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September 5, 2025 105 mins
Craig Collins sits in for Dana. Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett gives her first interview since announcing a memoir wherein she defends striking down Roe v. Wade. The Justice Department posts a statement that's a screenshot from a 30% battery iPhone in airplane mode that begins with, "I met a woman named Skylar on Hinge" following a bombshell report from James O’Keefe. Trump responds to the August job numbers that came in lower than expected. Trump asks the Supreme Court to let him fire FTC Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter. Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers tried to replace the word "mother" with "inseminated person" in state law. The Justice Department is deliberating banning guns for trans people over mental health concerns. Craig recaps RFK Jr.’s Congressional hearing. The new Home Secretary of the UK claims Islam is the most important thing in her life. Jasmine Crockett makes a joke about Trump’s hand falling off. New emails obtained by NYP reveal Biden didn’t even review the list of clemency recipients that his autopen signed.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Danish show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in, thrilled to be with you. A whole bunch
of stuff out there to talk about. First, though, I
do enjoy this more than I should. This is JB.
Pritzker talking about the city of Chicago and how dangerous
it isn't even though it absolutely is one of the
most dangerous cities in the country. I think it ranks

(00:22):
like eight or something in the top ten. But it
doesn't matter. JB's gonna lie about that. Then he's also
going to claim that Trump has Pritzker derangement syndrome, which
sounds horrible. If anyone ever were to get that that
illness sounds uniquely terrible, I would not want that at all.
Here we go, Let's see if we can get this
to play for us, and then let's do it all right.

Speaker 2 (00:44):
Here we go.

Speaker 1 (00:45):
Now, you know, one second, we got to make sure
that we actually hear that for you, not just for me,
So we'll give it a minute there. But what I
think is really interesting about this too, is that JB.
Pritzker is the kind of moron, the kind of idiot
that that begs you to pay attention to him. And
then pretends as though, when you're paying attention to him

(01:06):
that it was your choice, even though he's the most
annoying person in a lot of rooms and needs you
to be focused on him one hundred percent as much
as possible in order to have even you know, a
modicum of a conversation about anything. So I just find
that really interesting that it's him who's blaming others for
something that he's definitely desperate to have occur on a

(01:28):
daily basis in all capacities. All Right, we're gonna take
a second on the audio there because I actually have
to get something to restart itself for us. But we
will get that to you in just a second. Let's
talk about this. Pete heg Seth put out a pretty
hilarious post on social media. There was an individual that
was a part of the military. She was a part

(01:50):
of the navy. She also in fact was there we go.
Now it's gonna work better. That's so great anyway, So
he put out a tweet for Janelle Mara who had
her pronouns in her bio I think on LinkedIn she her.
So Pete Haggst tweeted pronouns updated she her fired, which

(02:11):
I thought was hilarious. I thought that was amazing that
you would go the extra step to say this person
has been fired because of the way in which they
definitely don't seem to agree with anything in everything that
is who we are and who we should be in
the military, and who this administration is, etc.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
Etc. All right, let's get to the JB. Pritzker audio
that I was mentioning a second ago.

Speaker 1 (02:33):
Because again, I just I shouldn't like this as much
as I do, because I definitely don't agree with JB.
The Trump has Pritzker derangement syndrome, where that anyone would
ever have anything like that. But I just think it's
amazing when the left essentially like flails in the water
and then gets mad when the lifeguard tries to save them.

Speaker 3 (02:53):
The city of Chicai wasn't even in the top twenty
five most dangerous violent crime cities, So he needs to
do a little reading. I know he doesn't do much
of that, and instead maybe someone can inform him what
the facts are. But he seems a little obsessed with
me and with Chicago. Maybe he's got Pritzker derangement syndrome.

(03:15):
But maybe again, he could just take a beat, learn
a few things and focus elsewhere, maybe on protecting the
country from the axis of evil that is beginning to
form between China, Russia, North Korea and they're drawing in India.

Speaker 4 (03:31):
Now.

Speaker 1 (03:32):
Yeah, actually he has been doing that. Trump did tweet
about that, by the way, and does seem to be
focused on that as much as he needs to tell
us about it. But more than anything else, Man, does
this guy want to be a presidential candidate for the
Democratic Party? He's begging to be it by trying to
get attention the way he's doing it. All right, let's
do some other things. I thought this was really interesting too.

(03:53):
Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett did her first interview
since she became a Supreme Court just in October of
twenty twenty, and one of the questions that was asked
to her I was about contraception and whether that could
be similar to the changing of rules for Roe versus Wade,
and Amy she has a unique opinion on this. Here's

(04:15):
what she said to CBS News.

Speaker 5 (04:18):
You wrote in the book, the Court has held that
the rights to marry, engage in sexual intimacy, use birth control,
and raise children are fundamental, but the rights to do
business commit suicide and obtain abortion or not?

Speaker 6 (04:31):
Right, I'm describing the doctrine. I was a con law
professor for many years. Yes, I described the doctrine in
the book, and that is the state of the law. Yeah,
which I described in the book because I want people
to understand it, but want Americans to understand the law
and that it's not just an opinion pool about whether
the Supreme Court thinks something is good or whether the

(04:53):
Supreme Court thinks something is bad. You know, what the
Court is trying to do is see what the America
people have decided. And sometimes the American people have expressed
themselves in the Constitution itself, which is our fundamental law,
sometimes in statutes. But the Court should not be imposing
its own values on the American people. That's for the

(05:14):
democratic process.

Speaker 2 (05:16):
And yeah, I agree with everything you just said there.
That was fantastically none.

Speaker 1 (05:20):
I love the fact that a lot of people will
fear monger in the place of mainstream media about whether
or not, you know, the Supreme Court will change other
rules and make more things illegal, whether or not that
actually protects babies, that doesn't matter.

Speaker 2 (05:34):
That's not important.

Speaker 1 (05:35):
But what I do like about it is just the
interpretation of the law itself, which the Supreme Court justices
will say, is why they're doing anything. That's why they
make any decision in their profession that they make at all.
So that is unarguable of reason to do whatever they
choose to do.

Speaker 2 (05:54):
And so I really do like it.

Speaker 1 (05:55):
I think it's a great version of saying, as might happen,
and the reason it might happen has nothing to do
with my own personal opinion, regardless of what you the
news media want to claim is happening. All right, let's
move on other things out there. I do think this
is interesting. The White House put a big statement about
implementing the United States Japan Agreement by the authority vested

(06:16):
in me as President by the Constitution and the laws
of the United States, including the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, etc.

Speaker 2 (06:23):
Etc.

Speaker 1 (06:24):
I announced a framework agreement between the United States and
Japan which lays the foundation for a new era of
United States Japan trade relations. I grounded in principles of
a reciprocity and are shared national interests. So yeah, things
are going to be better. What I think is amazing
about this is as Trump continues to actually get deals
done because of tariffs more than anything else, deals that

(06:47):
benefit us more than any deal in the past has
on a large amount of these things that he's accomplished,
there's still that pesky little thing going on in the court,
and then Amy Komy Barrett might actually be involved in
this at some point, the pesky Supreme Court version that
might eventually be the decision as to whether or not
he's allowed to do this. It is amazing because if

(07:10):
at the end of all of this, and I don't
think this will happen, actually, I think the Supreme Court
is probably going to be the only judicial body that
decides that Trump does have the power to do what he's.

Speaker 2 (07:22):
Done, because it'd be good if that happens.

Speaker 1 (07:24):
But anyway, if they take this away from him, all
of these deals which are locked in and hopefully you know,
don't change, will have been created by something that they
tried to flip back, and they'll make us refund money
that's going to help us pay down deficit. And we're
not seeing the economic horrible things happen. To just open
a soda while I was on the show, I think

(07:48):
that again we didn't see the horrible things happen, and
they told us we're going to happen with the economy.
So they're really just doing this because they hate Trump,
trying to fight him on the tariff stuff. It hasn't
gone as badly for us as anyone said, and it
really feels like we should just leave good enough alone here.
All right, one more thing, I'll play this and then

(08:09):
we'll take our first break. A. Jasmine Crockett was laughing
and clapping as she joked about Trump's hand looking like
it was quote about to fall off. The amount of
hate that people have for the president or for the right,
for you know, voters of President Trump, it's through the

(08:29):
roof insane. And then this side of the eyse also
wants to like be the nice people or claim to
be the nice people. And I don't get it. We
have so many examples of this. They happen all the time.
But this is the latest version, version of someone hoping
that Trump dies on the Democratic side of the aisle,
that he's seriously ill, which is the most pathetic way

(08:52):
to want to try to win some sort of you know,
ideological political argument to wish death upon someone else.

Speaker 7 (08:59):
Here we go, I don't know, Donald trump hand looked
like he's about to fall off, but no, in all seriousness, though,
I yeah, I don't understand.

Speaker 2 (09:10):
How that's a joke. By the way, I don't understand
how you find that funny or amusing. I'll be honest.

Speaker 1 (09:17):
As President Biden became more and more visibly, you know, broken,
Not that I think he was ever really functioning properly
as a human. I don't think his brain was ever
working the way it was supposed to the entire time
he was in the White House. But when it got
real bad toward the end, you started to actually think
that for his own health, he should not be doing anything,

(09:40):
much less being president of our country. That's a very
different sentiment than I hope he dies. So actually, I
and I think a lot of other people did say,
and this was not tongue in cheek, This was not disingenuous.
It was absolutely intentionally, on purpose and authentic that Biden
should go away for his own well being, and that

(10:00):
they were kind of doing elder abuse by keeping him
in a position of power and using him via the
auto pen up until the end of his terrible presidency.
And so I just think it's amazing that that's the difference.
That I would say something to the effect of and
I think a lot of people I know who voted
for Trump would say some of the effective man, I
think Biden should go away because it would be good

(10:22):
for him as a human.

Speaker 2 (10:24):
Among other things.

Speaker 1 (10:25):
It's not like I'm going to be nice about all
the other crap that was happening, but I'm not wishing
him dead. And then the exact opposite is how they
treat Trump on a daily basis, and they treat other
politicians that they disagree with because they don't like when
power is taken away from them. That seems to be
the motivating factor for Democrats and hatred is if I
don't have power or control over something, I hate you,

(10:49):
and I hate you up until I can remove you
in whatever way I decide to remove you so that
I get my power back. All Right, we'll take a
quick break. A lot coming up. This is Craig Collins
filling in on the Danish burn.

Speaker 8 (11:01):
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really ultimately, if you're disarmed from protecting yourself, and I
mean there's all that out there. I would love to
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free zones. But I'm a big kid and I got
to do adult stuff, and I got to do job stuff,
and I don't have the luxury of just crossing my
arms and saying I'm not going to go there, because
I you know, I got to, but I also don't
want to be left utterly defenseless as well. So Berna

(11:23):
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target acquisition. And with the new CL that's the burn

(11:44):
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you got like one or two shots and that's it.
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for defense with this. There's the Burna SD, which is
both of these are pistols. SD's a little at larger.
The CL's thirty eight percent smaller than the SD, and
they've got rifles and all that stuff. But I think

(12:05):
specifically for the purpose of self defense, y'all want to
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(12:26):
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Speaker 9 (12:34):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 1 (12:40):
That's right, it's time for a quick five on the
Dana Show. D Lash Dana Lash Radio and x on
Twitter if you want to stay connected to her. Thank
you to all the people who followed me at radio
Craig z As I've been mentioning my own Twitter handle
this week and the very small amount of people that
follow it and my Yankee tweets. All right, let's do this.
Giorgio Armani said passed away. The king of Italian fashion,

(13:03):
as he's described in a couple different articles about his passing,
I was ninety one years old. This is a big
news in the world of fashion, not that I follow
that world very closely, but it demonstrates how big of
a person this is, that I know that name, and
I know that brand Armani is most of us. Of course,
do he sadly again, as I said, passed away, but

(13:25):
ninety one years old, lived a long life.

Speaker 2 (13:28):
Let's do this.

Speaker 1 (13:28):
The powerball jackpot is now going to be at least
one point seven billion dollars. That could go up even more,
but that is expected to be the third largest powerball
jackpot in the history of the country, or the third
largest lottery jackpot in the history of our country. The
thing that matters here is that they did this on purpose.

(13:49):
They made the odds even worse, and no one has
won since May thirty first, but people will probably buy
a whole bunch of tickets. It's actually within seven hundred
million dollars I think are seven million something like that
of being the second largest. And then there's a two
billion dollar jackpot that happened in November of twenty twenty two,
so we'll see just how high it goes and if

(14:10):
anybody wins. By the way, the two biggest jackpots in
the history of our country were both one in California,
which means that somebody's cheating.

Speaker 2 (14:17):
I think that's my feeling about that.

Speaker 1 (14:20):
A millennial parents are going crazy for this tin can
phone for kids.

Speaker 2 (14:26):
This is hilarious.

Speaker 1 (14:27):
It is a little toy that kind of looks like
the phones that you used to create yourself out of
a tin can. The new iPhone debuted next debuts next Tuesday.
But there's only one phone that kids really need. According
to the post about this, it is a kid friendly
Wi Fi phone called the tin Can, and it's gone
all crazy over social media.

Speaker 2 (14:48):
I like the fact that they're creating like.

Speaker 1 (14:51):
Landlines and other things that look like these old school
things that we had before. It work very differently, so
at least a kid can start to experience it. The
craziest thing for me, as someone who was raised in
a generation without cell phones being as ubiquitous as they
are now, is that when you ask a kid to
do the phone with their hand, most people over a

(15:14):
certain age will do the one that you would pick
up physically with your pinky shooting out to talk into
your thumb is the spot where you'd put the you know,
the audio into your ear. For some reason, the little
kids now all do a flat hand because they think
of the iPhone or a cell phone instead. So maybe
interacting with some of these things it gets them back

(15:35):
to realizing what phones used to be for us and
for so many other people out there. All right, what
are some other things going on? As far as just
silly topics go. You can now buy a Star Wars
lego set for one thousand dollars. This is, I guess,
is a good deal according to some. I don't know
why anyone would spend one thousand dollars on legos with

(15:56):
nine thousand pieces, thirty eight different figurines, different kind of
things in it. It's a death Star and I wouldn't
want to build it, and I also wouldn't want to
step on any of these pieces. And then finally, one
last thing. The Cowboys did lose last night to the Eagles.
Pretty boring second half, I would say, even though it
probably was stressful for any sort of Eagles fan I

(16:18):
like producer Steven but not as much scoring as in
the first half. But the most important thing from the
game is that Dak Prescott spit first. And this is
sort of connected to Star Wars. I guess the whole
Han shot first thing. Dak definitely spits before anyone else
spits and then got thrown out of the game. So
I just think it's really interesting that that happened at

(16:41):
the beginning of the game too, and that Jalen Carter
had remorse first spitting on Cowboys Dak Prescott and how
he spoke about things after the game.

Speaker 2 (16:50):
But I don't blame him as much.

Speaker 1 (16:52):
As other people do because Dak spit first, and there's
video and you can see it, and if anybody deserved
to be thrown out, or at least if one other
person deserved to be thrown out, it should have been both,
not just an Eagles player that got thrown out of
the game. But NFL football is officially back, baby. That
is exciting. I think it's a lot of fun. I
think a whole lot of people are going to be

(17:12):
gambling and betting on things. The Chargers do play the
Chiefs today. That game might be more interesting than the
game was expected to be between the Eagles and the Cowboys,
even though it did end up in just being a
four point game, so the spread was larger than the
inevitable end, and I think the spread is much closer
for the game tonight, I quick break a lot more.

Speaker 2 (17:33):
Craig Collins filling in on The Dana Show.

Speaker 8 (17:34):
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Speaker 10 (18:30):
Not able to catch all three hours of The Dana Show.
Subscribe to the full podcast and get news and laughs
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Speaker 1 (18:44):
This is the Dana Show, d Lash, Dana Lash Radio
X on Twitter are great ways to stay connected to her.

Speaker 2 (18:52):
My name is Craig Collins Radio.

Speaker 1 (18:54):
Craigc is a good way to stay connected to me
and the four hundred or so people who do that
than the giant audience for a Dana and I'll stop
mentioning that at some point I'll be thrilled to be
on this week for Hershey is back on Monday. The
DOJ has responded to the secret tape of the official
detailing the Epstein file plan.

Speaker 2 (19:14):
Look.

Speaker 1 (19:15):
Project Veritas was incredibly effective at uncovering a lot of
truth that was hidden via these secretly recorded tapes, which
oftentimes seemed to be honeypot stuff where you sent an
attractive person in to date someone that knows things, and
then the person who knows things. I didn't question the
fact an incredibly good looking person was after them. After

(19:38):
James O'Keeffe left Project Veritas, they've broken way less things,
but James continues to be very successful at doing this
on his own now with his new organization.

Speaker 2 (19:49):
And that's what happened here.

Speaker 1 (19:50):
A DOJ official, a person of significant importance, the Deputy
Chief of Special Operations, Joseph Schnidt, told some who apparently
was a very attractive human that he was planning along
with the DOJ and removing a whole bunch of Republican
names from any sort of Epstein file and releasing just

(20:12):
a democratic version of information.

Speaker 2 (20:15):
This is exceptionally damaging to Pambondi and.

Speaker 1 (20:19):
Others, regardless of if it's actually true, I will say that
a person may brag to a hot individual about things
that may or may not seem true but might not
actually be true. I'm not trying to claim that it's
false either.

Speaker 2 (20:34):
I don't know. It seems there's a good chance that
this is true, but I will just put that out
there that a.

Speaker 1 (20:40):
Dude who's dating someone might actually up the amount of
things he claims to know beyond what he actually knows
to impress them. But the funniest part about this, if
there's a funny part to the story, is the thirty
percent iPhone battery airplane mode notes app a response that

(21:00):
the US Department of Justice actually put up on social
media on Twitter to deal with the fallout of this
becoming a giant story. And here's what it actually says.
This is the notes app. I met a woman named
Skyler on Hinge, a dating app, in July of twenty
twenty five. Her profile is no longer findable. We had
two dates, August fourth and August sixteenth. She claimed to

(21:21):
be an au pair in Georgetown. That sounds like a
nice gig. She gave no clue that she was a
reporter or recording our dates.

Speaker 2 (21:28):
Had I a clue, the first date would have ended
immediately and there never would have been a second one.
Of course, not by the way. I love that part.

Speaker 1 (21:35):
Like had she told me at all that she was
secretly recording me, I wouldn't have been interested in this
hot lady anymore, and certainly would have told would not
have told her any secrets. But since she didn't tell
me she was recording stuff, I remained interested. That's the
dumbest part of the mention. My profile indicated I did
government work, but did not specify for which agency. I

(21:55):
never discussed what I do at the DOJ. Fortunately, there's
some vid you know, and things that have gone viral
of you discussing a lot of work done at the DOJ,
whether it's you or not. It goes on to say
the comments I made were my own personal comments on
what I've learned in the media and not from anything
I've done or learned via work. I have no knowledge
of the circumstances surrounding this Maxwell other than what is

(22:16):
reported in the news. I also never divulged anything about
what I do at work. I recall that she asked
if I had any knowledge about Maxwell, and I specifically said,
I only know what's been reported in the media.

Speaker 2 (22:28):
Yeah, this is not a good look. No part of
this is a good look.

Speaker 1 (22:31):
And to be honest, the funniest thing to me is
how effective the honeypot is. And if you don't know
what that is, that's just a very attractive person that
hits on you and gets insider information from you. It's
a tried and true, as old as time, a version
of a way to break whatever wall exists between you know,
the truth and the lies given by the government. Would

(22:54):
I be surprised if the DOJ and the Republican Party
a unique interest in protecting just Republicans and not putting
out information about them about Epstein while trying to slant
everything to be overly about Democrats. No, I wouldn't be surprised.
That's not what I want. I want full transparency. But

(23:14):
the reason that I think that it's important to focus
on this and this is a this is a weird
I'm going to take a you know, a full U
turn approach to it, is that the Democrats would have
done the exact same thing when they were in power.
And oh wait, they were in power when they had
access to all of the Epstein files, and they never
went after Trump with them at that point. They're going

(23:37):
after him now and claiming that there's something something damaging
involving him and those files, but they did nothing to
release them on their own. And Democrats would have tried
to overly make it about Republicans and specifically Trump. And
so it says something to me about who actually is
in this and how significant the names are on both
sides or wherever they are, that it might even be

(23:58):
hard to clean this stuff up. I'm not sure, but
I do think that it matters because it proves even
more that Trump's not actually going to be harmed by
any inevitable release of the Epstein files that he's not
actually going to be indicated as being someone who did
anything wrong, and even the people the victims who spoke
earlier this week seem to agree with that. When they

(24:20):
were asked certain questions about Trump or asked if they
had any knowledge of any wrongdoings of the current president,
they kept saying no to that sort of stuff. They
also said there's no actual list written down on paper,
so that's interesting. But anyway, I just think it's amazing
that James O'Keefe is so good at this gig, and
he just keeps being above and beyond what anybody else

(24:41):
can seem to do in respect to breaking news and
getting people to say things to attractive people. I would
say that if you're in government in any role whatsoever,
and someone who is way out of your league has
interest in you and asks you random questions about your job,
do not engage. Or actually I maybe do engage because

(25:03):
I want more information to keep coming out. So maybe
I shouldn't help the politicians. Actually I should take that back.
Hot people definitely like.

Speaker 2 (25:11):
You for real.

Speaker 1 (25:11):
It's the waitress or stripper fallacy happening again. They definitely
have real interest in you. It's not the job you
have in the information they want tell them everything. Yeah,
that's what I should say. That's actually what I'd like
to see happen. I just find it in music, all right.
Another story that I thought was interesting out there. There's
a teenager in Scotland.

Speaker 2 (25:32):
A woman, her name is Lola, who.

Speaker 1 (25:34):
Got ridiculed by media there and some social media because
the original narrative is that she was being mean to
a migrant, a mean to someone based on you know, race,
being a racist. Her sister, her younger sister, was involved
in this too. It turns out that what really happened
was a person, a you know, foreigner, I decided to

(25:58):
harass and attack them, her and her younger sister Ruby,
and then Lola stood up and defended them against this
horrible guy who's now been arrested for assaulting a minor.
But what I think is amazing about this is that
the initial narrative, because they saw a young white girl
being mean to a non white man, was that it

(26:19):
had to be racism. It had to be horrible, terrible
things happening anywhere in the world, in Scotland, not even
here in the United States. And the end result is
that actually she was being a brave, awesome kid deciding
to stand up to someone who was doing horrible, terrible
things and being a creep in front of children. So

(26:39):
every single version of the initial reporting of this story
was wrong, and they inevitably arrested the guy. And it
demonstrates how desperate people are for a narrative that they
would go so far as to portray a teenage girl
who defended her little sister from a guy who was
assaulting them into someone who had to be a bad

(27:00):
person because they want everyone who's white to be a
bad person, or everyone who disagrees with them politically to
be a bad person. They want that so bad that
they're willing to lie about a kid.

Speaker 2 (27:10):
That's horrible. And we're not surprised by that, we know
that's true.

Speaker 1 (27:14):
But I just love the end of this story that
the guy inevitably gets arrested, that the truth comes out,
and that it's all over social media, specifically x or Twitter,
because you know that's the one that Elon Musk owns
now and he lets all the real information actually come
out about that about stories there much different than anything else.
All right, let's do this too before we take a break. Actually,

(27:38):
Trump has responded to the job numbers, saying the real
numbers will be about a year from now. Fox Business
announced that the twenty two thousand jobs added in August
are much less than the expected seventy five thousand, etc.

Speaker 2 (27:51):
Et cetera. Here, let's get Trump first.

Speaker 1 (27:54):
And then eventually I will actually throw my take into
the wind on this topic.

Speaker 2 (27:58):
Here we go, Thank you, mister President.

Speaker 5 (28:01):
Tomorrow we have a jobs report coming out, the first
since the BLS commissioner who you.

Speaker 6 (28:06):
Fired won't be there.

Speaker 2 (28:08):
A lot of people will be turning to you to
see if you believe the data that's released.

Speaker 5 (28:12):
Can you commit to saying the data will incredible.

Speaker 11 (28:15):
The number I don't know they come out tomorrow, but
the real numbers that I'm talking about are going to
be whatever it is, but will be in a year
from now. One of these monstrous, huge, beautiful places, the
Palaces of Genius, and when they start opening up you seeing,
I think you'll see job numbers that are going to
be absolutely incredible.

Speaker 1 (28:36):
Right now, by the way, he's looking at a bunch
of tech and company leaders sitting at a table with him,
talking about how they're going to be developing a whole
lot more here in the United States, but the twenty
two thousand jobs is much less than expected. There does
seem to be a pullback by a lot of companies
toward the end of the year for variety of reasons.
Here's what Fox Business said about it.

Speaker 2 (28:56):
Go through.

Speaker 12 (28:57):
I sure do twenty two thousand jobs added in the
month of August. That was much less than the expectation
of seventy five thousand guys. The July number was revised.
I will get to revisions in a moment. Unemployment rate
coming in I was expected four point three percent, so
that would be higher than July's four point two percent. Again,
twenty two thousand jobs added in August. Let me get

(29:20):
you the revisions, because this is what everybody has focused on.
For June and July together combined twenty one thousand jobs
lower than previously reported. I'll categorize that now, so you
see for June it was revised down by twenty seven thousand,
getting you to negative thirteen thousand, and the change for
July up by six thousand, getting you to seventy nine thousand.

Speaker 1 (29:43):
Yeah, numbers are flying all over the place in the
world of jobs creation, in the world of everything. What
I think is actually more interesting than anything else about
this discussion. The Supreme Court will inevitably, inevitably decide if
tariffs are something that the president can actually apply out
of countries he's done it, and if it's what helps
us create trade deals, etc. So there is a lot

(30:04):
of unknown uncertainty all across the board, not just in
the tariffs to begin with, but in everything, every decision,
what's happening, where we're going moving forward, and so it
does seem like a confusing time. But if you wait
longer down the road and see things get way better,
which we all hope that they do, inevitably what Trump

(30:25):
says will will be true.

Speaker 2 (30:28):
I don't know if that'll actually occur.

Speaker 1 (30:29):
I just think it's interesting that even President Trump himself
had stated early on in the tariff stuff, as mainstream
media was projecting it to be immediately horrible, that there
might be early pain for long term growth to happen.
And so I do think that that might be what's
playing out here, but we'll see. But to have job
numbers revised into negative is never a good thing, and

(30:52):
then to have them be as low as they are
now is certainly worrisome. But the exact reasons why and
the length to which this will occur is something that
deserves to also be mentioned as Trump, did there all right?
Quick break a lot coming up? Craig Collin's filling in
on the Danash Show.

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Speaker 10 (32:07):
On the go and need a quick news fix with
a fun twist, follow Dana's Absurd Truth podcast for bite
size and formative episodes perfect for your busy schedule on
Apple or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 2 (32:19):
This is the Dana Show.

Speaker 1 (32:20):
My name is Craig Collins filling in d Lash Dana
Lash Radio on x on Twitter to stay connected to
her all great things going on from both her and
her team, including producer Steven who make all the social
media I must watch, must pay attention to stuff.

Speaker 2 (32:36):
Let's do this.

Speaker 1 (32:37):
A exclusive grocery store that exists in California is making
its way to New York City. But it's going to
be for members only, and the price is going to
be ridiculous to get inside of this grocery store, something
like an initial fee of thirty six thousand dollars and
then you got to pay seven thousand dollars a year
to keep your membership to a grocery store.

Speaker 2 (32:59):
Here's the thing.

Speaker 1 (33:00):
If you have money and you want to spend your
money on something as dumb as this, that's your decision.
Spend your money however you want to. But I would
just say if a buddy or friend of mine was like, hey,
do you think it's a good idea to drop this
much money on an exclusive grocery store? My answer would
be no. It would be a very definitive no. It'd
be like, there have to be better things you can do.

(33:21):
What's wrong with whole Foods or anywhere else that you
want to spend higher amounts of money for better products
on food or just go to the cheaper grocery stores,
darn it, which may be killing you with all the
terrible things in them, but.

Speaker 2 (33:32):
Hey, at least they're affordable. I just find this ridiculous.

Speaker 1 (33:36):
But this isn't the news, and people are asking the question,
who's even gonna show up at this spot?

Speaker 2 (33:40):
But it's New York City.

Speaker 1 (33:42):
There's a bunch of people who have more than enough
money to throw it down on that, and it's just
sort of a status thing.

Speaker 2 (33:47):
I think.

Speaker 1 (33:47):
I think once you know that something is exclusive, if
you could afford it and you pay to be in it,
you're really just happy that you have it, more so
than even you use it.

Speaker 2 (33:55):
All right, let's do this. There was a.

Speaker 1 (33:57):
Spinning volnado in Hawaii that would be a volcano tornado
thing that was happening.

Speaker 2 (34:05):
It looks terrifying.

Speaker 1 (34:07):
There is video you can watch of the cyclone esque
molten lava foaming, you know, volcano thing, and say to
yourself that this would be the end of days if
this occurred more places. You look at it and say,
how absolutely you don't want this to be a thing.
Sharknado is nothing compared to molten lava volnato. That feels

(34:28):
like a movie where everyone would just be screwed. That
doesn't seem like a good thing by any stretch of
the imagination. But there is video and I think even
some like live feed stuff of that that you can
check out if you want to. And then finally I
thought this was really interesting. There is a Harvard astronomer
who is saying that there's an object flying very rapidly

(34:51):
toward Mars that seems like it was shot intentionally at
the planet, and not that it's just a clump of
ice or something or a comet that they're saying it is,
but that there's a lot of intelligent planning in how
close this thing is going to get to Mars specifically,
and that with a little itty bitty correction it might
actually hit Mars. So at least one astronomer again, a

(35:13):
guy at a Harvard by the name of Avi is
saying that this is proof that aliens are. They exist somewhere,
and they're now firing objects at our solar system and hoping.

Speaker 2 (35:22):
To hit some of our planets.

Speaker 1 (35:24):
That seems either good or bad, depending on your belief,
that they might fire something at the Earth and we
might not be able to avoid it. But I think
it's interesting that he's making the argument and saying how
the object has turned and moved, and how it seems
that it couldn't have been natural, and that this means
that they are aliens somewhere. We don't know where the
object originally came from, so we don't know what it is.

(35:45):
Maybe it's Superman. Maybe that's the vessel that's carrying Superman.
It's just going to miss Earth by a bit. All right,
quick break a lot more. Craig Collins filling in on
the Danish.

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(36:36):
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Speaker 1 (36:40):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in, thrilled to be with you. A bunch of
stuff to talk about Dlash Dana Lash radio and X
on Twitter is a great way to stay connected everything
going on with her at radio. Craig Z if for
some reason you want to follow me and the very
small amount of people who do that, and the very
seldom tweets that I put out, but I'd like it.

Speaker 2 (37:00):
Trump Administration.

Speaker 1 (37:01):
The Trump administration is asking the Supreme Court to let
him fire more people, specifically a first and person at
the Federal Trade Commission. I think that Trump should be
allowed to fire people. I think it'd be great. I
don't need to dive deeper into the story than to
say that I think that any president should be allowed
to can a bunch of people and then have other
people come into positions of relevance within any administration, mostly

(37:24):
because I hate the fact that bureaucrats think they can
have their job forever. I'd like to see a bunch
of firings. I'd like to see an Apprentice style on
television with Trump's saying you're fired, after they go through
some of the things they've done or failed to do
to help the American people. I don't know why this
has to be a big, giant, debatable thing. If the
president is in charge and if a certain subset of

(37:46):
people work for him in some capacity via the bureaucratic
government that exists within the executive branch, then fire away, buddy.
That's my response to it. Will see what the Supreme
Court says. DEI insanity goes even further in Wisconsin, this
story is insane. The governor there, Tony Evers, is just

(38:08):
a broken mess of a human in some of the
things he wants to remind you of.

Speaker 2 (38:13):
One of the most ridiculous things he did.

Speaker 1 (38:15):
He changed women, pregnant women as far as any sort
of statewide acknowledgment of the person into inseminated persons. It's
a real thing he did that he pushed for that
he's now pushing for mother and father to be entirely
removed from any of the verbiage that exists within Wisconsin,

(38:36):
which is again, the dumbest thing you've ever seen. You
can call this a war against fathers if you want.
You can call this a war against women if you want.
You can call this just an insane, stupid war in
all capacities. But what it really does, and Evers is
running for reelection, and you gotta hope that he loses
based on this amount of stuff, because what it really

(38:57):
does is shows how out of touch the Democratic Party
is with everyday American, especially most Americans in Wisconsin that
aren't in places like Milwaukee. I guess because there's so
many people who think that this sort of thing is
insanity and it's not at all valuable in the grand
scheme of how, you you know, run an organization run

(39:18):
a government run anything much less a you know, entire state.
So I just think this is crazy, that this is
a real thing that's actually out there in the news
that he's pushing for, and then people on both sides
of the aisle are saying all kinds of this is
sort of insane versions of reactions to it, mostly that
it's actually a war on both mothers and fathers, and

(39:41):
that who knows who else could wind up in the
crosshairs of this.

Speaker 2 (39:44):
But it just it just makes no sense, all right.

Speaker 1 (39:47):
Another thing out there that I do want to talk
about a bit more on the DJ is considering banning
trans people from buying guns.

Speaker 2 (39:55):
Is a real story.

Speaker 1 (39:56):
Justice Department, President Trump in some capacity that t administration whoever,
have contemplated if it's a smart thing to allow people
that are showing a lot of mental health issues to
the American people, if it's smart to allow those individuals
to buy guns. Now, I have two opinions on this,
and they sort of compete, and one does inevitably win.

(40:18):
I don't like government encroachment on the Second Amendment. I
don't like it across the board. I don't think it's
a good thing. Mental health is an exception, because we
do have mental health restrictions on guns that do make
sense to me. You shouldn't let anyone who is a
demonstrate demonstrating their inability to be sane to purchase a weapon.

(40:39):
But I don't like just a blanket rule that says
that everyone in some subset group in our society is
incapable of buying guns because of this.

Speaker 2 (40:50):
I don't like that, And so.

Speaker 1 (40:51):
It's interesting that my inclination is actually to defend trans
people and their right to bear arms. That is, that
is my gut reaction to a story like this, even
if I acknowledge when mainstream media and a lot of
society won't, that it's a tremendously great likelihood that everyone
in that group is struggling from some sort of mental

(41:14):
health issue, whatever that might be, or several different mental
health issues, and a lot of people in that group
actually do commit suicide. So even more so, it seems
to be the kind of thing that you deserve to
have a discussion about that goes on for more than say,
a couple minutes.

Speaker 2 (41:32):
But what I really think is interesting about this topic.

Speaker 1 (41:35):
If anyone on the conservative side of the aisle, myself included,
actually advocates for gun rights to exist for trans people.
Is what the left does in response to that version
of a discussion. Is the left going to demand the
right for trans people to have guns even though they
want no one to have guns?

Speaker 2 (41:53):
What are they going to say?

Speaker 1 (41:55):
I almost feel like this is a test where you
put out a leaked story where the Trump administration is
contemplating doing something that they may never ever do, and
you just see how the left responds, because if they
if they dangle the carrot of the argument that the
Second Amendment protects people's right to own weapons, then you'd
think that they're actually admitting a lot of what they

(42:16):
try to do to undermine the Second Amendment is no
longer going to be a thing they can keep doing.

Speaker 2 (42:21):
It seems like they might.

Speaker 1 (42:22):
Lose the war to try to win this battle, essentially,
and that might be the reason that it's occurring.

Speaker 2 (42:28):
Or they go the other road and they say that,
you know, this is.

Speaker 1 (42:31):
Fine with them, that more people shouldn't have guns, not
just trans people, and then it feels as though they're
not being the party that's supposed to protect the weak,
innocent individuals of the world. In certain groups that are
disenfranchised and treated terribly. So it seems like actually a
lose lose for Democrats in whatever position they take on

(42:51):
that issue, and so I am interested to see it.
But just to fully explain my belief here, and I'll
do this, it might sound woke to do it this way,
and I'm not intent to be woke, and I don't
care if it sounds woke. I do believe that there's
some minuscule subset of society that might struggle more with

(43:13):
if you're a dude or if you're a girl than
the whole rest of us do. And I don't know
what causes that, if that's like, you know, a bunch
of chemicals in the brain and whatnot, but I think
it's minuscule. I think it's the kind of like weird
thing where someone is born with both male and female parts,
which does also occur, but is exceedingly rare. I think
our societies demand for something that's incredibly rare, it's actually

(43:37):
something that's way less rare. Has caused a whole lot
of other people who are evidently struggling with mental health
issues to believe that they're in the same bucket. And no,
I absolutely don't advocate for the mutilating of children or
any of that stuff.

Speaker 2 (43:49):
All that is horrible.

Speaker 1 (43:50):
But I'm just saying that somewhere in the ridiculous amount
of lies that media is telling us, there's somebody who
at least has a version of a conversation and.

Speaker 2 (44:00):
About, you know, what's going on with them medically.

Speaker 1 (44:04):
But it's such a small group that it's insane to
pretend as though it's as many people as it needs
to be, for as many people who are questioning whether
they're a boy or a girl because media is begging
them to do it, because of all the things that
are pushed on you and thrown on you now as kids,
as far as conversations go that are highly inappropriate and

(44:26):
definitely designed to make you politically on a certain side
of the aisle. But so I say all that to
say this, when you're talking about the rights of people
to own guns, for anyone that's actually, you know, medically
affected by something, I think they have a definitive right
tone of gun. I don't think that the mental health
issue is as a parent, but the vast majority of

(44:46):
people who fall into this category have mental health issues.
I would say it's in the ninety plus percentile a
ninety nine percent tile of people who describe themselves this way,
and so for them, I think I am comfortable with
the idea that you were gun access, that you restrict,
you know, the use or ability to buy weapons because

(45:06):
they might hurt themselves or hurt somebody else because they
obviously have a mental health issue that no one is addressing.
And I know, again, to even crack at all in
that world of somebody somewhere might have an actual issue
and might not just be a mentally unhealthy person feels
like you're giving it enough for the left to squeak
in and expand.

Speaker 2 (45:26):
And yet I just think it's simply the truth.

Speaker 1 (45:27):
I think there is data out there that demonstrates the
uniqueness of this conversation.

Speaker 2 (45:33):
But that's all it takes all the time.

Speaker 1 (45:34):
By the way, I will remind everyone of one other
thing that I definitively believe is another ridiculous way that
democrats use something and pretend as though it's more significant
than it is. When they talk about abortion, and then
they include rape and incest, which is a minuscule amount
of people that wind up being pregnant because of something horrific.

(45:55):
They talk about that like that's the majority of people
who choose to get an abortion, and it's not even
close to true. So again, whatever the thing is that
the Democrats can exploit, they choose to exploit it, and
much to the harm of all of society, they pretend
as though it's something that they convince more and more
people is a part of their.

Speaker 2 (46:12):
Own life, when it isn't.

Speaker 1 (46:14):
But nonetheless, I say all this to get back to
the original point that by and large, I think that
my position on a story that's ever evolving is that
I would defend everyone's right to own a gun, although
I would think that you need to be if you're
going to any level of treatment, or any level of
exploring the option of changing yourself from a man to

(46:34):
a woman, you need to be heavily evaluated for mental
health issues, because I imagine that the tremendously large percentage
of those individuals are dealing with a mental health issue
and probably shouldn't have a gun because of that. But anyway,
I would say, blanket statement, no, majority of people. Probably, yeah,
as far as mental health issues are concerned. All right,

(46:54):
that was complicated. I did my best. I might have
gotten woke. I didn't do it on purpose. A quick
Brain a lot more. Creig Collins filling in on the Danish.

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Speaker 9 (47:56):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (48:01):
I'd try it.

Speaker 1 (48:02):
It's time for a quick five on the Dana show
Dlash Dana Lash Radio and x on Twitter to stay
connected to her.

Speaker 2 (48:08):
The Powerball is going to be a ridiculous amount of money.
It already has been, but it's just getting more ridiculous.

Speaker 1 (48:14):
And so someone somewhere decided to put out a list
of the most likely numbers to be drawn, not at
all mathematically, you know, backed and supported is this thing,
but they do say that the most common numbers drawn
by Powerball are sixty one, twenty one, twenty.

Speaker 2 (48:30):
Three, thirty three, and sixty nine. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (48:33):
Baby, those are the numbers that are most likely. Maybe
not altogether, but at least some of them probably should
be in your list. The five least likely to be
drawn thirteen, forty nine, twenty six, forty six, and sixty five.
Again according to a very unscientific thing put out there
by people just before the Powerball drawing tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (48:54):
That's likely to be one point seven plus billion dollars,
and maybe even more than that.

Speaker 1 (49:00):
The least likely powerball number, by the way, is sixteen,
according again to a very unscientific thing. So go any
road you want, people, if you're going to be buying something,
I do, start to buy Powerball tickets. When it gets
to this ridiculously high price, as I imagine many people do,
and that's probably why they made it harder to win
the thing to begin with, so we get up to
these ridiculous numbers. Japan has a rent to person industry

(49:24):
with scary people fre which is sort of like getting
a bodyguard. Intimidating appearances and things are available. You can
rent people in Japan, which sounds horrible for all kinds
of reasons. You can look up the rent to person industry.

Speaker 13 (49:40):
There.

Speaker 1 (49:41):
You can get fake grandmothers, siblings, muscle to walk around
with you and again intimidate people whatever it might be.
You need a date for wedding, rent a person, You
need someone to accompany you to a bad side of town,
rent a person to do that kind of thing.

Speaker 2 (49:56):
This is weird and.

Speaker 1 (49:58):
Definitely the kind of thing that I don't I think
a lot of us would want to do as a career,
but apparently it pays pretty good in Japan if you're
a rent of person for hire. I wonder though, and
this is my curiosity, if the people who look like
muscle in fact act like muscle. If you need to
be defended, if you rent a person who's not actually
a security guard, but just someone who looks like they'd

(50:20):
be a valuable security guard when stuff goes awry, Did
they help you or do they run in the opposite direction.

Speaker 2 (50:27):
My guess is it's option two.

Speaker 1 (50:29):
It's not going to be option one. They're not going
to assist, they're not going to care, and they're going
to look at you like, well, I did my part
in standing next to you. The rest is up to you, buddy.
And then they leave, so we'll see what actually happens there.
College football continues this weekend. Fifty two percent of college
football fans admit that they're superstitious on game day. This

(50:50):
can manifest in all kinds of different ways, from just
wearing your favorite jersey lucky hat during a game, certain
other things that you might in order to help a
team win. My favorite version of a story to this,
and I'm not necessarily proud of this, but it might
have happened. I was during the Stanley Cup when the Blackhawks.

(51:13):
I was living in Chicago, not a huge Blackhawks fan,
but with a group of people that were playing in
said Stanley Cup, and my wife went to the restroom
and the Blackhawks scored a goal, and then later in
the game my wife went to the restroom in the
Blackhawks scored a goal, and so at the end of
the game, the friends and family that were watching the
game with us started to ask Betty to go to
the bathroom when she didn't have to go, just to

(51:33):
see if.

Speaker 2 (51:34):
It would happen again.

Speaker 1 (51:35):
And I believe that actually she was in the bathroom
during a marquee moment when the Blackhawks scored multiple goals
late in the game win a Stanley Cup.

Speaker 2 (51:43):
And this is why I feel bad about it.

Speaker 1 (51:44):
She didn't get to see it because she was sent
to the restroom, and I probably should have defended her honor.
But truthfully, it seemed to actually work. So there was
something confusing about all of it going in and she
seemed to be amused by it more so than upset
by it. For anyone that's gonna send hate letters to me, But.

Speaker 2 (51:59):
I love that story.

Speaker 1 (52:00):
I love still telling She hates that I tell that
story still actually, even though I do have permission to
tell it. He thinks it's so dumb and so stupid.
But I think she deserved a Stanley Cup ring, you know,
a championship ring. I think that's a part that's missing.
The Blackhawks really should still get her hers from that
championship team, all right. And then one last thing just

(52:20):
out there, as far as silly stuff go. What's the
most and least organized room in your house? The living
room is actually the most organized because it's the one
that people see that made sense. Forty five percent of
people say that it's very organized, only four percent that
it was a total disaster. The least organized room in
your house the bedroom, as again, this is the one

(52:41):
you're least likely to put other people in, at least unexpectedly,
so only thirty three percent of people say it's very organized,
and a decent number about ten or so say that
it's an absolute disaster, which seems interesting to me too.
You probably should not let the bedroom get to disaster stage,
even if you're not going it off to the you know,
the general public. It feels like the kind of thing

(53:04):
you shouldn't do. I quick break a lot more. Greg
Collins filling in on the Danas Show.

Speaker 8 (53:08):
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Speaker 10 (54:06):
Keep your finger on the pulse with a Dana Show
podcast delivering timely news with insightful analysis whenever you want,
straight to you on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get
your podcasts.

Speaker 1 (54:19):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins.
Filling in d Lash Dana Lash Radio on x on
Twitter to stay connected to her and the show. Very
great things on all the social media pages. She's got podcasts, television, everything.
You can find Dana all over the place. Very successful,
very famous, very smart person. My name is Craig and
you can find me at Radio Craigsey, along with say

(54:41):
four hundred or so people. It's not as big of
a following, but thrilled to be here. In doing the show,
Robert F. Kennedy Junior talked about a lot of things yesterday.
We played a lot of audio as it was happening
in yesterday's show, but this was probably one of the
better things that we sadly didn't get to. So let's
do it now.

Speaker 2 (54:59):
This is Robert.

Speaker 1 (55:00):
He just unloaded on all different kinds of problems we have.
How we're one of the sickest countries in the world.
That's based on the you know, development of our country
and then the effectiveness of our medication and our our
medical community, even if it's tremendously expensive. We are the
most expensive country in the world for medicine too, and
this is bad. Rfk Junior thinks that this is not good,

(55:22):
as do most Americans. He also points out that he's
going to fire some people at the CDC who are
not doing their jobs.

Speaker 2 (55:29):
Well.

Speaker 14 (55:31):
This morning, I got the latest numbers from CDCING that
seventy six point four percent of Americans now have a
chronic disease. This is stunning. When my uncle was president
was eleven percent. Nineteen fifty, it was three percent. He
is seventy six point four percent. Eighty five eight out

(55:54):
of ten of our kids cannot qualify for military service.
This is a national security issue. My uncle was president,
we spend zero on chronic disease. Today we spend one
point three trillion dollars. It's the biggest cause. It's increasing.
And all of the arguments that Republicans and Democrats have
about a single payer Obamacare, or the various way is

(56:18):
allocate the health dollars, they are all like rearranging deck
chairs on the Titanic. If we don't end this chronic
we are the sickest country in the world. That's why
we have to fire people at CDC. Yeah, they did
not do their job. This was their job to keep
us healthy.

Speaker 15 (56:36):
Thank you.

Speaker 14 (56:37):
I need to fire some of those people to make
sure this doesn't happen again.

Speaker 1 (56:40):
Yes, buddy, do it fire away. I like when you
actually are held accountable. If you do a terrible job,
you don't deserve to keep your job. This is something
that would be startling in the world of bureaucratic government.
It is true everywhere else in society. Also, there was
this shouting match which was amazing where myocarditis comes out
and the actual risk that is definitively proven science that

(57:04):
m r NA vaccines create issues with your heart, especially
for people who are young, healthy and would not otherwise
have any sort of heart swelling or myocarditis problems. This
is a big reason to not recommend these types of
vaccines for kids or anyone that is, you know, healthy
in a whole lot of ways. I here is a

(57:24):
shouting match between Robert F.

Speaker 2 (57:26):
Kennedy Jr.

Speaker 1 (57:27):
And one of the senators trying to corner him on
a topic that they definitely chose incorrectly.

Speaker 15 (57:33):
If you can make you can characterize it any way
you want. I quoted them today. What I said was
accurate when you said were lies you just moving moving?

Speaker 2 (57:45):
The type are you saying.

Speaker 14 (57:49):
Has never been myocard.

Speaker 16 (57:53):
I am saying, I am simply we're trying to tell
I am simply trying to say that the people that
you have put on that panel, after firing the entire.

Speaker 1 (58:04):
The question, you Yes, you're absolutely evading the question, Sir, sir,
does it have a likelihood of creating miacriditis?

Speaker 15 (58:13):
Here?

Speaker 2 (58:13):
That question?

Speaker 15 (58:14):
I'm asking the questions.

Speaker 1 (58:17):
I'm asking Okay, I love this, I love that back
and forth. Hey we're sitting here. You've got a microphone,
I have a microphone. You think you can handle Uh,
you know, full control of how this discussion goes and
what you can trap me in and what you can't
talk about. And I'm just going to add some context
to the things you're trying to say and see if
you agree with me or not. Because the moment he
says he does, because you can't say no to that,

(58:40):
that it's obviously and definitively proven that miacriditis is a
genuine risk of taking a mRNA vaccine. That as that
stuff occurs, as these things happen, the only thing you
could possibly say in response to it is, uh, you know,
all right, never mind, let me move on, because I've
demonstrated how my opinion is clawed. The Democrats they wouldn't

(59:01):
do anything like that. How dare you even pretend they
would ever contemplate that. All right, let's talk a little
bit about the ability to speak freely in the UK.
I think that there's a lot of discussion about this.
There's a comedian that got arrested for making jokes on
social media that says that he's the latest example of

(59:23):
how terrible free speech is now being hindered in the UK.
There's also this audio from the new Home Secretary of
the UK and how she's talking about Islam being her
religion and that she likes to practice certain things and
how bad that might be for restricting, say, free speech

(59:43):
even further.

Speaker 17 (59:43):
Here we go Islam my own religion. Like a lot
of practicing Muslims, my faith is the most important thing
in my life. It is the absolute driver of everything
that I do. Strong calling of my own conscience, and
my conscience calls me to God.

Speaker 1 (01:00:04):
That is that's how I know that I'm supposed to
do certain things in certain ways, and you know we're
all screwed. Is essentially the entire tait there, which I love,
because yes, there's certain lessons within certain religions that if
they're the driving force of how you behave I might
actually not be so great as far as governing people
in a whole lot of ways. Now, I'm not telling

(01:00:25):
you to change your own religion. I am telling you, though,
that sometimes you might have to govern beyond it in
some capacity in some scenarios, whether you like that or not,
and especially when free speech is concerned. But a whole
lot of people have to do that just in general
the things they simply disagree with. You don't have to
have the stakes be up to the level of religion,

(01:00:46):
where it's something that's you know, more emotionally and intellectually
connected to you than say just something where I have
an opinion different from yours. Making sure to protect free
speech in and of itself is a basic right in society,
one actually granted by the creator that we believe is true.
And so I just think it's very interesting and very

(01:01:07):
odd that these type of videos go viral and these
discussions get had, and then how people make certain executive
decisions based on what we're already seeing in society and
how horrible things are going. In the UK, you're arresting
comedians that are making jokes on social media and saying
that there's somehow a threat to society and honestly, bad

(01:01:27):
jokes really aren't a threat to society. It's just the
kind of thing. I don't even think his jokes were
that bad, actually, but just the kind of thing where
he's probably not going to have a whole lot of success.
All right, let's do this a Jasmine Crockett seems to
be cheering for Donald Trump to die. She is the
latest Democrat to be cheering on what she sees as
medical issues that are a parent with the current president.

Speaker 2 (01:01:48):
Of the United States.

Speaker 1 (01:01:50):
I don't remember a single conservative saying that they wanted
Biden to die, and Biden was evidently behaving like someone
who was not doing well health wise for a long time,
and you were screaming from the rooftops that that was
occurring because mainstream media was somehow trying to pretend it
wasn't happening, and main everyday Americans could see it.

Speaker 2 (01:02:12):
It was easy.

Speaker 1 (01:02:12):
Even John Stewart admitted it and then got trashed by
the left for doing that. What I think is amazing
is that these Democrats actually do hope for the death
of someone. If you remember during COVID when Trump got
it and was flown to the hospital, there were a
lot of people hoping that he would die, which is
just surreal. And this is the party that claims to
be of better people. This is the party that thinks

(01:02:35):
that they're the good guy and you're the bad guy
because of who you vote for. And they hope that
politicians they disagree with are off from this planet, even
politicians who were almost killed and attempted assassinations occurred, which
is ridiculous again too. But here's a bit of that
audio of Crockett seeming to hope that his hand looks
like it's going to fall off soon.

Speaker 7 (01:02:57):
I don't know, Donald Trump hand looked like he's about
to fall off. But no, in all seriousness, though, I
do think that we should have a reasonable conversation about
what the twenty fifth means.

Speaker 2 (01:03:13):
Yeah, I already don't care.

Speaker 1 (01:03:14):
I already don't care so much about her and her
take and everything about it, because it's just it's so
odd to a cheer for someone to die and then
to also want to do anything you can to remove
someone from his position of power because you don't like
what they're doing. Trump every single day, multiple times a day,

(01:03:37):
takes questions from media, and so the narrative that his
brain is no longer functioning appropriately like Biden is so
difficult to validate because he's so consistently the same guy
he was a few years ago. He goes on tangents
and rants, he does all those things he'd expect him
to do, but he's also incredibly accessible. And the thing
that they did with Biden is they hit him. They
made him completely unaccessible. They gave him sheets of information

(01:04:01):
to ask specific questions of only individuals, you know, that
were pre approved by his administration, where he probably got
the questions in advance and practiced the answers like it
was so controlled. And Trump and this is something they
actually ridicule him for, is uncontrolled. Is going to do
whatever he wants to do, however he wants to do it.
I do believe President Trump is the kind of person

(01:04:24):
who could wake up one morning with what he thinks
is an epiphany and run with it regardless of what
it is. Be like, you know what, I'm going this
road today and that sounds unpredictable, and I think the
Left pretends that it's terrible, But it is someone who's leading.
It is someone who's in charge and behaving with the
authority of a person who believes himself to be in charge.

(01:04:45):
Biden was the exact opposite. Biden was the kind of
guy in a room who would make jokes about how
his wife or his team were telling him what he
was allowed to do and not do. I would never
want someone in a position of ultimate authority for a
government or even a company I'm working for, to behave
that way. I'd want them to be certain of the
decisions they make and to deal with the fallout if

(01:05:08):
those decisions go poorly, because at least they're leading and.

Speaker 2 (01:05:11):
They're not doing everything else.

Speaker 1 (01:05:12):
To give that power to other people, I wonder I'll
say this real quick, if you've ever worked at a
company where there was a person in charge who was weak,
who was easily manipulated, who seemed like they had people
that they deeply trusted within the company, and then you
talk to those people, the people that you know, again
the boss thinks are their knights in shining armor, their

(01:05:34):
friends who are on the front lines fighting for them.
A lot of those people hate the person in charge,
but they do manipulate them. They are in control of them.
But it's crazy. They'll say all kinds of awful, terrible things.
And then if any of those awful, terrible things get
back to the person in power, the person manipulating them goes, Oh,
I was just saying that to get everybody's trust who
was saying stuff about you, But I don't actually believe it.

(01:05:57):
It's amazing. I've seen it occur two times in my
professional career in the industry that I'm in, where the
person at the forefront of a company was actually the
least secure, the most you know, easily manipulated, just the
person who probably should not be in charge because of
how weak of a leader they are and how easy
it was for someone else to in the shadows actually

(01:06:19):
control everything. And the people in the shadows are the
most devious, horrible people that you can possibly imagine. And
this is true easily within our government. The amount of
people who wielded the auto pen for Biden seemed to
be more than it should have been. It should have
been zero, but it seemed to be a large group
of individuals, and the things they did and the way

(01:06:40):
they use someone who is mentally incapable is sort of,
you know, the antithesis of what it means to be
a good person. And then you have Trump, who probably
can't be wielded by anybody in any capacity because he'll
do what he wants at the end of the day.
But all right, and I do like that better again.
And I almost feel bad for the bosses who get
manipulated by the people, but inevitably sometimes that manipulation hurts me.

(01:07:03):
That don't feel that bad for the people that are
stupid enough to be tricked by people that work for them.
All right, quick break a lot more Craig Collins filling
in on the data show and as we.

Speaker 8 (01:07:12):
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Speaker 2 (01:08:20):
It's his laugh mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida Man. That's right.

Speaker 1 (01:08:29):
This is the Dana Show, a d Lash Dana Lash
Radio on x to stay connected to all things she's
up to and time for Florida Mann.

Speaker 2 (01:08:36):
We have several today.

Speaker 1 (01:08:37):
First, there was a machete wielding man in Florida, in
Fort Pierce that showed up at a Walmart. He started
threatening people and just flinging around a machete. That's definitely
the kind of thing where you're going to ask yourself
all kinds of questions, like why is this guy at Walmart.
Why am I at Walmart at this time of night?
But Lawrence Fountain is the dude's name. Eventually Fort Pierce

(01:08:58):
PD showed up and tackled the guy. No one was injured,
and police are amazing to do this kind of work
where they show up at a scene, see a crazy
dude with a machete and like, well, we're going in
and tackling that dude again. They prevented, hopefully anything horrible
from happening, which seemed like it could have. But this
dude eventually went with police and no reason why he

(01:09:21):
was there wielding a machete other than the fact that
it's Florida, all right. That story is one Florida man.
This other guy was dumb enough to quote head butt.

Speaker 2 (01:09:31):
A patrol car. I love this story.

Speaker 1 (01:09:34):
After a fight at a tiki bar, So a thirty
nine year old dude by the name of Christopher I
got in a fight at a tiki bar and as
the police rolled up to the scene, I guess the man,
who thought he was probably getting in trouble with authorities,
decided to take it out on the worst object he
possibly could by headbutting the car itself.

Speaker 2 (01:09:55):
Being like get away from me, police, I'm doing this now?
Did I think two things?

Speaker 1 (01:10:02):
First, it demonstrated that this guy's nuts and probably the problem,
which is why I think he immediately gets arrested after
that moment. And the other thing it did, and this
was the jokers thing in the dark night, is you
don't start with a head injury. Man, People get all
fuzzy and then they have no idea what else is
going on. So this individual probably also made it easier
to apprehend him the moment he rammed his head into

(01:10:23):
a vehicle. But this really occurred, and the dumb Florida
man was arrested a man. I can't imagine how many
drinks he had at the tiki bar or if he'll
be invited back anytime soon. Although it would be amusing
to look out the window and to see a dude head,
but a car and go down is the kind of
thing that I would not mind seeing again.

Speaker 2 (01:10:42):
I wouldn't even maybe pay for that type of entertainment.

Speaker 1 (01:10:46):
Another story out there, a Florida man was arrested for
a DUI after he drove past police who were actually
in another traffic stop thing going on, and he had
absolutely no tire on one of his.

Speaker 2 (01:11:00):
It was just rim and he was driving on.

Speaker 1 (01:11:02):
The street, sparks, flying things, going crazy, and cops watched
him in there like this is probably not good. So
they pulled that guy over. He's intoxicated, and now he's arrested.
What I think is uniquely interesting about this is that
the dude was yelling that there was nothing to see here.

Speaker 2 (01:11:19):
Don't be suspicious.

Speaker 1 (01:11:20):
Don't be suspicious is probably what he was thinking as
he was like, it's totally fine, everything will be okay.
They're not going to catch me. And then he drives
by missing a full on tire. Easy work for Florida police.
Sometimes like that, that's happening too. I won last one,
and this one is kind of just awful. A Florida
man in a inflatable a dog costume choked a juvenile

(01:11:42):
during an argument outside of a pet store. What the
exact argument was, I'm not sure how old the juvenile was.
I'm also not sure, but certainly not eighteen years old.
But Clearwater, Florida, had to arrest a forty six year
old man again wearing a puppy costume, which actually made
it look like he was riding a dog.

Speaker 2 (01:12:01):
The inflatable dog. You know, similar to the way a
horse would be and the dude standing over it. And
he choked somebody. He choked a child, And that gets
you a whole lot of arrested and a whole lot
of places, including Florida.

Speaker 1 (01:12:14):
It also gets you in Florida. Man, all right, quick
break a lot more. Craig Collins filling in on the
Danas Show.

Speaker 2 (01:12:20):
This is the Danish Show.

Speaker 1 (01:12:21):
My name is Craig Collins filling in. Thrilled to be
with you d Lash Dana Lash radio on x on Twitter.
Great way to stay connected to her and the team
and everything that they do on this show. A producer,
Steven does a great job, but social media as well
at radio Craig Z if you want to see what
it's like to not have a producer Steven and to
just be me and four hundred or so followers. But anyway,

(01:12:41):
other things out there. Janine Piro announces that they've made
two arrests in the murder of a Capitol Hill intern.
This is a uniquely sad story. They're looking for a
third person that they believe was also involved with this,
but way to go, judge Janine. In tracking down some
of the people responsible for killing an intern. You know,
for whatever reason, political or not, here we go.

Speaker 13 (01:13:05):
I stand here to address specifically the tragic event that
has shaken d C, the senseless fatal shooting of a
twenty one year old intern by the name of Eric
Tarpinim Jackham, who was fatally shot in northwest d C
far too soon on June thirtieth of twenty twenty five.

(01:13:29):
He was shot and killed at ten twenty eight at night.
He was hit four times. The scene involved two rifles,
one nine millimeter and seventy nine rounds on the ground.

Speaker 2 (01:13:47):
Wow.

Speaker 13 (01:13:49):
Eric was a rising senior at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
He was in the nation's capital, as many young people
are pursuing his passion for public safe He was interning
for representative ron esses. And he was an innocent bystander,
innocent bystander who was caught in a violent act that

(01:14:13):
was not meant for him. He leaves behind his mother Tamara,
his father Robert, his sister Angela, and his brother Jeremy.

Speaker 1 (01:14:25):
As I said, she goes on to announce that there
have been at least two arrest and there's a third
suspect that they are looking for. Judge Janine Piro doing
a good job in front of a microphone, of course,
and how she talks about that and making sure to
mention the family and the victim along before getting to
the part where you're actually talking about the people who
have been caught as people responsible for this, all right,

(01:14:47):
other things out there a g. Pam Bondi is mentioning
a brand new fight against human smuggling, human traffickers, all
kinds of things, and I just love how definitive she was,
and one of the statements she made. Pambondy not exactly
popular with a lot of people right now. The belief
is that she might be aiding and covering up some

(01:15:08):
sort of stuff with the Epstein files, and that even
if Trump doesn't seem to care as much about them,
maybe people like Dan Bongino are very upset with Pambondi
specifically of what they are or are not doing in
that regard. And a recent thing that got leaked with
all reference in a minute is a pretty big deal
and it doesn't make Pambondi look very good. But this

(01:15:30):
is a good thing, focusing on, you know, human smuggling,
drug trafficking, all kinds of things, and trying to get
a handle on it.

Speaker 2 (01:15:37):
This is good, So let's play this.

Speaker 18 (01:15:40):
Under President Trump, we have coordinated more closely with our
US Attorney's offices to protect unaccompanied children being smuggled into
our country from exploitation. One of the task forces greatest
accomplishments has been demonstrating how dangerous humans smuggling and trafficking

(01:16:01):
are for those being transported. Yeah, for those who are
considering paying to be smuggled into the US, it is
not safe for you or for your families. These coyotes
are coordinating with terrorist organizations, collecting money from them to
bring families and unaccompanied children into our country. These operations

(01:16:25):
are getting people killed.

Speaker 2 (01:16:27):
Yeah, not just that.

Speaker 1 (01:16:28):
Horrible things happen to a whole bunch of people who
trust cartels to get them into the country. You know,
a rape, abuse, everything you can imagine.

Speaker 2 (01:16:37):
It's horrible.

Speaker 1 (01:16:38):
And so one of the things that we do in
creating a better deterrent to you know, prevent people from
coming into our country legally. One of the byproducts of
that is actually protecting individuals from putting themselves in harm's
way by trusting people they shouldn't trust and giving money
to organizations they shouldn't trust to do horrible things throughout
the world and certainly here in the United States.

Speaker 2 (01:17:00):
Pambondi in a fight about that that is good.

Speaker 1 (01:17:03):
Is that put out as a distraction to the other
thing that's out there in the news, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:17:08):
So if you're.

Speaker 1 (01:17:09):
Unaware, James O'Keefe, who is famous for Project Veritas and
all the things they uncovered, all the you know, moments
where someone in a position of power said something that
they probably shouldn't have said to what is usually a honeypot.
That would be an attractive person who has gotten insider
information by convincing someone in a position of power that

(01:17:30):
they're interested in them romantically.

Speaker 2 (01:17:33):
To whatever degree that is.

Speaker 1 (01:17:34):
I don't know who knows, But anyway, James seems to
be uniquely good at this stuff. Even though he's no
longer with Project Veritas. He does this on his own,
and a secret taping of a Pambondi official, the Deputy
Chief of Special Operations for the DOJ Joseph Schnitt, was

(01:17:54):
damaging significantly. So in the video you hear a Joseph
talk about how they're going to do everything they can
to quote redact Republicans from inevitable Epstein files. That put
out into the world, shift all of the blame to Democrats,
like all of the tinfoil hat stuff that people believe
politicians are doing, and might even think that Trump is

(01:18:15):
involved in doing any of that. And so what's really
interesting about it is first that this is a person
in a position of power saying all that stuff out loud.

Speaker 2 (01:18:25):
Now, I want to make two points about this topic.

Speaker 1 (01:18:29):
The first one being that if you're a position of
power person in government and a ridiculously good looking person
seems to be interested in you, question it. Question it heavily.
Although actually I don't want them to like I give
that advice, but truthfully, I'd like to uncover truth. So
go ahead and believe that this ten out of ten
is interested in you a four out of ten, Go

(01:18:51):
ahead and give them information. But the second thing is,
this is obviously what both sides politically would want to do.
This wouldn't be uniquely a republic thing. And it's the
big thing that Trump actually is saying about Democrats and
how they had access to these files.

Speaker 2 (01:19:06):
First, that they might have.

Speaker 1 (01:19:08):
Scrubbed any and all version of information, and actually cash
Mattel and Dan Bongino also stated that there's files they
don't have access to at the FBI that other people
might have access to, and they need them. That seem
to demonstrate that maybe the rabbit hole goes deeper than
what they have right now. But the other thing that's
important in saying that is that since this is so manipulatable,

(01:19:30):
and that both sides of the aisle had fingerprints on
it at one time or another, it convinces me even
more that Trump is not going to be found guilty
of anything, not going to be a casualty of any
inevitable Epstein file release. And the biggest reason why is
Democrats would have done that already and scrubbed it the
same way this Republican is claiming that the DOJ is

(01:19:51):
going to attempt to do it before they put stuff
out there. I think there's always a thread no matter
what happens. As long as you get transparency, I think
you can keep pulling at a thread and you can
find the truth, even if it's being a protected But
the other thing I will say the defense here, the
guy wound up sending a note app a screenshot to

(01:20:13):
his director, to his boss, Joseph Schnitt. He signed it
and everything. The funny things about this is it's an
airplane mode thirty percent battery iPhone A note it doesn't
look like you put a lot of work into it.
That eventually got tweeted out by the US Department of Justice.
In it, the person who's in the video says, I
met a woman named Skyler on Hinge a dating app

(01:20:34):
in July of twenty twenty five. Her profile is no
longer findable. We had two dates on August fourth and sixteenth.
She claimed to be an O pair at Georgetown. She
gave no clues that she was a reporter or recording
our dates. Had had I had a clue, the first
date would have ended immediately and there never would have
been a second one.

Speaker 16 (01:20:53):
Duh.

Speaker 2 (01:20:54):
That part is like, of course. I love that he
also doesn't put in here.

Speaker 1 (01:20:58):
I probably wouldn't have discussed my own opinion of what
we're doing in the DOJ with someone that I thought
was a secret reporter. My profile indicated I did government work,
but did not specify what agency. I never discussed what
I do at the DOJ. I love that it also
says he was a victim. You know that he didn't
actually make it easy to figure out who he was.
I think his photo did that. The comments I made

(01:21:20):
were of my own personal opinion from what I've seen
in media, and not anything to do with what I've
done or learned via work. I have no knowledge of
the circumstances surrounding miss Maxwell other than what is reported
in the news.

Speaker 2 (01:21:32):
I also never divulged anything about what I do at work.

Speaker 1 (01:21:35):
So essentially, he was gossiping with a hot chick and
trying to impress her with knowledge that he claims he
didn't actually have. Whether that's true or not, I don't know.
James O'Keefe is very good at finding the individual who's
a weak point, who's willing to give you information. As
I said a second ago, so there seems to be
a tremendous amount of value to believing this and believing that.

Speaker 2 (01:21:56):
It could be true.

Speaker 1 (01:21:58):
And the delay might be in trying to create a
convincing version of document that doesn't harm Republicans of it
does harm Democrats. But I think once more information gets
out there, the people that exist in our society, the
independent reporters, will keep pulling at threads, will keep chasing
down rabbit holes and the thing that's most important, and
I think this is what would disappoint mainstream media is

(01:22:19):
that they probably won't get Trump. Even the accusers and
the victims who spoke yesterday with a lawyer about all
the Epstein stuff, and there were a ton of women there.
They were asked point blank questions about Trump, and no
one said anything to indicate that they saw or were
a party to something where Trump did something bad himself.

(01:22:41):
And they also seem to say very often that the
only thing they ever heard was Epstein bragging about his
friendship with President Donald Trump, long before he was actually
the president. And so I find that very fascinating that
that information is already out there, coming from the victims themselves,
and mainstream media is ignoring it and trying to low
up this thing to be something different than I think

(01:23:02):
what O'Keefe thinks it is, which is a bunch of
elites hiding other elites that you may not even have
heard of before, and how they orchestrated and helped run
a sex trafficking ring involving children, which is a uniquely
horrific group of people that deserves to be as accountable
as humanly possible for the horrible things they did. But

(01:23:24):
all right, we'll take a break we'll talk about some
other things have a little bit more fun within the
rest of the show today, because darned it's a Friday
and we have to. This is Craig Collins filling in
on The Dana Show.

Speaker 9 (01:23:35):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 1 (01:23:41):
That's right, It's time for quick five on the Danas Show.
Dean Lash, Dana Lash Radio and x on Twitter to
say connected to her and everything that is awesome coming
out of the team that handles some of that social media.
She does a lot of it herself. A producer, Steven
handles a lot of it too. A great job all around.
An Eagles defensive lineman was kicked out of the game
last night before it even started. It's a unique walk

(01:24:02):
of shame to be taken off the helmet, to walk
back through, you know, into the locker room, and to
have no sweat on your face whatsoever. This is because
of him spitting at Dak Prescott, who definitely spit first.
I here's some audio of Mike Ico talking about what
happened last night?

Speaker 15 (01:24:19):
Defense?

Speaker 2 (01:24:22):
Has this qualified him from the game? Whoa fifty villainy?
Whoa post off?

Speaker 4 (01:24:27):
So Jalen Carter, the focus and the star for the Eagles,
on the front line out for the game before snap.
Here he goes, he walks there front of Dak Prescott.
Did he spit? Did he spit on him? There you go,
Jalen Carter out of this game before a snap.

Speaker 1 (01:24:46):
I don't know if I enjoy a little bit too
much Mike Ico asking several times did he spit?

Speaker 2 (01:24:51):
Did he spit later on in the game.

Speaker 1 (01:24:53):
I think they debated whether or not Dak spit first,
and my answer is absolutely yes he did. A mom
from New Zealand broke a world record that you probably
don't want. Her name is Gabrielle. She ran the fastest
one hundred meter sprint over lego pieces. This is something
that maybe moms might be uniquely good at avoiding injury,

(01:25:13):
although I'm pretty sure they would hurt while stepping on legos,
a pain that is surprisingly bad compared to what you
would assume it would be until it happens to you.
But anyway, Gabrielle was talking about breaking this record and
how weird and specific it is right here in this
piece of audio that went viral. I love that she's
proud of this that she can run one hundred meters

(01:25:35):
faster than anybody else twenty four point seven five seconds
on a bunch of legos.

Speaker 19 (01:25:40):
I had a health scare a couple of years ago,
so reevaluation my bucket list as a result. One of
the things that ended up on the list was to
do again to swirled records attempts, nice conditions on the
treck today, sunny with a good chance of INDROI it
looks a lot longer than it did in the training.
I have to say probably about halfway it switched from
being like, Wow, I'm actually doing this to boy, that

(01:26:00):
looks like a long, long way away, like a dream.

Speaker 20 (01:26:05):
It's like running on clouds.

Speaker 1 (01:26:06):
Like a dream, running on clouds where a whole bunch
of pain happens. Other things out there as far as
quick five go, way to go her Charlie Sheen is
opening up about a lot of crazy stuff, surprising stuff
that he's done during his life, which is saying something
about a guy who has already been very vocal about
a lot of crazy stuff. He has a new book
coming out on September ninth, and then a documentary on

(01:26:29):
Netflix the next day. One of the biggest things that
media is focusing on, is that he admits to having
sex with God.

Speaker 2 (01:26:37):
I don't have more of a take on that.

Speaker 1 (01:26:39):
Charlie Sheen did say when this started happening was when
he was heavily using crack.

Speaker 2 (01:26:45):
So whether or not media is propping up.

Speaker 1 (01:26:47):
What they think is an LGBTQ plus story because they
like it about a guy that's been in media a
lot for a lot of reasons, and whether it's actually
a story about drug addiction and how you know certain
activities that you do you might not understand later.

Speaker 2 (01:27:02):
Some of the quotes within the books seem to demonstrate.

Speaker 1 (01:27:04):
That he wasn't really sure why he did what he did,
outside of the fact that maybe cracked was a big
component to that.

Speaker 2 (01:27:11):
So it's weird.

Speaker 1 (01:27:12):
It's weird to celebrate drug use because it might tie
to a different narrative that media thinks they're happy about.
And Sheen is going to make money and say that
he doesn't care anymore about what people think of him,
not that I think he ever did.

Speaker 2 (01:27:26):
And then finally, one last thing, I thought this was
interesting too.

Speaker 1 (01:27:29):
Florida Honda salesman has gone viral for a skateboard trick
and I use air quotes when I say that that
he put up on social media. The guy is standing
in the bed of a truck and he jumps down
and lands on a skateboard. I thought it was like
a kickflip or something at first, some kind of trick
from outside the bed of the truck.

Speaker 2 (01:27:48):
It's not.

Speaker 1 (01:27:49):
He's just dropping the skateboard in front of him and
landing on it and then holding it while talking about
making sales in.

Speaker 2 (01:27:56):
Ritchie for you to buy a Honda.

Speaker 1 (01:27:58):
And he's gone viral, mostly because he seems to think
he's cool when he definitely doesn't look all that cool
and definitely looks ad do old. I'd be doing the
skateboarding tricks he's doing, but I'm not judging.

Speaker 4 (01:28:08):
Man.

Speaker 1 (01:28:09):
I'm almost forty, and if you can do a skateboard
trick at this age, I'm as impressed as anybody else,
even if that's barely a trick. Bud quick Break a
lot more Creig Collins filling in on The Dana Show.

Speaker 10 (01:28:20):
Subscribe to The Dana Show podcast because who says you
can't make fun of people while staying informed on your
own personal time. Subscribe on YouTube, Apple or wherever you
get your podcast.

Speaker 2 (01:28:31):
That's right, this is the Dana Show.

Speaker 1 (01:28:33):
My name is Craig Collins filling in Dlash Dana Lash
Radio on x on Twitter. Best way is to stay
connected to her and everything that they have going on
there at radio Craig Z, if you want to help
me have a less and less embarrassing amount of followers,
although it's still embarrassing it.

Speaker 2 (01:28:47):
Probably will be for a while. But at Radio Greg Z.

Speaker 1 (01:28:50):
If this giant, massive audience wants to help me at
all and cares about my Yankee tweets, all right, CBS
News is demonstrating bias yet again. What I find him
me actually about this topic and how long it's been
going on now, President Trump absolutely deserves credit. There are
others before him in the up and down history of
people in charge of our government and the media and

(01:29:12):
how they cover those people. But President Trump absolutely deserves
recognition for being at the forefront of a lot of
Americans in today's society openly admitting that most media is biased.
The mainstream media especially has a significant bias. And now
it's so valuable in the world of discussion that Trump's
getting sweet sweet cash out of it. He's getting adeals

(01:29:35):
and he's getting organizations to go ahead and make some
sort of negotiation with him, some sort of payout to
him in light of actually having discovery occur in a lawsuit.
If you'd rather settle than have the lawsuit, the biggest
reason to me why is because you don't want discovery
to damage the reputation of your organization even more, which

(01:29:57):
it would inevitably do. The case in point, how highest
media still is even with all of that going on.
Is the difference between the Katanji Brown Jackson interview and
the Amy Cony Barrett interview that CBS did recently. So
we have a side by side comparison of some of
the things that happened in these conversations, and we just

(01:30:17):
want you to acknowledge anyone out there to acknowledge how
ridiculous this is, and how when the left fights back
against the narrative that media is uniquely unfair to Trump,
they embarrass themselves even more and push the everyday American
further away from that party because of how much how
detached they seem to be from the reality at hand.

(01:30:39):
But here's a bit of a comparison to understand.

Speaker 20 (01:30:42):
Just as Katanji Brown Jackson consider the poem she's kept
close for decades.

Speaker 5 (01:30:48):
The Court has held that the rights to marry, engage
in sexual intimacy, use birth control, and raise children are fundamental,
but the rights to do business, commit suicide, and obtain
abortion aren't.

Speaker 2 (01:31:00):
I'm not toiling up, Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:31:01):
By the way, that first part was a narrative and
a you know, a pre interview demonstration of how they
were turning Katanji Brown Jackson into essentially a saint. And
then the next piece of audio is actually a question
thrown at Amy Cony Barrett challenging her and her position
on certain things.

Speaker 20 (01:31:17):
Let's hear more word, as Henry Wadsworth Longfellow put it, is,
how the one hundred and sixteenth justice says she made history.

Speaker 5 (01:31:26):
As the first black female on the Supreme Court. What
kind of pressure does that come with? And so when
Hillary Clinton, for example, says what's next, she said, my
prediction is the court will do to gay marriage what
they did to abortion.

Speaker 2 (01:31:41):
Sorry, I can't help out good.

Speaker 1 (01:31:42):
This is how well this is cut together by town
hall media, and I think the conservative war machine actually
initially put it up on social media. But what does
it feel like to have pressure surrounding you and the
amazingness of who you are, Katanji Brown Jackson, Is there
anything you can say to us to blow our minds
with the you know, amazing and incredible a nature of

(01:32:03):
you as a human. I just give us some insight
into what it's like to be officially a saint of
the Democratic Party and democratic machine that runs a lot
of media.

Speaker 2 (01:32:12):
To Amy Cony Barrett, what's it like to be the
devil incarnate is basically what they're saying.

Speaker 20 (01:32:16):
Want more details her journey to the highest court In
her memoir out Tuesday, the title lovely One, Yes, that's
what your name means.

Speaker 6 (01:32:25):
It is.

Speaker 1 (01:32:26):
It is also say I'm sorry, I have to uniquely
stop it there too. I love that Like, that's a question.

Speaker 2 (01:32:32):
The title of this book, that's what your name actually means, right, Yes,
that's that's correct.

Speaker 5 (01:32:38):
And the book that the rights to marry and engage
in sexual intimacy, and use birth control and raise children
are fundamental.

Speaker 20 (01:32:44):
This is the classroom where you met. Is the classroom
where we met.

Speaker 2 (01:32:48):
Oh fun.

Speaker 1 (01:32:49):
Look at Kaitanji meeting the person that she's married to now,
and look at Amy Cony Barrett facing the fire hose
of questions. Look, I'll stop it there, because even without
the answers coming from Amy Cony Barrett on this, it's
just amazing. And these media people, they show their personal
opinion in the way they ask these questions. If someone

(01:33:10):
were to get an interview and they inherently agree with
the person they're interviewing, now, which media is not supposed
to do. You see it on display, You see the Yeah,
I'm going to get take it easy on you. I'm
going to highlight and prop you up and love you
and everything you do. And honestly, I'll say this, a
lot of conservative media will do the same thing, not
all of it. Actually, something that I've always been very

(01:33:32):
impressed with Data on is her willingness to hold the
feet to the fire of anybody, which is awesome and
important and you need it. People absolutely need it. But
there is a lot of conservative media that won't challenge
their leaders. And I think part of the reason why is,
and this is what the Fox News people of the
world say when they don't do it, is they're trying
to be a counter point to the inevitable version of

(01:33:53):
ridiculous challenge that exists in mainstream media. So it does
feel like a softball interview somewhere might be more valuable
for the Conservatives than for the Democrats because of how
consistent the larger news organizations in our society, which luckily
have been losing their influence more and more all the time,
but they often operate, you know, softballing one side and

(01:34:16):
giving a whole lot of.

Speaker 2 (01:34:17):
Scrutiny to the other.

Speaker 1 (01:34:18):
So I don't hate occasional softball interviews existing in the
world for Republicans because they're rarer, I guess, is the
way I'm trying to say it. But I usually just
love anyone and everyone being challenged on anything, because that's
the right way to go about this stuff. And actually,
you know, it's really interesting about this the backdrop of
Amy Cony Barrett writing a book and being you know,

(01:34:39):
essentially attacked by the person interviewing her at CBS after
they celebrated Katanji Brown Jackson. Is the ridiculous amount of
lying and a secrecy that exists on the left, and
you're seeing it on display in President Biden and the
things we've learned about it. You had another mid level
Biden staffer showing up at Capitol Hill for his testimony

(01:35:01):
into the ridiculous cover up and all the different things
that happened with the auto pen actually being in charge.
I think there's a little bit of audio of Fox
trying to confront this guy White House.

Speaker 2 (01:35:12):
Moran kilis the question, League Center, do you have any
just open remarks before you walking into Nay House for
your collaborational committee? And do you want to say you
than about you know, a high US net per Right
now I've heard.

Speaker 15 (01:35:25):
What do you plan to sell the committee?

Speaker 2 (01:35:27):
Are you silent?

Speaker 1 (01:35:29):
Are you concerned that you're gonna get caught doing a
lot of horrible, terrible things on his just stone faced
reaction as he's trying to walk by people. What's amazing
about this again is they claim that Biden was fine,
and if Biden actually was fine, which no one believes anymore,
then they wouldn't have a problem answering questions to press
and saying how ridiculous is that they're even there? Like,
how crazy is it that I'm even having to talk

(01:35:51):
about this. That's how media reacted for years when Biden
was in the White House, and now everybody seems to
be stone faced and quiet and hiding the truth as
much as they possibly can and worried about their own
self incriminating position they might take on stuff, which is
amazing because it definitely shows how horrible stuff actually was
and how many conservative pundits were right by the way.

Speaker 2 (01:36:14):
This is also interesting.

Speaker 1 (01:36:15):
Jesse Waters broke the news last night that Biden has
been diagnosed with a second form of cancer. As there's
a continued scrutiny over just how much Biden was actually
in charge and how much he was manipulated and how
much mental decline he suffered, they continue to roll out
these stories that I think are designed to make people
just move on, just forget about it, and to allow

(01:36:37):
the left to say, you're being mean to someone who
is ill.

Speaker 2 (01:36:40):
However, the left was willingly using someone who they knew.

Speaker 1 (01:36:44):
Was ill for quite some time and actually for a
while tried to get him back in a position of
power in the White House, probably to have this happen.
They probably knew this was going to occur, and the
best way to get Kamala Harris the White House would
have been, in their opinion, until it went horribly, to
get Biden reelected and then to have him die. Essentially,
the Left was sort of orchestrating all of this. It

(01:37:07):
sounds like behind closed doors and it's uniquely horrible, and
how they treated Biden, it almost reminds you of how
they treated Bernie Sanders their side of the aisle when
they didn't want him to be a candidate and he
was doing uniquely well against Hillary Clinton.

Speaker 2 (01:37:20):
But here we go. Cool. Fox News alert.

Speaker 21 (01:37:24):
Joe Biden's been diagnosed with another form of cancer. A
spokesman confirmed that Biden underwent surgery last month to remove
cancerous lesions on his head. This is not the first
bout of skin cancer. He's had multiple cancers removed in
the past, as recently as twenty twenty three. He's also
battling an aggressive form of prostate cancer that spread to

(01:37:46):
his bones.

Speaker 2 (01:37:46):
Yeah, this sounds horrible.

Speaker 1 (01:37:48):
It sounds like his health is definitely not good, and
that the former president of the United States does not
have a long left to be on this earth.

Speaker 2 (01:37:55):
And that's sad.

Speaker 1 (01:37:56):
I don't care how much I disagreed with him publicly.
I don't wish death on any book, unlike the Democrats
who seemed to be wishing death on Trump on a
daily basis. But it's interesting that this giant amount of
health issues has been hitting the news now and didn't
hit the news at all when he was in the
White House, even though he definitely had some of these issues.
Then the skin cancer one, I guess, being a bit

(01:38:17):
of a different thing because he was treated for it
openly while in.

Speaker 2 (01:38:20):
The White House at times.

Speaker 1 (01:38:21):
But nonetheless, like all of the health issues of Biden
finally coming to the forefront of discussion on purpose, it
feels for Democrats to try to get you to just
move on the same way they did when they chose
not to try him for stealing a bunch of classified
documents that the assessment then at the time by the
DOJ while Biden was in office was that you'd feel

(01:38:41):
bad for him if you were a juror, because it
was evident that he was an old guy whose brain
didn't work anymore, and that guy was still in charge
of the country and remained in charge of the country
until his term ended. After that moment happened, and after
media called it, you know, ridiculous and corrupt, and it
seems utterly true. One last thing I do want to
play this es JP Pritzker. Jelly Bean Pritzker has said that,

(01:39:04):
you know, Chicago crime isn't that bad. He said, they're
not ranked in the top ten in violent crime in
the country. Chicago is number one for murder in the
country any way that you slice the data. They are
the number one city, the number one place with one
hundred thousand plus people, you know, per capita for murder rate.
That feels like violent crime that you'd want to stop.

(01:39:26):
If you go beyond murder, if you go into the
world of you know, assault, rape, a bunch of other things,
you know, carjackings and whatnot. Yes, you can start to
mess with those numbers. But I think the most relevant one,
the most important one, the one that gets talked about
all the time with Chicago, the amount of shootings and
murders that happened there. They are, in fact, number one
in the country by any set of FBI released data

(01:39:49):
over the last year. Pritzker going to refuse to admit
that and claim instead that Trump is focused too much
on him. Well, Pritzker is begging to have a national spotlight.
Here's a bit of what he said to mainstream media
about the National Guard being sent in to help prevent
murder in the place that has the most murder of
any place in our country. Again, just go ahead and

(01:40:10):
look those numbers up if you want to definitively true
of courts.

Speaker 3 (01:40:14):
If National Guard or other military troops are sent to
deployed to the city of Chicago, immediately go to court.
So that's going to be our first line of defense,
is getting a court to issue a tro or other
injunction that again.

Speaker 1 (01:40:29):
We're gonna stop everybody from doing anything. You know what's
crazy about this too. By the way, the last thing
I'll say about it is, let's say that the National
Guard were activated by the President in Chicago to help
fight crime, and they didn't behave like police, but they
assisted police in whatever way they needed to to bring
down the number one murder rate of any city in
the country. If it went the way that Democrats claim

(01:40:51):
it could go, which is it felt like martial law
and people who were innocent were being treated poorly, they
could actually go to court. Then they could allow help
to happen, and then react to the thing that they're
claiming may occur when it actually does occur, instead of
saying they're going to fight it immediately for whatever reason.
That shows how little interest they actually have in cleaning

(01:41:13):
up crime in Chicago, Because even if they had a
legitimate concern, which they don't, about the military doing things
wrong that I don't think the military would do, because
I actually trust and honor other men and women who
serve our country. But anyway, in order to get any
of that to make sense, you have to claim that
inevitably they would be doing you know, essentially Nazi Germany

(01:41:35):
type stuff and not even allowing any of it to
occur for even a moment to see if that were
actually happening, which is a case in point the reason
that they fight this so hard because they know it
would actually get better and they don't want Trump to
get a win for bringing down the murder rate in
places beyond Washington d C. All right, quick break, a
little bit more coming up. Greg Collins filling in on

(01:41:56):
The Dana Show.

Speaker 10 (01:41:57):
On the go and need a quick news fix with
a fun twist. Follow Dana's Absurd Truth podcast for bite
size and formative episodes perfect for your busy schedule on
Apple or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 1 (01:42:09):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you very quickly. Dlash,
Dana Lash Audio, Dana Lash Radio. Excuse me on x
on Twitter to stay connected to everything going on with her.
A great job by producer Steven and the team for
doing a bunch of the social media so so well,
and Dana does a lot of it herself too. A
Newsome leads the twenty twenty eight Democratic field in a

(01:42:32):
brand new survey that demonstrates how screwed Democrats actually are.
Newsome is way ahead. Part of the reason, they say
for a recent surgeon popularity is the disrespectful way that
Newsom has behaved on social media toward Trump. Now, I
definitely think it's not actually Newsome making those jokes, but
some people in charge of his social media campaign, And

(01:42:53):
the difference between Newsom and Trump is he won't be
able to do that well in public. The haircut is
a uniquely annoying person to listen to and how he
talks and now he carries himself, so any amusement in
the social media version of him I think will wane
very quickly. Harris came in at a distant number two
as far as presidential hopeful as in twenty twenty eight

(01:43:14):
is concerned, and.

Speaker 2 (01:43:15):
Then AOC was number three on this list. Pete bodhaj
Edge and JB. Pritzkert rounding out the top five.

Speaker 18 (01:43:21):
Ah.

Speaker 1 (01:43:21):
By the way, Pete bootaj Edge recently accused by Tucker
Carlson of being a fake gay guy, something that definitely
made the news and something that a whole lot of
people attacked Tucker for. But I do have to be honest,
not that I have any of the insight that Tucker
has in any of us. I do not put it
past any politician, especially a Democrat, to be fake anything.
So I don't necessarily think that is impossible for that

(01:43:44):
to be true. If you think it, Garners more support
for you and buddhaj Edge does make the list. Other
things out there that I thought were kind of funny.
A woman went viral for making her own pasta on
a flight. You're not allowed to bring any sort of
cooking apparatus with you on a flight, so she couldn't
actually make the food into edible vergins of pasta.

Speaker 2 (01:44:04):
She just has raw noki.

Speaker 1 (01:44:06):
But she did demonstrate, while sitting in her seat how
she slowly put all the ingredients together to roll her
own pasta. A lot of people said if they saw
this next to them on a plane, they would be irate.
The woman is a social media influencer, and yes she
is attractive if you're wondering about that. But she did
impressively go from no noki to raw noki, but did

(01:44:28):
not cook it at all, so I'm not sure she
ate it. But she bragged about how airplane food is terrible.
That's true, and how she's uniquely good at making her
own food, which also seems to be true. Again, not
really allowed to cook whatever you want on the flight.
That part I'm going to get you in some trouble.
Finally getting older and eating breakfast later maybe a sign
of waning health. This could be because of depression, fatigue,

(01:44:51):
or oral health problems. If you used to eat breakfast
early and you're putting it off, don't do that, they're saying,
because it might be bad for your health as we
get older.

Speaker 2 (01:44:59):
That's it. That's the show.

Speaker 1 (01:45:00):
Oh thanks for being a part of it. Data Back
on Monday, Craig Collins filling in on The Dana Show.
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