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November 12, 2025 110 mins
More Democrats are calling for Chuck Schumer to step down as Senate Minority Leader following his “cave” to reopen the government. Critics are trashing Trump for having Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa for a White House visit. An AI-Generated Country Song is topping the Billboard Charts. Ariana Grande at the premiere for Wicked says “Oz has always been a queer place, a safe place for queer people for every different color of the rainbow”.
 
Trump says that H1-B immigrants are necessary since there are not plenty of talented Americans. Singer Tish Hyman CONFRONTS Pelosi’s predecessor, CA State Sen. Scott Weiner over his stance on trans following getting assaulted by a biological man in a women’s gym locker room.

GOP Rep. Foxx gets HEATED in a committee hearing after being accused of enjoying an “eight week vacation”. Socialist Katie Wilson is likely to be Seattle’s next mayor. Recovering Investment Banker Carol Roth joins us to break down the 50-year mortgage proposal, the problems with stimulus checks, H-1B visas, tariff drama and more.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
And then conveniently, all eight of those senators aren't up
for reelection in twenty twenty six. This is the DC
way Senator Schumer could have blocked this if he had
wanted to. And one of the challenges is, in addition
to the healthcare premium spikes, it undermines the narrative that
this was a Trump shutdown. If eight Republicans, that eight
Democratic senators could have ended it, we should have kept

(00:21):
the pressure on.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
Well, that was what I was thinking of last night,
because the whole discussion that we've had for I don't know,
like however many weeks, they keep saying that, well, they
kept saying it was a Republican shutdown. But then now
their bases like, oh, you caved, you caved, Hold up,
hold up up, Now, what do you mean they caved

(00:46):
because we were told reliably, I might add, came reliably
so correct sir, reliably.

Speaker 3 (00:53):
So questionable, but yeah.

Speaker 2 (00:54):
Reliably informed that it was a Republican shutdown, and lo,
twas not because it was Democrats that kept voting no.
So that's my whole point. I can't remember what show
I was on yesterday, but I was, but I the

(01:16):
discussion was part of the discussion was about this, and
I just remember thinking, well, they said for the longest
time that this was a Republican shutdown. Clearly it's not
if they are caving. So you you have to pick.
You know, you got to pick a narrative here. They

(01:38):
can't have it both ways. They don't get to have
it both ways. Welcome to the show, Dana lash with
You got a lot to discuss as we get rolland
gets you set up for the day. It's somewhat cool
in Texas still for those of you, can I just
say the amount of I ought to read it and
just call it the weather edition of hate mail, The

(01:59):
amount of hate mail that I got from people who
live in parts of the country where they're getting snow
for the first time, Caine. They were none too pleased
at me, saying that the fifty degree temperature was too
much for me and I needed a fire and it
was so horrible, and oh my gosh, the amount of

(02:25):
there's only I think only when I talked about candy
corn and then I can't remember the other topic. I've
gotten weird things where I get a deluge of response
about it, and this was one of those times. So
people were not happy Kane. They think that we would
die in the Arctic, and you know what, they're correct,

(02:46):
You're right, I would. That's why I don't like fifty
degree you know now, Yeah, I know it's seventy degrees.

Speaker 4 (02:53):
Now.

Speaker 2 (02:53):
I don't know what to do. I don't know how
to live my life. It goes from fifty to seventy.
I don't know how to live at least the Missouri
kind of swampy, you know, and you could you could
in Texas. I've my garden's like, are we growing still?
What's happening? What's up? Yes, it's spring, another growing season.
It just has no idea. It's very confused. So not

(03:15):
as confused segue as the left is on everything. I
The other thing that that I hear a lot about
is whether or not you will have a new Democrat
Party leader because of Schumer, because the base is rebelling.

(03:37):
They're very upset. They're very upset. You heard a collection
of Democrats that we're speaking about this. Rocana was one
who's been leading the charge. And they keep saying that
they are going to call for Chuck Schumer to resign
or to step down as a Senate Majority leader, which
is never going to happen. By the way, it's never

(04:00):
ever going to happen. Ever, he's going to step down
if he feels like it. Here's the problem that I
want to put in perspective with folks when they're talking
about who's going to take over the Democrat Party and
AOC represents. Yes, she's very loud on social media. Totally
get that she's very loud on social media, but that

(04:20):
doesn't necessarily translate into influence and you know, getting votes nationally.
Maybe she can do it for her district in the
state of New York, but that doesn't translate nationally. And
if you ask whether or not nationally she has the
ability to step up and leave the party, I don't

(04:41):
think that she does because there are too many still independents.
I think within the Democrat Party, the ones that have
stayed because they keep thinking that maybe the Democrat Party
is going to turn a new leaf, and there are
more of the social progressives to all the fiscal ones left,
but some of the ones who are clinging to like
a more moderate social position, they're still there. And I

(05:03):
just don't think that she's very representative of a lot
of them. And again that's just a very small area
that she comes from. She doesn't move the needle in elections,
she doesn't move the needle in legislation at all whatsoever.
And she's not a major fundraiser. You have to be
all of those things and to even be considered for

(05:25):
Senate Majority Leader, which she's not. Some of the loudest
people actually aren't some of the biggest fundraisers. And if
you look at members of the House, there's a reason
why some of the loudest people they don't really necessarily
have seniority because fundraising comes with that, and fundraising is
indicative of your ability to reach outside of your sphere,

(05:46):
not just your ability to control and retain and harness votes,
but to do that for others as well. She comes
from a solid blue district, so that's why she can
do what she does. Don't mistake continued support from her
very small her small district. Yes it's in Manhattan, but
in the grand scheme of things, again, small district, very blue.

(06:10):
Don't confuse that with a nationwide appeal. So you know,
I know that some people you know, disagree with that,
but there's they've been saying this with different demographics for
such a long time. It's just not something that's just
since not something that's going to happen with the left.
It's not something that's going to happen with that party.

(06:31):
At some point, Schumer is going, I mean, when he
does step down, when he decides he's, you know, done
with the Senate, I think that's when he's going to leave,
kind of like Pelosi's done. I think he'll pull a Pelosi.
But there isn't anyone so far in the Senate that
can step up to do what he does. There isn't.
I mean, because you have to understand parliamentary process, you
have to understand all of the land minds. You've got
to deal with the mcconnald's and all this stuff. And

(06:52):
this is one of the reason why you know, Trump
might he might criticize McConnell, you know, to a great deal.
But mcconnald's the reason jd vance is in the Senate.
I mean, Tucker Carlson also, he lobbied everybody to get
jd Vance in there. His son's the deputy Press secretary
for jd Vance. But Mitch McConnell bailed jd Vance's Senate

(07:13):
race out to the tune of millions upon millions with
his pack. Mcvance was not winning that race. He was
going to lose, and McConnell went in and bailed him out.
And so, you know, and he's able to go and
do a lot of stuff in the Senate, the Judiciary,
et cetera. There's a lot of things that people disagree
with him about. I get it, But when you're talking
about being the Senate majority leader for Democrats, you have

(07:35):
to be able to handle McConnell. And there's nobody else
who can stop up in that party to do that
right now, nobody as far as the House. I mean,
you know, you got a couple of people, I guess
that can you know, I mean you got Kee Jeffreys there.
He's got some seniority, but that's about it. He's somebody
else who doesn't move the needle. He's somebody else whose
name doesn't come up in big Manhattan fundraising or anything else.
So they have a problem because they didn't recruit a

(07:57):
lot They haven't recruited a lot of people since Obama.
And I've been talking about this for ten years. Over
ten years actually, when Barack obamalled the White House, he
took the entire digital fund raising apparatus and all of
its people with him. He did not work with the
Democrat Party after he left. He refused, he would not
work with them, and so when he left, he took
all of that with him because he didn't want anyone

(08:18):
else to get a slice of the pie in true
Marxist fashion, So they didn't recruit a lot of young guns.
They didn't have a lot of young young you know,
lawmakers coming up, and so that was one of the
reasons too. I think they were forced into essentially elevating
their street team for the lack of a better way
to put it. So it's very it's very interesting to see,

(08:42):
you know, some of the power shifts in that party.
But for as I said last night on Fox, I
really the Democrat Party, as you know, it has been
done for a while. The last thing that has to change,
basically is the name, because they're not the Democrat Party anymore.
You can't look at their policies and tell me that
they are. So that's that's been That is a huge
topic of conversation, and I get it, I get it.

(09:04):
I understand why. I understand why people want to know
who's going to take over, because you want to understand
how to strategize and beat these people, you know, in elections,
and I totally get that. But you know, the Republicans
are having their own fight as well. Who's who's going
to ascend after Trump? And you're already seeing some of
the right go after Trump as he gets closer every

(09:25):
day to turning out they're going to try to wrest
control from his hands. And that's part of what I
think Marjorie Taylor Green's doing. Marjorie Taylor Green as well,
she's I think she's been really railing at now some
of the things that she criticizes Potus on. You know,
I dislike the six hundred thousand Chinese students, but there's
the way that she like positions her her stances and

(09:48):
the way that she discusses it. She shows her cards.
She's not a strategist, So I don't know. That's a
lot of stuff we got to talk about as we
because we've we've got about a year until midterms kickoff
really well, oh well, yeah, basically a little a little
less than a year. Also, some of the other things
that we are looking at, in addition to all of

(10:10):
the ANTIFA protests at college campuses, you also have the
UH House Freedom Caucus. They're they're doing a victory lap.
You need to spike the football more. Republicans need to
spike the football a hell of a lot more than
they do because people like to see winds celebrated because
it reminds them of those winds.

Speaker 5 (10:29):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (10:29):
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Speaker 5 (11:48):
New York's new mayor zor on Mom Donnie claims the
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Speaker 3 (12:06):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (12:11):
I really wish everybody would leave Wendy Williams alone. I
really like her. A lot of people don't know this,
but that's actually the first time I ever did television
was with Wendy Williams because she was the first big
female broadcaster, and she was so kind and gracious. Show
me her wig room, that woman, show me. She was
always so nice. But I feel like a lot of

(12:32):
people are trying to manipulate her. So now they were
saying she has dementia. She does not have dementia. Her
doctors are walking back this like diagnosis nearly two years later.
They are treating her so horrifically. It's enraging. But her
lawyers are hopeful that the new results are going to
influence a judge to terminate her hosts, her guardianship. I
think somebody's just trying to get out her money. That's

(12:54):
what this is. Somebody's trying to manipulate this woman. They
are trying to get a court order to drug this woman,
and they are trying to take her money. My onion,
that is exactly what that is. Also another cruise panic,
Oh my gosh, panic at the sea a cruise? Is
this a catamaran? Why are we on that? Oh my gosh,

(13:15):
why are we on it in the open sea. No,
that's a giant those are giant waves. Fifty individuals aboard
a catamaran were rescued by the Navy as their vessels sank.
It was they were faring pow okay, so it was firing.
It was off the Dominican Republic's coast, so they had
to rescue. But I'm sorry, I'm looking at the little catamaran,

(13:35):
the little twee catamaran. How in the world were fifty
people a on it? B y ce. Seriously, there's more.
There are more things there right that you can use
and have to make the catamaran out of canduct.

Speaker 3 (13:54):
They have the catamaran over.

Speaker 2 (13:56):
That's insane to me. I was like terrified there was
going to be another pook. It was like the Netflix thing.
Just scared, terrifying. A postal worker was killed after getting
stuck in a oh my gosh, a male handling machine,
and they only discovered the body when the distraught fiance
turned up to report him missing. Ooh they oh he

(14:19):
was in his thirties. Oh my gosh. He was trapped
for several hours instead of a large male handling machine.
This was in Detroit. They think it was accidental. They're
still they think they're still investigating. This is something the
joker would do. Out of batman. They discovered. His body
was discovered by firefighters who responded after he failed to
return home from his shift. His fiance good on her,

(14:42):
She kept on it. But they Oh my gosh, can
you believe that? Can you believe that? That's so horrific?
Now they have a Now they're investigating workplace safety there,
I would think, so right, how does this even happen?
The number one country song in America is AI generated,
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Speaker 6 (16:46):
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Speaker 4 (16:59):
Well, Brian, it's the Democrats tried to stop President Trump.
They couldn't stop him in the courts. They couldn't stop
him with the mainstream media, so they shut down the
government and they've taken the mask off. Ezraclined in The
New York Times two d yesterday, actually said this was
never about healthcare. This was about President Trump and his totalitarianism.

(17:23):
So they were willing to cost the government tens of
billions of dollars. That the economy was in a great place,
three point eight percent growth last quarter, tracking very well
this time. I think we're going to accelerate into twenty
twenty six. But they've caused a hiccup here.

Speaker 2 (17:44):
Put in it mildly. They caused a hiccup. That's Scott Bessant.
They caused a hiccup.

Speaker 4 (17:51):
You know.

Speaker 2 (17:51):
They tried to stop him in the courts. They couldn't
stop him with them, so they shut down government. I
think that there's something to that, but I also think
that this was a very I also think that this
was kind of a dry run for them. For Democrats,

(18:13):
I think this is a dry run for how kind
of they're taking the temperature of their party to see
how far they can push it going ahead of midterms.
I this is a fascinating thing to me, because both
parties are really shifting and changing. The right has the coalition,
The right has its own problems right now. The right's
also trying to deal with its problems. Just FYI, but

(18:38):
the left has changed so quickly and so fundamentally even
and I'm not just talking about from now to like
the sixties, I mean from now until like going back
to twenty ten, even twenty fifteen, that it isn't I mean,
they're not the same party there. If you go and

(18:58):
look at what they're platform is now and you go
to the DNC website and you read it's so incredibly
different from what it was, and a lot of people
feel politically homeless. And I think that they're sort of
kind of taking a temperature to see how far they
can go, how far their base will carry them. And
as you can tell, they didn't work. It didn't work
so well with polling, it didn't work very well with

(19:21):
them now. One of the criticisms that Potus is receiving
we pull this up. I was reading a couple of
things about this this morning. Is he is they're upset
well for a couple of things. One of them is
the UH pull this up. Is the Syrian leader who

(19:46):
visited with Potus on that Al Shara he had a
White House visit. This was just a couple of days ago.
The Washington Post, everybody else has just been going crazy
over it, and a lot of people were asking, like,
at one point, I think he was quote Trump was

(20:08):
quoted and asking him how many wives he had. I
think he was joking with him. But what I They
broached the Abraham Accords in this, and apparently Shira said
that Siri is not going to enter talks directly right
now on the Abraham Accords. I like that they're pushing
it because this UH. I think they can and I

(20:31):
think they should. I think that this was I go
back to the strike on Iran and after Assad was
run out, and then you have Sharra who takes over.
And Sharra was a Jihati, I mean, you know, wants
preparing some of the UH the White House meeting there
for you. He was a Jihati. He absolutely was, and

(20:54):
I think that there's this is where it gets a
little weird in terms of geopolity, geopolitical issues, and how
the president has to position himself with this because this guy, yes,
he's a Jihati. But if you remember back to my point,
when we had the strikes on Iran, the regime, the

(21:15):
new regime pulled support for Iran. Iran was not allowed
to use Syrian airspace anymore. That was a huge issue,
and that enabled the United States and Israel to do
what they needed to do. That was incredibly significant. And
I think that that was a response to when Trump

(21:36):
was in the Middle East and when he was giving
his speech and he said that now with the fall
of Asad, because Assad has always been pushed as this
like great Christian defender, right, that's why all of the
Russian sycophants go on and on about Bashir al Assad
mayor saying, oh, well, you know now that he's you know,
he's over there in the Middle East, et cetera. And Trump.
I thought Trump's speech was great. He was speaking at

(21:57):
this business event. The Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia stood
up and applauded him, so did the whole room. We
get a standing ovation when he said that now, because
of regime change in Syria, that they were going to
rethink and reapproach and perhaps start to chip away at
these sanctions that have been placed on Syria. And this

(22:17):
is one of the reasons why there has been a
lot of Arab investment in Syria because of the sanctions.
No one and what nobody wanted to find themselves hit
punitively as a consequence of doing business with a sanctioned country.
No one wanted to get sideways with the United States
on that. And so when he did that, I think
this was the refusing Iran's request to use their airspace

(22:39):
was sort of like, you did that for us, We're
going to do this for you. So he's in DC
regardless of whether you like. Whether you like it or not,
does not change the fact that Shira still now the
leader of Syria. Whether you like it or not doesn't
change that fact. Whether he was a Jihati or not
doesn't change that fact. The fact is is that he
is now the leader of Syria. So you can either

(23:01):
choose to operate in a manner that best benefits the
United States, or you can choose to alienate an entity
and perhaps, you know, work against the goal of minimizing
Iranian Shia control over in that part of the world,
which has posed the threat to the United States. Because
no man, no country is an island. And I think

(23:22):
that's what Trump's positioning is doing. There are a lot
of people who I don't think understand this, and they
don't understand the history of it. It is what it is.
Not everybody. There's some people who think that every nation
can be just like the United States, if only the
United States, you know, white knights over there and sets
up a republic with democratic processes for them. That's not

(23:43):
how that works. It's never going to work. And some
parts of the world are never ever going to do that,
and it's not our job to make sure that they do.
You want to talk about nation building, that's nation building.
That's not our job to ensure that they adopt our processes.
It is our job to make sure that we have
allies and that no one's going to hurt our interest.
That's it. That's it, and I think that he accomplished that.

(24:06):
Does it change Shira's past? No, it doesn't. No one's
even saying that it does. No one is denying what
this dude was or where he came from. But this
is where you get very clinical about diplomacy in these
geopolitical spheres. There's no room for people to get emotional
about it. It doesn't advance your goal, yes or no.

(24:29):
Does it benefit the United States? Yes or no? Does
it benefit our interest? Yes or no? And there are
a lot of people that like to talk a good
game about how hard ass they are, and then they
get so soft and emotional on this issue and decide
to go and criticize the administration for it. Of all
the things to criticize the admen for. I mean, they're
bypassing fifty year mortgages and paying people thousands of dollars

(24:49):
as part of the tariffs. But that you let fly bit,
this is what you go after. That doesn't make any
sense to me. I mean, Kane, you don't like the guy,
but he's still bill head of Syria.

Speaker 3 (25:01):
Yep. It doesn't change his position based on what I.

Speaker 2 (25:04):
Feel exactly, I would rather have someone over there who
is not amenable to Iran than have someone over there
who is amenable to Iran. That's the whole point of this.
That's one of the reasons why I didn't like the
United States's involvement in Libya. And this was under Barack Obama.
Remember you had sid Bliminhal, you had Hillary Clinton. They
wanted to get in their ground floor of nation building.
They thought they were going to be able to flick

(25:25):
out Willmark a Daffi and get in there and install
a leader and then do whatever they wanted to do.
Loll holl lo and behold did they not know? Did
they not know? I mean, you created a power vacuum
and then the brutes moved in because you had to
have a brute to manage the brutes. And that one
learned his lesson after watching Iraq, and he was no longer.

(25:46):
He wasn't posing any kind of issue for the United
States at that point. But it didn't stop the Clintons
from wanting the nation build. It didn't stop Obama Clinton.
You know, for all the talk about Obama control in
his house, he let that woman walk all over him.
In terms of foreign policy, Hillary Clinton mucked up so
many things all across the world, whether it was Russia,
whether it was Honduras, whether it was Libya, whether it

(26:07):
was backing the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. She was one
of the worst Secretary of States in the history of
this nation. It is embarrassing how many losses that woman
racked up on the board. Why does that No one
talk about that. That's what the Trump administration had to
walk into a show. They had to walk into that.
Barack Obama let her walk all over him. He had

(26:30):
no idea what he was doing. That's the whole reason
Joe Biden was there in the first place, was to
provide some sort of balance as a diplomat and a statesman. Well, hell,
he wasn't doing it. He was too busy merching out
his office for financial gain. So Hillary Clinton did it all,
and she made a mess of the world. I mean
maybe next to Carter. Carter's the worst, followed by Clinton

(26:50):
the worst. So, oh my gosh, Lorraine said she listened
to the AI country song. No, it doesn't slap Lorraine.
It does not not doing this. Hey, we go back
to this for a second. So the number one country
song right now, this is according to I'm looking at

(27:11):
a newsweek, it's a AI. The artist is AI. What
did they did they do it with chat GP? How
did they make this? Is it chat gyps?

Speaker 3 (27:21):
I don't think it's chat Gypt but it's some program
where you just plug in the genre the lyrics.

Speaker 2 (27:28):
Actually, do you write the lyrics or does it do
all of that.

Speaker 3 (27:31):
You can write the lyrics, but I think it also
you just give it a premise and it writes the
lyrics for you.

Speaker 2 (27:37):
You guys are witnesses to history, because yesterday was the
first time on air that I literally asked AI anything.
I am so anti, I've been so and I don't
hate technology. I love technology as an aid to people.
I don't want to encourage it to get over as
skis you know what I'm saying. I forget I was
asking it yesterday. Oh I can't remember, Oh I remember

(28:00):
what story was asking it on just live on air,
like let's ask Ai. So I'm fascinated by this that
you can just say this is what I want a
pop country song, and it spits it out for you
like the Jetsons. That's weird. I I get why artists
are nervous. I get why animators are nervous. Now, when
I'm watching films or especially if you're if I'm watching

(28:23):
like a series, a TV series, I'm looking at the background,
going was this AI generated? Like? How much of this
was AI? Right, because now it's CG and then you
really have an appreciation for practical effects. I'm not I
don't want to listen to this song, but okay, so
that's it. If you come up with an AI song,
kine who owns the rights?

Speaker 3 (28:42):
Right? That's what I'm wondering, because it's derivative, So it's
whoever prompted the AI to make it? Then?

Speaker 2 (28:50):
Yeah, oh gosh, Lorraine knows it. She I asked chat
GPT how many air traffic controllers worked through the shutdown yesterday?

Speaker 7 (28:57):
Thank you?

Speaker 2 (28:58):
That's what I asked, legit the first time I actually asked.

Speaker 3 (29:02):
I don't know why I don't considered chat GPT AI though,
like there's AI programs already swindled. I mean, but I
don't think it's my front. This new version of chat
GPT sucks compared.

Speaker 2 (29:15):
To the last version though, I even I didn't even
use the last version. Again, I'm I've been debating with
myself for five weeks now, if I'm going to get
a robot vacuum just for like a part of my house,
not even you know, not even giving it full full control.
I but that so, if you have an AI generated song,
it's derivative right, because it's essentially culling or gleaning from

(29:40):
everything else that's out there. So I don't know how
that wouldn't be copyright infringement. Example, when you do, you
remember the little girl statue that they installed outside of
the in the Financial district of Manhattan, and it was
standing outside. It was put up outside Wall Street and
she was supposed to be facing off against the bull.
And then artist who sculpted the bull filed suit of

(30:03):
copyright infringement and one because half of her meaning was
the bull. She was literally playing on someone else's intellectual
property that statue in order for that statue to mean
what it meant, and as a result, that was considered
copyright infringement because the sculpture was lost without the bull

(30:24):
and they had to move it. That guy won. So
that's what what I'm talking about. With AI generated music,
you have it gleans from what's already out there, and
then it compiles it and then composes it, and then
that's the final composition that's super derivative. So man, I

(30:45):
really feel bad. I feel bad for intellectual property attorneys.
Actually I don't because they're gonna get rich, and patent
attorneys Actually, I don't. They're gonna get super rich too.
I don't feel bad for any of them. They're going
to be rolling in all the dough coming up. If
you're going into law, there you go go into those fields.
I'm telling you we have more on the way as
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Speaker 6 (32:53):
Slash Dana get the loadown 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 Sands through.

Speaker 3 (33:06):
The Glass, So are the days of the United States.

Speaker 2 (33:11):
We love you, we love you.

Speaker 8 (33:13):
You're amazing and thank you for believing in us.

Speaker 3 (33:18):
Do you have a message for the queer fans who
are watching this?

Speaker 8 (33:21):
We love you, we love you, we love you.

Speaker 3 (33:23):
We love you, we love you, we love you. In uns,
it's always been a weird place, a safe place. Look
for every.

Speaker 9 (33:29):
Different color of a rainbow.

Speaker 3 (33:30):
Where everybody read the Al Frank Bomb books. It's the truth.
You're safe and us. We love you so mud Dot,
Bob the Gang are the better.

Speaker 2 (33:36):
Do you have a message from the gunky slass?

Speaker 8 (33:38):
Oh, we love you too, We love you too.

Speaker 2 (33:41):
Where is that camera? Are they high? Yeah? What is
it like Dante's Inferno where you have like different levels
like you have like your normal gaze and then there's
just more glitter and twinkery. Is you just descend like
how does that work? I don't understand, you know, how
does that? What does that even mean? Why can't it

(34:03):
just be like it's a movie, you know, I mean,
you're talking about how people have sex. Why does everything
have to be tinged with it? Why does everything have
to be viewed through that perspective? Why can't you just
be a normal person and not sex obsessed? That's what
this say is. Stop it, Stop it. It's just so goofy.
That's Ariana Grande who looks like a minecraft character. She's

(34:26):
lost so much weight. All the fat in her face
is gone. God love her, and now it's just hard angles.
It's just hard angles on the jaw, hard angles on
the cheek bone. It's just all hard angles. You can't
do that. As you get to your thirties, you can't
be losing your body fat like that. Ladies. You got
to keep that body fat in your face. What's up?
I don't think she had like plastic surge or anything.

(34:47):
I think she just dropped a lot of weight. And
then I don't know why she bleaches her eyebrows. That
doesn't look good on anybody, you know, you know, not
even mannequins. Stop, says Gayer Lim it. Then she talks
like Chris Catan when he was doing Kippi's voice from
the Olympics. Back with Kippie and Carrie Strug.

Speaker 3 (35:04):
It's so great.

Speaker 2 (35:06):
That's which sounds like, all right, we got our another
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Speaker 10 (37:03):
There's never going to be a country like what we
have right now. And does that the Republicans have to
talk about it?

Speaker 11 (37:07):
And does that mean the H one B vis a
thing will not be a big priority for your administration
because if you want to raise wages for American workers,
you can't flood the country with tens of thousands or
hundreds of age.

Speaker 10 (37:19):
We also do have to bring in talent when we're
gone to be.

Speaker 11 (37:22):
A talent and I know you don't know, you don't
we don't have talent.

Speaker 10 (37:25):
No, you don't have you don't have certain talents, and
you have to people have to learn. You can't take
people off an unemployment like an unemployment line and say
I'm going to put you into a factory we're going
to make missiles or I'm going to put do we.

Speaker 3 (37:37):
Ever do it before?

Speaker 2 (37:38):
Well, you and I I'll give you an example.

Speaker 10 (37:40):
In Georgia, they raided because they wanted illegal immigrants. They
had people from from South Korea that need batteries all
their lives. You know, making batteries are very complicated. It's
not an easy thing and very dangerous. A lot of explosions,
a lot of problems. They had like five or six
hundred people early stages to make batteries and to teach

(38:03):
people how to do it. Well, they wanted them to
get out of the country. You're going to need that, Laura.
I mean, I know you and I disagree on this.
You can't just say a country's coming in going to
invest ten billion dollars to build a plant and going
to take people off an unemployment line who haven't worked
in five years and they're going to start making their missiles.

Speaker 2 (38:21):
It doesn't work that well. So this was a very
interesting discussion. And look, I got to give kudos to uh,
Laura Ingram for you know, following up and asking questions.
And you know, maybe some people Tucker needs to watch
how she interviews or watch my interview with Kevin Roberts.
That's how you follow up and you you do follow
up questions and you ask this stuff and it doesn't

(38:44):
have to be combative. I mean, if it's about finding
out you know, Okay, why do you think the way
that you think about this issue enlightened me? Isn't that
the whole purpose? Welcome back to the program, being a
lashed with you. We're at the top of the second hour.
A lot of people, myself included have a major problem
with AGE one B visa situation because it's I do
think it's an absolute scam. I think it's an absolute scam.

(39:05):
I think that we have a lot of talented people
in the United States, and I think it's been used
by corporations as an excuse to get cheap foreign labor
at the expense of American workers. Bottom line, there's no
other way around it. I mean, there's I mean, right now,
look that the Department of Labor has launched an investigation.
They have over one hundred ongoing investigations right now into

(39:25):
H one B abuses, lots of abuses. They said that
they have one hundred and seventy five ongoing missions right
now targeting potential abuses within the H one B visa
program as part of its mission to protect American jobs.
Let me tell you that protecting American jobs and protecting
American workers that is not only America first, but it's

(39:45):
a national security issue, a major national security issue. I
know that it was just sort of given, you know,
as an example about making missiles, But Kane, honestly, I
don't want I don't want to. I don't care what
it sounds. I don't want to form worker making American
missiles just to use that as an example that was
brought up in the cut.

Speaker 3 (40:05):
No, I get that, but I don't. I mean, I
don't want to ignore the fact that over the last decade,
as this government has been offshoring manufacturing, including we're talking ships,
not just missiles, but ships and other important things that
involve national security. I want the people that know how
to do it to teach Americans how to do it,

(40:25):
and then they go home. And I know that that
was something that Scott Besson addressed this morning, and it
is a temporary thing for the specific manufacturing that Trump
is bringing back. He's got seventeen to twenty trillion in
investments that he's brought back into the United States. It's
going to take some time before we get that ball going,

(40:46):
but we're going to need some of that talent that
we haven't had here and have it needed here because
things were not being manufactured here.

Speaker 2 (40:54):
And I think, and I get that, I think the
response isn't to just keep letting the flood of And
I'm not saying that's what you're stating, but I don't
think the response is letting you know, these individuals that
have just a flood of H one V. VISA workers
come in.

Speaker 3 (41:09):
And to your point, it has been used as a scam.
It has been used to essentially the excuse as well,
we need these people here, and at the time when
we were offshoring, we didn't need those people here. So
you're right it was used as a scam during that time.
But I think now we're in a point where we
want to bring back manufacturing that hasn't been here for
a while, and in order to do that, we have

(41:31):
to bring in the people to teach Americans how to
do it, so then they contemporarily do that and then
go home.

Speaker 2 (41:36):
And I think some of this also is the college
students that we allow in. I think that we need
to be with our universities. I you know, why not,
since I don't. It's going to take an It's going
to take a monumental movement to uncouple the issue of

(42:00):
government running student loans, uncoupling that after that was pretty
much centralized under Obama Biden. And until that happens, you know,
you're going to have colleges and universities for those who
are seeking higher education. It's going to be prohibitively expensive.
Why not then make it super expensive for foreign students

(42:24):
based on country coming into the United States, you know, like,
I don't want six hundred thousand Chinese students who are
in good standing with the CCP coming into the United States.
I don't, And I think that's completely fair. You know what,
why is it every other country allowed to do that
but not the United States. We're treated like second class
citizens in this world. We're mooched off of, we're leeched

(42:45):
off of, we're condescended to, and we're treated as second
class citizens. Tired of it?

Speaker 3 (42:52):
I agree? And the Chamber of Commerce actually proposed one
hundred thousand dollars fee on certain H onebvsas like that,
the ones that universities I mean, I would imagine Stanford,
Harvard and the others. But the AAU joined a lawsuit
against that idea. So I agree with you. You should make

(43:13):
it more expensive for certain H one b vsa is,
the ones that don't necessarily benefit the United States in
any way. I'd say eliminate them altogether. But the ones
that we absolutely need, you know, are considered to be
and being messaged as right now by the administration is.

Speaker 2 (43:28):
Temporary, and I hope so, but I those coming in
from China, no, I think if you're coming in from
a communist nation, no more importation of communists. And then
have it on a graduating scale of liberty. This is
how much you got to pay to come in, and
then you know what some of those fees could be
used to offset until we're able to figure out the
mess of college financial aid and all of that. Undo

(43:52):
that mess. But you know, as far as it relates
to H one B, we just allow people to come
in for everything. Do we need another humanities degree? A
foreign worker with a humanities degree? To your heavens, no,
good night. Some of these degrees are so stupid and worthless.
They really are, and and we've got to really people

(44:14):
began looking at colleges and universities like like back in
the olden days when people would go to balls and
galas and all of that stuff. And that's how Uppercrest
families mingled, and that's how you presented your daughters. The
people use college the same way. It's like societal entry.

(44:34):
That's where they go and mingle with other people within
their same social status, and that's what it's really ultimately
used for more than anything else. Nobody wants to admit it,
but let's be honest, that's what it is. I mean,
I know women who like spend you know, six figures
trying to get their daughters in you know, certain universities
and certain sororities in those universities, and the girls are

(44:56):
going into like you know, art history or something like that.
Like why why you're doing that? It's because it's about
preserving social standing. And we have gotten this very bougie,
very aristocratic view of higher ed and it's got to
stop because that's part of the driving reason. I mean,
you guys, remember back in the seventies and eighties, if

(45:16):
you weren't going to get a four year degree, you
were looked down on. You were looked down on. That's
a real thing, you you know, you were looked you
were condescended to. It was as if though you what
you were accomplishing or doing in life wasn't as good
as somebody else because they were going into debt for school.
I don't know, but the Labor Department said that they're
trying to put a stop to the H one B

(45:36):
visa abuse. I mean, I don't think we should be
taking anybody in and unless it can be used to
train American workers and used to boost our own American workforce,
and it should only be temporary and it's not guarantee.
And even then, and then everyone else know, because we've

(45:57):
got enough communist here, we have enough people with ruthless
humanity's degrees, we have enough of it. It's done. It's
a national security issue at this point. And it's to
where we have industries that you know, Americans aren't even
going to be able to participate in because we've we've
imported in an entire workforce. This is a very serious thing.

(46:17):
And I get that there are businesses out there that
want to protect that and they want to have cheaper
labor costs. Well, then that's a conversation to have with labor.
But you don't, and labor also needs to be a
little bit you know, let's let's be a little bit
realistic about it as well. You help us, we help you.
You know what I'm saying, We don't. We don't want
to see American workers undercut. In fact, all of these
steps are taken to ensure that American workers are protected.

(46:38):
But by God, don't be fleecing the American public with stuff,
and I'm talking especially to some of these big old bosses,
and you know that the workers don't always align in
terms of agreement with the bosses. There's a way to
meet in the middle and deal with this so that
we don't have American workers punished in the end. And
that's that's something that's got to happen. So I was
pleased to see that, you know, push back with this

(47:00):
do that. We got a lot of talented people and
I don't know it just it's I will say that
one of the things I think that Elon Musk has
done has I think he's kick started a renewed interest,
a resurgence in newcomers into tech and engineering and making

(47:23):
it look cool and accessible and showing everything that can
be done with such a course of study and how
you don't necessarily have to go to very expensive universities.
I mean, granted, it helps that he's, you know, kind
of that he's super smart and he's a genius. It helps,
but you don't necessarily have to go into debt in
order to get the kind of foundation to do something

(47:45):
that he's done. And I think that's been very, very helpful,
especially for younger generations to see. But younger generations can't
do this on their own. Older generations need to stop
treating colleges and universities like these aristocratic, you know, steps
into life. I think that's a fair assessment.

Speaker 4 (48:03):
King.

Speaker 2 (48:03):
Am I being too harsh on that? Because I feel
like that's what it's looked at?

Speaker 3 (48:06):
Yeah, I mean, yeah, it is looked at that way
to case.

Speaker 2 (48:10):
I know, you know people who sent you, you know
how it is the big fraternities and sororities down south
with these colleges. Right, So we have a friend and
they're very, very very great people. Three daughters, and each
one of the daughters went to a big, giant university
in the South. One actually went into nursing to be

(48:35):
what am I thinking of the nurse that's basically underneath
the doctor. I'll think of it a minute, Earl Lorrain
will remind me. The other one literally went into art history,
and the other was going to go into education and
then changed the course of study and ended up going
into something like literature or whatever. I'm like, why are
you going into debt for that? That's a worthless degree.

(48:56):
But the amount of money that they the bulk of
it was they wanted to go and in a sorority,
and they paid an ungodly amount of money for the clothes,
the makeup for Rush Week. That's all true. All of
that's true. That's not even remotely exaggerated. That's all true.
And I love traditions. But at the same time, I
think that that is incredibly unrealistic to start out life

(49:19):
like that, so you can check that box and have that,
you know, social outing. I don't know, it's just all
weird to me. We've got to stop treating college like
it's this I don't know, like we have a very
antiquated view of how it fits in with modern American
life and education.

Speaker 3 (49:39):
I think we're seeing more people in trade schools now
rather than taking this academia.

Speaker 2 (49:44):
And they're making to and they're doing.

Speaker 3 (49:45):
Much better, and those are by the way, I think
those sustain longer. I just think that once you have
a talent, you can never be taken away and you
can make money with that the rest of your life.

Speaker 2 (49:56):
I had a cousin that went into trade school, into
electric goal engineering, and I don't even know what he
does because it sounds very complicated, and he didn't go
to a regular college. He went to a trade school.
That dude makes six figures. He makes six figures.

Speaker 3 (50:08):
Effective training is where it's at.

Speaker 2 (50:11):
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Speaker 3 (51:22):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (51:28):
So that's why you like chat gpt, Kane, Because apparently
chat gpt has empathy, and some say that it acts
more human than doctors. Even do I know that's where
we are AI Chatbots like chat gpt apparently score two
points higher than doctors on some imaginary ten point empathy
scale that we're all supposed to believe has existed for

(51:48):
a long time. The advantage held across thirteen or fifteen
studies examining a whole bunch of stuff. Blah blah blah.
Text only interactions is what it evaluated it as so
so it didn't even look at in person or voice consultations.
It was just text. This is so stupid. Why is
this even a study? Did someone spend money on this?

(52:12):
Not a cry not loud? I'm closing this out it's
too stupid to read. Let's see, we've had this one.
The Atlantic headletter was from yesterday. A woman born with
no brain turns twenty in a medical miracle. She was
told she'd never make it to five. Medicine's awesome. Cursive
is now a lost art writing cursive. I think that

(52:35):
it should be taught because it's valuable. And also everyone
writes like chicken scratch. I just cannot believe that it's
considered a lost art. At this point. Nobody does cursive anymore.
Nobody everybody prints like you know, toddlers. They all print.
Coffee is good for you again. It may protect against
the regular heartbeats. Was This follows the headline from last

(52:55):
week where it said it was bad for you yay,
So now it's good for you again. I am going
to come back to the nine year old that lost
a drunk passenger out of the Carnie Ride, of the
carnival ride in British Columbia. But in the meantime, we've
got more in store. Stick with us as we move
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Speaker 6 (54:23):
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 3 (54:34):
Are you going to protect women, not trans women? Women?

Speaker 1 (54:38):
Women?

Speaker 3 (54:38):
Trans women are took leomen lemen, listen, we need to
protect one that's safety.

Speaker 5 (54:43):
I was assault No, they are not.

Speaker 7 (54:46):
They are men.

Speaker 10 (54:46):
I was assaulted by Yes, he broke his my sauce
so brash.

Speaker 3 (54:51):
You need to reconstruct this sne I'm a lesbian, I'm
not transphoting, and I'm black. So there's another black woman
in you hand. I want to tell me how they feel.

Speaker 7 (55:00):
Please join in.

Speaker 3 (55:00):
But all of you are.

Speaker 12 (55:01):
Not And I don't know who you are what you are,
but I'm a lesbian and I'm.

Speaker 8 (55:05):
Telling you right now men are harassing women in the
locker room.

Speaker 3 (55:08):
Answer the question.

Speaker 11 (55:10):
I'm just telling you.

Speaker 8 (55:11):
I want to woo.

Speaker 3 (55:12):
Just that's now I'm doing.

Speaker 12 (55:13):
And by the way, I respect what you have to
I just want to let you know that I'm.

Speaker 3 (55:21):
So sorry that you were a multiple of times. I
appreciate you talking about it.

Speaker 4 (55:26):
I think we need to like to say the all
women and and obviously that's increditor important.

Speaker 3 (55:34):
I also know that frands women are also ordalized in
this country. So women, and.

Speaker 2 (55:43):
What answer is that? That's I think they say his
name Wyner, but we're calling him Wiener Scott Wayner. What
would you say? Yeah, typically, Uh, he's the guy who's challenging.
He's going to try to take over Nancy Pelosi's seat
in California. And this was at like a it was

(56:04):
like a meet and greet that he was having in
California where he was questioned by you remember the audio
that we had played. I think it was last week. Tish,
her last name starts withthing a and it slips in
my mind now, Tish him no, doesn't start with nay.
Tish Hyman. She's the Grammy nominated singer songwriter. She's you know,

(56:29):
a gem buff, she's you know, works out, works on
her fitness, and she's out in California. And she was
the one in the video who while she was in
the women's locker room at her gym, a man walked in,
like right as she was changing. So she's in a
state of undress and a man walks in and she
says something because she's shocked, as any normal woman would,

(56:52):
and the man was very aggressive in his response to her,
and then he called her a bitch. And then that's
when a homebroke loose. And then she was on video
subsequently saying that, you know, alerting the women at the
gym that there's a man in the locker room. And
so they really attacked her really with this, and the

(57:16):
gem dismissed. I mean, they canceled her membership. You guys
remember the video for that. They canceled her membership. And
so she was at this. Oh, by the way, the
guy that's at the gym, Alexis he calls himself alexis black.

(57:38):
He has a history of assault. He apparently beat up
his ex wife, so he has the history of assault
against women, and he's and he was not just walking
in the locker room and changing. He was described as
displaying his genitalia. Sounds like he was doing a little

(57:58):
bit more than changing in the locker room, you know
what I mean. And so he got she got She
ended up because she was the one who criticized it
and worried about her safety. She's the one who ended
up being having her gym membership canceled. So she's and
the guy is a history again a documented history of

(58:19):
domestic violence, and she has every right to feel, as
she was saying, deeply concerned about women's safety and female
only spaces. So she's sitting right in front of this
uh Wiener what's his name, Scott Wiener at this town
hall style meeting, and you heard what Weiner said. He's
it was a Kamala Harris word salad. I have the transcript.

(58:41):
He says, we lent everybody to be saved, and we
also know that we have tens people, both men and women,
who are men and women? What what? And he was
saying yes, uh, and she was. She was explaining to
him because she's apparently an advocate. She's a lesbian an

(59:03):
advocate for lgb I don't think she has the T
and the Q on there, but whatever, And she's and
he's apparently tries to be an LGBTQ advocate, civil rights advocate. Wiener, he's,
by the way, he's fifty five. That guy's fifty five. Yes,

(59:26):
he's like one of those soap thin people that you
can't guess their age anyway. So because he's a guy
who's who I guess backs the trans and she apparently
doesn't even though she's a black lesbian, he has more
intersectional boxes than she does. Is that how it works
in the victim Olympics, So progressive rules dictate that he
outranks her in the grievance hierarchy. I guess that's how

(59:50):
that goes. But she has every right to say that.
She's like, look, I don't feel safe. There's dudes in here.
And he's like, yeah, well, you know, we need to
I think we need to protect the safety of all women.
But then he kept trying to say in the crowd
was booing her. They were booing her when she was
talking to uh Wiener, and he's always I mean, he's like, well,
you know, trans women are no, they're not. There are

(01:00:11):
men pretending to be women, And I mean it is
I cannot believe you have a man telling a woman.
And essentially what was happening is the is Scott Wiener
in the town hall that you just saw in the video.
I mean essentially he was telling her that her concerns
are unfounded, was he not? Yeah, you know in trans

(01:00:36):
a history of a beasts on trans women. There's not
a history of a beasts on trans women. There's the
guy who is at the gym, who's beaten up women before,
and he's at the gym apparently throwing his you know,
bits and pieces all around. Why is it that they
I'm so, you're a man is not going to be
victimized by other women like that? Stop it. I I'm

(01:00:56):
just this is actual that. That's the progressive patriot and
they've always been progressive and this is just a continuation
of it. This is why third and fourth way feminist
y'all messed up because you open the door to this
and now your movement is done. Your movement is so done.
You came full. So this is beyond even horseshoe theory

(01:01:18):
word solid defense. Now the Scott Wiener, he's trying to
go for Nancy Pelosi's seat. I mean he's got all
of the weird super far left. Oh wait, he's not
fifty five. He's born in seventy. Is he fifty five?
Oh wow, yeah he is. He doesn't look fifty five.

(01:01:40):
But I think he dies as beard you know, he
has like that just for men, like beard eyed stuff,
and it's like super dark. But I don't know if
he's he's going, I mean, he wants to he wants
her seat in Congress. He may get it. I mean,
he actually may get it. I haven't really looked too

(01:02:00):
much at his I've tried to avoid him. He goes
to all the I don't even know some of this
stuff that he goes to. He he wears leather and
he goes out to those festivals and all that stuff.
You know, wears the straps and everything. I don't know.
That's all I'm gonna say. But hey, I mean, you know,

(01:02:20):
they could pick him. I don't know what is who
his challengers are. He's trying to lay the groundwork for
this congressional run out some of the local presence, like
why couldn't you have waited just a little bit. The
ag endorsed him. Rob Bonta already endorsed him that California ag.
So he I mean, it looks like he's starting to

(01:02:41):
rack up those endorsements. But that's interesting because now Tis
Shaiman could be a roadblock to that. So you have Wiener,
who's gay, who does the BDSM stuff apparently and does
the backs of the trans issues. And then you have
Tish Hyman, who is a black lesbian who's going to

(01:03:04):
win in the minds of the left in that area
in San Francisco in the Bay Area, who wins.

Speaker 3 (01:03:10):
Well, based on that video clip, it certainly isn't tish.

Speaker 2 (01:03:13):
How insane is that.

Speaker 3 (01:03:17):
That's the logic of the left, or the lack of it.

Speaker 2 (01:03:20):
They don't even like they she's just a plain old lesbian,
So you don't count, can you. That's basically what they're
telling her. In fact, that's not basically what they're telling her.
There's been an argument about that in Britain where they
push backward the trans Tifa push back against women, especially
if they're like gay activists and they're like, you're just
a you're just like a someone that one of the

(01:03:42):
videos was a basic I can't even say some of
the words be lesbian was one of the videos that
came so that in the Intersectional Olympics, she loses. She's
got to tear off her arm or something. She needs
to be like a one armed black lesbian because.

Speaker 3 (01:03:57):
They her, yeah, sorry women or men.

Speaker 2 (01:04:01):
Well, well, what does she have to do to get
one more intersectional box over the wiener guy? Like does
she have to be? She probably has to stop working
out because can't you be obese? And that counts, remember
like super fat, mid fat. I don't remember the grading privilege?
Yeah yeah, yeah. So what if she just turned into
a fat she's a black lesbian who's fat. Is that enough?

(01:04:25):
Because he's a gay dude who supports trans So there's three.
Oh man, I don't know, like how this is. This
is what I'm talking about. It's intersectional Olympics. This is
exactly what we're talking about. So I don't know, like
they're I don't know what. And then what if there's
a candidate that decides to challenge the Wiener dude and

(01:04:48):
they have more intersectional boxes. What if it's a dude
who became a woman who got fat and not become
a woman he lobbed off as Willie, decided to really
seriously cosplay surgically as a woman and then got fat
and then has one arm right like the drummer from
Death Leopards. Think about it? Would that guy beat the

(01:05:09):
Wiener guysation? I am being completely serious. You think that
it's absurd, and you're correct, that is what they do.
I am not kidding you. That is how this works,
the intersectional Olympics. That's exactly how this works. Yep, yep.
So how does I know enjoy that, enjoy that Bay Area.

(01:05:32):
You know what I would be doing if I were
the right, I would be launching like these secretly conservative
like just cos players. I mean, if you can pretend,
why not hire actors to play super intersectional candidates and
challenge all of these candidates, right, why not just you know,
let's just be a chaos agent. Let's just bring up

(01:05:54):
you know, I don't know, I don't know how far
it's going to go, but I feel like that's this
is where we're at. That's how the left. They don't
look at merit, they don't look at whether you're smart.
Case in point that Jack Schlossberg brat. He's in his thirties.
He's like middle age. Now, right, when does middle age start?
I don't even know when. When else that's the internet

(01:06:17):
does middle age start? Oh yeah, he's about middle aged.
So again, this is another case of the left infantilizing.
They're one of the sons of the Democrat families. Jack
Schlosberg is JFK's grandson. JFK's daughter Caroline Kennedy she married

(01:06:40):
h and had this is one of her kids. He's
got a sister. I think too all he does is
make these deranged videos where he goes after women and
talks about their physical attributes and their appearances. I mean,
his videos are in hinge. The Left doesn't even really
want anything to do with him. He's running for our
Jerry Nadler's seat. Now he's in and seen a congressional run.

(01:07:01):
He tried running before? Did he try running before? Did
another one of them damn Kennedy kids try doing it?
What did one of them gingers try? Wait? Hang on,
let's ask the internet. What was that other Kennedy brat
who ran for office? I said, what not?

Speaker 3 (01:07:20):
Who?

Speaker 6 (01:07:22):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (01:07:22):
No?

Speaker 2 (01:07:23):
So one of the grand Yeah, another one of them.
I think it was like one of Teddy's kids or something.
I don't know he was. He ran for office and
he lost horrifically. Didn't he didn't Jack try running before?
I don't know. He seems he seems nuts because he is.
Long story short. They this infantilization of the dudes on
their side. This is who they have. These are their

(01:07:45):
young guns. You got the Wiener on California and you
got this crazy Schlosberg dude. Oh so, I've never been
happier to not be on the left. It's so nice.
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Speaker 3 (01:09:00):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida man.

Speaker 2 (01:09:10):
All right, so ho, this is gross because the guy's nude,
A nude Florida man. He's totally naked. That's how you
say that. In southern Missouri, alt's naked. Any Kki date
nicked a Florida man done stole some wheels at a
university campus. He uh stole a vehicle at Bucknell University.
Callum Dryer twenty was charged with felling you on author

(01:09:33):
Ray's use of motor vehicle, receiving stolen property, and also
I would add, if it were me, the extra charge
of being gross because he sat naked in the seat
of the car. Someone has to clean that and then
get in the car also to drive it. Would you
sit in your vehicle if someone if a naked dude

(01:09:54):
stole your car and he sat in that seat, would
you sit in your seat after a neckad dude had
set in your seat? Cane, I would up my car
on fire sooner, and I'd sit in that seat. It's
not going to happen. That's nasty with a capital nasty. Uh.
He stole a white out e Q five and the
victim said she had parked there when she went to
get her vehicle, it was gone, and they saw the

(01:10:17):
camera footage of a nude dude. Nude dude. He got
He pulled on the vehicle's door handles. He was able
to break in. They were able to identify him, and
they took him into custody. He bales at five thousand.
But I don't think he made it. Oh, oh my gosh,
it's so gross. Like he was nude and probably touched
everything in there. That's nasty. I mean you, I don't

(01:10:44):
like buffets, and I don't like naked people doing anything
that's outside of the Just no, don't keep it in
your house and don't get another people's cars like that.
That's nasty because you know he probably wasn't clean either.
The Caine hates old people listening to this. Eighty five
year old Florida man admits he knew he hit something.
He was in a Publick's parking lot and he ran
over a ninety one year old woman. Oh my gosh,

(01:11:05):
he didn't. He's eighty five years old. He ran over
a ninety one year old in the grocery store parking
lot at Saint Petersburg, and he said that he just
kept driving home. He didn't stop. He thought, he said, well,
I knew I had hid something, but he just chose
to kept driving back home. Anyway. It happened about five pm,

(01:11:26):
and I can't this is you wouldn't stop. That has
to be pretty significant, you know what I mean. Police
track him down using surveillance footage and witness reports, and
he was driving alone. He struck this lady after she
was walking through the parking lot and he just kept
on driving back to his apartment killed her. So that's

(01:11:49):
horrible that her death. The Panela's County Medical Examiner's office,
if they can have if if this website can stop
having the god forsaken pop ups that pop up every
five seconds, I'll finish the sentence. The Corner's office. They
said that she injuries contributed to her death. That's why
she was killed, because her death was caused by her injuries.

(01:12:11):
We can run over. How do you just keep going though?
I mean, man, I know what you're saying, king you
and them old people. You know, maybe there's something to it.
We got more on the way stick with us. Third hour.
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Speaker 12 (01:13:35):
Thank you, Madam Cherra, welcome back from your eight weeks
of taxpayer funded vocation. It's good to see you, and I.

Speaker 2 (01:13:40):
Hope I'm going to interrupt you Republicans. I interrupt you please.
I am sick and tired of hearing you all say
we had an eight week vacation.

Speaker 12 (01:13:50):
That's exactly what happens.

Speaker 2 (01:13:51):
I worked every day. I don't know about you. I
don't know why to hear every day.

Speaker 12 (01:13:56):
So we all write every single day, and that's exactly
what happened.

Speaker 2 (01:13:59):
With I'm taking you're recognized.

Speaker 7 (01:14:04):
I hope that you.

Speaker 12 (01:14:05):
All enjoyed yourselves. While American families looked at their letters
from their health insurance companies terrified that their insurance premiums
were going to double or triple while the House was
out of session for fifty three days. That is unacceptable, Madam.

Speaker 2 (01:14:22):
Chair, Well, yeah, she did her job. Why didn't you
get off your skinny noe backside having backside and get
up and vote yes? I mean super easy to do right,
you guys voted no. You know what what the kicker
is is that they could have done this two weeks
ago and they chose not to. It's the same damn
thing as it was two weeks ago, y'all know that, right.

(01:14:43):
The same bill that they voted to finally pass was
the same one that was presented two weeks ago. In fact,
it was the same one presented two weeks before that,
and the same one presented two weeks before that. Your
inability to do your job like a grown ass person
doesn't necessitate an emergency on someone else's part. Nothing makes
me sicker than when grown people don't know how to work.

(01:15:06):
Welcome back to the show, Dana lash with you or
at the top of this third hour, and I get
real tired of hearing these democrats a vacation. Well apparently
that's what they did. They voted no, and then they
just went off and did whatever. King, that's what seems like. Yeah,
I mean, I know that our congress person here, who's
a Republican, was out meeting with voters like every single day,

(01:15:30):
every day.

Speaker 3 (01:15:31):
What I hate is the fact that they're trying to
play both sides of it. They're trying to act like
it's a Republican shutdown. But then they go out in
public and talk about all the leverage they gave up
by having eight senators vote to open up the government.

Speaker 2 (01:15:42):
Yeah, it can't.

Speaker 3 (01:15:43):
You can't have it both ways.

Speaker 2 (01:15:44):
You can't have it both ways at all. This is
so and the fact she's like trying to go off
on this older lady who's a Republican and trying to say, oh, well,
you know it just it's you, just, you know, hope
you enjoyed your vacation. With her smug face. She sit
right next to heavy Wasserman Schultz. Girl, get real, you
could have voted for the thing two weeks ago and

(01:16:05):
you chose not to because you want to add them
trillion and a half dollars and expand Obamacare that everybody
busts their backside to afford, and it's god awful so
that you can put a bunch of people who came
into the country illegally on it. You're a welfare queen.
You're an entitled participation trophy welfare queen. That's what you are.
That's why I can't be I could not could not

(01:16:27):
do that. I could not be a politician. I don't
honestly don't understand why people want it. I guess they didn't.
I think that some of them they wanted to go
make it big in Hollywood and it didn't happen, so
they went to DC to be politicians. Because you can't
tell me that you really want that you even if
you go there with the hot you know, the intent
to work on behalf of the people. I'm sorry, but

(01:16:49):
it ain't nobody worth sitting there biting your tongue that
hard for Sorry, just not oh my gosh, but that's
they're really trying to, really trying to work really really
hard and and fudge all of that for people. So's
it'll go through. We still got the flight cancelations and

(01:17:09):
all of that other stuff happen. And in the meantime,
let me move to a couple of other different things
here running around doing craziness. You have a socialist that
won the Seattle mayor raise, so you'll have a socialist
in Seattle. You're gonna have a socialist in New York
or else. You're gonna have socialists everywhere. Yeah, wherever there's

(01:17:30):
democrats anymore. Do you see what I mean in that?
It's more and more. It's not it's more and more
they are. They're coming out and admitting what they are.
What I think. It was two thousand and eleven when

(01:17:57):
I was the token conservative at CNN, and I remember
saying to you exactly what I'm saying now about the
issue of socialists in the Democrat Party and how they're
really socialist, and oh my gosh, the media matters. People
were living at me. Media, it was mad at me.

(01:18:18):
Can you believe she's calling Democrats socialists? But then look though,
now they're coming out and they're saying it. That's what
it's been all along, It's been all along. That's insane.
Lorraine notes too that Senate aids were the ones that
had to keep working with no pay because they didn't
qualify for any of the other stuff that the federal
workers who were furloughed that they received, So the House

(01:18:42):
furloughing their aids actually helped them. It's true story. Oh
and another quick thing too. Remember we were talking about
the Tisheim and the lady who called out the guy
in the gym. Not only did the guy who walked
into the women's locker room. Not only did that guy
who walked in the women's locker room. Not only did
he have a history of domestic abuse because he apparently

(01:19:03):
beat up his ex wife, he stole his ex wife's name,
like just co opted her name and is going by
her name Alexis. That is some Norman Bates level of creepery. Oh,
really bad. It's bad stuff. Now a few other things. Yeah,

(01:19:26):
we were talking about the pulled this up. The socialist
that is now going to be in Seattle. I mean,
this is just crazy. Progressive is on the edge of
the in the mayor world race. You're going to have
a socialist this Katie Wilson is the socialist who as

(01:19:48):
of yesterday they were counting ballots. They're saying that looks
I don't know if they're going to have to have
a recount or not. Uh, but she the she was
leading the mayor over the thirteen hundred votes according to
the latest stuff that was released yesterday. Seattle's pretty lefty.

(01:20:10):
I mean, how do you keep going more and more
left when you see the state of things, Well, we
just didn't go left enough, and that that's going to
actually bring back prosperity and economic sanity to the city.

Speaker 3 (01:20:22):
Yeska, this is how we know that it won't stop
at socialism. Where does it always go after this communism?
So whenever they push back against the people who are
rightfully saying socialism will become communists, it's silly to me
because we already know they haven't stopped at this point.
They're not going to stop going forward. It's going to

(01:20:43):
graduate to communism.

Speaker 2 (01:20:44):
Yes, And you're they're just getting crazier and crazier. The
Democrats are getting crazy and crazier candidates. We're talking about
the Schlossburg guy, you see the Wiener guy in California.
They're getting insane, just crazy candidates. It's the disparity between
the right and the left in terms of seriousness is

(01:21:05):
going to be stunning. Just you know, when we know
we're going to talk more about the economic side of
things with Carol Roth here coming up, but man, it's
h In addition to all of this, we were talking no, no, no,
no no no no. Let me get opened up some
of the audio here because we had some really good audio.
We uh there there are these With all the discussion

(01:21:27):
that we have about the left, as you know, the
right is still roiling over some of the uh, some
of the the woke Reich stuff, which you absolutely do
have to be able to call out your side. This
is one of the reasons why I'm focusing so much
on these crazy candidates that are coming up on the left,

(01:21:49):
because that's who they are, that's who they've embraced. They've
allowed those people to hijack the Democrat Party and run
with it. And now the Democrat Party is a full
on Marxist entity, which is crazy to think, full on
marks identity, and so the as they keep going further
and further left, you don't want the right to be

(01:22:11):
pulled with it. And that's one of the reasons why
it's incredibly important to be able to use your discernment
and keep your own side focused and on the right path.
And that's what all of this is. I've seen some
pretty stupid things, of course, you know, it's all the
Nick fu Winta stuff, which there is so much audio
out there. It's unbelievable the amount of audio that is

(01:22:36):
out there. And the people that talk about Israel. We've
been talking about the Katari funding and all of this
other stuff. It's pretty crazy. And the Wind I don't
think he's ever going to I don't think Fuints is
ever going to be in a position to have lunch
with Trump again. That's one of the reasons why people
are are telling you that this stuff matters. It's not

(01:22:57):
just something that's a fight on the internet. I mean
this dude, and I don't believe that Trump knew who
he was. I think that Trump's people, some of his
people knew exactly who he was. I don't think Trump did,
And I hope those people were dragged for allowing that
guy to even be near Potus, much less sitting at
mar A Lago for a lunch with Kanye for crying

(01:23:19):
out loud. There are better ways to look to get
the youth vote than to stuck up to the CCP
with TikTok. They are better ways to get the youth vote.
You're not even trying if you're just If you think
that you have to act like a Nazi and start
hating American allies in order to get the youth vote,
you are too weak to play this game. If you

(01:23:41):
can't sell your message without debasing yourself to try and
chase and become that in order to get a part
of that audience, then you're too weak for this game.
You're not smart enough to sell a message. And there
are a lot of these stupid consultants, part of the
establishment on K Street right now, who are buying into

(01:24:01):
this because they can't sell freedom. They think that they've
got to. And a lot of this comes down to
the influencers in the digital economy. That's one of the
reasons why you see some of these top tier people
not call out this stuff because they don't want to
make the online you know, edge Lord's mad. So what
it is. They're too scared. They're too scared to say
anything about it. They don't want to have to deal

(01:24:21):
with the comments. I don't give a rats ass. They
don't want to have to deal with the comments. This
is they have to have this stuff. Not everybody does.
But that's what a lot of this is. I mean,
just this is this case in point. I don't know why,
you know. Uh, let me pull this down just to
give you an example. I hate even playing this stuff.

(01:24:44):
But audio sound by eleven Now, I want you to
remember what Charlie Kirk said, get married, have kids, raise
the family. It is it's the cornerstone of our society,
a free society. But the Fluinas crowd says this what.

Speaker 7 (01:25:00):
Kind of doesn't matter if you're multiplying out in the periphery,
you know. But people don't want to hear that because
they want to feel like, you know, they want what
they want to be the thing that is honorable. And
it's like, I don't think we really need to be
given any awards out because you, you know, married a

(01:25:21):
woman and had kids. I mean that used to be
the expectation. Now people want a prize. I used to
just be that just used to be the biological reality.
That was just like the sociological reality. You need to
get married and have ten kids because like three are
going to die in the winter and you need seven
to like take care of you or whatever. It's like
you just had ten kids because there results in no

(01:25:41):
birth control. Now people are like breaking an arm pat
They want to get a purple heart. They want to
get the Medal of Honor, the Congressional Medal of Freedom
because they went out with some you know, some average
woman and had a couple of kids and they live
in some house where they're watching in Disney Plus. And

(01:26:04):
because you go to the farmer's market. It's a revolutionary act.
I don't think so buster like we need to go
at the center, and that requires real dedication, real sacrifice
that yes, might involve actually.

Speaker 2 (01:26:17):
Not having kids for some people, you know, sounds pretty good.

Speaker 7 (01:26:21):
Does it ever cross people's mind that in a war,
young men die? Is this any different?

Speaker 2 (01:26:26):
Did it ever cross Did it ever cross anybody's mind
that maybe you shouldn't take advice about family planning from
a single Nazi twink who got caught streaming gay porn
on a show by his own audience. And you want
to talk about crossing anybody's mind because that happened. Yeah, No,
the Jews didn't do it either. That was him Cephoi

(01:26:46):
Away just saying, throw another out there. There are two roads,
two ways, Western man, Charlie Kirker, that way seems pretty obvious.
And one of them was supremely jealous of the other.
Guess who. We got more on the way. Oh, we
were not even done thrown bombs. We got more on
the way. Got headlines coming up as we move our
partners that he'll bring you the program. It's the folks

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Speaker 3 (01:28:05):
You and now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (01:28:12):
So Honda has recalled over four hundred thousand Civic Sedans
due to wheel detachment issues. That sounds like like you
mean the wheel could just go flying off. That sounds
kind of ooh, So if you drive a Civic, you
might want to check your wheels four hundred thousand. Oh yeah,
the wheel nuts could actually become loose. That's yeah. Yeah,

(01:28:34):
the wheels could even fall off. Yeah, the wheels on
the Civic. Oh important, Yeah, that's wheels are super important.
They said it affects twenty sixteen to twenty one models
equipped with eighteen inch alloy wheels. So check your wheels
if you got a Honda Civic. Also, solar activity could

(01:28:57):
send a cannibal coronal mass ejection towards Earth. Yes, And
then don't they say this all the time? Are they
prepping us for like an alien attack? Feels like it,
you know that giant space turt up there, that it
could be sending out some lasery stuff, just saying and
then we're going to say it's a geomagnetic storm. Maybe.

(01:29:18):
I don't know, I would really something needs I'm just
bored with all the infighting and everything else. Like bring
us some aliens or bring us an angry son, you know,
let's do that, like shoot us with some space goo.
I don't care. Let's make it happen. Also, a man
named Pancake beat up his father, oh, his elderly father.

(01:29:40):
According to police, a man named Pancake left his father
with severe bruises and swelling to the eye and face.
I feel like mister, oh my gosh, it's literally his name,
Eric Thomas Pancake, the Pancake family, mister or missus Pancake son.

(01:30:01):
So mister Pancake battered the other mister Pancake. I know
I'm going to get around it. They said that Pancake
also appeared drunk and loud and belligerent, and then he
pled the fifth every time they tried asking him questions.
But he'd allowed himself to be arrested, so he's booked.
He posted five thousand bonds, so he's out on bond

(01:30:23):
all right. Coming up, Carol Roth on fifty year mortgages,
stimmy checks and more. Stick with us. So with Patriot Mobile,
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got to ask why, you know, especially if you cancel
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Speaker 6 (01:32:12):
The Danas Show podcast. You're fast, funny and informative news
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Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.

Speaker 10 (01:32:23):
It's not even a big deal. I mean, you know,
you go from forty to fifty.

Speaker 2 (01:32:27):
Years and whatever does you pay?

Speaker 10 (01:32:29):
You pay something less from thirty that some people had
a forty and then now they have a fifty. All
it means is you pay less per month you paid
over a longer period of time. It's not like a
big factor. It might help a little bit, but the
problem was that Biden did this. He increased the interest
rates and I have a lousy fed person who's going
to be gone in a few months now.

Speaker 2 (01:32:48):
I knew he was going to say something about that
I got a lousy fed person. That's potus. And he's
talking about this fifty year mortgage thing. And no, we're
not all in agreement on this. I don't know why
we're doing this. I just the first thing that we
thought of when Cana and I talked about this. And
by the way, welcome to everybody rejoining the chats at
Rumble channel law three forty sevens, where you can go

(01:33:09):
and find the simulcats of the radio program. We're like,
we need to get Carol on the show. We need
to bring on Carol, because Carol's pretty common sense, Like
she's just no drama, straight, no chaser, she's got great hair.
She probably also hates Koda Roy two. She joins us
now via video. Everybody knows Carol Roth and she's the

(01:33:29):
best selling author her newsletters at Carolroth dot com, slash news,
the book You Will Own Nothing. Yeah, that seems to
be what this is all leading towards. Carol. It's so
good to see you. Oh, this is kind of I
feel like this is sort of the same argument that
everybody had when they were talking about minimum wage. Oh well,
if you really love people, you'll pay fifteen dollars an hour? Well,

(01:33:51):
why not a million? I guess we love them more
than you. If we want to pay a million dollars
an hour, I feel like, why stop at fifty? Let's
just have two hundred year mortgages. Right, Let's just make
everybody push them into this neo feudalism. That's what it
feels like. Is that an overreaction on my part?

Speaker 9 (01:34:07):
Not at all. I saw a funny post which I
will paraphrase, but it's you know, this mortgage has been
in our family for generations. You know, instead of that house,
it's absolute insanity. You know, we have the monetizing of America,
which means you don't actually own anything, and we're trying
to help Americans build wealth. The reason why houses are

(01:34:29):
so important, the American dream is so important, is because
historically it's been the largest asset on Americans balancees across demographics.
They stay in their houses and they are forced by
discipline to build wealth. They're forced to build equity, and
then they have extra money that they can then you know,
later in life, use or pass on to their kids

(01:34:51):
or what it is if you stretch things out to
fifty years versus thirty years. Let's say we have a
four hundred thousand dollars mortgage bridge at like six and
a quarter percent, you're going and that's assuming that you
can still get six and a quarter percent at fifty years.
But put that aside. Of just apples to apples, you
are doubling the amount of interest that you're paying, and

(01:35:13):
in doing so, you are delaying the building of equity.
So this is not making housing more affordable, and it
is stimulating demand. So if you have more people thinking
they can get in, it will probably end up pushing
up home prices anyway. So we have to find a
way to stimulate not the demand side here the supply side,

(01:35:35):
and there are you know, a lot of different ways
that we could do this. We could have assumable or
portable mortgages as a way to unlock the people who
have been locked into these three year mortgages, saying well,
I can't go to a house even if it's the
same price where maybe it's a bit higher and pay
six or seven percent. That would be one way of
fixing that. You're doing things like creating incentives for home

(01:35:59):
builders to build smaller footprint housing and getting some of
these regulations out that make it so expensive to build
a new house, and Totus using his platform to you know,
really shine a light on howse state and local municipalities
need to stop with their ridiculous regulation too, because they're
weighing another problem. All those kinds of things can stimulate

(01:36:21):
supply and actually make the houses more affordable, not just
create monetization tricks that seem like, oh, I'm paying less now,
but I'm actually just becoming a renter to a different landlord.

Speaker 2 (01:36:32):
Yeah, a renter for however long that, you know, I mean,
good heavens, and allow Fanny May and Fredie Mack to
get into the fifty year mortgage business is insane to me.
I mean, I feel like this is we're all going
to I mean, we saw all this. They're low they're
already talking about lowering criteria for home loans. We've lived
through this seven oh eight and it was disastrous. And

(01:36:55):
I get that people, and I feel for them. I
want my kids to be able to buy property. But
isn't it also Carol, when we're talking with our good
friend Carol Ross, with us just joining us, isn't it
also true that this isn't going to fix anything so
long as you have bad economic policy coming from the
top down, and DC hasn't done anything to reduce spending,
to cut taxes, to deregulate any further, which all none

(01:37:18):
of this is going to matter in the long term
if they don't do any of those things.

Speaker 9 (01:37:21):
Yeah, I mean, obviously we did get the you know,
one big beautiful bill passed, so we did make those
tax cuts permanent, so that's a good thing. On the
deregulation front, I feel like that has been back burnered
a bit. There are a lot of things that could
happen that will make it easier for individuals, for small
businesses that are the backbone of the economy, for ranchers,

(01:37:42):
for farmers to do business, things that will really generate
more growth organically on a real basis, not just you know,
inflating things, you know, with monetization, and those are the
kinds of things that need to be focused on. We
do have affordability issues, and I think it is important
to focus on housing, but we have to do the policies,

(01:38:03):
as I said, that focus on the supply and actually
bring down the cost, not just create an illusion that
something seems you know less costly one is actually more
expensive for you. They need to solve the student loan
debt crisis. I mean, this is insanity. They are taking
money wholesale, giving it from young people to college administrators.

(01:38:25):
Why that is not I mean, that's the easiest thing
to get the government out of this and reshape that because,
as you know, Dana, even if you have an affordable house,
if your balance sheet is filled with you know, five
and six figures of college debt, you're still not going
to be able to afford it. So there are a
lot of things that can be done to say we
hear you on affordability. The system hasn't been working. That's

(01:38:48):
why President Trump was put in there with his good
business mind and all these people around him, and for
some reason, the messaging is just going sideways. We're getting
more each one B visas and fifty or more pages
and tariffs, and you know, it's like, I feel like
I'm in bizarro world.

Speaker 2 (01:39:04):
And on that h one B visa front. That's the
other big thing. He gave an interview, and I really
appreciated Ingram kind of push him back a little bit
on that and saying, yeah, well, you know, we have
talented people here, which we do. I this is this
seems like it's kind of a one to eighty move
for him, or am I incorrect on that? It seems
because I don't remember twenty sixteen Potus being that supportive

(01:39:24):
of H one B visas.

Speaker 9 (01:39:26):
I mean, it's weird, right you have somebody who's considered
a populist now saying I'm going to be in favor
of H one B visas, which I do think is
you know, all of the tech bros that are in
his ears, this is something that they want and probably
you know, a nod to them. But it doesn't make sense.
And for me, policy always has to make sense for
the time and the context. And perhaps there was a

(01:39:47):
point in time we could argue it, you know, where
H oneb's made more sense. Certainly they have been abused,
But now we're in a situation we have young people
who are graduating who cannot find jobs. We have white
collar works that is being destroyed by AI. It seems
to me the context right now is that we need
to get more of the Americans back to work and

(01:40:08):
in good paying jobs and going out you know, to
this H one B pool doesn't make a lot of sense. Now. Also,
H one B is different than other types of visas.
You know, I'm a big supporter of entrepreneurs. If we
have people who are entrepreneurs, who have startups and businesses
that they want to come to the US and build
their business here and hire people here, we should be

(01:40:30):
encouraging visas for that because we want more jobs. But
that is not an H one B visa. That's a
different visa, and that's the specialization. And even in the
Ingram interview, you know, he said stuff like about factory workers,
like factory workers don't come here on H one b's.

Speaker 2 (01:40:45):
So I don't even understand that that's what the focus
of this was.

Speaker 9 (01:40:49):
It just it's a it's a messaging miss from this administration,
who is you know, supposed to be pro American, pro
main Street, and it's just they need to tighten that up.
We want them to be entrepreneurial. They can throw ideas
that don't work, we'll push back on them, but they
really need to be focused on Main Street and it

(01:41:10):
just isn't sounding that way. They think they need to
make a major adjustment here.

Speaker 2 (01:41:14):
It would be great if this administration created an initiative
where it's like the Great American Jobs come Back, and
they you know, really promoted making sure that our up
and coming employees were trained in the areas that we
needed them. Like they you know, they could do like
job Faares like and try to you know, help kickstart
that and help expedite it. I'm actually shocked that they

(01:41:36):
haven't introduced anything like that, because that is like a
national populist like idea that they could run with.

Speaker 9 (01:41:44):
Yeah, I mean, and also they could push back on
these big companies that say, hey, you should be training
employees if you want great employees to work for you,
that's what companies do. So train these wonderful people that
we have educated and that are young and hungry, and
then you'll benefit from right, That's the capitalist way. We
have these companies that are worth trillions of dollars in

(01:42:05):
market cap, that have you know, tens of billions of
dollars in cash. I don't think it's a lot to
ask for them to do their own training of people
here in the United States. And it also is real
frustrating to me as a taxpayer, you know, especially on
a local basis. I pay so much money into the
school system. If you're sitting and telling me, Okay, well,
the people that I'm paying all this money for are

(01:42:27):
not getting any kind of relevant education, then that means
that should be the focus, and we need to rethink
the education and really go after the teachers unions and
figure out what's going on here so that we have
people who can read and who can do math and
then can grow up and you know, get into those
jobs that are available so we don't have to import
them from other countries.

Speaker 2 (01:42:46):
Gosh, I wish, I mean, gosh, I hope something like
that happens with this administration. Before I let you go,
I got to ask you about the stimmy checks, the
two thousand dollars free your tea. There's a million things
I can ask you about right now, but just because
for the limitations of time. So this two thousand dollars
rebate check that Potus is talking about sending out basically

(01:43:07):
saying it's coming from our tariff revenue once again, and
you had some really smart remarks on this on X.
This again once reminds me of the stimulus that happened
under the lockdown and happened you know with Biden also,
and it didn't do anything, and it actually helped drive inflation,
Why are we doing this and who even actually qualifies
for this.

Speaker 9 (01:43:29):
Dimmy too electric boogaloo. I mean, we've seen this movie before.
We know how it ends. The last time we had
non emergency quote emergency based stimulus was the American Rescue Plan.
It was something like fourteen hundred bucks, and we ended
up having everybody paid ten thousand plus dollars a year
in extra costs for the rest of their lives because

(01:43:49):
of getting the stimulus. So the idea of something that
we all railed on and said it was a bad
idea is now great because President Trump is promoting it
is ridiculous. Now I've had well try to push back
on me and say, oh, but we're not printing the
money this time. Well, folks, guess what. We're running an
almost two trillion dollar deficit, which means that any money

(01:44:09):
that's not going to pay down that deficit is being
financed at a very significant interest rate. And by the way,
nobody wants to buy our long term debt, so they're
financing it all in T bills at the short end
of the curve, which is inflationary. So yeah, maybe it
takes a little bit longer, and you know, the two
thousand gets you the same place that fourteen hundred did before,

(01:44:30):
but it is all inflationary and it works ultimately to
support asset holders and does not help the cost of
living so bad. Idea, we should be if somebody in
the US who is a business or consumer paid a tariff,
they should get that back. We shouldn't be redistributing it around,
and anything extra that's coming in, supposedly from another country

(01:44:51):
should be going towards our deficit so that we have
a smaller deficit we need to finance. I don't know
why we have to keep saying these things that seems
like the most thing to say, but just because the
guy you like is saying it, it does not change
the policy period.

Speaker 2 (01:45:06):
That is true. Carol Roth, always insightful.

Speaker 5 (01:45:09):
You know.

Speaker 2 (01:45:09):
It reminds me of my cousin Vinnie when Marissa Tomay
when they asked you the question about cars and all that.
It's literally the exact same thing, but with economics. I
love it.

Speaker 9 (01:45:18):
Carol Roth, make it in a nineteen sixty seven whatever,
just like it.

Speaker 1 (01:45:23):
I got it.

Speaker 2 (01:45:25):
Find her online Carolroth dot com slash news where you
can go get her free newsletter and then Carol js
roth on X always get to see you. My friend
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Speaker 2 (01:46:56):
So welcome back to the show Dana Lash with you.
It is what's the tipperature here in Texas?

Speaker 5 (01:47:01):
Now?

Speaker 2 (01:47:01):
Okay?

Speaker 10 (01:47:02):
What do we got?

Speaker 2 (01:47:03):
Seventy four degrees? Okay? So is it really such a jerk?

Speaker 8 (01:47:08):
Here?

Speaker 2 (01:47:09):
I am rolling at some of the emails from some
of the all people that were like, I cannot believe
you think fifties cold were then? And then they'll email
like I guess like the like the weather forecast for
their area that they get on their phone and they're like, look,
we're getting snow in November. Oh my gosh, I would
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(01:47:30):
want it. I couldn't I wouldn't. There's no way I am. Nope, Nope.
One day I'm going to share with you the first
and last time I ever tried skiing. The story that
if you thought it was funny when I got into
a slat fight with a chimpanzee or when I fought
with a goat, I mean, keep going on and on, Barracudah,

(01:47:52):
Yeah that happened. I was about I was feeding a
turtle and this barracuda was going to try to mess
with me. And I'm like, I might be meaner than you.
I mean sure crop would writ my face off, But anyway,
that's a that's a whole other story. But yes, me
and snow don't work. So maybe i'll maybe I'll share
that story tomorrow. It does involve falling all the way

(01:48:15):
down a mountain, Yes it does. Didn't Hank Williams fall
off a mountain and get hurt. See, I don't want to.
I don't want to do like I can't have what
happened to Old bosifas fall upon me, you know I'm
going to snow. I don't want none to do with that.
Or Sonny Bono sit on a ski slip. I'm not
a skier. I don't do that. I mean, I'm athletic,

(01:48:36):
but I'm just like m God didn't give us these
things on our feet to do this. But it did
involve me literally like falling all the way down a
thing and having what they call the yard sale and
just flinging all my stuff everywhere. You know, it was
just a mess. And I laid there for a while
and it was like a three year old. I swear
it was like a three year old expertly snowboarded. Snow
boarded over to me and was like, are you all right?

(01:48:57):
So I just add to the humiliation, you know, just
add And I was bound and determined not to get
like dragged out off the slopes. So I had to
gather all my stuff. Everybody was very nice, but oh
my gosh, it's insane. So if you like skiing, I
love that for you. I love that journey for your life,
for me, for me. So I'll share the story another

(01:49:18):
time because it's a long one. But it's worth it though.
I mean, we don't have slopes in Missouri, you know,
we would have Hidden Valley. But it's nice, yeah, but
it's got a snow for it to matter. Art Hill
with the snow was ridiculous, all right, today's stupidity robber
at the end of it, Yeah, avoid.

Speaker 3 (01:49:38):
The Lake cut eight one. I think Chicago's mayor just
mispronounced least safest.

Speaker 8 (01:49:46):
But listen to this approach that look, the safest communities
in America, they all have one thing in common. They
invest in people. When a child is hungry, you don't say, hey, look,
would you like to meet the commander of the fifteenth.

Speaker 3 (01:49:57):
Policem Sorry, but the community policing is actually effective and no
government programs don't make the safest communities. I'm not sure
where he's coming from.

Speaker 2 (01:50:08):
Why didn't he just volunteer to make the kid a
sandwich right in his own kitchen and bring him a sandwich? Like,
what's I don't get it. I have the government do it,
can't do it myself. It does it for us today, folks,
make sure you follow us on YouTube, Facebook. I can
subscribe chapter and verse over at Substack. Have a great night.
Back with you tomorrow.
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