All Episodes

November 10, 2025 109 mins
The Senate reaches an agreement to end the longest government shutdown in American history. The New York Times puts out a fluff piece pushing Gov. Josh Shapiro has the best chance for Democrats in the future. Democrats everywhere are being accused of “caving” to Republicans. White Progressive women got arrested for protesting outside of a Chicago ICE facility. Trump gets booed while swearing in service members at Commanders game.

The International Olympic Committee is looking to BAN trans people from competing in female Olympic events. New studies show the RAPID decline of trans identification. A CNN contributor is upset she is going to lose her eyebrow technician over losing clients who can’t pay for their services with their EBT cards. Dana reacts to Trump proposing a 50-YEAR mortgage for homebuyers to lower monthly payments.

Transportation Sec. Sean Duffy gets in a fight with looney Katie Porter over private jets being able to fly. A Southwest Pilot GOES OFF on the government shutdown and urges passengers to call their Senators. Stephen Yates from Heritage joins us to recap his experience traveling with the Administration to Asia, Japan’s new Prime Minister, Chinese ownership of American land in Missouri and much more.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
So many people across this country are desperate for the
government to reopen. At the very moment that they do
that final vote, I will call all House members to
return to Washington as quickly as possible. We'll give a
thirty six hour formal and official notice so that we
can vote as soon as possible to pass the amendedcy

(00:21):
Our Bill and get it to the President's desk. As
you all know, and he said as recently as last night,
I was with him and he told the press he said,
we want to get the government open. He's very anxious
to get the government reopened and to end the Schumer shutdown.

Speaker 2 (00:33):
We all are, well, it finally happened. Well, there's still more.
There's still more to do before everybody gets super excited
about it, because you know, you have to go through
the House and you've got to go through it in
that vote I think is expected on Wednesday. I don't
think there's going to be a don't foresee a problem
going through the House because it wasn't the House that
had the problem in the first place.

Speaker 3 (00:53):
It was the Senate.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
It was the Senate that was fighting with it and
dealing with everything. So this is the shutdown has ended
well technically, but then you have to have, like I said,
this vote in the House, and that is I think
they're saying Wednesday for that. I think it's Wednesday that

(01:18):
they're going to be doing that. So that's going to
be the latest. I'm actually looking at some of this stuff,
and then we've got all of the stuff the people
who voted to end this shutdown, what tweaks were in it.
There were a lot of fights over stemmy checks. I
don't like that people don't understand the reduction of purchase

(01:41):
power that comes with us.

Speaker 3 (01:43):
We're going to talk a little bit about it. I
thought Carol Roth was great with.

Speaker 2 (01:45):
It on social so all of I don't really know
what Democrats have gotten from this. I mean, I really
don't see what winds they have. But like I said,
we're going to get into all of it. Also, they've
broken open into a complete and total civil war on
the left as a result of their votes on this.

(02:08):
I think I get the impression that this is like
the last.

Speaker 3 (02:16):
Gasp the left. I think this is.

Speaker 2 (02:20):
The last gasp maybe of the more moderates in the
Democrat party is how I'm looking at this, Because I
don't know if they're ever going to be able to
muster because they had eight of them muster the votes
needed to do something like this again. So we got
a lot to unpack get into. And it's actually a
cold day in Texas. It's a cold day falls here.

(02:43):
It's officially fall. So welcome to the program. Dana lash
with you. Actually, what is the temperature here today? I
gotta look at it, look at it. It is, Oh
my gosh, it's fifty degrees. Light the fires, the beacons
have gone to or lit. Light them all up because
holy wow, it's fifty degrees. Cane, it's fire weather, it's fitty,

(03:03):
it's cinnamon weather, all of that.

Speaker 3 (03:07):
All right.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
So yeah, so the uh shutdown is ended. I say
that with air quotes. So the Senate advance is it now?
Everyone's like, well, what is happening now?

Speaker 3 (03:20):
Like who?

Speaker 2 (03:21):
Well, you know, Fetterman was one of the was one
of the votes for it to get to actually for
this to get to end the shutdown. You had eight
of these Democrats that voted for this, and I know,
I didn't even think there was eight Democrats to vote
for this. You had Fetterman, you had Maggie Hassan of
New Hampshire. You also had Tim Kane, Tim Kane, did

(03:47):
you think you'd hear that name? Tim Kane voted end this.
I think they were starting to see some of the
writing on the wall, I do now. I know a
lot of people were like, well, you know, the the
election that took place was largely decided based on the economy. Yes,

(04:09):
I don't disagree with that, but I also think that
I don't necessarily think the shutdown played as big of
a role as the left wants to think. But I
do think that that had it gone on, if we
were in like a greater election cycle like midterms, than
perhaps you would have maybe seen a little bit differently.
But anyway, so you have Tim Kaine. Yeah, there were

(04:30):
a lot of these, I know, Angus King of Maine,
Jackie Rosen of Nevada, Jeanine Shaheen, Jean Shahen in New Hampshire.
So these are the kind of you know, more moderate
ones that ended up voting for this. Now and they all,
you know, they had eight of them who crossed the line.

(04:50):
Now they're they're oh my gosh, they're Democrats are in
a full on war as a result of this full
on war as a result of this. They're very upset
at these people that voted. They said, oh, you just
gave them. I don't know where they're talking about. You
gave anybody anything that they wanted. That's just kind of stupid.
But they had this vote yesterday, and then Rowe Kahana

(05:13):
of California said that as a result of this, Schumer
is no longer effective and he needs to be replaced.
So they are mad at Schumer. They want him out
as a result. They're blaming him for caving on this stuff.
That's how they're looking at it. So you had Schiff
who also said he put out a video after he
had a no vote. I don't care about any of
these people. Do you care about anything?

Speaker 3 (05:33):
I don't care about any they lost.

Speaker 2 (05:35):
They ended up losing it because they were getting their
butts whipped in the court of public opinion. So now
the Senate advances it, and we'll see what happens from
here on out. But you know, as much as we
talk about the civil war on the right, the one
on the left is I mean, they're just trying to
figure out what degree of socialists they are. That's ultimately
what it's all about now. In this isn't the only

(05:57):
bad news for Democrats. You also have and we'll talk
a little bit more about this coming up. Uh, the
Supreme Court ruling the Scotus has declined a case challenging Overfell,
Democrats hardest hit. This has to do with excuse me,
this has to do with same sex marriage. And Democrats

(06:17):
are saying that that that Potus is going to over it.
This is this is the same argument that they've had
from the from the get go. So that's also bad
news for them. They're having some bad they're having a
bad day. Democrats are not starting their week out the best.
Now I'm pulled up this other stuff. I have all
these windows open. The some of the promises that came in.

(06:43):
There were a couple of things that conservatives were a
little nervous about. The two thousand dollars check for every
American thanks to the tariff revenue. That's a stimulus check.
You realize that, and everyone's like, well, it's our tax
dollars anyway, shouldn't we get it back?

Speaker 3 (06:57):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (06:57):
But at this but at the same time, do you
realize what you're doing with it. That's like when you're
at Chuck E Cheese and you play. You spend like
ten dollars to get a long string of tickets, and
you end up using your tickets your winnings to go
and trade them in for a stuffed animal that was
made for fifty cents in China. That's literally the equivalent

(07:17):
of this. Can I feel like I'm very very happy
with my comparison there? Wouldn't you agree? That's pretty accurate.
It's just like paying ten dollars at like Chuck E
Cheese or something or Davenbusters, and then you get all
these tickets and then when you go to redeem them,
you get a fifty cent made in China toy. And
that's supposed to be like a big thing. You're supposed
to be very excited about that. That's that is exactly

(07:40):
what this is like giving out. Yes, it's tech, Why
don't we just cut taxes if we have all of
this money to give away, cut the damn taxes. I
don't want redistribution of income. That's exactly what this says.
This isn't a conservative proposal. For the love of all
things holy, this isn't a conservative propose. It's so leftist.

(08:02):
You got Democrats out there rushing to rub all over it.

Speaker 3 (08:05):
It's such a leftist proposal. Stop it.

Speaker 2 (08:08):
Just cut damn taxes for everyone. Don't sit here, well,
just give two thugds. No, it's like again spending ten
dollars to get a made in China fifty cent thing.

Speaker 3 (08:19):
You're you're killing.

Speaker 2 (08:20):
You're you're killing how far your dollar, how much your
dollar is able to purchase, You're killing your purchase power.
It ruins it. It's a bad thing in the long run.
So that's that is one of the uh, one of
the proposals that was coming through. And then of course
we're going to get into the fifty year mortgage.

Speaker 3 (08:37):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (08:38):
But in the meantime, now we have looking at democrats.
I saw this fascinating piece over at the New York
Times because everybody's been discussing, well, what are we going,
what are what's going to happen in twenty six, what's
going to happen with midterm, what's going to happen in
twenty eight? Who is who are Democrats going to push

(09:00):
out there? I mean it's they're struggling to discover the
front facing avatar, their avatar of identity. New York Times
has the story man Donnie isn't the future of Democrats
this guy is? And you know the photo that they used,
you know the individual that they said, it's Josh Shapiro. Interesting,

(09:21):
is it not. We talked about him last time around.
We thought he would have been, I mean, a dangerous
nominee had Democrats actually you know, elected to have him
instead of going with Kamala Harris or even going again
with Joe Biden. But the reason that Josh Shapiro didn't

(09:42):
get it is because these Jewish and Democrats are notoriously antisemitic.
Although some on the rider A given him a run
for their money, Oh you know, it's true. So there
The New York Times said, you know who would be
a good candidate. This guy would be a good candidate.
It is never going to happen. It is never gonna happen.
Josh Shapiro has a better chance running as a Republican

(10:05):
than he ever does than he ever will running as
a Democrat. It's just not gonna happen for him as
a Democrat. There's no way that they're gonna go, No
way they're gonna go for that. They were talking about
the Centrists and their party. There aren't even enough Centrists
and then of the centrist the centrist elements within the
Democrat Party, there aren't enough to carry something like that

(10:30):
within their base, Like within their party, there are not
enough to pledge for it. This is not gonna happen.
I mean, I'm I think he would be an incredibly
dangerous candidate for Democrats. But if he was going, if
they were going to pick him, they would have picked
him this last election because I think he would have run.
I think he would have run, and I think he

(10:51):
would have I don't know how well Trump would have
done in the Blue Wall had Josh Shapiro been running. Now,
he's horrible on policies, Josh Shapiro's, but he's can't believe
I'm saying this. He's seems more reasonable than the AOC types.
We're going to dive into this this hour. We also

(11:12):
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Speaker 4 (12:18):
Should social media influencers register like lobbyists? Some in Congress
are proposing that paid social media influencers publicly disclose who
they represent, especially if they're being paid by foreign countries
for their causes. Check out the Watchdog on Wall Street
podcast on Apple, Spotify, wherever you get your podcasts.

Speaker 5 (12:38):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Danta's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (12:45):
All right, So first up, so.

Speaker 3 (12:48):
Wait for this to slowly load here. For some reason,
it decided to freeze.

Speaker 2 (12:52):
Trump is threatening to see the BBC for a billion
dollars over edited coverage of him. Do you realize how
many times they had to have already issue different retractions
for stuff the BBC. That's something we're going to dive
into here coming up. But I don't think that he
may necessarily lose something like this. Also, Scotus is going
to hear a Republican lawsuit that could dradically restrict mail voting.

(13:17):
So it's a major case. It has major implications. They're
going to decide whether or not mail in ballots have
to be received by election dat account or if it
merely must be sent by then I think it should
be received by election day if your ballot is not there,
I mean, if we're going to have mail in, you know,
mail in ballots, and if your ballot is not there,
then that's kind of your problem. You know, if you're

(13:39):
and I, that's just the way it is. You don't
like it, Tough, tough. It's so easy to cheat this system.
It is so easy. I told people that I've gotten
mail in ballots for people who are fraudulently registered at
my home address, and I had to fight with the
Board of Elections to get those struck. And it's not
an easy thing to do, and a lot of the
people that govern that they just don't even care. I
don't care it's a couple of votes. What if it's

(14:02):
more than just a couple aliens?

Speaker 3 (14:04):
Guys? Alien?

Speaker 2 (14:05):
An alien ship releases seven jets with a glowing halo
as it nears the sun. Please, dear Heavens, that's all
I want for Christmas is an alien spaceship to come
into clear war on Earth. I'm so bored with all
the infighting, and you know that we hate the Jews
from the right and the left.

Speaker 3 (14:22):
I'm so tired of it. So I would love that.
I want that.

Speaker 2 (14:26):
But they said it's okay when someone's an alien expert.

Speaker 3 (14:30):
How are you an alien expert?

Speaker 2 (14:32):
This is all subjective, right, So I can't even take
seriously this lead. They go an alien expert claims it's
the space turret up in the sky.

Speaker 3 (14:40):
Remember that grew tail.

Speaker 2 (14:41):
They're saying, well, it's actually looks like it's an alien
ship with a complex jet structure. How are you an
alien expert? There have no been There have been no
aliens here that we know of, And I seriously doubt
that a guy would advertise himself as an alien expert
is going to be one of the guys that they
let into this top secret base somewhere out in the
desert to go and look at the alien stuff.

Speaker 3 (14:59):
Don't you agree?

Speaker 2 (14:59):
Kne So, I can't take any of that. It just
it feels like such a letdown. Nobody hates the shysters
in the alien world more than me because they kill
my hope. Makes me sad. I don't even want to
talk about the flight cancelations over now. Just when you
this headline was added in over at eleven hundred flights
canceled Sunday. Do you know that those cancelations have climbed

(15:20):
to now over three thousand, well three, that's also with
I think fifteen hundred delays, But then that's also the
cancelation That was just a piece that I read this
morning and this is going to happen until they have
that vote, which I think we're looking at Wednesday, so
we'll see. I don't know Kim Kardashian took the bar
exam and failed. You know, she was doing an apprentice

(15:42):
ship for years because in California you don't have to
necessarily go to law school. You can actually do an apprenticeship,
and that's what she was doing. And apparently she took
the bar and failed on her first try, so I
guess she's ready to try again. I mean, you know,
it happens sometimes, and trans genderism is in rapid decline
amongst young Americans. So all the people who tell you

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Speaker 3 (16:31):
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Speaker 2 (16:32):
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(16:52):
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Speaker 3 (17:09):
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Speaker 6 (17:26):
The Dana Is 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. As a betrayal
and that.

Speaker 7 (17:41):
Voters will remember next November.

Speaker 3 (17:44):
What do you say to Bernie Sanders?

Speaker 8 (17:47):
Well?

Speaker 9 (17:48):
I think what I'm saying is, what was your strategy?

Speaker 10 (17:50):
Man?

Speaker 9 (17:51):
What was your endgame? If we're going to extend the
shutdown another week, another month through Christmas Thanksgiving? Is that
going to get us anywhere? The point is there never
was an endgame. If the initial strategy didn't work, and
now we have one, we're going to have, as I say,
a guaranteed vote on the ACA.

Speaker 3 (18:11):
M well, that's true. What would you have done? I mean,
that's the thing.

Speaker 2 (18:15):
You can't just sit there and say I don't want this,
and if you don't give me one and a half
trillion dollars in spending for illegal aliens and for government subsidized,
taxpayer subsidized healthcare, we're not I mean, that doesn't work anymore.
That's not something that's working. Clearly, Democrats are starting to
very slowly realize this. Welcome back to the program, Dana

(18:36):
Lash with you. We're at the bottom of this first hour.
It's Monday. I don't like Mondays. Nobody likes Mondays. They
are I was telling Kine this on break because all
of the drama is happening over at Blue Sky, which is,
if you don't know what it is, kind yourself lucky.
Actually we can all kind ourselves lucky because none of

(18:58):
us are on it. But the Blue Sky is it's
like a stupider ex and that it's all the left,
and they decided that's when they all left X when
Elon Musk purchased it, and then they all went to
Blue Sky and they rage at each other in a silos.

Speaker 3 (19:17):
That's kind of all it is.

Speaker 2 (19:18):
And if you are anyone on the right, the second
you open an account, all you have to do is
go HI and they ban you. You're banned, You're out.
They will mass report you and you're out. Your mere
existence is offensive. Your mere existence is too much for
their weak and gentle constitutions to manage. And thus you

(19:42):
got to go. So that's where all of the fighting
is happening. Apparently on Blue Sky. It's just they're having
a real one over there right now. That's the best
way to put it. And this is what happens though,
when you allow your nut jobs to run your party.

Speaker 10 (20:00):
Hmmm.

Speaker 2 (20:01):
I don't think that the shutdown has much to do
the shutdowns singularly. I think that you have to parse
this stuff out. I think the economy was the big
driver of it. I think that the you know, the
shutdown kind of fed into it, but not the way
that Democrats want to because keep in mind that whenever
there's been a shutdown over any election period, it's never
worked out well for Democrats.

Speaker 3 (20:20):
Despite their rhetoric.

Speaker 2 (20:22):
And again, I go back to twenty ten, I go
back to twenty twelve, you can even go back.

Speaker 3 (20:26):
Before then into the nineties.

Speaker 2 (20:27):
It's never benefited Democrats the way that they say, because
people are like, well, wait a minute, the government shutdown.
This is not, you know, really disrupting my day to
day life. So I don't care, and they're not wrong.
They're not wrong. They're really trying to amp up the
shutdown as it relates to airports and the delays and
the cancelations. But a lot of that also is that

(20:48):
they ran Department of Transportation. They didn't do anything apparently
with the FAA. I mean, the FAA needs overhauled. I
don't think anyone's debating against that. But they didn't do anything.
They just saw it. They just let it go. I
still honestly have no idea what the hell these people
did for the last four years. I legitimately don't know
if if the continuation of the world depended on any

(21:08):
of us being able to accurately state something that that
Buddha Juice did or that he did that had a
positive impact on his department, we would all die because
there's no we don't we can't come up with anything. No,
they're in an open war. And then in the meantime,

(21:29):
the worst of the worst of their ideology is now
going to be running New York and apparently they're going
to be raising property taxes based on skin color. That's
one of the things that he's called that he's called
for during his election. How does that work for his election?
He's called for raising taxes on certain communities because of

(21:49):
due to skin color. He said that the Reciti's residential
property taxes are inequitable. What that homeowners living in neighborhoods
populated by minorities pay too much in property taxes, he says,
and those that live in wealthier, wider neighborhoods don't pay enough.
So he said it's time to shift the burden. He

(22:10):
wants to end the cities. What he calls on you know,
he doesn't pay taxes, right because he doesn't even live alone.
He doesn't even he owns nothing. Unbalanced property taxes, and
that's what he's saying. So they're wanting to do a
reassessment of everybody and look at the neighborhoods. They want
to lower the payments for people like you know, who

(22:31):
are in Jamaica, New York or Brownsville, and then they
want to increase them in the really swinky Brooklyn Brownstone area.
That's good luck there in New York. Good luck, good
luck for that with that one. You know, there are
people that are supportive of that. It's a major I mean,

(22:53):
there's a I mean everybody voted for him is supportive
of that. He talked about that quite frequently. Although now
he's being criticized because he promised free bus rides and
apparently now he realizes that you can't do that, and
so that's one of the other things that he's being
criticized over because they're saying that he's starting to walk
back some of the freebies that.

Speaker 3 (23:12):
He was advertising.

Speaker 2 (23:14):
I don't know, but his demands, I mean, his people,
by the way, have already been making serious demands.

Speaker 7 (23:22):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (23:23):
For instance, the New York Post had a very interesting
piece because they because now he's mayor elect. So he's
mayor elect. Now the swearing his swearing in is set
for just after midnight. I think, what is it coming
up on New Year's Day? So we got free busses,
free groceries, free childcare, free everything.

Speaker 4 (23:47):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (23:47):
Linda Sarsaur do you guys remember her from when was
she When did was she really prominent? Was it like
eight years ago? And she's always just remained there. She's
a rabidly rabidly, rabidly rabid bigot.

Speaker 3 (24:01):
She is a major leftist racist and bigot.

Speaker 2 (24:04):
And apparently she's described as a mentor to him, and
I guess he's going to somehow install her in some
fashion in his cabinet or at least in his inner circle.
She was co chair of that Women's March on Washington
when they were protesting Trump's first term, and she was

(24:28):
she kind of had to leave. She was run out.
She's Linda Sarsauer's the female Nick Fouines. They both love Islamists,
except you know, she actually sleeps with members of the
opposite sex. But they they both have like the sound,
It's true. They both have, you know, the same position
on the Islamist stuff, and they both hate Jews. And

(24:50):
she one of the reasons that she had to leave
is because she excluded anybody who is Jewish from participating
in the upper levels of that women's march. In twenty seventeen,
she had said, quote, one cannot be a feminist and
support Israel at the same time, which I don't even
understand what that means. She denounced the United States. She

(25:12):
said that it wasn't the land of the free, home
of the brave. She said it was the land of
genocide and slavery. And now she rallied. At a private
Soros conference or sorry so must conference last week, she
said that if you do the right thing, you'll keep
your job. And she's meaning you'll keep your job in

(25:32):
his new administration going forward. So I don't know what
that means to do the right thing, you know, I
guess that means you have to promote all of her
insane hatred as a policy. And I think she's looks
like she's going to be She's with care, she does
a lot of work with care, so it looks like

(25:53):
she's going to be really there pushing all of this stuff.
Remember one of the other things she said, she went
after the Somali born Ian Hersili, saying that she was
asking for a beatdown. And then of the women that
were criticizing Islamism, Islamism, she was saying she said, quote,
I wish I could take.

Speaker 3 (26:14):
Their vaginas away. They don't deserve to be women. End quote.

Speaker 2 (26:19):
We actually play that on air when at the time
that it happened. So yeah, And by the way, she
was criticizing Ian Hercili, who's the victim of female genital mutilation,
as it's a practice of Islamism. So yeah, that's who
is up there whispering in man Donnie's ear. In the meantime,
they're all bitching and moaning at each other on Blue

(26:40):
Sky over the shutdown and who voted for what. I
feel like that's the least of their concerns. That and
them all promising that they're going to start taxing people
based on race. The smart thing that Republicans would do
is to make everything man Donnie does. They need to
brand that as the Democrat Party for for the Democrat

(27:00):
Party as a whole.

Speaker 3 (27:02):
They have to brand it.

Speaker 2 (27:04):
Everything that he does, it has to be tied to
the national party because ultimately that's what they all are.
I mean, that's that's that's what it is, that's what
they're all going for now. In the meantime, in Chicago,
they've had didn't They attack ice facilities more in Chicago? Okay,
so did you see what happened? And this was insane.

(27:25):
There are a group of suburban women. There are a
bunch of white progressive females, and they got arrested in
Chicago outside of an ice facility because they were disrupting literal,
you know, routine business. And they apparently one of them

(27:47):
told the press per this piece that they hoped to
use their quote privilege as white women end quote to
stand up for immigrants who couldn't do for themselves. Y'all
can't even define what a woman is. How the hell
are you going to use your privilege of it to
do anything? And these aren't immigrants. These are people who
entered the country illegally. They committed a criminal action, and
then they continued committing criminal actions, which is why it

(28:08):
was pretty easy for them to be hunted down and detained.

Speaker 3 (28:12):
But they tried this.

Speaker 2 (28:15):
They were trying all kinds of stunts, and of course
there were more things being thrown at ICE agents, but
they had all of these women, every single one.

Speaker 3 (28:21):
Of them were arrested. It makes me happy.

Speaker 2 (28:25):
That's just just the smile that it puts on everybody's faces.

Speaker 3 (28:29):
It's so nice.

Speaker 2 (28:30):
So they apparently were accused of like grabbing agents and
all kinds of stuff, and they ended up getting I mean,
when you get handsy, you end up getting you end
up getting detained. They're having a real one up there.
They're having a very difficult time, very difficult time. But
this goes back to what I was saying before we
went to break consider all of this, and then consider midterms,

(28:54):
and then twenty eight and this New York Time. I'm
going to save this piece, this New York Times piece
about Josh Shapiro, because I just when even the New
York Times knows what the Democrat Party has to do
to be successful, but they won't do it because there's
such rapid bigots. It's stunning. It's absolutely stunning. That's never
going to happen. I'm surprised that they got eight senators,

(29:16):
eight Democrats in the Senate, beyond Fetterman to do this.
Like when I saw Tim Kaine going towards that, I
almost fell over. Tim Kaine voting to shut downs insane.
That's how bad there fight.

Speaker 3 (29:26):
Let him fight. Let them cook, guys don't in a rut.
Let them cook.

Speaker 2 (29:30):
We have more on the way, including the BBC drama,
also the Oh gosh, we got a lot. So the
head of Syria is going to be meeting with the President,
and I think people need to understand that it is
way better to have a pro us anti Iranian Syrian
regime as opposed to a pro Iranian Syrian regime. We're

(29:55):
going to talk about this coming up. We're also going
to get into the trans because now the IOC has
banned ding transgender women from all female Olympic events, meaning
they're banning men who are pretending to be women from
all female Olympic events. Transgenderism is in decline, the mind
virus is now dissipating. We're going to talk about that

(30:18):
and more as we roll ahead. In the meantime, the
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Speaker 6 (31:25):
Get the lowdown on the latest news with the side
of laughs. Whenever you want. Subscribe to their Data Show
podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast,
like SAMs.

Speaker 8 (31:37):
Through the hour Glass. So are the days of the
United States.

Speaker 2 (32:07):
So that's potus. There were a lot of cheers, there
were some people booing. He was swearing in service members
at the Commander's Game, which I don't like to say
Commander's Game. It sounds weird. It's DC, but it's also
in d C. And that's not like, you know, it's
in DC. Is that part of the reason why there
was booing?

Speaker 7 (32:25):
Probably?

Speaker 3 (32:26):
Is it DC?

Speaker 2 (32:26):
Do you think that's what it is to there's a
d C, it's the DC crowd that was booing.

Speaker 3 (32:32):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (32:33):
Well, Trump did spend some time in the broadcast booth too. Afterwards.
I thought it went well. He actually you know, called
to play sort of yeah in the booth, which was
pretty cool. Commanders though, yeah, I want the Redskins back.

Speaker 3 (32:47):
I mean that was such a yeah.

Speaker 2 (32:49):
But you know, the White Saviors they had to what
does even hang on in and look at this?

Speaker 3 (32:53):
What does their merch look like? Oh gosh, it's horrid.
It's just a w It's so lame. That's so lame.

Speaker 2 (33:03):
Oh my gosh, that's so lame. They said they're not
going to return to their old name for obvious reasons, obviously,
but uh, it's just a w.

Speaker 5 (33:15):
Yeah, lame is celebrated in DC.

Speaker 3 (33:17):
Uh. I could never get behind that team. Never.

Speaker 2 (33:21):
That's horrible, so dumb. Anyway, so coming up in our
second hour, we had this headline and now this kind
of dovetails with the IOC band too. They're banning trans
their dudes. Why can't say it's transgender women. I'm so
tired of the stupid language. Olympics dudes who want to
pretend to be women. They're banning them from all of

(33:44):
the female Olympic events, which is huge. It's amazing, and
coupled with us transgenderism is in rapid decline amongst young Americans.
It's amazing how now it's dissipating. It was a fad
for what, Kane like maybe five ten years, and now
it's has it been what do you think it's been

(34:07):
ten years? It's been a fad for ten, Yeah, at
least five.

Speaker 5 (34:10):
Most of that I know for sure, five, But I
think there the push for it has been going on
for longer than that too.

Speaker 2 (34:17):
I mean, and I feel like to try to say
mainstream it is really anemic compared to what I think
that lobby was fighting for in terms of taxpayer subsidization
of their lives. But it is in rapid rapid decline
now amongst young Americans. So does that mean that it's

(34:38):
not trendy to pretend to be in a different sex now?
Kind of seems like we're going to get into all
of that as well. We'll have an update on the
war with the woke Reich, also the UH fights, the
the issues with Snap. I have an insane audio we've.

Speaker 3 (34:55):
Got to play.

Speaker 2 (34:56):
I'm not going to play it now, but just let
me let me tease it. So on CNN they were
saying that Snap was having a massive impact because one
of the ladies on CNN who has way too many
extensions in her hair, she said that she went to
her eyebrow tech who told her they had to fire
people because clients don't have money to do their brows.
So my first thought was, why in the hell are

(35:17):
you going and pain to have your eyebrows?

Speaker 3 (35:19):
Did if you're getting snap?

Speaker 2 (35:23):
You know, I mean, I would think feed your babies
get your eyebrows done. What do you think is going
to weigh out here in the game of needs over once?
So oh, it's real and I was shocked that people
were actually stating that on live television without any awareness.

Speaker 3 (35:40):
It was amazing.

Speaker 2 (35:42):
So we're going to get into that. We've got all
of the latest to get into as well. We'll get
you set up for the week and we'll watch what
happens with the shutdown as it goes towards the final
Wednesday vote.

Speaker 3 (35:51):
Stick with us.

Speaker 2 (35:52):
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That's bu es naturals dot com. Support the show and
tell them that Dana sent you. The IOC has banned

(37:06):
transgender women from all female Olympic events. According according to
a new report, the IOC has set to is setting
to ban transgender women from competing in all female categories.
The change is going to be announced early next year.
According to the Times report on Monday, the decision they

(37:27):
said to overhaul the policy. They had a I mean,
I can't believe they had to have a Sporting Committee
carry out a science based review of the biological advantages
of that men have in women's sports. I don't I
don't get that at all.

Speaker 3 (37:47):
Why do you have to have this whole thing? Why?

Speaker 2 (37:50):
Why do you have to have this whole thing with it?
I don't I don't understand that at all. So, uh,
this IOC spokesperson, they'd said that they had not made
a disci decision on it yet, and they said that
the update was given by the IOCs Director of Health Medicines.
Why do you have to have this like whole thing

(38:10):
for it? Why do you Why did you have to
have this whole process? I mean, it's a dude. It's
a dude, That's all.

Speaker 3 (38:20):
There is to it.

Speaker 2 (38:21):
Why Why do you Why do they have to undergo
or pretend to undergo this. I'm reading how they put
it this scientific presentation which laid out the evidence. I mean,
you could just look at what, you know, what the
person has. You know what I'm saying, Why is there
this big thing? I don't get it? But it was
so they said that the update was given by IOC's

(38:43):
director of Health Medicine Science and it was the last
week of their i.

Speaker 3 (38:48):
Don't give a brat's ask about any of this stuff.

Speaker 2 (38:50):
I'm I cannot believe that they had to do this
whole thing. I think they only did it so that
they could make it look like they were making an
effort to really understand the pseudoscience behind it.

Speaker 3 (39:00):
That's it.

Speaker 2 (39:01):
That's what it seems like, so that they could really
understand the pseudoscience of it. All right, that's what it.
And they said that the regular the guidance that they
had that they said that the women were able to
compete in the men as women were able to compete
in the female category. But they had but they said

(39:21):
that it was left up to individual sports apparently to
make the determination, individual athletic disciplines to make the determination.

Speaker 3 (39:30):
I don't know. Is it good.

Speaker 2 (39:32):
It's good, yeah, But at the same time, it also
seems like it's entire that this is like all performative.

Speaker 3 (39:39):
They could have done this at any point.

Speaker 2 (39:41):
I mean, you don't have to have like a scientific
panel to make the determination that a man is going
to have a benefit in women's sports.

Speaker 3 (39:49):
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 5 (39:51):
That they do blood tests for drugs and stuff, well
x X and x Y, I mean that's literally what
you can do.

Speaker 3 (39:58):
Yeah, I don't know. I mean, yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (40:02):
So this is I mean, I'm happy that they've done it.
There was a lot of discussion because one of the Olympics.
They're coming up the summer, right, Yeah, the Olympics are
coming up this summer.

Speaker 3 (40:12):
So I mean it's.

Speaker 2 (40:16):
I guess good that they were able to get this
squared away before then. But the how many people have
already been displaced though? How many women have already been
displaced by these policies, That's the million dollar question. Because
you have all of the different competitions that lead up
to Olympic qualification. So are is that going to be considered?

(40:41):
Is that going to have been fair? Steve says, it's
February Milan. That's not too far off to be honest,
February Milan. So a lot of people have probably gone through,
you know, different qualifications, and I'm just wondering what that
looks like. Have they been just where they displaced? How
is that handled? I don't know, So we'll see. But

(41:04):
that's sorry I'm dealing with We're dealing with some equipment
stuff here that we've got going on. It's like legoed here. Sorry,
I'm like knocking stuff down on this desk. All right,
if I don't touch it, maybe it won't. If I
don't touch the keyboard, it's okay. If I touch the keyboard,
everything falls apart.

Speaker 3 (41:22):
So there you go.

Speaker 2 (41:23):
The next Summer Olympics are going to be held in
Los Angeles in twenty twenty eight, So the Winter Olympics
are going to be in Milan coming up in spring,
and they don't know if the new guidance is going
to be implemented during that time or not.

Speaker 3 (41:37):
We don't know, So I don't know. We'll uh, But
that's big news.

Speaker 2 (41:42):
This goes into this dubtails into the story that we
had about the decline of transgenderism. This was over its
skeptic This is interesting. So they did the survey of
fifty thousand students a year per year from about two

(42:03):
hundred and fifty universities and they were looking they broke
everything down in all of these different subgroups, et cetera,
and they looked at in a Foundation for Individual Rights
and Expression, which is.

Speaker 3 (42:16):
Doing a really great job. By the way.

Speaker 2 (42:18):
The firefolks they also co sponsored the two a debate
that I did last week. They came up with unequival
The conclusion of their data, they said was unequivocal that
the share of students identifying as transgender meaning other than
male or female, which that apparently peaked in twenty twenty

(42:42):
three and it's been halved in two years since. And
they said it's a stunning reversal of culture, which I
think it is. It's a I mean, that's pretty amazing
that it's halved already. But they looked at fifty thousand
students and they what they discovered is that the percentage

(43:04):
of students not identified as male or female has dropped
off dramatically, like it was at its lowest point for
some reason, like in twenty nighteen, and then it's skyrocketed,
absolutely skyrocketed. And they note them by different verse by
university in their study. But they said that it is
on a rapid decline. That's interesting, do you And I'm wondering.

Speaker 3 (43:30):
Why that is.

Speaker 2 (43:33):
They I mean, they said, well, why is the transcurve
bending downward? Is it because they're becoming more conservative and religious?
And that answer was no. They said, they said that
the student survey shows non binary gender and gender queer sexuality.

(43:54):
They said that it has been dropping they have not
found any kind of shift to the political right, that
there's no share in, no rise in the share affiliating
with the religion, and that they're no more supportive of
free speech, et cetera. They're still woke.

Speaker 3 (44:09):
So what the hell? Then? What's the then?

Speaker 2 (44:12):
What is it? Is it a nonconformity thing?

Speaker 3 (44:15):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (44:15):
I don't understand what this is. What do you think
it is?

Speaker 3 (44:18):
Kane?

Speaker 2 (44:18):
Because they're like all of my stuff, all of my thoughts.
It's just it's not correct. Sorry, I'm dealing with this thing.

Speaker 5 (44:26):
Yeah, no, no, I'm with you on it. I don't get it,
and it breaks your brain to try and get it. Yes,
it's all based in, you know, a mental illness that
has just you know, they've stretched to affirm and here
we are.

Speaker 2 (44:40):
Well, they are wondering whether it's a decline of mental health.
It's I do I find it. I mean, the whole
trans movement is in decline, and I do find that interesting.
But if it's but I think that they need to
have a better understanding as to why that is. I mean,
I would think that it shouldn't have anything to do
with It's weird that it would be moored in a

(45:01):
political ideology because you're thinking that this is scientific, you know,
if you're I mean, people know that a man is
not a woman, a woman is not a man. It
shouldn't have any bearing on political ideology to blur the
lines of reality and science in order to accept that.
That's what's so weird to me about this.

Speaker 5 (45:16):
I agree. But I also think too that there's been
a lot of extremist behavior from that community over the
last year or two. It's only ramped up, and they've
been targeting kids and the whole nine. I think there's
a lot of people that are like, all right, you know,
we were all right with adults who wanted to do this,
but now that you're actually morphing it over into some
sort of doctrine that children want to adopt, right, they're

(45:38):
starting to pull away from it, and they're like, look,
we don't agree with that, right, And so I think
logic is in common sense is starting to take hold again.

Speaker 3 (45:48):
Maybe, So I hope that's the case. Yeah, maybe.

Speaker 2 (45:50):
So very interesting though with this, So there is I mean,
there's some good things. I think there's like some finally,
some wins here that are happening. Uh, that's these are
all good things. That's like, you know, that's a that's
a huge win, I think, But I also I don't
know the I think the whole start of this has
been weird, the whole and especially as it's been uh

(46:14):
moored in you know, a political identity. I mean, it
shouldn't matter whether or not well, I mean, I guess
you know, it really shouldn't matter whether or not you know,
you're a right or left when you're looking at science
and science based fact. But we have an ideology that
accepts lie as gospel truth.

Speaker 3 (46:34):
And so I don't know.

Speaker 2 (46:36):
Also, let's see here because we have a couple of
things to hit an apologies because I'm like, deal, my
desk is like, my stuff on my desk is falling apart. Uh,
We've I wanted to go back because there's some things
that I didn't get into. So the Housing Director this
came and pulled this up.

Speaker 3 (46:55):
This is from the Hill.

Speaker 2 (46:57):
They confirmed that the administration is working on a fifty
year mortgage what.

Speaker 3 (47:03):
This is crazy.

Speaker 2 (47:04):
The Federal Housing Finance Agency said that on Saturday, the
Trump administration is working on a direct plan to introduce
a fifty year mortgage term for home buyers. And I
get that they're trying to What they're saying is that
they want to make it to where Gen Z or
younger generations can actually like purchase a home. But I

(47:28):
feel like this is just garbage.

Speaker 3 (47:32):
This is absolute nonsense to do something like this.

Speaker 2 (47:35):
The reason it's absolute nonsense is because what if you're
not talking about reducing government spending. If you're not talking
about reducing government spending, and you're not talking about cutting
taxes and reducing spending, this is just neo feudalism. A
fifty year mortgage. Might as well just make it to
how they did it back in the you know, the
days of yr where you can actually do like a

(47:57):
hundred year lease and you can tie it to your
subsequent generations. You know, just do it like that. If
you're going to go that far. I mean, there's a
reason you don't need to do this fifty year mortgage
thing to make housing affordable. All that is is an
excuse to allow government to continue making bad economic decisions,

(48:24):
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Speaker 5 (49:51):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (49:57):
So Italian pasta is poised to disappear from a American
grocery store shells. Some of it, they're saying is due
to the exorbitant costs. They said that the tariffs are
amongst the steepest based by any product. The thing that
is a bummer about this. And by the way, they
said that the important anti dumping duties are a hundred total,

(50:17):
one hundred and seven percent on pasta brands. A lot
of this stuff, a lot of the Italian stuff, it's
just a couple of ingredients. If you get USA made stuff,
it's garbage. They add so much nonsense in it. You
look and there's like twenty five different ingredients in it.
It's healthier to actually make your own at that point,
which a lot of people don't have the time to do,

(50:37):
which is why they buy it.

Speaker 3 (50:38):
So this is bad. It's bad all around.

Speaker 2 (50:43):
Also, let's see here because We've got a couple of
other things.

Speaker 3 (50:46):
DEI.

Speaker 2 (50:46):
For owls, there are nearly half a million birds are
going to be killed across the West. I know, you
guys saw all this stuff. In Canada, they have a
half a million owls expected to be shot now under
a new wildlife protection plan that sounds like an ox moron,
the US Fish and Wildlife Service are prepared to kill
nearly a half a million barred owls throughout the Washington, Oregon,

(51:08):
and California states after a short lived effort to halt
the coal was thwarted in the Senate last week.

Speaker 3 (51:14):
So they're looking like.

Speaker 2 (51:16):
Of like half a million of these owls across the
West to protect another owl species, the Northern spotted owl,
which is listed as threatened under California's Endangered Species Act
and its federal counterpart. They began managing these spotted owl
populations since the seventies, when the declines were attributed to
habitat loss across federal lands because of timber harvesting. Or

(51:39):
I could have them as pets. It's also that we
could have them as a pet. I just don't like killing.
Did you see what they did with those birds up
in Yeah? Up in Canada. A most said of California
or a grenade was found don't give away grenades. Grenade
was found amongst donations at Forced Pierce Forked Pierce Goodwill

(52:02):
and they determined that it was real. WPTV please say
there's no active threat to the public. Investigation is ongoing.
They had this grenade that was apparently in the donated items,
and a whole bomb squad had to show up. This
was on Friday, Friday evening and they said that they
were able. They had the bomb disposal unit responded to

(52:22):
the scene. They confirmed it was real.

Speaker 3 (52:23):
They safely removed it.

Speaker 2 (52:25):
They were trying to figure out how a real, actual
grenade ended up in the donation Bend. I mean, you know,
you got a grenade in your pocket. You know you
don't clear them out, You're getting rid of your you
know it happens. I guess I really don't know.

Speaker 3 (52:35):
I'm just thinking.

Speaker 2 (52:38):
Polk County and Texas, their emergency management ordered an evacuation
around the Carter Lake Dam. This is they said that
an eight inch hole. This is what they should have
led with. And this is why Abbogail Trumany's to go
back to j school. The lead as an eight inch
hole was found in the privately own damned Saturday morning,

(52:59):
prompting to call for residents south of the dam and
Canden to evacuate, and they're trying to pump water out
of the lake and into the spill way in order
to prevent a bigger disaster. We've got a lot more
on the way, including the latest education gaza and more.
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Speaker 6 (54:20):
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Speaker 3 (54:31):
This is having massive impact.

Speaker 1 (54:33):
I went and got my eyebrows done the other day
and my eyebrow technician was like, they're going to fire
two technicians from here because all of our clients don't
have money to come.

Speaker 3 (54:43):
She's not on snacks. Lord, put a hand over my
mouth right now.

Speaker 2 (54:49):
I cannot even believe that was someone on CNN talking
about how she they had her eyebrow plays. They had
to let two people go because people couldn't afford it
because the snap. Well, then if you can afford to
go get your eyebrows done, you shouldn't be getting to snap.
I mean, for crying out loud. I just have some priorities.

(55:10):
I don't go get my eyebrows done. You don't have
to do that. That's like a luxury. If you want
to do that, I don't go do that. If you gotta,
you gotta way out. That's that's part of being a
grown adult, figuring out what you want to pay money for,
what you need to pay for, and what you what
is a need and what is a want. That's embarrassing

(55:31):
for a grown woman to be on television lamenting Snap
during the government shutdown and using as an example her
eyebrow text saying that they had to let some people
go because snaps so bad they can't then people can't
come in and oh my gosh, welcome back to the program,
Dane lashat you the chats at Rumble. You can stream

(55:52):
channel through forty seven Direct TV. I think that's there's
a major disconnect, I think with some people overall this stuff,
you know, talking about the Snap benefits and how you
had eleven percent have eleven percent of the American population
that's on food stamps And we had a story. Was
it last week that we played the audio of the
woman who was on food stamps for thirty years? For

(56:14):
thirty years, that's three decades, three zero thirty years now
for context, I don't even like the program. I think
it's big government nonsense. I am very much opposed to
all of it. I think that if we weren't taxed

(56:37):
to death, that people, individually, private citizens, as has in
keeping with the historical tradition of mankind, would fill, would
actually have more capital with which to fill the need
than letting the government do a mediocre at best job

(56:57):
at it. But that's said, that's not our current structure.
But there are people who have used it temporarily. You know,
they've been on it for a couple of weeks or
a month, and then they're off it, and they don't

(57:18):
milk it. It's not looked at as some sort of
guaranteed stream of income for them. And when I hear
this woman talk about it, she said this on CNN,
like you're talking to pundits and she says this on CNN. Well,
my eyebrow text says, I just can't even believe that
this is what's passing a serious political discourse today.

Speaker 3 (57:38):
But here we are.

Speaker 2 (57:39):
We live in an era of stupidity. It is really
amazing that that was the excuse. Well, we've got to
stop this now, because they're letting eyebrow texts go, well, also,
we live where I mean, these are hard times economically.
People are complaining about the cost of beef. And yes,
one of the things that Republicans cannot do is try

(58:01):
to gaslight people out of the cost of stuff. And
it is not bad to acknowledge that you're not forfeiting
anything by acknowledging that, you're not saying that it's Trump's
fault by acknowledging it either. I mean, he's not even
been in office for a year. How fast did people
think that this turnaround was going to happen? For crying
out loud, we had four years. But you can't gaslight

(58:26):
people out of it either. And that's one thing I
think Republicans are going to be very careful about, especially
as this last election was absolutely an economic one, and
they better get the messaging right because midterms is just
I mean, it's coming up and now what a year,
So they better get the messaging right on this. To

(58:51):
my eyebrow, tech says, man, I tell you what you
got to learn, cause and effect and adulting, lady, and
you're absolutely going to have to learn. This gets into
this whole issue where we were talking about last segment.
And again, apologies for all the I had literally equipment
that was fallen off and we were pushing through. But

(59:14):
this promoting this fifty year mortgage, I mean, do you
know how long are how long are you going to
pay like pure interest for fifty year mortgage. I want
the next generation. I want younger generations to be able
to afford homes. But I feel like this proposal, even

(59:34):
if it's meant as a short term solution, is a dodge.
It's a dodge because you're not changing the economic structure.
You're not changing the way that we propose and implement policy.
You're not even changing policy. It's just a band aid.
We're not reducing government spending really at all. We need
to have more of the deregulation like we had when

(59:57):
Trump walked when he came into his first term in
twenty sixteen. I think he has a way better team
around him this time around. Granted that's not even up
for debate, but when he came into the White House
in twenty sixteen, one of the things that he did
was just cut and slash and deregulated they and then
I think it kind of just started to taper off

(01:00:19):
and they need to go back to that in addition
to stopping spending. But you know, you're not going to
be able to stop spending with the Republicans that we
have in Congress because this last cr that we passed
was literally just an extension of existing Democrat spending and
they barely got that passed. So having a fifty year mortgage,

(01:00:41):
I mean, this is just like, it's just feudalism. You
will never actually own anything and you'll be happy. Isn't
that what Carol Roth says? You'll own nothing and be happy.
That's literally her book title. I mean, if you have
a fifteen year mortgage, you know that you're going to
eventually own the home. Well, except for property taxes, you

(01:01:05):
never really own your own property. But you'll actually be
able to, you know, asterisk own the home in which
you reside. Right. And then if you have a fifty
year mortgage, you're not really owning your home. That's feudalism,
it's neo feudalism, and that's how it treats it that
it's just you know, I mean, it's great if you're

(01:01:28):
a physical bank, that's you know, if you're a bank,
that's good for you. But aside from that, no, And
I don't want people to think that this is a
good idea as a replacement for better economic policy and
a reduction in spending and a cut in taxes.

Speaker 3 (01:01:47):
And that's what makes me nervous.

Speaker 2 (01:01:48):
Because people, I feel, are overlooking that because they want
the short term. They want to be able to have
that paper, that have that title. But is it yours
though with a fifty year mortgage? I mean, there's no
way in hell I would ever take out a fifty
year mortgage. I mean that I think that goes wrong
the other way.

Speaker 3 (01:02:06):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:02:06):
I get really, I'm really nervous about this because I
feel and can I think that I see, I know,
you know where I'm coming from. It feels as though
it is an absolute dodge, and I just you're setting
people up. This is just to me, setting people up
to be happy with never owning anything.

Speaker 5 (01:02:22):
I think it's less of a dodge and more of
a poor choice. It's just like with lowered interest rates
that we saw in the threes for mortgages. What it
did was it made the monthly outgo more affordable, and
therefore it made these homes become more valuable. So when
you have these big companies like Blackrock and other investment

(01:02:45):
firms that come in and take advantage of those low
interest rates, and essentially we'll pay cash more than the
actual value. Because they own other homes in the area,
they're falsely raising the price of homes, therefore pricing people
out of homes. And so the choice that this administration
seems to be making is that in order to get

(01:03:06):
that monthly outgo to come down, you extend the length
of the mortgage so that your monthly payment is lower.
That isn't necessarily a dodge, but it is it seems
like a poor choice when there are some basics that
tie into what these mortgage rates are and where these
values at homes should be.

Speaker 2 (01:03:24):
It's and it's not going to make It's not going
to mint a whole bunch of new homeowners overnight either.

Speaker 3 (01:03:29):
No, that's policy.

Speaker 5 (01:03:30):
There are a lot of people that still have their
three percent mortgages. It's keeping them from buying, it's keeping
them from selling because right now we're at the six
where in the six is now, so it's double what
it used to be. So anybody that's sitting in a
mortgage that's between three and four percent, they're not going
to do any moves right now. They're not going to refinance,
they're not going to sell their home because they know

(01:03:51):
they're going to have to buy another one and pay
six or something percent. So it's a stagnant market.

Speaker 2 (01:03:56):
And I was looking at so if somebody gets a
thirty year mortgage, I was looking at how many actually
hold that mortgage to full term, and it was saying
that the average payoff or refinance occurs within eight to
ten years. Now it's usually due to selling or dropping rates,
but that the home ownership tenure averages ten to thirteen years.

(01:04:18):
And that's from Freddie mac. So you could have a
fifty year mortgage and that might suit you for cash flow,
but at the same time, that's not true ownership.

Speaker 5 (01:04:32):
Right And the hope is, and the way that the
mortgage sellers would sell these homeowners on is that, oh,
you know, you'll enjoy this low payment now, and then
when your home increases in value, you can later then
refinance into a much you know, like a thirty year
mortgage instead or maybe a twenty year mortgage, so and
then you can afford that payment because now you have

(01:04:53):
equity and therefore, now that you're borrowing less than eighty
percent of the value, you're going to see a lower
rate that Again, like I said, it's not necessarily a dodge,
but it is a poor choice.

Speaker 2 (01:05:03):
Yeah, I mean, I will say that no one's telling
you have to hold it for the entire the entire
fifty years. But at the same time, I just think
that this I don't know, I.

Speaker 5 (01:05:14):
Have you seen any amortization schedules, because it's typically the
first seven to ten years that you're paying mostly interest
on your payment. Yeah, your payment, most of it goes
to interest.

Speaker 2 (01:05:24):
Yeah, it's a problem, but we do. We have to
figure out a way, and it's not going to be
the problem with this is that there's so many things
that go into creating this current situation and also affecting outcome.
It's not going to be something as simple as just
changing mortgage rates. It's not even going to be as
simple as just singularly in reducing interest rates. You also, again,

(01:05:46):
it goes back to government spending, it goes back to taxation,
but it also goes back to a societal structure that
has made it to where you cannot be a family
where only one parent works anymore. That's just I mean,
our economic structure, not just in the United States but
elsewhere in the world just doesn't support that. And it's

(01:06:06):
I'm not saying that I agree with it at all,
obviously I don't, but just something like this, it might
look good initially, as you know, on paper, but it's
not helping with true ownership and long term, it's not
fixing the problem. All it does is give politicians a
chance to say, oh, well, look we're doing something about
the housing issue. By the way, here's more entitlement spending.

(01:06:28):
I mean, that's that's literally what we're looking at with
and we're going to be fighting over entitlement spending again
in three months with this cr this is all going
to be coming to fruition right after the holidays. We're
going to be back here arguing over government opening and
shut down and all that stuff all over again.

Speaker 3 (01:06:43):
So it's like that we're in this.

Speaker 2 (01:06:45):
One of the reasons why we all get so aggravated
over it is because it's like we're it's groundhog Day
every three months with us. Literally came when was the
last and we were back here arguing about all of
this stuff.

Speaker 3 (01:06:56):
I mean this was three.

Speaker 5 (01:06:57):
Months ago in July.

Speaker 2 (01:06:59):
Yeah, I mean, yeah, that's a real issue. We have
Florida Man on the way. And also we're gonna get
into a whole bunch of other stuff because we've got
the latest on the woke right, but also the left
as well, Democrats civil war and in Paris a group
of like agitators stormed in to the symphony to attack

(01:07:22):
the Israeli Philharmonic in Paris.

Speaker 3 (01:07:24):
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Speaker 5 (01:08:54):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions.

Speaker 8 (01:09:01):
It's time for Florida.

Speaker 3 (01:09:02):
Man.

Speaker 2 (01:09:03):
I'm trying really hard to understand the story, so let
me just share the headline drunk Florida man gets kicked
out of Dollar Tree after rudely demanding staff triple bag
his candles.

Speaker 3 (01:09:18):
So this.

Speaker 2 (01:09:22):
Poor teenage girl who was the cashier. A customer who
was there recorded the incident and it was a major
scene inside the Dollar Tree store.

Speaker 3 (01:09:33):
So what happened?

Speaker 2 (01:09:33):
A man walked in drunk and he was trying to
buy some candles, and the cashier on duty was a
teenage girl, and he was, you know, as he was,
I guess, trying to check out. He was very belligerent
already without any need to be. She was ringing up
his stuff and he demanded that she wrapped each candle
in three separate bags, and when she offered to use

(01:09:54):
two bags instead, he was not happy about it.

Speaker 3 (01:09:57):
He got in her.

Speaker 2 (01:09:57):
Face and was screaming at her, pointing his finger, and
then the customer had been filming, stepped in and then
that man turned around and snapped at him, and then
it escalated from there, and he was screaming at the
customer recording him, if I want five redacted bags, then
what redacted business is it of yours? Shut your redacted mouth,

(01:10:19):
and clearly he was drunk. The manager tried to de
escalate and the customer, you know, the guy was recording,
didn't stop recording. Uh, and I mean this guy was
losing his mind. He was yelling at the manager, yelling
at everybody else. So they ended up having to call
the cops. And now he's apparently I think he's banned

(01:10:40):
from that Dollar Tree. He your mad over candles, Like,
first off, that's the gayest thing I've ever heard.

Speaker 3 (01:10:49):
That's super ghg y ga.

Speaker 2 (01:10:52):
To be that mad over having your candles wrapped up
at a Dollar Tree, just stop.

Speaker 3 (01:10:58):
This is why Leans don't visit us.

Speaker 5 (01:11:00):
These papers for his bathroom trash can.

Speaker 3 (01:11:02):
Oh my gosh, it's insane.

Speaker 2 (01:11:04):
This Florida man was arrested because his ceiling hideout and
a Florida home didn't work so well. He fell through
the roof or fell through the ceiling right into the
SWAT team literally, so they had an hour's long standoff.

Speaker 3 (01:11:19):
This was in Vero Beach, Florida.

Speaker 2 (01:11:21):
The guy's facing grand theft auto and resisting and he
thirty seven year old Keith Rogers. He was trying to
hide from SWAT after this hour's long standoff, and he
got into the ceiling, but the ceiling didn't hold and
it was caught on their shoulder, their their body camera
footage that it showed him falling through the ceiling right

(01:11:45):
literally at swat team, the swat team's feet. Yeah, like
he'd like. They practically caught the guy. They quickly surrounded
him and arrested him. He is being held on twenty
five thousand dollars bond. You would think, I mean, wouldn't
you know that the drywall of the ceiling is not
going to hold you? You would think that you would
know that. And then Good Samaritans rescue a seventy four

(01:12:07):
year old Florida man from his burning Porsche Ooh Clearwater.
Seventy four year old man was pulled from his burning cart.
Was a dramatic rescue. The folks came and they pulled
him out, dragged him to safety.

Speaker 3 (01:12:20):
He was taken to the hospital for treatment.

Speaker 2 (01:12:22):
Nobody knows how it got to that point, but everybody
got footage to that Porsche or that fire region. Nobody
likes to see that. Our third hour is on the way.
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Speaker 11 (01:13:33):
Here's a question for Donald Trump, as he forces airlines
to cancel thousands and thousands of flights, why is he
starting first with the commercial planes that we all use
to go visit our families or get where we need
to for work. Every day, thousands of private jets take
off carrying CEOs, billionaires and the one percent, and they

(01:13:55):
take up the work of the air traffic control system too.
Wouldn't it make more sense to cancel the planes that
carry the fewest passengers first. It's just another example of
who Donald Trump really cares about, and it isn't us.

Speaker 3 (01:14:09):
This is like one of the dumbest things I've heard ever.

Speaker 2 (01:14:11):
That's Katie Porter, the woman who gets mad over like
the littlest things during an interview. Welcome back to the
program Dane Lash with you at d Lash on X
and chats at Rumble Channel three forty seven Direct TV.
So this was Sean Duffy, who is the head of transportation.
He actually is doing stuff. You see him out here.
You see him out doing stuff. This was his response

(01:14:34):
to this. This is cut tin.

Speaker 3 (01:14:35):
This is so dumb. Listen, Katie Porter is a hack.

Speaker 12 (01:14:39):
That's not what happened. In the order, we reduced general
aviation or jet travel by ten percent. But what we've
also done is that, you know, if we have a
staffing trigger, I think Nate was at LaGuardia or in Newark,
we have one in Newark this morning. If we have
a staffing trigger, there's gonna be no jets flying into Newark.
We're gonna we prioritize commercial aircraft. Now, if there's space

(01:15:01):
to fly in with general aviation or a jet, we'll
allow them in. But the priority is the traveling public.
And so that's been that's been the order, that's been
how this has been implemented. So it's nice political theater,
but that's not what we're doing.

Speaker 2 (01:15:14):
So everything that she just accused Trump of doing, he
wasn't doing. Yeah, okay, that's you know, par for the course.
In the meantime, cut eleven, this pilot, the Southwest pilot,
went off on the shutdown.

Speaker 3 (01:15:32):
Listen.

Speaker 13 (01:15:33):
I don't really care what your political persuasion is, and
you should really call your senator because I'll tell you
this is costing the airlines millions of dollars. I just
think of thirty airplanes with one engine running, and it's
going to take at least ninety minutes to take off.

(01:15:54):
So it's frustrating. It's really frustrating for me because right
now it's going to cost about two hours of our
lives on the ground before we even take off, spend
all that gas, all that money, and it just rolls
into the rest.

Speaker 2 (01:16:07):
Of the system.

Speaker 4 (01:16:08):
So right now we're at a four.

Speaker 13 (01:16:09):
Percent reduction in flight capacity. Next week we go into ten.
Last night I had a six hour delay in Houston.

Speaker 3 (01:16:20):
And the weather was perfect.

Speaker 13 (01:16:22):
It's because their traffic controllers aren't get paid.

Speaker 6 (01:16:25):
So at the weekend.

Speaker 2 (01:16:27):
Well, and he's right, and he's right, and so now
as it relates to the shutdown, Mike Johnson gave that
thirty six hour warrning. He called House members back to
d C. As the Senate approved that bills, So now
the House has to vote on it. The Senate has
one final I think their final thing. The House will
next take it up. So they get so usually what

(01:16:49):
happens is if during the shutdown, House members have not
been in DC, so they have thirty six hours, so
they get a warning, so that gives them enough time
to you know, hopefully you know, book a flo and
get out there. And so they come back, they're going
to look at the short term funding bill. You know,
we're going to be dealing with this again. Sorry in January,
we're going to be back here fighting another shutdown. So

(01:17:10):
of all the things that were included in this the deal,
you the government's being funded through January thirtieth, twenty twenty six,
So in January we're going to be back here. The
vote is scheduled. So I think this was a concession
on the half of Republican On the part of Republicans,
the vote is scheduled on the ACA tax credits in December,
so they're going to be voting on this in December,

(01:17:33):
and then federal agencies can't block any workers until January thirtieth,
and then all of the snap and then the WICK stuff,
all of that is going to be funded through September
of next year, so all the way up until fall
of next year.

Speaker 3 (01:17:46):
So that is so.

Speaker 2 (01:17:48):
We're going to be right down right right in January,
right as we're getting it's don't I don't think Republicans caved.
I think that was a concession that they gave. I
think that Democrats, they remember what they were wanting. They
were winning one point five trillion dollars in expansion and
they did not want to take They weren't going to

(01:18:10):
vote yes on that bill unless they got it. So
allowing for a vote to happen on the Obamacare tax
credits in December isn't necessarily giving them, you know, I mean,
what is it like a it's just what a seven
week not even a six week? Really six week? Not
even that extension on it. I don't know, do you

(01:18:32):
look at it. I think that was a concession that
Republicans gave. But I think ultimately, if you had to
say who caved, who would you say cave came because
that's all that matters.

Speaker 5 (01:18:40):
No, this is definitely Democrats cave in. And what's odd
to me is that this whole time they've been blaming
Republicans for the shutdown, yet somehow magical Democrats opened the
government with their votes. So now they're the ones they're
blaming for opening the government. So how is it that
it wasn't the Democrats done this entire time? It makes

(01:19:01):
no sense to me.

Speaker 3 (01:19:02):
A million dollar question. I just don't take a million
dollar question. No, I agree, I don't. I don't either.

Speaker 2 (01:19:07):
So that's they're going to reconvene. Uh And he says
that they have. Johnson says that they have the votes
in the House to pass the CENEPAL. So that's they
said that. That's not a thing. So so it's not
done until the House votes on it, and I think
they're looking. So they gave the thirty six so it
looks like Wednesday is going to be the vote. They're

(01:19:27):
going to allow today and tomorrow for everybody to get
back to DC, so Wednesday will be the vote, and
uh well, and then it'll.

Speaker 3 (01:19:34):
Go from there. Then we're going to be again back
in January. We're all going to be here. Yay, We're
all going to be right back.

Speaker 2 (01:19:41):
In the same spot. I know you guys are super
excited about that.

Speaker 11 (01:19:44):
I know that.

Speaker 5 (01:19:44):
Look, the ACA which wasn't affordable in any way, shape
or form. It's just the subsidies that are expiring. It
shouldn't need subsidies if it was a successful program. So
there's going to be reform, and it's not going to
happen the way the Democrats want it. The Democrats wanted
it to be subsidized for another year, and I don't
think the Republicans are going to do it. And at

(01:20:06):
this point, I think Democrats know that's probably not what
they're going to get, So they're going to stonewall the
reform and we're going to, like you said, we're going
to see this fight again in January.

Speaker 2 (01:20:16):
So what gets me in terms of why they why
it went this far.

Speaker 3 (01:20:21):
So just think about it.

Speaker 2 (01:20:22):
So you had eight Democrats that agreed to reopen the
federal government and they're continuing the current levels of funding
and they're going through January. So we're going to be
back at this fight in January.

Speaker 3 (01:20:32):
And they.

Speaker 2 (01:20:35):
Needed a promise from John Thune in the Senate to
hold a vote the second week of December on extending
the premium subsidies.

Speaker 3 (01:20:48):
That's that legislation.

Speaker 2 (01:20:51):
And then I think what they were they're looking at
reversing the four thousand federal layoffs, which better or not.
I don't really, let's not say we did. Now Johnson
has not committed. Now here's what's here's the caveat. So
in the Senate they extracted that promise from Thune. That's
why I say that was a Republican concession. But I

(01:21:13):
don't think Republicans cave because they didn't get the one
point five trillion. Johnson, however, has not committed to holding
that vote on extending the subsidies in December. Yeah, who
go ahead, asked that question, Kane.

Speaker 3 (01:21:29):
You're so excited it's the House that does.

Speaker 2 (01:21:36):
Yeah, so they haven't, they haven't. He has not committed
to that. Oh, and that's it. That's it now. It
doesn't it seem stupid that it took that long to
get that finalized.

Speaker 5 (01:21:53):
Yes, that's why I think reform is what's going to
be pushed. Like if there is a propose for reform, which,
by the way, you could just eliminate the ACA and
that would be the biggest move to reform right there.
Allow the free market to do its thing, more competition
brings prices down. ACA should just be scrapped.

Speaker 2 (01:22:12):
Now, can people see why we did not want to
blow up the filibuster to pass this thing that we're
going to be back here in January arguing over again.
You never use your nuclear option, you don't. You never
do that.

Speaker 3 (01:22:27):
You never. Look.

Speaker 2 (01:22:29):
I am not against being persuaded for something massive, but
for something that we literally have to come back in
January and debate again.

Speaker 3 (01:22:39):
Hell to the no.

Speaker 2 (01:22:41):
So now you see why some of us did not
want to get rid of the filibuster. You realize all this,
We would have had a packed Supreme Court if we
had gotten rid of the filibuster, if we and Democrats
were baiting us into doing it so bad, they were
baiting us into doing it.

Speaker 3 (01:23:00):
So it's smart that we didn't. It's very good that
we didn't. So that's that is the uh.

Speaker 2 (01:23:06):
Now, sure you can say and and I'm not I'm
done talking about this. You could say, oh, well, you
know the shutdown that really made it hard for Republicans.

Speaker 3 (01:23:14):
You could say that it was a factor.

Speaker 2 (01:23:19):
But when you look at some of the I mean
like look and Winsome, Earl Sears and Abigail Spamberger, she
was trailing Spamberger the entire election. You know that was
never going to happen. Do you think that the reason
that Cheryl had the uh like plus fourteen over Kiddarelli,
that that was because of the shutdown?

Speaker 3 (01:23:40):
It wasn't because of the shutdown. That's just the way
I mean.

Speaker 2 (01:23:42):
It's for the New Jersey. So I think people have
got to stop extrapolating that. That's like to me, that's
goofy to say that the shutdown had nothing to do
with that. Those were two candidates that were that were
trailing the Democrat opponent for the entirety of the election.
Now that's not to say that they shouldn't have run
and Republicans should always run a candidate and fight when

(01:24:02):
they get the chance, but to sit here and act
like the reason that they lost was because of the shutdown.
It was one of the stupidest things I've ever seen
in my life. Stop saying that that's dumb, that's so stupid.
Oh my gosh, So that's bad, all right, So I
got that out of my system.

Speaker 3 (01:24:17):
So we're gonna be back.

Speaker 2 (01:24:18):
Well, save it because we're gonna be back here in January, guys, yay,
So save all Just take your little arguments for that
and just fold them up, pack them away. But don't
put them away away because you got to get them
out after Christmas, right after you get the tree put
up and all that, and then we got to argue
about this again. So I know you're gonna be really
happy about that. And we're gonna get your set up
for the week as we do so our partners that

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help bring you the program.

Speaker 3 (01:24:40):
It's the folks over at Berne Gun.

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Speaker 5 (01:25:30):
Now all of the news you would probably miss it's
time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (01:25:34):
So the administration had an announcement earlier today.

Speaker 3 (01:25:38):
The FDA is.

Speaker 2 (01:25:39):
Liberating women's hormone replacement therapy, and they had a very
interesting press conference about that. They said they're gonna get
rid of some of the warning stuff, the black box
stuff that I mean, it's gonna be very I think
it's good for and I'm glad that they announced it
in such a way because it's always so taboo to discuss,
right like older women and then are going through a

(01:26:00):
minute's always so taboo for them to discuss. And younger
women you know that are not there yet, but we
all will be one day. We would like to have
a little bit more open conversation about it.

Speaker 3 (01:26:09):
It would be great.

Speaker 2 (01:26:10):
And it's good that they're like getting rid of some
of the regulations surrounding this. So that was a very
good announcement from the men this morning. Uh let's see,
the Australian state is weighing a rule change to allow
dingoes to be pets. Now, some of us who grew
up in the early late eighties, early nineties, what was

(01:26:31):
that movie The tinco ate Ma Baby came?

Speaker 3 (01:26:34):
What was that movie?

Speaker 5 (01:26:34):
I forget the movie the.

Speaker 3 (01:26:35):
Tinco ate Ma Baby Crying in the dark. I think,
wasn't it real? Straight? That wasn't it?

Speaker 5 (01:26:40):
That sounds right?

Speaker 2 (01:26:42):
I know my mom has watched it at least twice.
But it was apparently about a true story about a
dingo who ate a baby out in Australia in the outback.

Speaker 3 (01:26:49):
So I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:26:49):
So now they're weighing in Queensland, they're trying to they're
thinking of changing the classification that would allow them to
be kept as household pets because they're like dogs, but
they're also not they're wild. They're I mean, they're basically dogs,
but they're wild dogs. So they said that they are
reviewing Queensland's biosecurity laws ahead of these amendments, that they're
going to make some of these changes they're going to make.

(01:27:10):
In Spring, Oh Boy, somebody slipped and fell off the
edge of a cliff and the Grand Canyon. Then the
recovery effort occurred on the west rim. A sixty five
year old slipped and was killed. He fell more than
one hundred feet set authorities in Arizona. It happened at
Guano Point on the canyon's western rim, and it was
on Mahafi County Sheriff's office. They had to respond to

(01:27:34):
a technical recovery Thursday afternoon. The moon was one hundred
and thirty feet down on a pile of rock fragments
and they had to use ropes to bring him up.

Speaker 3 (01:27:42):
That's horrible. His name wasn't released.

Speaker 2 (01:27:45):
But people got to be super careful there because you
can get right to the edge and fall off in it,
So don't that's terrifying. It wasn't there a story of
someone who fell and they were trying to take a selfie.
Like that happens like at least once a year. It's terrifying.
Japan's police are amending rules to allow officers to use
rifles against bears because the bear problem is getting kind

(01:28:08):
of serious over there. This is something in Tokyo. Their
National Police Agency amended rules. They're going to allow officers
to use rifles to call bears because there have been
a surge in bear attacks on people in Japan. Now,
the amendment that's going to take place on November thirty
are going to be in effect on November thirteenth. Up

(01:28:29):
until now, they haven't actually been able to use that.
They've only been able to use rifles very restrictive like
hijacking incidents or like terrorism or something like that. But
there in certain prefectures, the number of bear attacks have
been increasing dramatically, and so now they have to They're
undergoing joint training, they're working with local hunting associations because

(01:28:52):
the bear population has grown and now it's kind of
destabilizing the ecosystem there, so they're going to have to
actively do something about it.

Speaker 3 (01:29:01):
So good for them.

Speaker 2 (01:29:03):
Also, let's see, oh, man, a man cheated death because
somebody lit a cigarette and threw a match on the
Florida gas station.

Speaker 3 (01:29:10):
Who does this?

Speaker 2 (01:29:12):
Who does something like that? Everybody knows that you don't.
You don't smoke at a gas station, and you definitely
don't throw like a cigarette butt or a match down
at a gas station.

Speaker 9 (01:29:22):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:29:22):
The CCT footage in a Brazilian state of Marinho, they
caught this dramatic moment where a huge like fireball, I
mean it blew up flame sturgeon into the air because
the guy dropped a match that he had used and
him and his friends had a run for their lives.
I shockingly, nobody was injured because it was a blaze.

(01:29:45):
Nobody was injured. Huge explosion. Uh. And I mean there,
it's terrifying. You gotta be careful with that stuff. We
have Steven Yates who's gonna be joining us. He's been
traveling with the administration. He's got a lot to report.

Speaker 3 (01:29:59):
Stick with us.

Speaker 2 (01:30:00):
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Speaker 6 (01:31:23):
Keep your finger on the pulse with a Dana Show
podcast delivering timely news with insightful analysis whenever you want,
straight to you on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get
your podcasts.

Speaker 2 (01:31:35):
Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash with you. You can
listen coast to coast as well as follow along with
the live stream of the radio program Channel thirty forty
seven Direct TV. So we were watching very closely as
Potus traveled to South Korea and then of course he
met and was speaking with Jijimping, and we were all
like anticipating what kind of what kind of deal are

(01:31:57):
they going? Are they going to strike a deal? Is
there going to be some sort of de escalation and tension?
Like what are we going to get from this? And
it seems as though there were some concessions or there's
there were a couple of things that were achieved, but
it also seems that you know, at least for the
next year things might not go unchanged for the most part.
For some clarity on this, because he was there traveling.

(01:32:21):
Everyone knows our friend Steve and Yates at Yates Comms
on X. He has served with not one but two
presidential administrations. He's a foreign policy expert in the Senior
Research Fellow at the Heritage Foundation as well. He joins
US now because he's been I thought that my travel
was rough last week. Nobody knows rough travel more than
Steven Yates. He ought to be like the poster, the

(01:32:43):
poster man for talking about the airline travel, especially during
a shutdown.

Speaker 3 (01:32:47):
Stephen, good to see you.

Speaker 2 (01:32:48):
Glad you got back to the stage safely.

Speaker 7 (01:32:51):
Thank you so much. Data, It's good to be back.

Speaker 2 (01:32:54):
Well, tell us what you're you know, what did you
see and what did you walk away with after? You know,
Potus was meeting obviously with the new Japanese leadership South Korea,
but then of course Jijianping as well, because there was
a lot of discussion as to where they're going to
come out on agreements as it relates to where Earth's
and you know, the South Sea and I mean, did

(01:33:15):
we walk away with a big trophy?

Speaker 7 (01:33:18):
Well, Dana, what I saw was a lot of work
that had been done by the President and his team,
I would dare say more than any presidential team I've
ever witnessed in my lifetime, frankly in terms of touching
the necessary bases among allies and going to different multilateral meetings.
I mean, the President himself went down to the Southeast

(01:33:41):
Asian summit called Azion, that is not one where a
president always goes, but often tries. The President also did,
as you say, visit with allies in Japan and Korea.
This is all before meeting with the leader of China.
We'll call him Chair Herman she or Winnie de Pooh,
whatever he prefers. But all that spade work. I traveled

(01:34:06):
with the Secretary of War Pete Hegseth overlapped with the President,
but also went to several of these places. After the
president's visit, there are very meaningful agreements made, mostly in
security cooperation and making sure that there's co manufacturing for
key platform's acquisition of independent capabilities for allies. These are

(01:34:28):
things that were campaigned on that a lot of experts said, oh,
this can't happen or it's anti ally, and yet it
was happening and I think that that, combined with China
overplaying its hand on the rare earths leverage, really set
the stage for Cigping having to try to tamp down
the temperature at the meeting he had with President Trump,

(01:34:50):
and I think that's what we saw. There were some agreements.
I think you appropriately framed them as maybe buying time.
They don't think anything strategically has changed, but we may
have bought time to get ourselves out of the overdependence
on rare earths.

Speaker 2 (01:35:02):
And that's that's incredibly significant. One of the things I
was reading about as well is that so in the Pacific,
the United States and Japan are developing a partnership to
go and mind rare earth near an island as a
way to kind of, you know, push back against sort
of the dependence on these critical materials from China. And
Japan is going to be doing deep sea extraction tests

(01:35:23):
in January if they are, if Japan's able to do this,
does that and I don't know, maybe I'm putting a
lot of emphasis on how much they're able to extract
in the importance of this island, but I mean, is
that a blow to the Chinese monopoly on rare earth
that they're able to actually successfully extract from this island.

Speaker 7 (01:35:43):
It's a start, it's an important start, and there's a
lot more that we all needed to go in terms
of the true responsible stakeholders in the international community. I mean,
people will talk about China's economy, it's market, it's processing.
It does have a stranglehold in processing. We have to
fix that. That's part of our pathology of worshiping the
issue of climate change. We somehow decided that it was

(01:36:06):
really dirty to process these rare earths, so we gave
it to the most polluting nation on the planet to
do it for us. Somehow someone's maths suggested that was better.
It was stupid on environmentalism, and it was worse strategically,
economically and otherwise. But there we are. But Japan, Korea, Taiwan,
several others, including people in Europe, if they are getting

(01:36:28):
past their wokeism, would look at hey, why don't we
together finance extraction and processing in Argentina instead of China
getting those five lithium minds, Why don't we make our
hemisphere safer and productive and have that supply chain running
on things that help the economy go instead of having
migrant flows. And so this is the logic that I

(01:36:51):
think the President has unleashed with this with a new
leader in Japan, and boy do we have to do
a different new leader in Japan. We now have a
real partner to do.

Speaker 3 (01:36:59):
Something how much?

Speaker 2 (01:37:01):
And we're talking with our friend Stephen Yates the new
leadership in Japan, the new Prime minister, I mean, and
I love the fact that she's a woman, but not
because she's a woman. It's like she's just the most
qualified candidate who won. She's just the most qualified. And
that's what I love about this. How much is set
to change now with her as the new Prime minister?

Speaker 7 (01:37:26):
Well, Dana, I mean to me, the most strategically significant
part of it is she's a heavy metal drummer, so.

Speaker 3 (01:37:31):
She's not cust She rides a bike as.

Speaker 7 (01:37:34):
Everyone else, and so I think you know what she
is doing. I mean, she just issued a statement that
said that if China uses military force to keep a
blockade on Taiwan, that that would provoke collective self defense
clauses under Japan's constitution. That was something that even shinzo

(01:37:54):
Abe was bashful about saying out loud. She's not doing
it because she's a heavy metal drum or because she's
the iron Lady of the Indo Pacific, which I think
she might be. She's saying it because it's true, and
it's important for the government of Japan to begin telling
the truth about these things and maybe even wake up
some sleepy academics and other capitals to stop using the

(01:38:17):
Chinese talking points and realize that it's with these allies
being clear, we will actually have deterrence and we won't
have to fight the wars that people keep saying are
going to be inevitable in a couple of years.

Speaker 2 (01:38:28):
And I love there was a Chinese diplomat that literally
threatened to behead her over that comment. He actually he
said this on x and then he had to delete
his post on X after.

Speaker 7 (01:38:41):
I'm a little salty about that, because, yes, tell me
about my wife was deplatformed from Twitter because she just
reposted that odious, formally funny comedian and the fake severed
head of Donald Trump back when censorship was in high church. Yes,
so she was kicked completely off of Twitter for a

(01:39:02):
long period of time for that, this Chinese diplomat, and frankly,
that whole mission in Japan ought to be kicked off
the platform. If poor Michelle was worthy of getting kicked
off of Twitter at the time.

Speaker 2 (01:39:16):
Wow, I mean they and Tokyo responded obviously, and I
mean that's pretty They rebuked the Chinese diplomat and this
was all over time. That seems like that was a
real obvious era. Do you think that there was any
pushback on that Chinese diplomat from Beijing?

Speaker 7 (01:39:33):
Well, I think it's just like the old school rules.
You get caught, you get in trouble, you don't get caught,
and they clap behind the scenes. I think they like
the edginess. They let their wolf warriors go out there
and show their fangs and bark and threaten and bully,
and then when it goes too far, they will sacrifice
said warrior and move on. Because they have an ample
supply of people. They don't value individuals. They don't value

(01:39:56):
even high ranking military generals at any given day, sort
of just like a mafia. It could be her last day.
You'd better check up his plastic on the floor when
you go into the meeting. And that's basically what it
is for these wolf warriors and the pla gnerals.

Speaker 2 (01:40:11):
Wow, this is going to be very interesting to watch
because if it's already at that spicy level and she
just literally got a line. If it's already at that level,
I mean, who knows where this is going to go?
Because I love what you said. She's like the iron
Lady of the Indo Pacific and that's I mean, it
seems like she's not going to flinch. And what a
great ally that is for the United States and how
much that changes things for Taiwan. Of course, this leads

(01:40:33):
to this, I don't know, I guess you can call it.
It seems like it's a kind of a naval race
between US and China. They just had a new aircraft
carrier enter the fleet. Are we keeping up with them?
Is that one of the things that was sort of
explored during this trip.

Speaker 7 (01:40:48):
Well we're not doing enough. I think that the administration
is trying to put the gas pedal down, and what
Secretary Hegseth announced about trying to really completely reform, revital
and maybe detoxify the manufacturing processes that have allowed the
Pentagon to get to where we are where everything comes

(01:41:08):
too late at too great an expense, and then we
jawbone people about spending more on their own defense. But
we aren't able to manufacture and provide things on time
for them. That has to get solved. Some of it
is applying technology, some of it's using newer platforms instead
of thinking that an aircraft carrier battlegroup is the solution
to every problem. So I think that the Secretary is

(01:41:31):
on the right track, but he has a huge mountain
to try to move in getting that right. I support
the push, I support the vision, but really we all
need to back that up and make sure that the
cardinals in charge of appropriations on the Hill don't get
in the way of this.

Speaker 3 (01:41:49):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:41:50):
Last, this is kind of a goofy story. I mean
it's not really goofy. It's kind of crazy. This story
that I was looking at. I think this is one
of the ones that you were watching about how wow,
and I got to find this. It was a story
of there was apparently next Okay, here it is Daily Caller,

(01:42:10):
US Nuclear bomber Fleet shares a fence with a trailer
So a guy who literally works with the CCP, the
Communist Chinese Party, owns this trailer park which shares a
fence with Whiteman Air Force Base.

Speaker 3 (01:42:27):
What in the world.

Speaker 7 (01:42:30):
Yeah, kind of puts a new definition of trailer park
trash out there, and I think that it's the least
vetting we ought to be able to do to make
sure that the perimeter of our most sensitive sites are
not compromised by questionable people and questionable property acquisitions. So
this is just another one of those wake up calls.
We've just got to get serious. We're not talking about

(01:42:51):
vetting every single person that comes into the country, although
that wouldn't be the worst thing in the world to
know who's coming into our country, but he has property
to tell. When the B two's take off, I mean,
I don't know at what point they acquire stealth capability,
but I'm thinking the rather slower motion of takeoff, it's
easier to spot them.

Speaker 2 (01:43:10):
And this is in Missouri, Kane, this is in Missouri
on top of it, So, I mean, I didn't even know.
This is like for those who don't know, it's near
towards Kansas City. It's like you know, western and northwest Central.
But I mean there's that CCP on land in our
home state of Missouri, literally right next to And the
way that I understand it this is, you know, it's

(01:43:31):
it's it is one of the world's only nuclear capable
stealth bomber. This is no, no, it's Okham's razor. This
is suspicious. This guy's trying to steal secrets. What what
can we do about this? This is this is horrifying.

Speaker 7 (01:43:48):
Well, I mean, we have to vet and can we
just like.

Speaker 3 (01:43:51):
Can we roll up outside of the fence and.

Speaker 7 (01:43:53):
They've already committed some kind of a defense. They have
a record, they have something that identifies them. And so
it's one thing if you have some well meeting person
who's just trying to make an extra buck and has
come over here. But if you find out that in
the course of some cursory investigation, because it's a higher
priority when you get closer to sensitive sites, that there's

(01:44:14):
questionable people, you should question everyone from the People's Republic
of China that enters into that zone. But if you
especially have people who've committed crimes or some kind of
wrap sheet, then you know, this is just on us
completely not doing sensible, easy things that even at the
state level they should be able to do.

Speaker 2 (01:44:32):
Maybe they can ask Steve Bannon about it, because apparently
he's a friend of the guy who owns it. So
I don't know, maybe the White House can go and
ask Steve about his little CCP friends.

Speaker 3 (01:44:40):
We'll see.

Speaker 2 (01:44:40):
I don't know, mister Stephen Yate's always a pleasure to
have you on my friend. Good to see you, and
I'm so glad that you got back safely. Thank you
so much, Thank you very much to tak your care.
You two partners that help bring you the program. It's
the folks over at Celtech and they've been working to
develop a program. It's called the Peacekeepers program. Words to
those who protect our communities. Military law enforcement, church security teams,

(01:45:05):
school resource officers, faith based teams and SROs typically rely
on pistols. You know, has limited range. There's only so
much you can do with a pistol. Kel tech long
gun solve that problem and especially depending on what you get.
They fold compact for discrete carry and they can deploy
in seconds with full rifle capability. Now the Peacekeeper participants
they also get mission ready support, so you get extra

(01:45:27):
platform testing, you get armor or training. You get direct
Peacekeeper pricing for budget conscious organizations as well, so you
don't have to pay a full price on that. They've
got great deals. The programs active. They've equipped over a
dozen a couple dozen churches already through the Faith Based
Security Network and every Brevard County school also Sweetwater County
they've added our fifty defenders. Some others have added ksgs

(01:45:49):
and sub two k's.

Speaker 3 (01:45:50):
Those are the ones that fold in half.

Speaker 2 (01:45:52):
Celtech works with the Faith Based Security Network, so everybody
gets access to the peer training, mission ready tools, all
of it. If you're interested in learning more about this
Peacekeeper's program, if you want to participate, if you want
to take advantage of it, use the contact form at
keltech weapons dot com, slash Dana k e l Tec

(01:46:14):
Weapons dot com slash Dana. You can find that form there,
fill it out and learn more about the Peacekeepers program.

Speaker 6 (01:46:21):
On the go and need a quick news fix with
a fun twist, follow Dana's Absurd Truth podcast for bite
size informative episodes perfect for your busy schedule on Apple
or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 12 (01:46:34):
So.

Speaker 2 (01:46:34):
I don't know if you guys saw the video that
came out. This is from Paris over the weekend. A
bunch of pro Hamas protesters decided to storm the Paris
Philharmonic because the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra was giving a concert
and they brought in red flares, they lit them off.

(01:46:57):
They began attacking members of the audience and destroying the
chairs and everything else. They were finally kicked out by security.
And I mean they literally were punching people in the audience,
and then the people in the orchestra, the Israel Philharmonic,
who was playing there at the Paris Philharmonic, they had

(01:47:18):
to stand and finish the show because the chairs had
been damaged. Huh, there's not a I don't like to
say the word Palestine because it's a colonial name for
a bunch of Jordanians who decided to hijack a strip
of land there and pretend that somehow thousands of years
of Islamic or any other type of antiquity supports that,
which it doesn't. So I just, you know, it's just

(01:47:40):
either Gosen or pro Hamas, because I don't like to
use fake colonizing terms, but the and that's exactly what
it is. But yeah, there isn't a Gosen Philharmonic is there?

Speaker 3 (01:47:52):
Why is that? Oh?

Speaker 2 (01:47:54):
Because of Hamas, which has democratically elected and oversees the
area and still enjoys extreme popular larity to this very day.
I'm just surprised that people in the audience didn't beat
the ass of the people that were doing that. If
I'm in the Philharmon, if I'm going to a concert
and you come and disrupt, I will literally beat your
head off your neck. Not kidding, I will, I mean

(01:48:15):
it will. You will walk away? Well, you may not
walk away. I can't believe that people just didn't turn
on them. Did you see some of the video that
they showed, Like people were getting punched repeatedly in the
head and they were just trying to get away, like
they were hitting women. They were going in there and
punching women. There's video of women being punched by these
people going on there. Oh my gosh, I can't even man, ladies,

(01:48:37):
that's what your heels are for. That's a weapon, you know.
You just take that heel off and flack. That's you know,
it's it, all right, Today's stupidity.

Speaker 5 (01:48:44):
Came, all right the former Prime Minister of New Zealand,
Jacinda Artern. That's how she says it too. And while
this is cut twenty nine, how long have we been
hearing about this climate catastrophe we're expecting Listen to her.
She got every wrong, by the way, in New Zealand
with COVID. But listen to this.

Speaker 10 (01:49:02):
I immediately within the next five years, someone said that
without significant change, you run the risk of, you know,
losing huge parts of our ecosystem, wildfires, tropical cyclones that
will take many people's lives, and a planet that's so
warm that people will die from that from hate in

(01:49:25):
five years presented itself with immedia set.

Speaker 5 (01:49:27):
It's going to happen in five years. And ever since
the mid nineteen hundreds, they've been telling us like every
ten years every time. It's by the way, it falls
on an election cycle, every time.

Speaker 3 (01:49:38):
Every single time, which is weird.

Speaker 2 (01:49:39):
I would like it's cold in Texas today. I would
love some global warming right now, it's cold. I determined
my furnace on this morning. Folks. That does it for
us today. I hope you have a great rest of
your evening. We will be back with you tomorrow. Find
us on substat chapter and verse
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