
you stay connected wherever it is that you go. They
have plans tailored for singles, families, businesses of all sizes,
doesn't matter, and they also provide coverage on all three

(55:12):
major networks. Like I said, in addition to that, they
have one hundred percent US based customer service team. They
can make you They can make it easy for you
to switch. You don't even have to go into the store.
I mean, you don't have to go into the store.
You can stay home. I mean it's so easy to switch,
no no store visits, no hassles. It takes minutes. And
if you want to keep your number and keep your
phone or get entirely new everything, it's up to you.

(55:32):
They will activate you within minutes. And they also support
the issues that you vote to protect. Every time you're
at the ballot box. Visit Patriot Mobile dot com slash
data or call nine seven to two Patriot and get
that free month of service using promo code Dana Switched
today and defend freedom with every call and text you make.
That's Patriotmobile dot Com slash Dana nine seven to two Patriots.

Speaker 7 (55:51):
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 12 (56:02):
Hey President Trump, it's time to stand down. It's time
to make another phone call to Greg Gavitt. This time,
instead of calling him and telling him your quote unquote
entitled to five congressional seats, it's time to tell him
to stand down. It's time to recognize that democracy is
at risk. It's time to dare I say, do the
right thing? Actually see see how that feels for you

(56:25):
doing the right thing. If you don't, California will neutralize
anything you do in the state of Texas. California will
continue to punch above its weight. We believe in democracy.
We believe in the enduring values of our founding fathers
two hundred and forty nine.

Speaker 2 (56:40):
Oh my gosh, we're not talking about passively. We're not
going to jeevus gee b us. Welcome back to the program,
Dana lash with you. Their process for redistricting, though in
California we've talked a little bit about this. It's not
they can't just Gavin Newsom can't go, oh, well, we're
going to redistrict. He can't do that. They have a
whole commission that's set up separate of that, that runs
all of that go through this independently elected commission. There

(57:03):
are so many I don't want to say checks and balances,
but they have an independent commission that they have to
go through that that runs the that runs everything on this,
and they determine what's going to be done, when it's
going to be done, how it's going to be done.
They don't they don't have the same ability like he

(57:26):
Texas the governor can actually call for a special session
and to deal with redistricting, and California does not have
that freedom. And I also don't think that there are
going to be enough Democrats that are going to go

(57:46):
along with it anyway, because it's it's like distracting at
that point. I mean, how are you going to in California,
which is already jerrymandered, and you have a Democrat supermajority.
I mean, what's the point. That's just you know, stupid.
There's no they think they're going to try to squeeze
out some of those Southern California Long Beach Republicans. That's
not going to happen.

Speaker 9 (58:06):
No, it's not going to happen. Plus, they wouldn't be
able to offset, like he's talking about the five seats
that were up in play for Texas, because I don't
even know if they have five.

Speaker 2 (58:17):
So in Texas, the governor can call a special election
or sorry, special session for the state legislature to gather,
have quorum and deal with redistricting, right and then through
that they can determine how they want to redo the lines.
In California, the Independent Commission entirely, it's mandated by their

(58:42):
state constitution that the Independent Commission in California handle all
of the redistricting.

Speaker 8 (58:48):
And so.

Speaker 2 (58:51):
Any change to that to allow the governor to even
call a special session to address it, or the governor
to propose, you know, you have to have a ballot
measure and it's two thirds of I mean, you have
to have a ballot measure approved by voters. So it's
not the same thing. It's not remotely the same. And

(59:13):
he's just all he's doing here is just saber rattling
and trying to make it look like once again he's
got a take. Welcome back, Dana lash with you. These
runaway Texas Democrats, they're still out there. Kindergarten. I mean
a lot of schools are starting.

Speaker 8 (59:31):
I saw that.

Speaker 2 (59:31):
Let me pull this up. I saw one lawmaker, so
we asked on a couple. I mean, I really don't care.
I think they're nothing Burger discussions to talk to any
of these Democrat officials, honestly, but like James Tallerico, none
of them have any interest in coming on and discussing anything.
Of course they don't because they've abandoned their voters. I mean,
heaven forbid they answered to that. But the school seasons

(59:57):
are school you're starting, They're going to have to go
back to school. I was reading pull this up. It's
on my prep. I was reading in one paper this
morning where some lawmaker was sad because he's going to
be missing his daughter's first day of school kindergarten. This

(01:00:20):
is so goofy. Texas Democrats cope with exodus, and apparently
one of them is going to be absent when his
daughter starts kindergarten this month. I mean, if that's the
choice that you want to make, don't pretend that that
you're doing anything for voters. You're not. Because you left
your job, you abandoned your post. You didn't stay and

(01:00:41):
fight it, you abandoned it. You can't win elections, and
so your response to your inability to win elections is
to run away. That's sad, but it does sound like
they're kind of struggling right now. They're running out. I mean,
they're running out of options because now you got the
court decision. How for the people that pack, which is

(01:01:04):
really using this to fundraise it's better or work, and
his stupid power for the people better or workers just
a tool. I mean, I don't mean like he's you know,
he's a tool for what however you want to interpret it.
He's a tool for them to use. And they didn't
have a lot of cash on hand. Lest I said
that had like two hundred thousand. They don't really have
a heck of a lot of cash on hand, but

(01:01:24):
they are. They can't fund them, They can't fundraise for them,
et cetera. They had Kristin Welker, JB. Pritzker was on
with MSNBC and he was struggling. This is audio somebody
at seventeen. He's struggling to answer because they're asking him
about the hypocrisy of all of this. How do you
listen to this?

Speaker 15 (01:01:44):
Well, look, sticking on your state's map, every major group
that grades the fairness of congressional maps gives your state
an f Common Cause and nonpartisan government watchdog even says
your map, and I'm going to quote represents a nearly
perfect model for everything that can go wrong with redistricting.
And I guess the question is, you talk about preserving democracy,

(01:02:06):
how do you preserve democracy if you're using the same
tactics that you've criticized Texas Republicans for.

Speaker 9 (01:02:13):
But, as I say, what they're talking about is a distraction.

Speaker 7 (01:02:17):
The reality is that the violation of people's voting rights
is what Texas is attempting to do.

Speaker 9 (01:02:23):
That's what's wrong with their efforts.

Speaker 12 (01:02:26):
Right.

Speaker 2 (01:02:27):
Oh, so, correcting the turfed to the max wicked wild
district lines that Democrats drew prior and making them a
little bit more uniform and allowing them to reflect the
increase in population that if you want to talk about

(01:02:51):
disenfranchising voters, refusing to acknowledge that more voters have come
to the state of Texas, you have more people voting
and refusing to apportion lawmakers so that they're fairly represented.
That is what is disenfranchising voters. Not simple, I mean

(01:03:13):
holding these screwed up lines and actually, you know, you're
you're a lot of people are just not gonna have
a representations. That's not upholding the integrity of the voting process.
That's a stupid answer that Pritzker gave because he didn't
want to talk about how hypocritical it was to literally
use the same tactics and have for forever in Illinois
that he's trying to criticize Texas Republicans for. And even

(01:03:35):
then that would only make sense that that's what Texas
Republicans were doing. You go and look at the way
the thirty third and thirty fifth districts are drawn in
the state of Texas, and then you tell me that
that's not some of the dumbest stuff you've ever seen
in your life. It looks like a child's drawing. I'm sorry,
like a really bad child drawer too.

Speaker 9 (01:03:51):
Can San Antonio and Austin be in the same district.

Speaker 2 (01:03:55):
Well, I think of the three to thricting Magic Full Medical.
They run down thirty five, so it's called thirty fifth.
They run down that highway. So you just it's just
the stupidest thing ever. If you stay on that highway,
you can vote O wa Yes, stay worth then the highway.
But it does feel like they're kind of cracking. It's
very very hard for them to keep this going. It
gets more and more ludicrous. I don't know. I mean,

(01:04:17):
the hypocrisy is pretty obvious. Jeene Wu, the CCP's Gene Wu,
Oh my gosh. He goes, we had to leave the
state to stop this corruption. That's what he was saying.
We had to leave the state. He goes, we're gonna
we'll stay as long as it takes. He's like almost
seeming like he's trying to cry. He's like, it's not easy.

(01:04:41):
We're trying to hold on.

Speaker 9 (01:04:42):
So if I'm a constituent of Wu's, he's just admitted
that he won't fight corruption. He will run away, Yeah,
from corruption. That is correct, Yes, if that's what he
believes is happening. Corruption correct, And he chose to flee
in the face of corruption.

Speaker 2 (01:05:02):
Ye okay, just making sure he's like there's stress. Then
he tries to act like he goes. They're threatening to
use the FBI on this. They're harassing our families. They're
trying to break into people's No one's breaking into anybody's house.
You absolute CCP syop. No one's doing that. It's corruption
when Republicans do it. But when Democrats do it, oh
my gosh, they're so noble. You guys are so holy.

(01:05:25):
It's I don't know. You have to wait. How do
you save democracy by like not having it? That's a thought.
The Democrats have been doing this for ages. The first
time Republicans, the first time Republicans stand up will go
enough and Democrats are losing their minds. We're doing our

(01:05:46):
buats to hold on. Oh, they sounds so tough. They
run such they have such tough arguments, and they run
their mouths, and then they go and hide out of state.
And then they say, we're trying to hang on. We're
trying so hard. This is just it's so goofy. But
it does sound like, uh yeah, it does sound like
they're they're cracking at this point. That look this is

(01:06:08):
not something they're going to be able to hold fast
to Texas voters. Even Democrats get really aggravated at stuff
like this because there are a lot more things on
deck than just the redistricting. I mean, you've got property
tax relief. There's a number of things. I mean, I'm
most interested in the property tax relief. I know, Dan
Patrick is you know, fetishizes THHC banning everything that you
know has those letters in it. But you know, there's

(01:06:29):
there's some really big things that are on deck and
denying people that relief because you have to look at
it like this too. Democrats, you know, Democrats don't support
property tax relief. They don't even they think you shouldn't
even own your property. So they're denying voters relief. They're
the ones actively working to disenfranchise voters because they're denying

(01:06:50):
them representation by refusing quorum. And if they didn't like
the outcome of redistricting, then they should have a won elections,
and then b they should have been working in the
last ten years since the previous redistricting map was drawn
to change the law. But they didn't do any of
that because the law worked in their favor. Then when
They were the ones who able to had this way,

(01:07:12):
to be able to control things and determine what the
districts look like, and control and maintain what they had
managed before the law worked in their favor. Then and
then the second it does it suddenly the law is
no good. The veracity of the law isn't predicated upon
whether or not it's most advantageous for you or not.
It doesn't. The veracity of the law is not predicated

(01:07:34):
upon whether it is most advantageous to you or not.
That is the truth of it. But that's not how
democrats see it. So everyone else is getting screwed. In
the meantime, goodness, the folks that will bring you the
program burn a gun. It's always good to diversify your
weapons array because you carry different calibers. You carry blade,
you carry pistols, you carry all this stuff. So why

(01:07:55):
not have something when you are completely disarmed from basically
doing anything due to private property restrictions, municipal and local restrictions.
This is where bernergun comes in. I think it's a
really good remedy for any kind of for the issue
of ken you're a college student who's not old enough
to carry a pistol, but still needs to protect themselves.
Protect themselves. Bernegun is it's a pistol, but it shoots

(01:08:17):
chemical irritant projectiles that can deter threats from up to
fifty feet away. And it's easy target acquisition, no recoil,
legal in all fifty states, requires zero background checks, zero permits,
zero fee, zero anything. It can be shipped right to
your front door. The SD, which is the pistol, it's
the best selling model, and then the new CL which

(01:08:37):
is more compact. It's smaller than the SD, but you're
not losing on any kind of power with it. You
can go and choose your color, the accessories, all kinds
of stuff, but it's a great way to diversify your
weapons array and make sure that even when you're not
able to carry or maybe you're not old enough to
carry out, but you're like living out of town for college,

(01:08:59):
this is an option you really need to consider. You
can visit Burna dot com slash Dana and check out
the new Berna c l B y r Na dot
com slash Dana. It's his life.

Speaker 9 (01:09:11):
Mission to make bad decisions. It's time for Florida Man.

Speaker 2 (01:09:19):
So a Florida fisherman smiled after minutes after a shark
attack that left him with a bloody leg. Well us Cybergs,
remember that restaurant that had shark chock. There was a
young Florida fisherman. He was attacked by an eight foot
bull shark while on the gulf. The shark bit his knee.
He was hauled into the boat for safety, and he smiled.
He said it was quote a giant, gnarly flesh wound.

(01:09:42):
That's hysterical. He's a little he's a young man, but yeah,
he's okay. But yeah, bull sharks pretty aggressive there. He
was a discharge from the hospital twenty four hours later.
I'm sorry, I'm just am like, you get bit in
the leg by a shark and you're out of the
hospital twenty four hours. That's crazy. I mean, I'm not
saying that there was like somehow negligence. I just think

(01:10:02):
it's great that we're able to assess and treat these
things and then, oh, you gotta hit by a shark,
You're out the next day.

Speaker 9 (01:10:07):
It's almost like they have experience with it down there.

Speaker 2 (01:10:10):
Almost you would think, right, I mean, it's you would.
It surprises you really, you know that things in the
beach with teeth. You know that they have experience in
dealing with those. Okay, I gotta get into those one
because I saw those. A Miami woman slapped a seventy
two year old in an argument over a chair at
Aventura Mall's Italy. Now this is Italy, all right, This

(01:10:35):
is the Italian grocery store where we don't do this
stuff at Italy. We don't do this at Italy. You know,
this is where you go and if you don't want
to make your pasta at home, you get your pasta,
and you get your sausages, and you get you know,
your your salami or your purseudo, and you get all
this you know, you get all this stuff. You go
and you get your your Italy. Yeah, you get your

(01:10:58):
your moody tomato and all of your good stuff that
you get you go to Italy. You don't slap five
people at Italy. This isn't a waffle house, ma'am. Okay,
it's not a waffle house. So a Miami woman is
facing two charges. These are felony charges, guys. Police said

(01:11:18):
she got into a fight at the mall over a chair.
Oh and it's a man. She slapped this man so
hard she sent him to the hospital. Leela Trinchero, forty four,
of Coconut Grove told officers that she sat at a
table to eat food and wait for her husband and son.
Then she said she said the table was empty, but
then a woman approached her and said her family was

(01:11:40):
sitting at that table, and then it was like, okay,
well is the table occupied or not. Trenchero begin yelling
at the woman as she took chairs from the table.
Police said when the woman was taking the chairs, when
she took the last chair, Trenchero slapped her across the
arm and they began to struggle over the chair. The
seventy two year old man, who was part of the
woman's party, intervened to break up the fight. She slapped

(01:12:01):
him across the face and he said he had pain
and dizzeyess. I'm sorry, I don't care if you're seventy
two years old. If a woman slaps you and you
have pain and dizziness, you're a pansy and you probably
need to go to the hospital for a serious case
of but her too. If no man is gonna be
I'm sorry, I'm not buying that. Actually, I'm not sorry.
That's just ridiculous. Don't get into Evolved if you don't

(01:12:21):
want to get hit. So anyway, they arrested her on
charges of battery. Can we talk about the woman though
that started it. I'm not saying that this chick is
off the hook. I'm not saying that. But if you're
sitting at a table table's occupied, you don't get to
come over and be like, oh, that's our table, step off, Brenda.
No it's not. It's not your table, no more. But

(01:12:42):
you can't feed into this. People have got to learn
how to deal with conflict, and it's not by struggling
over chairs at Italy and slapping seventy something year old
dudes across the face. Right, although I still I cannot
believe he's got pain and dizziness. I have pain and
dizziness after reading this art. What is my relief? Where's

(01:13:02):
my injunctive relief? Where is it? Good night? You know
how I would have handled this. I didn't see it
being used. It's my table, now, enjoy your day, and
then I wouldn't respond. And then if they kept aggravating me,
I would call the police. And I just literally wouldn't
even respond to them syr we deal.

Speaker 9 (01:13:20):
I just anything.

Speaker 2 (01:13:23):
You deprive them of oxygen when you don't feed it.
This is not the way to handle People have got
to learn how to handle conflict. Everyone goes immediate. It
goes from zero to world star like that. Just quit. Oh,
let's see, Oh my gosh. A Florida dad was arrested
for shaking a baby out of the Naughty in a
Uti kill me Naughty parrot Oasis bar. It was a

(01:13:49):
two month old who was treated for shaking baby syndrome.
After the incident, twenty four year old Florida man arrested
he violently shook his two month old outside of a bar.
Why he was booked into Charlotte Couney Jener was released
on bond and the child's mother so medical attention. The
baby was throwing up. Of course he had shaken baby syndrome.
There were no lasting injuries, thankfully, hospital confirm if he

(01:14:12):
goes into prison, can he get shaken in mate syndrome?
Ask you for some friends, stick with us. Third hour
on the way.

Speaker 16 (01:14:18):
I think it's really important to be clear about what
is going on here and a relatively small crime problem
is being used for specific authoritarian purposes that.

Speaker 2 (01:14:32):
We know and understand.

Speaker 10 (01:14:33):
So let's be clear about DC.

Speaker 16 (01:14:35):
Does have a really one, really big crime problem, which
was the January sixth insurrection incited by the current President
of the United States, and his first act in coming
back was pardoning all the people who tried to overturn
constitutional republic order in Washington, DC. When I go to DC,

(01:14:55):
I'm not afraid of losing my wallet so much as
I'm afraid of losing my vote. Afraid of losing my
wallet so much as I'm afraid that my children's freedom
to breathe will be stolen in a world where climate
change policy is non existent.

Speaker 2 (01:15:11):
Yeah, I'm not worried about climate change car jagging me
in DC, you know. Can I just also add to
it is only it's only August twelfth, So why is
MSNBC giving us like Jack Frost. That's a Christmas character,

(01:15:32):
that's for Christmas time. We don't want to see Jack
Frost out now. We don't want to see Jack Frost
until like December. Kane, Am I right? Welcome back to
the program, Dana lash with you. That was some I
don't even care who that guy is. He looks like
Jack Frost with his hair.

Speaker 9 (01:15:46):
There's some years Texas doesn't see Jack Frost at all.

Speaker 2 (01:15:49):
Yeah, I know, yeah, but no, the issue isn't climate
change or losing your vote. I mean it actually is
crow in the area. And Trump is actually correct on this.
That's the thing. It's such you have local leaders that
have absolutely advocated their responsibility. What other relief can people expect?

(01:16:15):
And by the way, just because you have one specific
incident of one specific particular crime that's down does not
mean universally that all crime is down. And a lot
of people have been asking about the accuracy of the
crime reporting. There have been a lot of questions about that.
There have been people who have been fired as a
result of that. A DC police commander was under investigation

(01:16:39):
because he downgraded crime stats in his district. The guy
was placed on paid leave in mid May. And this
happened after he filed an equal employment opportunity complaint. So,
and he accused the department of deliberately falsifying crime data.
So you have multiple people downplaye and under reporting actual

(01:17:04):
criminal data, and then they turn around and say, well,
look it's lowered in this it's a crime is lowered.
We lowered crime because there's less of it. It's amazing, Kane,
how that happens, right, amazing. So this is the former
commander of the third District, they patrol Adams, Morgan and

(01:17:25):
Columbia Heights. He was placed on leaf with page told
he was under investigation for questionable changes to crime data.
And that's a handful of law enforcement sources that are
still active within the department that told this to the
local news channel in DC Channel four. Now, all of
this came to light a week after that same guy

(01:17:48):
filed a complaint against the executive assistant chief of police
for because the executive assistant chief of police is accused
of absolutely purpose deliberately falsifying crime data. So you can't
even trust these stats that they're using. You can't even

(01:18:11):
trust it. That's that's you know, that's a major problem,
a major problem. The city of two hundred and seventy
four murders in twenty three, one hundred and eighty seven
murders in twenty four. Now they're going to about maybe
one hundred, well it's still short. It'll probably it may
be under one hundred and eighty seven barely, but beyond homicide.

(01:18:35):
Other just because homicide has decreased, does not mean assault, robbery,
carjackings have not increased, which they have. But that's what
they're trying to conflate this and saying that, well, homicide
might be down and homicides down, and so that means
all crimes down because this one stat is down, all
crimes down. Well that's not true. I mean, you have

(01:18:59):
will we talked about big balls. That's what finally got
the attention of Podus, who is so badly beaten. They
tried to kill him in a cart after he thwarted
a car jacking. I mean that, you know. That's and
then they had another they apparently hours after, according to WAPPO,
hours after he was beaten in the street, and this

(01:19:22):
is Washington Post pis they had an issue in that
exact same block or one block away. Neighbors were awoken
again after a Courdestine was beaten in the street. Neighbors
were awoken again and this is from WAPO because a
rowdy crowd of juveniles, some in masks, were beating a

(01:19:44):
man and he was all bloodied. This was the same
night that Courdestine was beaten one block away. A gang
of juveniles did the exact same thing one approximately one
block away. Because they were were woken up twice and
it was like within this it was in this span
of like a couple of hours. DC police have made

(01:20:07):
nine hundred juvenile arrests this year, and two hundred were
for violent crimes. Gosh, over four dozen were for carjacking.
And they're trying to argue that, well, look, homicides are down, guys,
killings are down. This is all good. But what they're
not telling you is that all this other stuff is
actually increased. This is a real problem with this demographic,

(01:20:34):
this age group. Why are all of these juveniles running around?
The wah Post story actually noted that the residents and
they talked to numerous people, they said that they all
saw what they variously described as a rowdy crowd of
teens running around in the streets. That's not safe. Police

(01:20:56):
couldn't find any suspects. That's going to be another thing
that goes into the books. Going to have this crime,
but they're not really going to have anything else with
it to support it, And I how do you do it?
Because by the time police show up, they scatter like
roaches in the night. They had a twenty seven year
old man who was fatally shot blocks away from the Capitol.

(01:21:17):
Oh but wait, I thought killings were going down, and
then you had a thirty eight year old killed and
gunfire in Columbia Heights. None of those crimes made headlines though,
you know, but the killings are supposed to be down.
I mean they are out of control. It's out of control.
And for all the talk about opposition to federalizing the police,
well your judicial system is already federalized. We talked about

(01:21:40):
that last hour. But the issue that has to be
solved and remedied is if local officials are not doing
their jobs, then you are inviting the federal government to
go in and do it. Juvenile arrests are down in
DC this year, but that trend isn't applicable across the
United States and Baltimore, so compare it with Baltimore in

(01:22:02):
twenty twenty four, I think it was four hundred and
thirty nine juvenile arrests per one hundred thousand juveniles. Baltimore
it was almost fourteen hundred as in twenty twenty four alone.
That's a forty seven percent increase from the year prior.
Via the FBI Uniform Crime Reports, New York City juvenile
arrests are up eleven percent and they're rising still. Chicago

(01:22:27):
has seen a super sharp rise. And this you should
not have if you're committing violent crimes. Age should not
shield you from consequence. And yet that's how this is,
that's how this judicial system is treating these cases, and

(01:22:48):
that's why I'm saying you. And remember you have about
a twenty percent reduction in these judge ships because they're
not getting the Senate's not focusing on filling these vacancies,
and so already they didn't want to deal with it.
Now there's even a more incentive to not deal with
it because they're understaffed in terms of judges. So yeah,

(01:23:08):
there's a real mess here. And so some argue the
solution shouldn't be charging them as adults. Here's my question.
If you have a teenager that gets a hold of
a firearm, steals a firearm another home from their parents,
and goes in does crime, everyone talks about the parent,
you know, they talk about the teen and everybody else

(01:23:30):
is responsible really except for the parents, although negligence laws
suggests otherwise. Negligence laws, if a teen steals a firearm
from a home, you can a very aggressive prosecutor will
invoke negligence laws. And we've already seen one killer whose
parents were charged under that type of legal construct. And

(01:23:53):
I bring that up as an example because I want
to know why the same is not being applied to
parents in these situations like this in DC or elsewhere
where you have violent crimes increasing driven by these teenagers. Well,
at some point there has to be a serious enough
penalty to force societal change, especially when local officials are

(01:24:17):
abdicating their duty. So why doesn't that kind of construct
come into play in these cases? I've been asking this
for years now. You have parents who have kids running around,
gang banging out in the street. Where are the consequence
for those parents? Then? If that's the case, because parents,
I mean you guys know where your kids are. You

(01:24:38):
know what they're doing. It is wild to me that
in this day and age a parent would not know
what their kid is doing. I mean I that would
if I was talking to a group of parents and
was like, I don't know where my kid is and
it's eleven o'clock, I'd be like, the hell's wrong with you?
Go home and be a mom. What are you out
here doing? You don't know where your kid is? I
don't know there has to be some kind of solution.

(01:25:01):
Could they say, well, charging kids as adults that can't
be a solution. Why not. I'm gonna tell you some
of these crimes are pretty brutal, and they say, well,
it's not homicide, but if you're beating someone near to death, yeah,
that could be attempted homicide. I think absolutely that should
be on the table. To charge some of them according
to the severity of their crime as adults. They have

(01:25:22):
these signs going up, kids need care, not curfew. Well,
the people who are supposed to be providing their care
are not stop coddling criminals. They thrive off the indulgence
of this virtue signal that you call understanding. It's insane.
I wanted to play this. We're gonna play this at
the bottom of the hour. I don't watch who is this?

(01:25:45):
Is this the Real Housewives stuff? Let me pull this
up some broad I don't know who they. Oh, former,
here's a phrase, former Bravo star. Oh really yeah, I
guess so, I don't know. Some broad was that Trump
voter should be barred from going to minority owned restaurants
because I guess she hates minority business owners.

Speaker 6 (01:26:07):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (01:26:13):
Oh surprise, surprise, Ashley Biden has filed for divorce from
her husband of thirteen years. She posted, I mean, she's
my age. I don't know what a grown woman is doing,
posting an image of herself walking through a park to
this a Beyonce song about freedom, new life, new beginnings
means new boundaries. I mean, get your life together.

Speaker 9 (01:26:34):
Oh my god, I just read her diary. I think
that's where the problem is.

Speaker 2 (01:26:38):
I'd be like, you showered with your dad, You're so gross. Ills. Yeah, no,
one's surprised at that headline. Also this goodness, wait, we're
all what happened here? This is all crazy? So somehow
that let's go up here. Bottling up stress apparently can

(01:27:00):
fuel cognitive decline.

Speaker 11 (01:27:04):
Duh.

Speaker 2 (01:27:04):
I actually I am not surprised with us. This is
a new study that was done and they said that
if you're you know, if you don't vent, you don't
have any kind of release. They said that it actually
could damage what your all kinds of stuff, memory scores,
et cetera, et cetera. I mean, yeah, that's like it's

(01:27:25):
very detrimental it's very dangerous to do. So gen Z
have ditched hookup culture, thank heavens, because it's nasty. Yeah,
hookup culture, they said no, thank you. They're they're rejecting that,
and I think that that's good for them, good good,
good on them. Also, let's see here, caffeinated coffees are
mostly free of toxins, with a few exceptions. I don't

(01:27:46):
care about this at all. I don't care if it
has an alien plague in it.

Speaker 9 (01:27:51):
What wait, Just because it is caffeine, that's all you
care about.

Speaker 2 (01:27:57):
All I care about. I am a very simple person, Cane.
It's all about the transaction with me.

Speaker 9 (01:28:03):
That's why I read the ingredients list. I don't want
I want to know if there's toxins or something in it,
but I'm not going.

Speaker 7 (01:28:08):
To buy it.

Speaker 2 (01:28:08):
But determine that by the package, I think, and what
you're going.

Speaker 9 (01:28:13):
If you do buy, by the way, pre ground coffee,
that's nasty. That's you have about ten percent of that
it's just cockroach pieces.

Speaker 2 (01:28:21):
I don't doubt it. I literally I do know. I
know we do our own beans.

Speaker 5 (01:28:25):
Man.

Speaker 2 (01:28:25):
I don't be I don't be ground. I don't be
buying no ground coffee. Sidebar. I had to. I was
traveling over the weekend for work and I had my
first Starbucks. Because it was in no other coffee available,
I couldn't finish it and I was already sick three
SIPs in. I was like so gross. Yeah, all right. Also,
the Texas floods are washing away to Brian dirt and

(01:28:47):
they also uncovered one hundred million year old dinosaur tracks,
so that's actually pretty amazing. It was fifteen large, three
quad dinosaur foot prints scattered in a crisscross pattern along
the Sandy Creek area. Like what area does not have
a Sandy Creek? By the way, there's like two areas

(01:29:08):
in Missouri that have Sandy Creek, and I swim with
both of them, so I'm like, everybody's got a Sandy Creek.
It's not helpful, like you know, but they had a
bunch of paleontologists out there. They are similar. They're unambiguously dinosaurs,
and they're very similar to the here we go Acrocanthosaurus.

(01:29:29):
That actually sounds correct. That sounds correct. Yes, they think
that there are lots of millions of years old, and
each footprint is about eighteen to twenty inches long. They
look almost fake. I mean, I know they're not, but
they almost look like they could be fake. We have
more on the way so coming up. So apparently one

(01:29:51):
cable news guest thinks Trumper should only stay at Cracker Barrel.
We'll talk about that coming up.

Speaker 7 (01:29:56):
Makes some common sense of the crazy headlines With a
Dana Show podcast, You're on the go guide for getting
up to speed on today's most important stories. Subscribe on YouTube,
Apple or your favorite podcast platform.

Speaker 6 (01:30:09):
During the discussion, residents did not hold back, voicing their frustrations.

Speaker 9 (01:30:14):
Am I playing the system?

Speaker 15 (01:30:15):
Many questioning why kids are being held accountable?

Speaker 11 (01:30:19):
We as a city and a community need to be
much more focused on prevention and surrounding young people and
their families with resources if we want to be safer
in the long run. We cannot prosecute and arrest our
way out of it.

Speaker 2 (01:30:33):
Yeah, you can prosecute and arrest your way out of it.
What else are you going to do?

Speaker 7 (01:30:39):
That is?

Speaker 10 (01:30:40):
Who was that?

Speaker 2 (01:30:42):
I had that highlighted here? Oh the DC Attorney General DCG,
Brian Schwab. We can't rest our way out of crime.
We gotta hug it out, guys, gotta hug it out.

Speaker 12 (01:30:54):
You know what?

Speaker 2 (01:30:55):
Good side hawk. That's what that is. Welcome back to
the show, Daniel, lash with you. DC Police Union chair
Greg Pemberton agrees with Potus, though audio sent by thirty one.
This is what he had to say. Listen.

Speaker 17 (01:31:07):
Well, look, we completely agree with the President that crime
in the District of Columbia is out of control and
something needs to be done with it.

Speaker 4 (01:31:13):
We have to go back to how we got here though.

Speaker 17 (01:31:15):
In twenty twenty, the DC City Council passed an enormous
amount of legislation that handcuffed police officers exposes them to administrative, civil,
and even criminal liability even when they do their jobs properly.
And now five years later, our authorized warn strength is
four thousand sworn police officers. We currently have three one
and eighty, so we have more than eight hundred vacancies

(01:31:36):
for the position a police officer, and the way the
department makes up for that gap is through two million
hours of mandatory overtime every year. So the fact that
we need help from federal law enforcement and maybe even
the National Guard, it shouldn't come as a surprise, and
we agree with that.

Speaker 2 (01:31:52):
Yeah, it's interesting. They already have stats out of the
first night of arrests from the guard protecting DC and
they have a huge So the list that they gave,
I will have to say, I don't think that they're
picking and choosing what loss to prosecute. I think they're
just going after whatever laws. They had. Twenty three arrest

(01:32:15):
last night, homicide, different firearms offenses, possession of narcotics with
intent to distribute, evasion, leude, axe stalking, fleeing, operating a
vehicle without a permit DUI. And then they have a quote,
possession of a high capacity magazine. I do think it's

(01:32:36):
a little ironic too promote that as one of the
things for which someone has been arrested. But I don't
think that they're picking and choosing what laws they're prosecuting.
But I still think it's a little ironic. So which
because that should not be illegal, by the way, So anyway,
that's I don't think that the White House needs to
celebrate the arrest of someone that has a magazine of

(01:32:58):
more than that holds more than ten rods. So anyway,
we'll see. But the rest they got all this other stuff,
uh and uh, yeah, you probably can, I think Kane.
If here's the problem with the statement that that guy said,
you can't arrest your way out of crime. Well, you
actually can, but you've got to follow it up with.
First off, you have to follow it up with application

(01:33:19):
of penalty upon conviction. To there has to be a deterrent.
The problem is you're everybody pleas down, you have no
cash bail, everybody pleads down. There's no I mean, what's
the point of even having a law if you're not
going to enforce it. I mean, it's a set. It
is lawlessness because you can claim that you have the
law in existence. But if you're not enforcing it, and

(01:33:40):
if you're not prosecuting, and you're allowing everyone to plead
down to nothing, then there is no deterrent there. If
you cannot appeal to someone's good sense, please don't commit
a crime. It's bad if you do. You're a bad person.
If you commit a crime. If you can't appeal to that,
then maybe you can appeal to oh my gosh, you're
going to spend twenty five years in jail and have

(01:34:00):
a six figure fine. And if that's what keeps them
on the straight and narrow, I'll take that goodness, because
you can't defend yourself otherwise. There but yeah, you can.
You can't actually a rest your way out of crime.
That's that's absolutely true. I wanted to touch on this
because I thought this was so big in it and stupid.

(01:34:21):
This is gosh. I don't even know who any of
these people are. I had to go look it up.
This is audio somebody twenty two. So this broad's name.

Speaker 5 (01:34:30):
Who is she?

Speaker 2 (01:34:30):
She's like some chick who is on Bravo. They're like, oh,
she's a Bravo former Bravo star and I'm like, who
even are you? You know who this chick is. She's like,
she was on I guess Bravo. And then she does
like I get an interior decorating business. I don't know.

(01:34:56):
She's in her fifties. She's a fifty year old interior decorator.
I don't even know, or interior designer or something. She
was on a show from Bravo, and for some reason,
she was on Fox and while she went on this
explitive filled rant, Listen, I've had it with.

Speaker 4 (01:35:21):
White people that triple trumped. Yeah, that have the nerve
and the audacity to walk into a Mexican restaurant, a
Chinese restaurant, an Indian restaurant, go to perhaps their gay hairdresser.
I don't think you should be able to enjoy anything

(01:35:43):
but cracker barrel ha.

Speaker 2 (01:35:45):
Ha, because see they're crackers. Cracker barrel ha ha. So
she believes that everybody who supported Trump, probably including the
Hispanics and Indian voters and all of these subgroups that
voted Republican overwhelmingly in the last election, that they shouldn't
be able to either. Because she's making no distinction here.
And this is why it's dangerous for people who think

(01:36:06):
they're smart to actually leverage that and like go on
cable news and say this kind of stuff that's really bad.
Would she said triple Trump. Don't even know what that means. Okay,
walk into a Mexican restaurant. You know, there are like
Chinese Americans that have voted for Trump. There are Mexican
Americans that voted for Trump. They're Indian Americans that voted

(01:36:27):
for Trump. She's just like one of these old white
progressive racists who think that there are no minorities that
vote Republican. I mean, that's you can tell. I mean,
she's what she's saying here. She buys into all of that.
She doesn't think that there are minorities that vote Republican,

(01:36:48):
that all the people who vote Republican are white, I guess,
and that they should be banned because of her ignorant bias.
That is one of the dumbest things I've ever heard.
And I wonder she's a former Bravo star. Imagine that
being the line you lead with, what are you? Oh,
a former Bravo star? I can be meaner, but I'm

(01:37:10):
really trying to be a nice person because it's my Monday,
your Tuesday. Trying to be really nice. But can I
have more to say?

Speaker 9 (01:37:16):
Does she consider herself a husband or never was?

Speaker 2 (01:37:20):
That's a great question. I don't know. I've never heard
of her until late today. But and by the way,
if I had to go to I mean, why are
you hating on Cracker Barrel? Cracker Barrel is a good restaurant.

Speaker 9 (01:37:31):
I make that choice often.

Speaker 2 (01:37:33):
Yeah, what is that supposed to be? Like a flex?
You think that's an insult? They should only be able
to go to this great restaurant. Really, okay, I just
what she just thinks that she's so worldly. Apparently that
if you wanted trouble Trump, she goes. If you went
to browbeat Deibe who's browbeating gay people. You know, there

(01:37:55):
are gay people that voted for Trump, that voted Republican,
And she goes, And if you want to browbeat this
generation of immigrants that come here and open up businesses,
I guess she's never met anybody in the KURVR affiliate
area in McCallen, or in El Paso, or in parts
of southern California where you have predominantly Hispanic areas that
are also predominantly conservative. I guess she's never met any

(01:38:18):
of their, you know, any of those people. I just
feel like I can't even say, she goes. No one
wants to see your teeny weeny big gut, pink arm
big gut around. Well, no one wants to see a
fifty two year old woman with an inability to move
the top half of her face because her injector puts
too much botox in it either. But here we are.

(01:38:38):
If you want to be mean, we can be mean.
You just say the word so I don't threaten us
with a good time, right, King, Crackerbail is a great place.
Cracker Bails a really good restaurant. And I just I
don't know where this like, where these people get this idea.
It's always these people who you can tell probably never

(01:39:00):
even left the country, These these old white progressives that
think that all the people who vote Republican and people
who want lower taxes are all white. And they still
believe that they are entitled. They have this entitled view
of how minorities should vote. They are completely clueless, like,

(01:39:24):
for instance, Hispanics. Hispanic Americans one of the and it
is insane fastest growing Republican groups. But it's a natural alliance,
by the way, because the Hispanics are very conservative. Hispanic
Americans don't want any of this nonsense that they see
the left doing. But the left things, they're stupid. The
left things anyone who isn't white and blonde like them

(01:39:45):
are stupid. If you want to talk about the real racist,
that's who they are. Racist old white democrats think that
anybody who is an old, blonde and white like they are,
that you know, well then they're you know, that's the
view that they have, so they have they're clueless about this.
Hispanic Americans have been voting at such a pace, not

(01:40:06):
just last election, to this trend. Actually, I will say
the trend began even pre dating Trump in twenty sixteen,
there were some It wasn't enough for everyone to say
that there was a pattern. But in the midterms leading
into twenty sixteen, there were some things that were very
evident and people were wondering, wow, what, And I think
some people thought it was an anomaly. It wasn't anything

(01:40:27):
anyone even deep dived on. But later on at like
Real Clear Politics and elsewhere, people started pinpointing the start
of this. And it doubled in twenty sixteen with Trump
because a lot of people liked his messaging and they
liked what his policies economic immigration, et cetera. This last
election particularly, I mean, they just like doubled upon all
of the gains that they had in voting with that

(01:40:47):
demographic in this last election. I mean, I go through
all the primaries and caucuses and all I see all
the data, especially when I'm up in like New York
or Atlanta or whatever for networks. You see, they get
the sweeps as they come in, and it is it
is amazing.

Speaker 8 (01:41:03):
It is the.

Speaker 2 (01:41:06):
It's not as you know, Hispanic Americans are number one
Black Americans, and then more and more women Hispanic Americans
and Black Americans are beating women in terms of people
voting for Republicans of were Democrats. But that's changing too.
The youth also is changing, and I think as you
see gen Z get older, you're going to see more
gen z Ers because they seem to be more traditionally

(01:41:27):
socially conservative and fiscally conservative, They're going to be more
and more leaning, I think towards the GOP, at least
that's what early indications are. So when I hear someone
like whoever this, like bravo, whatever person is talk about
this kind of stuff, she sounds ignorant and it's kind
of embarrassing. And if she was a little less self
worship and a little more aware of the outside world,

(01:41:47):
I think that she would probably be pretty humbled by
how she came off, because she sounds stupid. That just
sounds ignorant and racist and old. It just sounds like ugh,
you know, like h So, you know, I don't even
know what that accomplishes for their side, I don't even
know what that accomplishes. Like you're smearing cracker barrel cracker barrel,
and you're commenting on other people's appearances and making fun

(01:42:10):
of how you think other people look without any self
awareness of how you look on camera. I can move
my eyebrows, can you all right? I told you, don't
get mean with me, especially if you're gonna have if
you're gonna have somebody go after someone's appearance like that,
I just chese. They They always think that what is
up with this, like white progressive woman savior mentality? What

(01:42:31):
is up with that? They are all of these older
white women on the left have this progress, this savior mentality.
We're going to come and save all the brown people.
That's what they sound like, without any awareness of how
horrible they come off.

Speaker 7 (01:42:50):
On the go and need a quick news fix with
a fun twist, follow Dana's Absurd Truth podcast for bite
size and formative episodes, perfect for your busy schedule on
Apple or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 2 (01:43:04):
I I'm kind of done with this stuff. So in
cheerleading and college cheerleading, you can have dudes who are
college cheerleaders, but they're the ones who like they're the builders,
they're the bases. They catch the chicks, they throw the chicks.
They you know, and I've known a couple and they
were not gay, like extremely not gay, to the point

(01:43:27):
where we were like, you're gonna dive in STD. I'm
just saying, but in NFL, they can't throw them up
in the air and all that stuff. They can't throw cheerleaders,
so it's more like a palm squad. Right, It's like cheerleaders,
but it's more like a dance squad. Anyway, I had
some friends that were talking about the Someone sent me
this link where it's like, oh, this is the Vike

(01:43:48):
the Minnesota Vikings. They have a male as their lead
cheerleader for football season, not just a cheerleader, lead cheerleader.
And I had someone say, oh, well, you know, he's fine.
He's not dressed up like a woman. He's a good dancer.
I actually, I don't think he's a good dancer. He's
not built like a woman in those moves that they
do or designed to emphasize the curves of a woman.

(01:44:09):
And if you knew anything about dance, you would know
that and shut up. But I digress. I don't want
to see a male on the football field of an
NFL game unless he's running camera reugh in the game,
or he's got a helmet on. That's it. I don't
want to see no little, you know, dude out there
throwing himself around shaking what he does not have on

(01:44:30):
the field. That's for ladies. I am really old school
about this. I don't want to see it, right, I
don't want to see it. I don't want to. I
just don't like it. I don't like it because it
looks like a mockery of the females. And I have
female friends who actually work with NFL cheerleading, and I'm

(01:44:50):
just I don't know, I just I'm not into the men. Look,
this is a man thing. Women love football, but come on,
more men love football than women.

Speaker 13 (01:44:59):
Do.

Speaker 2 (01:44:59):
Minn' want to that out there? Came, why are you?
I mean, what do you say to the people who
are like, well, just you know, give it, you know,
pick your battles. At least he's not dressed up like
a woman. Oh that's the new standard. We got a
lower to that standard. I don't think so. I just
think my personal opinion. I don't want to see no

(01:45:20):
man on that green on the field at an NFL
game unless he is a ref, he's running camera, he's
got a helmet on. That's it. I don't want to
see it.

Speaker 9 (01:45:30):
And why would they put him as the lead.

Speaker 2 (01:45:32):
That's the insult. He doesn't move as he doesn't move
any better then the other than the trick to his left. Well,
audience left his way to set the.

Speaker 9 (01:45:41):
Tone for the entire group. There's no tone he was
setting there.

Speaker 2 (01:45:45):
No he I mean he I did eighteen years of
classical ballet. W I'm me to break it down. He
has no turnout in his hips. His toes are pointed inwards. Still,
he is not as graceful. His moves are jerky and choppy.
He's just not as good as the other women. And
I think the only he's a DEI higher. The only
reason that he's lead cheerleaders because he's a twinkie looking dude.
That's it. But he does not move as well as
those women do. And those are hashtag facts today. Yeah,

(01:46:09):
today's stupidity came.

Speaker 9 (01:46:10):
All right, well and this is cut thirty. So the
DC Police chief, her name is Pamela Smith. She was
asked about the chain of command as it relates now
that Trump has said he's taken over law enforcement in DC.
So she was properly by the media asked the question,
what's the chain of command?

Speaker 4 (01:46:28):
Now?

Speaker 9 (01:46:28):
This was her response to that is what.

Speaker 8 (01:46:30):
The chain of command is? Now?

Speaker 2 (01:46:33):
What does that mean, well, he's speaking of America, so
as the executive.

Speaker 9 (01:46:38):
What does that mean? That's the chief of police?

Speaker 2 (01:46:42):
What do you mean the chain of command the chief
of police? I don't understand the chain of command?

Speaker 9 (01:46:46):
Is unfamiliar with the phrase change?

Speaker 2 (01:46:49):
Or are were they asking her like, are you aware
what's the chain of command? If the Feds come in, that.

Speaker 9 (01:46:54):
Could have been that, but you still still know what
chain of command is.

Speaker 2 (01:46:57):
But still she should understand. She I mean, if you're
going to hold a press conference, you should have been
briefed about that, and you should know how to answer
that that regardless of how it was interpreted or it
was asked, they should have already been brief to handle both. Right,
That's insane. That does it for us tonight. I'll be
on Fox Business later. I think it's an evening edit.

(01:47:18):
Make sure to find us over its substack, chapter and verse, Facebook, YouTube,
black and subscribe. Have a great night.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

New Heights with Jason & Travis Kelce

New Heights with Jason & Travis Kelce

Football’s funniest family duo — Jason Kelce of the Philadelphia Eagles and Travis Kelce of the Kansas City Chiefs — team up to provide next-level access to life in the league as it unfolds. The two brothers and Super Bowl champions drop weekly insights about the weekly slate of games and share their INSIDE perspectives on trending NFL news and sports headlines. They also endlessly rag on each other as brothers do, chat the latest in pop culture and welcome some very popular and well-known friends to chat with them. Check out new episodes every Wednesday. Follow New Heights on the Wondery App, YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to new episodes early and ad-free, and get exclusive content on Wondery+. Join Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. And join our new membership for a unique fan experience by going to the New Heights YouTube channel now!

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.