Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Thank you to those so often forgotten by the politics
of our city who made this movement their own. I
speak of Yemeny bodega owners and Mexican abuelas, Senegalese taxi
drivers and USBEC nurses, Trinidadian line coachs and Ethiopian aunties. Yes, aunties.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
This was all such virtue signaling from him last night.
Let's just not play around with it. It was a
bloodbath for the GOP. And there's a lot of stuff
to take out of this because it was across a
diverse enough amount of state with different voting blocks that
there are a couple of themes that have already turned out.
(00:58):
And if Republicans do not get a handle on it,
there's not going to be a twenty eight. There will
not be a twenty twenty eight for Republicans. It's not
going to happen. So welcome to the program, Dana Lash
with you. It's audio only today because your girl is
probably not going to sleep for two days. We've got
(01:19):
to race out and head to the debate, and then,
of course we would uplate watching all of this last night,
so we just did just don't have the resources for
video today. But it'll be back normal tomorrow. But this
whole thing last night absolute bloodbath, absolute bloodbath. I mean
you ended up getting. I mean, New York City is
(01:44):
now Marxists. It's Marxist now. I think there's a couple
of ways to look at it. I think it's incredibly myopic.
The people who say, well, this is just you know,
it's New York City, Jersey and Virginia. These are once
purple and these are areas that have always gone Democrat,
that's actually not true. I will say the bottom didn't
(02:05):
totally fall out with some of the Trump counties carrying
the ones that he had last election. He kept them
even though he wasn't on the ballot, but there was
a major decrease. And in Virginia, Democrats flipped all of
the local races that had been held by incumbents for
over thirty years. That's incredibly significant. That is I mean,
(02:28):
if you cannot see that, then we have no hope
of altering or correcting course at all whatsoever. You had
two Democrats in Georgia. There was a local race in
Georgia that two Democrats beat. So this isn't even just
about blue states.
Speaker 3 (02:43):
Now.
Speaker 2 (02:44):
Georgia is more of a reddish purple state. This is
an issue for Republicans. And when you look in these
local races, Democrats performed very well. And I mean in
Pennsylvania there was they lost school boards, there were local
elections that they lost. There was a statewide judge race
(03:04):
that lost by plus fifteen. So you can't say that
it's just Democrat states or just some blue states got
you can't ignore all the down ballot races. That's not
a smart take to have. And I say that because
I had a couple of people write me early this
morning and say, well, you know, Dane, I hope that
(03:25):
you're not going to be, you know, a totally despondent.
That's not the word they use, but me, I hope
you're not going to be totally despondent about all of this,
et cetera, et cetera. You know, it's just New Jersey
and New York. It's actually a heck of a lot
more than that. It's a lot of these down ballot races.
Plus when you look at the exit polling, and we're
going to get into this, there's one thing that's incredibly clear,
(03:46):
very clear on all of it, as to what was
driving it. Now the issue with New York City, I
mean quite a bit. I mean a lot of it
is it's people there wanted a Marxist. In fact, if
you look, if you want to break it down even further,
(04:08):
many who voted for Mam Donnie weren't weren't even in
New York on an eleven. I think that's incredibly telling
of them. The people who were in New York for
less than for fewer than five years eighty three percent.
And these are people who voted. People who voted for
Mam Donnie had been there for fewer than five years,
(04:32):
So eighty three percent of his voters had been there
for fewer than five years. For those who had been
there for five to ten years, it was seventy six
percent of his voters ten plus years, but not born here,
it was fifty four percent. People born in New York
City it was thirty four percent. As compared to the
people who voted for Cuomo. Now Cuomo ended up getting
(04:55):
I was born in New York City forty five percent
to that for Cuomo thirty eight percent ten plus years.
It's completely the inverse of Mandanni thirty eight percent ten
plus years, but not born here eighteen percent five to
ten years and fifteen percent fewer than five years. This
is measurable with Sliwa as well, who is an absolute
(05:18):
spoiler in this Slivo was an I mean, I don't
care if you like him, that's just the way it is.
He was an absolute spoiler in this race. He took
away a significant chunk. Now it's not just him, I think, yes,
not having a strategy to thwart mam Donnie. Yeah, sure
he's culpable of that. Nice guy, but he's culpable of it.
But also Cuomo's a moron and Democrats are idiots. They
(05:38):
ran a guy who killed people's grandparents. That was going
to be your big alternative to Mamdanni is to run
a guy who who is accused and got accused all
kinds of stuff, the least of which not actually the
least of which one of the greatest ones. He killed
a lot of people's elderly parents with COVID policies, So
all of this stuff comes into play. That's incredibly significant.
(06:01):
And you know what, that's also like that in some
of these other areas too. Gosh, in Kansas last night,
and which would talk Kansas, they lost two conservative school
board seats Republicans do not come out for smaller elections,
and this is why they lose. Democrats don't beat Republicans.
Republicans don't show up. So if you want to call
(06:23):
the trickle a blue wave, it looks like a blue
wave when you don't even have a trickle. I mean,
this is all around, all around. I mean this Virginia,
so many Virginia there's legislature flipped. And so if people think, well,
it's just blue states and you miss all this other stuff,
(06:46):
you're disconnected from the bigger picture. You can't just say
stuff like that and then kind of brush it off.
This is the canary and the coal mine. Guys. Now
as to some of this other stuff, and like I said,
we're gonna dive into it. Ooof people are feeling the
(07:08):
price crunch. This is the number one thing, the number
one thing that I'm hearing from people. They're saying, look,
things are expensive. Don't do what Biden did and pretend
that that didn't exist, that it didn't happen, that things
are not expensive. Don't do what Biden did and act
(07:30):
like people aren't paying more for stuff. I mean, heck,
one of the reasons that we paused our studio expansion
is because the price is skyrocketed and it ended up
being three times more than the original quote. And it's
still that way. There are a lot of people that
are hurting, that can't pay bills. And the longer the
(07:52):
tariffs go on without concrete deals, the worse it's gonna get.
Now you can say, yeah, but we gotta let this,
gotta let him cook, and no one's arguing with that,
but there's a price to it, guys, and Republicans, while
I think that they've held the line on lockdown, a
lot of people are looking at their bank accounts and
(08:13):
they don't care if Republicans held the line on back
on the on the on the shutdown. They don't care
if they've held the line on the shutdown. They're looking
at the stuff and they're thinking of but I only
have X amount in my bank account of I don't
really have. Oh man, everything's more expensive. That's the problem here,
(08:34):
that's a major problem. So these are all things that
are gonna have to get We're gonna have to look
at all of these things, all of them. And the
economic factor cannot be overstated enough, can't be overstated enough.
So this uh and looking at some of this, and
(08:56):
we've got a lot of audio for you as well,
and looking at some of this. Let me pull up
my audio list here because part of this, In fact,
I think one of the good soundbites. Look at this
is cut nineteen. This also goes into it. This is
what Desanta said about some of these conservatives leaving New
York and going to Florida. Listen to this.
Speaker 4 (09:15):
Well, first of all, Jack would have won four years ago,
and he would have won tonight. If you just take
all the Republicans who've left New Jersey since I've been
governor and moved to Florida, if they could have still
voted in New Jersey, he would have won both of
those races. Same thing with New York City. Maybe not
a Republican, but you know, Giuliani would not be able
to win with this electorate the way it is now
(09:37):
because what happened, Sean is a leftist politician gets in,
whether it's destroying a state like California, Illinois, New York,
whether it's a city like New York City or Chicago,
and the people that it tends to drive off are
the center right voters.
Speaker 3 (09:53):
And so when they.
Speaker 4 (09:54):
Leave, the resulting electorate is actually more liberal. That's how
you go from Lori life Foot to Brandon Johnson in Chicago,
which is digging the hole deeper. That's why you've gone
from eight years at Deblasio now leapfrogging here for to
have Mandanni. Who's even gonna be.
Speaker 2 (10:11):
Worth that's true. I mean you can't exp I mean, people,
of course are going to go where it's better to
raise their families. But man, I'm telling you what we
saw with this, what we saw last night, it was, uh,
Where's One of the first questions I had was I
(10:33):
was wondering where the Republican of the RNC chair is.
Where's the RNC chair one. We'll find out as we
do this post mortem what outreach has been, like how
much did that affect it? But I'm going to tell
you there's not gonna be a lot that it can
do when they're when people are worried about the economy,
(10:54):
and it comes down to something Carvil said during the
nineties during Clinton's campaign, it's the economy, stupid. It always
is going to be the economy every single time. If
people are hurting, that's going to show up. And that's
exactly what ended up happening that and Republicans. Republicans are
very lackadaisical when it comes to local and municipal elections.
(11:19):
They always always, always do and that's that plays into
this as well. Although I you know, some of the
turnout in Virginia wasn't as low as it has been before.
In New York, it's just not a man New York is.
It's it's going to be tough. Democrats have a major
(11:40):
they're going to feel like they have a mandate. The
other thing too, is that they're going to continue with
their violent rhetoric when you have somebody like Jay Jones
who can win. We'll talk more about that here coming up.
We have a lot to get to as we move.
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at preborn dot com. Slash Dana and now all of
the news you would probably miss.
Speaker 5 (13:34):
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 2 (13:36):
So first up at ups playing crash near the Louisville
Airport last night. This was the video looked just horrific
and a lot of the photos as well. A US
MD eleven planing crash shortly after takeoff, according to the FAA,
was just after five pm local time. It was headed
to an airport in Honolulu. The crash is being investigated
(13:57):
along with the National Transportation Safety that is leading it.
Three crew members were on the plane. They haven't contained.
Apparently there weren't any fatalities, but they had a massive
plume of black smoke that could be seen for quite
a long distance. A lot of photos of that as well.
Another reason the FED should lower rates affordability was push
the US median first time home buyer to age forty.
(14:20):
And not only should the FED lower rates, but we
should have an even more. I mean, we need to
be cut in taxes for people right now. We need
to be stopping government spending, which you know, the only
reason we aren't right now is because of a shutdown.
We haven't done anything to reduce government spending, which is
one of the reasons why people are saying that we
can't lower taxes because of the government spending. And so
until we get a handle on how government is operating,
(14:42):
you know, the Fed can do whatever it's going to
do and it's not going to matter much. Unfortunately, that's
the position that we're in. And if people don't believe
it until all the folks who voted that last night,
also a first of its kind of AI food pantry
opens in Brooklyn. I don't trust AI anything. It's the future,
they're saying, maybe the future of hunger. Wait until Mamdani
shuts it down. It's the met Council unveiled a state
(15:04):
of the art pantry warehouse. They said it's the first
AI warehouse and pantry twenty two thousand square feet and
they said that it's helping with efficiency and it can
tell you what pantries, which pantries need more food, which
need less food which have specific needs. It sounds like
a database more so than AI, but you know there
it is. An Oakland mom and her teen daughter were
(15:26):
arrested in a rubber mallet attack at a downtown cafe
in Oakland. This is weird. A mallet a rubber mallet.
She was arrested and charged with attacking another woman, robbing
the victim of a cell phone, and contributing to the
delinquency of her two daughters, who allegedly joined in the attack.
(15:46):
You know, because the family that hits people with a
rubber mallet together stays together. Apparently. When she she was
arrested thirty seven, she said that the victim had started
the altercation by using racial slurs and she and then
filming them. And she said that she then hit her
with the mallet, ripped out her hair, and took her phone.
The phone was found in her possession and one of
(16:08):
the daughters was seen swinging the mallet on cafe surveillance footage,
which didn't exactly support what the mother was saying there
which she was alleging. This is exciting because the first
mummy was fantastic. Brendan Fraser and Rachel Weiss are apparently
teaming up for a fourth Mummy movie. They said it
had been in the plans and the works for decades
(16:29):
and that they are reuniting. The first one came out
in nineteen ninety nine. The second one was really good too,
in two thousand and one, but Fraser alone did two
thousand and eight and it was all right. The one
in twenty seventeen did not have the same draw. So
now they're talking about bringing those two back. That's going
to be interesting. I think they both that would be
nice nostalgia. We need something a little nice, do we not?
(16:50):
I think we do. We need something a little nice.
And then I had one more headline here for you.
If I can remember to grab it out out of here,
well we'll have to wait. I'll have to save it
for next time. We have a lot more on the way,
including what was the big motivating factor? Like I said,
it was the economy. This is going to be a
three alarm fire. If the GOP doesn't get a handle
on it. We're going to dive in and discuss all
(17:12):
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Speaker 3 (18:42):
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Speaker 6 (18:53):
So many people who participated and were brought together by
his campaign because they were not just tasked with defeating
a Republican, they were also tasked with defeating the old
guard of the Democratic Party that essentially led us to
many of the perils of this moment. So he had
a two front war to win, which is what makes
(19:14):
his victory so deeply impressive.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
Hm oh boy, So she The thing is is that
she doesn't have that's AOC. She doesn't have any legs
outside of her district. She just doesn't have any She
only has pool right there, right in her district. And
(19:38):
that's why I've always been hesitant to say that she's
like the future of the party. But you have enough
of them there that from you know, from the pool
of Marxist candidates, you'll get one that's going to have
national appeal. This is just and that was from his
victory speech last night. And there they had a lot
of energy. They had a lot of energy at their
(20:00):
little victory party. Now, I don't know, you know, I
was thinking too. We mentioned this yesterday. Now that the
elections are over, they're gonna the shutdown is going to
be over to They're gonna go ahead, and that's going
to be all Overcain. As you know, we talked about
this yesterday. It's gonna be over there. It's gonna They
accomp it accomplished its goal. The whole point was to
(20:21):
mobilize everybody ahead of elections, and that's exactly what they did.
That's what they wanted to do. And yesterday, remember before
I think we were even I think it was what
four or five o'clock it came in that negotiations. They
were already in the middle of negotiations again to reopen
government after not having been so for a number of days.
(20:41):
So see, I mean they're just waiting, They're just waiting.
Democrats in the Senate were really nervous about it, and
Schumer was like, wow, I wait till the voting's over.
And that's exactly what they did. In fact, one of
the things they said that Mark Wayne Mullen was out
there saying that they had a bunch of back room
meetings and Democrat senators were told that they needed to
(21:04):
not move or negotiate with the Republicans until after the election,
and then they were going to do it because they
thought that their base that they needed in some of
these you know, New Jersey in Virginia, they thought that, well,
if we opened, if the government's opened up, they're not
going to show up to vote. Washington Post touched on this,
(21:27):
said a bipartisan group of senators was working to craft
a deal in which Congress would pass three full year
appropriations bills to fund some agencies, along with the short
term bill that would reopen the rest of government. Now
keep in mind, we're going to be back in the
same position in three months passing the cr This is
another reason why I'm like let's not blow up the
filibuster because they're going to make a deal. The only
(21:49):
reason they're not making a deal is because this was
an agitation tool to get out the vote. That's it.
That is it. So this is uh, who boy, I'm
telling you what. Yeah, they had eight Democrats apparently including
John Ossef that were in the meeting, and they decided
that I think that they were planting stories, Oh there's
(22:10):
some moderate Democrats to just sort of like drag it
out a little bit, but they've already been. And then
towards like four or five o'clock yesterday, that's when Senate
Democrats apparently approached Republican senators about the Obamacare subsidies and
compromising on that if they could get the CR passed.
(22:32):
So that's this is all. All of it is theater.
Every bit of it is theater, every single bit. So there,
you know, I hear stuff like you know, Schumer at
this point wars this cutout. This is yeah, cut thirteen.
He was asked if he voted, what a weird listen
to this today's election in New York City?
Speaker 7 (22:56):
Did you vote over a r CO?
Speaker 6 (22:57):
Look?
Speaker 2 (22:58):
I voted, and I look forward to working with the
next mayor to help New York City. He voted, so
he didn't vote. He didn't vote for, Ma'm donnie, he
voted for He didn't want to say it in case
somebody found his vote. He didn't so he didn't want
to vote for. He voted for Cuomo, you know, because
you know, he didn't vote for Siliwa. By the way,
(23:19):
Mam Donnie says that he did not get a congratulatory
call from Andrew Cuomo or Eric Adams last night. He
said that he got one from Curtis Leiwah. Interesting, I
don't know, so we'll see. I don't know. I mean,
this is going to be weird in New York. They've
gotten a full on socialist. I mean he literally when
(23:40):
he started his speech last night, he didn't say a
single time that he was proud to be an American.
He didn't even say he was proud to be a
New Yorker. He literally started off quoting communist Eugene Debs quote,
I can see the dawn of a better day for humanity.
He started off his speech literally quoting a communist. So
when we say that he's a communist, he's a communist.
(24:04):
That's like, you know, Nick Fiuente is literally saying over
and over and over and over and over and over
and over and over and over and over and over
and over and over and over and over and over
in video all over social media and typing it on
x that he's a Nazi and that he likes Hitler.
And if we call him a Nazi, guess what that
If he says all that that he's a Nazi and
we call him a Nazi, that's accurate. Correct. So when
(24:25):
Mandani identifies as a socialist, when he starts his victory
speech off, the first sentence is quoting a communist. Yeah,
you're a communist. That's exactly what that is. I mean,
that's how he started his speech. And apparently not a
single person good night. I mean, this is just insane.
(24:47):
None of the media that was assembled there, none of them,
none of them caught that. I'm like, wait a minute,
this sounds familiar. Oh yeah, because it's a famous communist quote.
They're not even trying to high did anymore. They needed
to change the name of their party and just go back,
and they needed to just have the hammer and sickle goodness.
(25:08):
But you know, one thing though, okin that I was
told was that there weren't going to be any more
elections because Trump was king right, what happened last night? Wait?
What was that?
Speaker 8 (25:21):
I didn't see any kings anyway.
Speaker 2 (25:23):
What happened last night? We weren't going to have any
of those things an election? Oh, I'm telling you weird. Yeah,
I mean now, I think I also want to be
some of the stuff that I've seen in terms of
how a lot of this with the economy and how
a lot of this is being presented. So I saw
(25:47):
some people saying, well, you know what, maybe if Trump
didn't tear down the East Wing to build a giant
gold ballroom while snap payments were stopped, maybe this wouldn't
be I think that is a really myopic I'm not
trying to be mean, but it's a very myopic take
because the idea that it was the ballroom and not
(26:12):
kitchen table issues is idiotic. It was kitchen table issues.
It was kitchen table economic issues, to be specific. That's
absolutely true. So I uh, I mean this Republicans are
(26:32):
going to have to figure out how to get a
handle on it. I don't know how else to put it.
They've got to figure out how they're gonna how they're
gonna remedy this. The other thing that I noticed, you
know what, was a real big story last night younger women.
Democrats are starting to also do better with young men
(26:53):
young men when they broke it down really for some reason,
and this Democratic Republicans need to figure out why this is.
They had a Democrats ended up getting a significant number
of young men. It was really really young women as
well last night, very much so. In fact, let me
(27:15):
look at some of this, pulling up my data. See
you had young women in terms of and these are
people under age fifty four eighty one percent from or
just women, eighty one percent for Mandanni in New York,
and he ended up getting a lot of the thirty
five and under eighty percent for Sheryl in New Jersey,
seventy eight percent for Spanberger in Virginia. These are from
exit polling data, and so it's still kind of a
(27:38):
pretty sizable gender gap, but they did increase the gap
with younger men or decreased it with younger men when
you broke it down, especially for instance, this is from
exit polling data in Virginia. CNNs compiled some of well,
just specifically for Mearas and Jones by gender, men was
fifty eight percent, so they had a plus eighteen spread.
(28:01):
Jones got forty percent, but for women, Jones got fifty
five Percent's got forty three percent. He actually did more
to close the gap than other candidates, which was interesting
because you had a female in Virginia. Very interesting. Indeed,
now in New Jersey, you can't say that it was
also about candidate quality. I saw this a lot last
(28:24):
night as well, and I think some of this was
related to win some earl seers in Virginia. I like
win some earl seers. I think she's a solid candidate.
I think that she has good ideas. I don't think
that she's good at retail politics, and I think that
as a talker, as a messenger, she's And this is
not any kind of reflection on her personal character. She's
(28:47):
that's not her strong suit. That is not her skill
set to be a talker, to be a messenger. I
think that she struggles some of her not because her
ideas are bad. Just some people can talk and some
people don't. That's just the way it is. You know,
some people can draw, some people don't. It's just the
way it is. And I think that that she struggled
(29:09):
with that. This is one of the reasons why I've
always been really cautious to treat elected officials and politics
like another Hollywood, because people get so hung up on
personality that they forget about character and merit and what
these people can actually do. Like Carlvin Coolidge was apparently,
you know, just basically a cold fish, but he was
an amazing leader and very decisive and had excellent policy ideas,
(29:31):
and we benefited from him as president immensely. But we
don't judge people that way anymore. So part of the
downside is that you get really good candidates caught up
in this. But if they don't have the Hollywood in factor,
if they're not out there smoozing and acting like Avenusom,
then you know, they kind of they get tossed out
with the bathwater. And that's kind of part and parcel
(29:52):
of what happened, I think, partly in Virginia. So when
I hear people, and I've had Republican friends say that
she was a weak candidate, I disagree with that. I
think that she's had you know, a pretty solid, you know,
voting body. However, what complicates that story, that story about
candidate quality is New Jersey was within two points of
Virginia last night. And Jiggarelli was a really good candidate.
(30:18):
So and he could do all of the things that
maybe when some earl sears was that wasn't her skill set.
So that kind of blows that up, you can't, you know,
it kind of blows that up. So's there's a lot
of things that Republicans are going to have to mitigate
(30:41):
going forward. And I don't even know where the heck
the next rn C chair is or where the RNC
chair is the problem with this is that you know, previously,
especially during any type of election, the RNC chair, you'd
see them all the time everywhere. You would see them
all the time on cable news, You'd see them all
(31:02):
the time out there everywhere. I mean, the current chair
of the RNC is Joe Gruders, the guy from Florida.
I remember he was kind of bad on guns in
Florida and fought DeSanto's on it. So he's the chair
(31:23):
of the RNC. Have you seen Joe Gruders anywhere? Have
you seen Joe Gruders at all talking about any of
this on any I have never seen such an absence
of an RNC chair in my entire political career. I
have not seen him out there everywhere, and I question
why he is even the chair of the RNC because
he didn't lead anything in Florida. He certainly wasn't a
(31:44):
big fundraiser in Florida. I know that. I have that
down to fact. He was not a big fundraiser in Florida.
He was not even really popular amongst the legislature in Florida.
You cannot have a guy like that as chair of
the RNC. Chair of the rnc's got to be a
winer and diner. I mean that's literally a pr position.
I mean, compare, separate whatever their policies were, but separate
(32:09):
Joe Gruders from people like I mean even Ryan's previous.
My gosh, you saw him everywhere to the point where
he's annoying. Even Ronald McDaniel. You saw Ronald McDaniel all
the time on television. Hell, people probably thought she was
a contributor at Fox. She was on TV so much.
Have you ever seen Joe Gruders. He's been there for months.
Have you seen him? No, you haven't. What is happening?
(32:33):
You would think with an election that the RNC chair
would be out there, but they're not. We have more
on the way to digest because Democrats elected a guy
who you know, the violent text that Jay Jones sent.
One of the things that I keep coming back to
with this story is that this is a guy, you know.
(32:55):
He was talking about his opponent's family, his opponent's kids.
He had this guy, he met this guy, He met
this guy's wife, He met this guy's kids, he knew them,
and he still was able in a text to talk
about how he wanted to kill their kids and have
the mother watch them die in her arms. How do
(33:15):
you talk like that? Or if you meet somebody, well,
he's the new ag of Virginia. We have more to
roll into. I absolutely have zero issues in using a
firearm or lethal force to defend myself or somebody else,
my loved ones. I don't care. I absolutely will because
it's my Second Amendment right. I also know that a
lot of times you have private property restrictions, municipal restrictions
(33:37):
that make that impossible. You can't carry like college kids,
for instance, you could be twenty years old and live
in a different town and you have to like maybe
your classes end and it's dark outside, you have to
walk back defenseless, to your vehicle, to your apartment or wherever.
Something like a burn a gun is ideal for the
situations that I'm talking about, because you do not want
(33:58):
to be left entirely fenceless, and a lot of these
places already have restrictions on knives and all of that.
So why not get something that has, you know, uh,
the ability to give you you know, a chance to
be safe and defend yourself. It shoots burna gun shoots
chemical airtant projectiles that can deter threats from up to
fifty feet away. They have the SD, the Burna SD,
(34:21):
which was their most popular model. I think it's being
overtaken by their new one, the Compact Launcher. That's the CL.
It's basically the size of a phone. There's no recoil,
easy target acquisition, and if you compare this to stun
guns or anything like that, they have maybe one or
two one or two rounds with that. This is fifteen
rounds in a cartridge with the CL. So you are able,
(34:44):
you have you have a lot of chances there, right,
And it doesn't care about gun free zone signs. It
does not care about there's no background check, there's no fee,
there's no tax stance, there's no any of that, and
it ships right to your door. So this gives you
an ability to at least have some means of defense,
and you really should check it out. I'll never understand
why people don't diversify their weapons or ay, you carry
(35:07):
different calibers, you carry blades. Why not have something for
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Speaker 3 (35:27):
Get the loaddown on the latest news with a side
of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to their Data Show
podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.
Speaker 8 (35:38):
Like SAMs through the Hour Glance. So are the days
of the United States.
Speaker 9 (35:45):
It pisces me off that people who have not walked
in my shoes, who have no idea who really I
am as a person, get to tell me how I
get to identify myself. So it's like I was like,
you can't tell me how I get to identify myself.
You can't tell me how I get to call myself like,
screw you, Like who that's not okay?
Speaker 2 (36:06):
M Yeah, so KJP with her book, she's having a
real one. She's having a day. Is anybody reading her book?
I haven't checked to see if it's even selling well.
Speaker 5 (36:22):
Like rightful criticism though, I mean, if you think about it,
she's always out there talking about how gay and black
she is all the.
Speaker 8 (36:29):
Time, all the time. And so when people are like, hey,
can you pull back?
Speaker 2 (36:33):
Dare you mention what I've been talking about?
Speaker 8 (36:35):
Pull back on that little and then maybe talk about
the books more.
Speaker 2 (36:39):
Yeah, exactly, it's just so goofy. The only she the
only reason that it's even discussed is because she brings
it up every time black and gay, black and gay,
almost like it's a song written yellow writer and yellow
black and gay, black and gay. I mean it's just
like NonStop. And now she's like, how dare you but
(37:00):
bringing it up?
Speaker 10 (37:00):
Guys?
Speaker 2 (37:01):
Yeah, I mean it's yeah, it's insane, absolutely insane. I
don't know, you know, I I look at it like
I'm glad that she's not in the job anymore because
it was ridiculous. I I don't know, I'm just she's
such a non entity to me. Now, I just but
(37:22):
I do miss her mispronunciations. I do miss her her Yeah,
I do miss that. I miss her mispronunciations. The Nordstrum pipeline,
I mean, who could forget pipeline? It's a very boogie pipeline.
Is that how she said? Emeritis amritis?
Speaker 8 (37:40):
Yeah, like it's you know, a medical condition.
Speaker 2 (37:43):
Yeah, exactly, So coming up, Uh, the economy drove it?
What other factors were at play that contributed to a
big old It's a canary and a cold mine. And
it's not just like I said, an explained in depth,
it's not just a couple of you know, these are
blue areas. Now, there were down ballot races in a
number of states that were now blue areas that were affected.
(38:04):
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(39:10):
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Speaker 6 (39:16):
What do you think it means that this guy ran
as the socialist and anti communism didn't work to stop him.
Speaker 10 (39:21):
That's day Yeah.
Speaker 7 (39:23):
I think we are in the heart of the imperial dor.
This is the country that defeated the USSR unfortunately, and
the reality of the matter is there's a lot of antagonism.
There's no class consciousness in the United States of America.
Is one of the things I try to address every
day with my commentary.
Speaker 2 (39:42):
So that's that the Left's Joe Rogan, Hassan Piker, that's
what they're trying to make him to be. He was
at Zora and Mandonie's election party and he said it
was a tragedy that the US defeated the Soviet Union
in the Cold War. Welcome back to the program, Dana
Lash with you at the top of the second hour.
This is what I'm talking about. If you don't listen
to some of these podcasters, you might want to keep
(40:03):
your powder dry. This is some of the stuff that
that's not even the worst thing that Hassan Paker's done.
I mean he's literally platformed a Hamas terrorist. He literally
had a member of Hamas on his show. And that's
he's a poster boy of the left. They invite him,
they have him work on their campaigns, all of it.
And he says it was a tragedy that the US
(40:24):
defeated the Soviet Union in the Cold War. Pretty unbelievable.
And that was at Mandani's party, although it could have
sounded like, you know, it could have been at a
woke Reich party. To be honestly, I mean, what's the difference,
what's the difference between what he said and then saying
that you think Stalin is great. They're the same person
saying that you think Stalin's great, like Fuentez did, or
(40:47):
talking about the woke right. I mean, those are the
same things, the same things. I wanted to play this
because this was really unfortunate last night. This is cut that,
and then we're going to move on to some of
this other stuff with the election. This is cut twenty four.
This is a podcaster defending I guess Nick Fuentez, listen so.
Speaker 10 (41:09):
Blinded by your ridiculous, insane hatred of Tucker Carlson that
you could not see how irresponsible and hypocritical you are being.
I mean, these tweets from Ted Cruz I'm gonna read
you next are a great example of this. So just
a month ago, he tweeted this, He said, they don't
kill you because you're a Nazi. They call you a
Nazi so they can kill you. Political violence is a
left wing phenomenon.
Speaker 11 (41:28):
Enough is enough, We.
Speaker 2 (41:29):
Need to shut it down.
Speaker 10 (41:30):
And then in response to fwant does and Tucker this week,
he tweeted this, Trump's bombing of the Iotola's nuclear facilities
made the little Nazi mad good. So now you're turning
around and you're calling somebody that you don't like a Nazi.
You're doing this at a blind rage because you're so
angry that the conservative basis attitudes are rapidly changing that
if Nick Twentez is getting national attention, and so you
have turned around it in response, you are compromising your
(41:53):
own values in anger, which is such so dangerous.
Speaker 2 (41:55):
Preceden to I get the jump cuts all the time,
but I think this is a podcaster nam Brakcoud. I
think she needs to take a deep breath and slow
her voice down because that's a lot. But number one,
Nick Fouentez literally said repeatedly that he was a Nazi
and that he said that he was Hitler. And if
she was unaware of this before she recorded, that that's
part of the problem. You can't be miles wide and
(42:16):
inches deep in politics. If you're going to get out
here and talk about this stuff, you know, you don't
make the mistake that Kevin Roberts did and be unaware
of what was said before you make a video, because
otherwise it looks really bad and we're citing the stuff
that has actually literally been said by these people with
(42:37):
their own mouths. So if somebody comes up to you
and they say that they're a Leninist and that they
love Lenin, and they think Lenin was great and that
Lenin's policies were fabulous, and they make video after a
video where it's not just a cut or it's not
just one thing that might not be in context, like
hour long videos where they discuss it in depth, how
(42:59):
much they love Lenin, how much they love Lenin's policies,
how they think Lenin could do so many great things
in the United States, it's fair to call them a Leninist.
It's fair to call them a Communist, it's fair to
call them a Soviet. So on that same hand, if
(43:19):
you have someone who has spent literal hours on camera
talking about Nazis, how much they like them, how much
they wish those policies could be implemented in the United States,
if they have tweeted out that they were team Hitler,
if they have tweeted out that why it can't Nazism
work here, a number of other things, it's pretty fair
(43:43):
to call them by what they choose to identify as,
which is a Nazi and making a very you know,
I mean, take a breath so that people know what
you're saying, making a video to where you're just like
motormouth and through it with jump cuts. That's not without
having apparently known all of this is not great. That
(44:04):
was really disappointing to see. But this is why we
need to have people understand history so that they know
who these you know, these people in history are and
the things that they've done. So and of course, you know,
you have her coming out and then Fluentes was like,
she's great, she's a Graper. All this stuff like, oh boy,
so there's a you know, another one for his Graper army.
(44:26):
Just really unfortunate to see. But I think it's desperately
unfair and it seems like it's clout chasing to accuse
someone of correctly identifying someone as they have, verbatim with
her own mouths identified themselves. So there we are, and
(44:47):
that's all I'll say on that. But I made the
point last night because I saw a number of Graper
that's what they call Nick Fouintes's acolytes influencers try to
blame the reaction to all of this for the losses.
Last night, I got Matt Gates almost stepped in it
with me this morning. And there's a reason why Matt
(45:10):
Gates had to leave his elected office and why he
will never run for elected office again, because remember that
investigation that they started, and then he inoculated himself by
stepping aside so that the Ethics Committee couldn't investigate him longer.
There's a reason why he stepped out of his seat,
and it wasn't due to just saying it's not something
that an innocent person I would think would do. But
the point of this is that there were these influencers
(45:31):
that were running around saying blaming all of the people
who had a single criticism of the Fuentees interview and
criticizing Fluents for his admitted Nazism. And remember Fuentez also
hates Trump and he actively campaigned against him in twenty
twenty four. And they were all the people that were
(45:52):
criticizing that, people like Jack post Sobic, I don't know
what his last name is, some of these other people.
They were out there blaming all of those voters saying, well,
you guys cost the election last night, which seemed really
just even if you don't have a dog in the fight,
I wouldn't want anyone giving me political advice that is
(46:13):
myopic enough to believe something like that, because, as I said,
they're ignoring kitchen table issues. And if you're not going
to pay attention to those issues, the real motivating issues
for why people voted the way that they did, then
you're never going to win another election, and neither would
anybody that would pay you to advise them either. So
the point of this is I mentioned I said, Wow,
how did I put it last night?
Speaker 12 (46:33):
On me?
Speaker 2 (46:34):
Look? I had said with this, I tweeted, I guess
it was last night. I said, Thank goodness, so many
podcasts hosts spent so much time hosting and defending Nazi
tweinks rather than host winsome Earl Sears or Jack Jitarelli
or Jason Mirez or even talk redistricting. They were so
helpful to the movement tonight because I saw a ton
(46:56):
of tweets blaming the people who objected to Nick Fouindaz.
And then Matt Gates decided that he was going to
step in it, and he says, Hi, Dana, are you
really suggesting that these candidates lost because podcasters didn't do
enough for them? And I responded, don't. Maybe your Huckleberry.
By the way, I said, Hi, Matt, I guess you
didn't pay much attention if you missed these exact same
(47:16):
things being said ad nauseum all of last night, prompting
this response. Looks like you may have missed something. You know,
It's okay to blame people who reacted to a softball interview,
but not to question the timing of a softball interview.
I mean, Tucker Carlson never once had any of the
people I mentioned on his show. Why didn't anyone say why?
Ask why Tucker Carlson never had win some role seiers
(47:37):
on his show. Why has he never done a single
show where he talked about Jay Jones. He's never talked
about Jay Jones ever. Don't you think that's pretty significant
considering what happened in September? Because I do. But yet
the people who criticized him spending his time talking about
Fuentas and not any of the things I just mentioned,
those are the people that are getting criticized by the
(47:58):
people who hope that some of Carlson's money falls on them.
And that's what this is all about, you know, because
he has this Tucker Carlson Media network and a lot
of these people are angling for jobs there, and that's
the truth of it. There's a lot of moving pieces
here that you have to realize with this, and it's true.
(48:21):
It's more than just power jocking to leave the Republican Party.
It's power jocking with the consultancy class. All of these
people are K Street folks. All the people whose names
I just mentioned are all K Street folks. Now. Prop
fifty pass last night. Even in blood red Huntington Beach
(48:41):
Republicans on their city council. It's a Magas stronghold. Now
they're going to have a progressive Democrat, Robert Garcia is
part of their newly jerrymannder district. If Republicans do not
get on this, redistricting, twenty twenty six is going to
be another bloodbath. Midterms are going to be another bloodbath.
(49:02):
And you know what, when I was looking at the
California map for Prop fifty, all of the counties that
are going to lose their representation because of redistricting, they
all voted against it. Really interesting, isn't it. Republicans need
to figure out redistricting. We've talked about redistricting on this show,
(49:25):
but we haven't seen some of the people who have
been entertaining fuints do it just saying very interesting. So
and we got the Supreme Court stuff, which I'm hearing
is not going very well in the administration's favor right now.
So this is a lot. Let's get to some of
this other audio that we have, because this is there's
(49:50):
a lot here. There's a lot here. So in terms
of looking at some of the election last night, this
is let me see which one do we want to home?
We got there, I've got a lot of man, Donnie,
but there's a couple. Oh, here's it. This is audio
sound bite eight. Listen to this. This is what he
saided his speech last night.
Speaker 1 (50:11):
So Donald Trump, since I know you're watching.
Speaker 2 (50:17):
I have four words for you.
Speaker 1 (50:21):
Turn the volume up.
Speaker 2 (50:25):
There. So they're gonna he's gonna be fighting Trump. Abigail
Spanberger is indicated she's going to spend the next three
years fighting him. I'm telling you, there's this. I'm telling
you this is this is I don't think Republicans had
a plan for this. I really don't. I really don't.
(50:46):
I really really don't. Now, in the meantime, we also
have this. This is cut thirty. This is Potus on
the filibuster.
Speaker 13 (50:58):
It's stipher Republicans to do what they have to do,
and that's terminate the filibuster. It's the only way you
can do it. And if you don't terminate the filibuster,
you'll be in bad shape. We won't pass any legislation.
There'll be no legislation passed for three and a quarter.
We have three and a quarter years, so I SI's
a long time.
Speaker 2 (51:15):
I I don't agree with terminating the filibuster during a
time where this is over a cr that we're going
to have to be back again in three months to debate.
We're going to talk more about this here coming up,
but that's kind of a bad move. Also, Mike Johnson
(51:36):
had a good SoundBite on the raging war within the
right on amplifying anti semitism. All Family Pharmacy has your
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Speaker 5 (52:49):
All of the news you would probably miss. It's time
for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 2 (52:54):
All right, So first up, a woman accidentally I think
we I don't know if this is this is I
don't know if this is one of the ones that
we've had before. A woman who got body parts sent
to her instead of her medication. It sounds very similar
to a headline that we've had before. But this woman
she ordered medication. You would never by the way, I
just want to caution you, you would never have this happen
at All Family Pharmacy. All Family Pharmacy dot com Last Dana,
(53:16):
I use Coddana tend to get ten percent off your order.
I'm just saying they would not send you body parts,
because this place did. They sent this lady literal body parts.
It literally missdelivered body parts in the corner. Had to
go retrieve them and take them back to the morgue.
They said sometimes they're ship for transplants and research purposes.
But she literally got a delivery Wednesday night. She thought
(53:39):
it was her medication, and she opened the box and
there were some arms and fingers in it instead of
her medication. I'm just wondering what kind of medication she
has delivered, because I don't know how big of a
box you need to ship an arm. But I'd be like,
this seems a little bit bigger than what I was anticipating.
And I don't know, it's like a cold packed or
(54:01):
what I'm like to you know, I'd be like, is
this a steak? And someone sent me one of the
order from mail stakes. I don't know, but they said
that apparently the incident involves an airline company, a free
company in a courier, so you had three chances to
like somebody to stop it, and it didn't happen. A
bank robber stole four hundred dollars in one dollar bills
and asks the police if he can please keep the
(54:23):
money for his jail commissary. That's not really how that works.
Forty two years old, he was arrested. He robbed a bank.
It's the city's first bank robbery in uh hunting a
bank in Ohio in what since twenty ten? And it's
all on camera, and he fled on foot four hundred
dollars and one hundred and one dollar bills. Of course
(54:45):
he was quickly apprehended, but he wanted to keep the
money so he could buy stuff in prison. This is funny.
US Space Force is going to use three weapons to
jam Chinese satellites via remote control. Should we be like,
I don't know, advertising this in the press, Hey China,
guess what we're doing. We're gonna be jamming YO satellites.
I just feel like this is something we shouldn't announce.
The military is close to fielding two weapons designed to
(55:07):
temporarily or I think they meant to say temporarily or temporarily.
Maybe they didn't mean temporarily jam Chinese and Russian intelligence
surveillance and reconnaissance satellites, so you have three counter space.
You don't tell them that we have this. I mean,
if there's one thing that my tax dollars go towards,
it's too super spooky stuff in defense of our nation
(55:28):
that you probably shouldn't be broadcasting like this. By the way,
the weapons are called meadow lands. That sounds almost nice,
doesn't it. Yeah, metal lands and remote sensing terminals meatal lands.
I mean, imagine you're going and it's just a giant
space lazer that jams you're sat It's funny. Oh my gosh.
(55:52):
So I just think you'd be careful about putting this
stuff out there. I don't know, maybe they meant to
A new driver was spinning in circles around a church
parking lots in South Carolina. It was near Myrtle Beach.
I mean, somebody's happen a day, that's all it is.
They were apprehended because they were driving recklessly. Also, they
were completely nude and smelled strongly of alcohol, said police.
(56:14):
The guy was arrested in charged with all kinds of stuff,
including lots of cocaine. We got more on the way.
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Speaker 5 (57:36):
I heard a compilation of some of the worst things
that Dick Wintess said.
Speaker 10 (57:41):
It's it's absolutely.
Speaker 5 (57:45):
Outrageous some of the things he said, just blatantly anti Semitic, racist,
an anti.
Speaker 13 (57:49):
American, anti Christian for that matter.
Speaker 5 (57:51):
I think we have to call out any Semitism wherever
it is, and I don't think there's Tuck or anybody else.
Speaker 2 (57:56):
I don't think we should be given a platform for
that kind of speech.
Speaker 5 (57:58):
He has a first memic right.
Speaker 3 (58:00):
We should never amplify.
Speaker 2 (58:02):
I think that's a good word that he used. That
speaker Johnson is amplify it, and especially during a period
of an election. Look, you have this, welcome back to
the show, Dan to lash with you. You have this
that's that's dominant on the left, and now we were
talking about how it's coming up on the right. Who
do you think is going to win in the battle
of socialists? The left is going to win because if
(58:22):
people are going to be socialists, they're I mean, they're
going to stick with the left. And really all socialists,
they're all the left. Anybody who's making idols of race,
you know, all of it. And by the way, it's
not very America first to be so obsessed with Israel.
That's not America first, it's true. So a few things.
(58:42):
The big driver or two things. The big driver was
the economy. Everybody's arguing over inflation and tariffs. Some say
that tariffs are what's helping slow inflation. Others are saying
that that's not accurate, because that's in fact, that's what
I mean. Look, there are prices on a number of
things that are up. I mean, that's you can't sit here,
don't don't Biden us and tell us that it's not
(59:04):
that got Biden in trouble. We want to avoid the
same thing with the right. But at the same time,
they got to move faster with the stuff because it's
it's kind of slow going. It's been nine months and
you knew it was going to take some time, but
we still have to get some of these deals ironclad.
And with China, this is a tricky one because there's
(59:25):
a lot of stuff involved in it, to say nothing
of them being a geopolitical foe. I mean, it's it's
it's a tough position. I wouldn't want to be in
the White House making these determinations. And I know everyone knows,
everyone realizes you're going to get you a fair deal
in the end, but it's that point up until that moment,
(59:47):
and that's what people were reacting to. They're hurting. I mean,
I was hearing from I mean, I saw it all over.
I was looking at exit polling last night, and it
is a real thing. You know, It's one of the
other things that I noticed, just some odds and ends.
Jack Jenarelli up in New Jersey, he got one hundred
and fifty thousand more votes then Chris Christie got in
(01:00:10):
twenty thirteen. So see, you can't say and looking at this,
it's not necessarily all about candidate quality. It's some of
this is it's Trump on the ballot too. When Trump
(01:00:30):
is not on the ballot, people don't come out, and
he's never going to be on the ballot again. And
if Republicans don't realize how to effectively want run and
win races without Trump on the ballot. Oh my gosh,
you guys, I'm not kidding. Look at every election. I
went back and looked at my notes from midterms and
(01:00:51):
even going all the way back to twenty sixteen, and
because I was in New York for a couple of
these things, looking through the stacks of raw data that
they were handing us every time there was another sweep
for exit polling. And I'm telling you what, when he
is not on the ballot, I mean, I just I
(01:01:13):
got to scratch my head here. It makes me think,
you guys, remember the special election in Georgia. This is
not the This was an awesome if it's when you had?
Was it Kelly Leffler? It was running and she ended
up not performing well at all. And the biggest part
of that problem was because a Republican turnout. And you
(01:01:35):
remember that guy who was that guy came the Democrat
with silver hair that was out there telling people not
to go out and they were mad because they thought
it was you know, twenty twenty. No, but I remember
going out there to try to help them get out
the vote, and there were people who were like, oh,
we were told our vote doesn't matter, so we're not
going to go out vote. In the most conservative county
(01:01:56):
in Georgia, their turnout was so abysmal that, I mean,
it was so underperforming of previous that that's what ended
up actually costing us a Senate seat in Georgia. And
I was trying to tell people your vote actually does matter,
and nobody wanted to hear it, so they ended up
(01:02:17):
losing that seat. But what gets me is that was
also wherever there was a special election, again Trump's not
on the ballot, people don't turn out. Lynn Wood, thank you. Yeah,
I remember, l I n lynn Wood. I remember he
was out there telling people don't vote. Oh my gosh,
I was fit to be tied. Victoria Victoria Sparks. She
was livid over that. She was just spitting mad over it.
(01:02:41):
But it's true, you know, it's I mean, this is
this is it's just tough stuff. They got to figure
out how to do it without Trump being on the ballot.
They got to figure out how to do it without
him being on the ballot. And the problem is, like
I said, you know, this wasn't just two blue areas
(01:03:01):
and a purple. I mean there was there were districts
all over that saw the same thing. So it's enough
to say, yes, it is absolutely a pattern. I don't
know what the R and C has to counter that,
because when we go into midterms in twenty six, oh
my gosh, you guys, it's not enough for him to
just endorse someone that helps. But then it depends on
(01:03:24):
the area, because in certain parts of Texas, in certain
parts of Georgia and Florida, particularly Georgia and Florida are
very interesting, even more so than Texas, because they're very
how do I put it, they are very state focused,
to the point where they treat like everybody knows every
lawmaker there, and they're very protective of their lawmakers. They're
(01:03:46):
very protective of their vote. And it does not really
matter to those people where what the endorsement is or
who it's from. It's really how well you can retail
politic in those areas, it really is it. It's very interesting.
It's not like that everywhere else in Texas. It's somewhat
like that. So even then his endorsement, it matters what
(01:04:11):
area it's in and what type of race it's in
for it to even have that impact. Now, if you remember,
going back to twenty ten, Barack Obama, he couldn't endorse anybody.
Remember how much kryptonite he was. Oh man, he like
repelled voters. I remember there was a big, big, like
kind of a controversy in Saint Louis when we lived
(01:04:33):
in Saint Louis at the time, and Claire mccaskell, who
was running for Senate. This was in August I think,
so the election was coming up. It was August and
like late August, early September. This was after her primary,
and she did not want to do an event with
(01:04:54):
Barack Obama because he was in the red in terms
of approval. He was a drag everybody. Previously during special
elections that he had endorsed, they all lost. He did
not have any coattails. And then after that we had
the shellacking. She did not want to do a fundraiser
with him, and it ended up being a big controversy
because she thought that it would actually drag her down
because in Saint Louis they didn't care. Democrats don't even
(01:05:15):
Democrats cared about his endorsement. It was very interesting, like
he was poisonous to them. It's not like that with Republicans.
And again it's only in certain states, and it's just
because they're super state focused. But the Republican response to
elections can't be well, we'll just have Trump endorse them,
(01:05:36):
and that's we don't have to do any more work.
And I gotta be honest with you, that's how they've
been treating those for a number of years now. They've
gotten really lazy. They just think, oh, well, you know,
we're just gonna will just have Trump make the endorsement
and then we don't have to do anything. Look, it's great,
(01:05:57):
that's it. That's all we have to do. Oh, it's
that's there was no I did not see any RNC outreach.
I don't know what their plan is to counter or
remedy some of this. You would think that you would
see the RNC chair all over television talking about what
the party is going to do, but you're not. Why
(01:06:18):
is that? I mean, it's it's very confusing to me.
And then you have J Jones. J Jones is really
I mean, I'm not shocked Democrats. You know, Democrats get
(01:06:40):
into violent rhetoric, but what they've done is they've sanctioned
it with his election. They sanctioned it, and it's tough.
I mean, he's the a g now. I kind of
worried about all the critics, all his critics in Virginia.
You know, when he was criticizing his political opponent, he
(01:07:02):
had met his political opponent, he had met his opponent's wife,
he had met their kids, and he still ended up
saying what he said. He still ended up saying that
he wanted to shoot his opponent and then watch his
opponent's children die in their mother's arms. How do you
say that if you meet someone he's the ag now
(01:07:24):
in Virginia. It's insanity. And what Democrats have shown they
Democrats did not care about the rhetoric. They didn't care
about rhetoric because they all think it too. They don't
care about any of those they all think it too. Now,
as for the filibuster, man, it's I feel like, if
(01:07:50):
you abolish it, this is going to be a disaster.
It'll be a disaster for Republicans. I mean, eliminating it.
The legend process, this is a feature, not a bug,
of the system. It's supposed to be incredibly slow and deliberate,
and that's how it's supposed to work. Trying to expedite
it by removing one of the ways that we were
(01:08:11):
able to protect people during Democrat majority. Is not because, look, guys,
we're just right outside of a midterm Kane, Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:08:18):
I believe him cut thirty one when he says that.
I believe that that would be the case. We care
about the filibuster because we understand the process and respect that.
Speaker 8 (01:08:27):
The left I don't think does there.
Speaker 2 (01:08:29):
I think there still are enough moderates in the Senate
for them right now to not do that because remember
a Mansion and some of the others. John Asso, as
much as I don't want to, I would agree with that,
you know, any weight behind him, I.
Speaker 8 (01:08:42):
Would have seen more moderates vote for the CR.
Speaker 2 (01:08:45):
If that were Yeah, but if we do it, guess
what and we lose If this is the can indeed
the canary in the coal mine, and we lose midterms.
Look what we just did. We just destroyed the one
option that we had to block all the bad stuff.
You guys don't understand how many bad things would have
come in if we did not have a filibuster. Oh
my gosh, you guys really, I mean, first off, there's
a lot of gun control that would have happened. Oh sure,
(01:09:08):
you would have lost semi automatics. I mean that's just
the start of it. I mean, would they would have
pushed through everything. This is a very important hedge of
security that we have to have, and you're not supposed
to You're not supposed to have. I mean when you
you diminish your minority in the Senate by getting rid
of the filibuster, and you turn it into a legislative
(01:09:30):
juggernaut for the lack of a better way to put it,
and it's not supposed to function that way. There's a
reason it's supposed to be slow and deliberate. It doesn't
operate like the House does, and it's not supposed to.
There's a reason why we should safeguard that. And we
shouldn't be the ones that sanction it's removal. We really shouldn't.
Speaker 5 (01:09:48):
I agree, And I also think though decades of slow
moving in the wrong direction kind of does require a
juggernaut in a way to write the ship. Sometimes that's
the emergency needed.
Speaker 2 (01:10:01):
But that that's predicated upon maintaining control, which as we
are seeing right now, there's some warning signs.
Speaker 5 (01:10:07):
Right, But is it wrong for Trump to think that
the Democrats would kill the filibuster as soon as they
get power.
Speaker 2 (01:10:13):
I don't think it's entirely wrong, but I don't think
it's entirely right simply because there were enough that stopped
it last time. That's the that's the thing. I mean.
You've got Fetterman's, you have Asoff's. I can't believe I'm
u citing. Well, he's not John ossof Is. He's still
enough ingratiated, there's still But you got to remember Madison
talked about this in Federalist Tent when he was talking
(01:10:35):
about mobrel and filibuster expedites mobrel. It turns the Senate
in a mob like super fast exactly. So it's the
problem is when people talk about getting rid of the filibuster,
they're not doing it as a way to improve the
legislative structure. They're doing it because they're mad over their
(01:10:58):
inability to quick enact what they want. And it should
never be made with that decision. We have a number
of other things as we wind up this second hour,
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Speaker 5 (01:12:21):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions.
Speaker 8 (01:12:28):
It's time for Florida man.
Speaker 2 (01:12:30):
Florida man allegedly listed stolen rocks on Facebook using the
photos from a construction site that they were stolen from.
It doesn't seem like that's smart. By the way, why
I can't pronounce what kind of rocks these were? Coquina
coquino rocks. I don't even know what that means, but
they were. He stole these rocks from a construction site,
(01:12:51):
posted them for sale online using photos of them at
the same site. Flager kind of Sheriff's Office said deputies
met with the victim on October twenty second. They were
reported seeing the rocks stolen from a Palm Coast construction
site and then listed for sale on Facebook marketplace. Facebook
Marketplace listed the used photos of the rocks, and detectives learned,
I mean, seriously, he was just to listen to all
(01:13:15):
his charges grand theft, dealing and stolen property, unlawful use
of a two way communications device. He bonded out at
seventy five hundred.
Speaker 5 (01:13:24):
It's like if I stole your car but took a
picture of it first in your driveway in order to
sell it online.
Speaker 2 (01:13:30):
He's not the best. Speaking of rocks, what a segue?
Florida man was arrested for throwing rocks at marked police
cards at their cars. What is he wanting to get arrested?
It took place minutes after the guy was released from jail. Too.
He cost three seven hundred dollars worth of damage. I
(01:13:52):
think he just wanted to go back into jail. He's
facing criminal mischief charges. Authorities say he intentionally threw rocks
at two marked deputy patrol vas and shattered the window
of one dented. Oh yeah, there's a lot of damage.
They have some photos of it. Now he faces a
criminal mischief charge and he's back in jail. Nobody's surprised
with that a police officer. So somebody who was impersonating
(01:14:16):
a police officer stole a corvette at Hard Rocks Hollywood Casino.
They but he and apparently nobody thought to intervene because
he was like impersonating a cop and I guess dressed
up as one. So the parking attendants told the police
officer that a man he had. He was wearing clothing
(01:14:37):
with Florida Department of Correction insignios. He jumped in a
running carvette and fled. It was a valet at a
valet stand. He jumped into a running carvette and fled,
and one of the attendants said, that's not his car.
Uh and the driver Angel Diaz of Miami Gardens sixty.
He was seen smoking a joint as he sped away.
Speaker 8 (01:14:59):
It's like a movie.
Speaker 2 (01:15:00):
It is like a movie. They finally got him. He's
got grand theft, auto, impersonating, law enforcement, trespassing, tampering with
physical evidence, so he at least has three felonies. He's
got a long rap sheet. By the way, third hour
is on the way and don't forget. You can also
find us on substack at chapter and verse. Stick with
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slash Dana. Welcome back to the program, Dana lash with you.
(01:16:23):
The former Transportation Secretary Secretary new Dad Poop Booty Juice, Well,
he wasn't a very good Secretary of Transportation. I mean,
I really don't know what he knew about transportation other
than he was the one time mayor of South Bend
and he was also the Vice Admiral rear Vice Admiral
(01:16:43):
of the Kannoe Fleet at Camp wimpy Tonka, and he
liked buses, you know. Couldn't fill a pothole to save
his life though, and his agency while he was at
Department of Transportation, his agency apparently spent eighty billion dollars
on DEEI grants and apparently it delayed air traffic control upgrades. Huh.
(01:17:11):
Now you know he went to run for president in
twenty twenty eight. He's very much like he's on board
with that, but apparently he is eyeing a twenty twenty
eight presidential run. He told executives that air traffic control
upgrades would allow them to fly more planes, and so
why would that be in his interest? Sources said they
(01:17:32):
handed out over eighty billion over four years. That was
half of all of the Department of Transportation's entire budget
for a typical fiscal year, according to records. They said, yes,
he was definitely pushing an agenda, and he apparently had
(01:17:53):
quote little to no interest and took zero action towards
air traffic control modernization. Oh my gosh, the safety system
that hasn't been updated since the Carter administration. And he
did nothing there. What do you I mean, don't you think, Okay,
(01:18:14):
this might be a naive question, but if you're gonna
be the transportation secretary, shouldn't you at least have some
sort of working knowledge about how the hell it works.
I don't know how Department of Transportation works. I know
that they're supposed to handle stuff like that, right, Yeah,
And he didn't do it. Remember he was also how
long was he gone? He was like gone eight weeks
(01:18:36):
after he purchased some babies. He was gone for eight
weeks from maternity leave. The best the cherry on the
top was when they both got into like pajamas and
sent in a hospital bed like they pushed the baby
out of their birth canals themselves. And he did not
take any questions. He was basically not basically he was
(01:18:56):
am I according to people within the Department of Transportation,
if you were while we had the supply chain crisis
and all that stuff, he was nowhere to be found.
So the booty juice is spokesperson Chris Meager. Of course
his name is Meager. His Meager spokesman said, no, no, no,
I mean there was some like new flight routes and
(01:19:18):
stuff that was added. What are you talking about? They
had an air traffic controller shortage apparently, and they weren't
upgrading systems, and he was doing nothing to help with that.
According to all of these insiders that are blowing the
whistle on him right now, the eighty billion and eighty billion,
(01:19:39):
eighty billion dollars on DEI grants, isn't the thing with
Delta that happened over the weekend. Wasn't that said to
have done. Weren't people complaining about DEI also, you know
where they had a pilot that had to take aggressive
maneuvers and all this stuff because they got too close
to this other jet. A lot of people have been
(01:20:01):
talking about the air traffic control industry and how they
need more actual, like competent air traffic controllers. So, I mean,
apparently he didn't do a whole hell of a lot
over at dot Kine. He didn't do anything here. I mean,
what is the point of having the department if you're
(01:20:23):
not doing anything that has to do with transportation? That
does DEI have to do with this?
Speaker 5 (01:20:28):
You know, if I spent eighty billion, even just eighty
billion in that department, which by the way, more was spent,
I would have something to.
Speaker 8 (01:20:36):
Show for it. I would say, hey, look, at this
Look at this thing I did with eighty billion. What
does he have to show for it?
Speaker 5 (01:20:45):
Because there's no improvements in the Department of Transportation as
it relates to air traffic control.
Speaker 8 (01:20:51):
So what do he do?
Speaker 2 (01:20:53):
Yeah, absolutely nothing. The focus of his it says under
Buddha judge, the focus of the department sifted dramatically. They
had four hundred DEI related grants approved, and that was
an audit of federal spending between twenty twenty one and
twenty twenty four. Grants for diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.
(01:21:16):
They said that programs like Justice forty, which sent about
fifty five percent of about one hundred and fifty billion
in infrastructure investments to quote unquote disadvantaged communities, pursue it
to an executive order that Biden signed to quote advanced
(01:21:37):
equitable outcomes. So that's the Justice forty Justice forty initiative.
They say. The categories investment are climate change, clean energy,
energy efficiency, sustainable and affordable housing, remediation, legacy pollution. That's
(01:21:58):
the there. Yeah, and uh, this was Biden's twenty one
one point two Infrastructure Law. Five billion equity that was
by the way, that part of that money. Do you
guys remember the Oh my gosh, this is crazy, the
craziest stories the electrical the electric vehicle charging stations. Do
you guys remember that? So they only built seven, good god,
(01:22:24):
seven like seven by June of twenty twenty four, and
that was a five billion dollar equity effort. They were
supposed to build five hundred thousand electric vehicle charging stations
and it only only seven were built. Now you might
be like, well, what is that? What do you what
(01:22:46):
do you mean equitable f what is the equity effort?
The equitable effort? What does that mean? Okay, So I
remember we had this story. Let me just bring it
back up, because it's been almost a year ago. Let
me just bring this back up to you. So, they
they had this program where they were supposed to build
like half a million of these charging stations. They only
did seven of them. And the people in DOT like
(01:23:09):
or in departments in which they fall under the purview
of Department of Transportation like the Federal Highway Administration, et cetera,
et cetera, they were the ones who started talking to
the press about it. And the reason being is because
of that equitable thing, that little equitable equity word in
there that I had mentioned. They were not a lot.
(01:23:32):
Remember they had all these requirements. If you were going
to build a charging station, like you had to be
like minority owned, and you had to have x amount
of minorities, Like it wasn't enough to be a minority owned.
Like if you were a black business owner but you
didn't have enough minorities on your staff, then you were
not considered. I mean, that's how crazy it was. And
you had to have like an interpreter and they did
oh my gosh, what was it block parties? Remember all
(01:23:55):
this stuff, and people were saying, you're not going to
be a to get anything built with this, with these
type of requirements, you're not going to be able to
get anything built. And it actually, I mean it was
(01:24:15):
blamed for holding all of this back. There were all
of these secret documents that came out. Daily Caller had
a big thing on it, and so did the Free Beacon,
and they were reporting on how all these internal documents
showed how all of these stupid DEI demands made it
impossible to I mean, I'm surprised they got seven built. Honestly.
(01:24:37):
It was described as a quote mess and it said
that the DEI requirements were hamstringing Biden's ev agenda and
that was why they were behind the charging station goals.
And I'm saying this because this is all part of
this eighty billion dollars. Apparently that poot pooty juice was
just given away to DEI stuff. How bad it was,
(01:25:00):
like they you had to be able. You had to
show like neighborhood initiatives, like if you had held a
block party and all that, Like, what the hell are
you doing. You're building an EV state, You're building a
damn charging station. Uh, meaningful public involvement. Now, it wasn't
enough to do it a one off it. You had
to prove that this would occur throughout the project's life cycle.
(01:25:21):
They never actually meant, they never actually defined what public
involvement was, but they just gave. The reason I said
block parties is because they gave that as an example.
The Department of Transportation documents. By the way, all this
is on the internet. That's the stuff. Yeah, visual preference surveys,
games and contests, and neighborhood block parties. Those were some
(01:25:42):
of the examples that they gave and that the grant
recipient had to provide multi lingual staff or interpreters to
interact with community members who use language other than English.
So it wasn't even that you had to have an
interpreter for your employees. You literally had to employ an
interpreter to talk to the community. You the person building
(01:26:05):
the EV charging station, so Cain. If Cain had a
company that wanted that was bidding for a contract to
build a charging station, they'd be like, Okay, well you're
half Hispanic. I guess that's half enough. How many people
of color do you have in your staff? How many
minorities do you have in your staff? And if he
didn't have enough minorities on his staff, he wouldn't be considered.
(01:26:27):
If he did, then he had a further show that
he had an interpreter on staff, not even to deal
with his own employees, but to just talk with the community.
He would have to prove that they were doing all
these events and stuff for the community as part of
the quote meaningful public involvement that was never defined but
was only really only showcased by examples of which block
(01:26:48):
parties were mentioned. You would have to do all of that.
You're even the sourcing of the materials that you used.
You had to make a good faith effort to show
that you were getting sourcing for your production from other
minority owned or disadvantaged minority own companies or companies in
disadvantage areas. Wrap your head around that, Wrap your head
(01:27:13):
around that. Why do you think we only had seven
of these damn things built? This was under Pooh Booty Juice.
And people in Department of Transportation were like this, like
actual other leftists, We're like, this is the stupidest burp
that we've ever seen. They said, you are ham stringing this,
(01:27:34):
ham stringing it. Meanwhile, Department of Transportation is that they're
going well, since Biden took office, the public public available
charging ports, it's grown wildly. It's to grow like over
ninety percent. Not because of you, not because of you.
So they this was just a slush fund. DEI is
just a slush fund. All it is is another way
(01:27:55):
to redistribute money. That's all it is. That's all it is.
It's just a way to redistribute money. So going back
to this, this was under this is all that justice
forty stuff. This is all a part of that eighty
billion dollars that poot Booty Juice was in charge of
(01:28:16):
and that he was spending more towards like DEI and
all of this other stuff than actually going and pursuing
air traffic controllers, upgrading safety systems, doing all of those things.
And what was his and his excuse was, oh, well
you can walk and chew gum at the same time,
meaning well I can do this and I can do
these other things. Remember that that was Remember we had
(01:28:36):
that whole thing, but here not doing the other things
is what people are pointing out to you. So I mean,
he he just I honestly all of this stuff. I
think it's very interesting that we had all of these
incidents that stem from the perfect storm of his if
you want to call it leadership over a Department of Transportation,
(01:29:00):
good heavens. By the way, we spent four billion dollars
to refunds for customers because of consumer complaints. Remember he
had that whole initiative setup that was in airlines that
was paying that, that was taxpayers that were paying that,
we were paying that unreal. In the meantime, our partners
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Speaker 5 (01:30:19):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 2 (01:30:26):
This is such a weird headline so if gen Z
is staring at you and maybe more than just a quirk,
it's called the gen Z stare. It's a blank look.
They said that gen Zers give to their elders and
it's like another intergeneration who when they say intergenerational, who
are fighting? Because I feel like gen X, we're just
like doing our thing and we don't care. So is
(01:30:46):
it like boomers or millennials who's fighting with gen Z?
I feel like everybody's fighting. Yeah. So they said that
it's called the gen Z stare, like it's a blank,
deadpan look, and they just kind of have you ever
s I don't know that I've ever seen that? Have you?
I don't know? But they said that that's like yeah, yeah,
but that's RBF. That's like not just a blank kind
(01:31:11):
of like dumbfounded like kind of stare. I don't know. Golly,
that's the latest though with it. Let's see a woman
commandeer's the Queen's Inn train for a one stop joy ride,
say in why PD, I don't know how you do that?
She she broke into a whole train, all whole actual train.
It was parked and she took it for a joy
(01:31:31):
ride and then disappeared it is their third train hijacking
in a year. Yeah, so maybe get somebody to watch
them trains. Zom saying you know what I mean. They
said it took place at four thirty in the morning
and it went to one stop. She got off and
she fled. They're trying to figure out how she gained
access to it. I'm sure you are, maybe figure that out.
(01:31:54):
So the corner says that Annabel Dahl was not president
in the hotel room when that dude kicked the bucket.
That paranormal investigator. He says that it wasn't. I mean,
maybe I'm surprised you didn't go was it the vacs?
I'm like waiting for you to say that ghost ghost facts.
They said, it's still an active investigation. But the doll
(01:32:16):
was not in there. That's what the doll wants you
to believe. I just want to say, just you know,
let's see. Oh gosh, doctors played a music bingo game
during routine eye surgery, but it apparently resulted in a
man's death. According to Channel nine News, the guy never
regained consciousness. It was this was like in twenty twenty
(01:32:37):
three in Colorado. They finally settled it, but apparently they
missed critical signs and the patient stick with us. Mordstort.
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Speaker 3 (01:33:50):
Brighten up your timely news consumption with a Dana Show
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Speaker 2 (01:34:02):
Make sure you go sign up at substack, chapter and verse,
find us at Facebook, YouTube, like and subscribe. The chat
does not rumble and channel through forty seven the simulcast
of the radio program. It's already tough when you're flying right,
You're on an aluminum tube and you're in the sky,
and I just get real antsy. When I'm in I
feel like I'm being held captive with a bunch of people.
(01:34:25):
I don't even know how I'm gonna do a cruise
later the academic thing with MRC going up to Norway.
I mean, it's not like I can scale up the
size of a feord to get away or anything. But
being on the plane, like where else you're gonna go
like open the door and fall to the ground, Like
where else you're gonna go hide in the bathroom, hide
in the laboratory. So I get it. When it's time
(01:34:46):
to get off the plane, people want to get off,
especially if you have connecting flights that can be tricky,
or if you got to use the loo, because using
the restroom on the plane is probably one of the
nastiest things ever, next to writing the subway in New York.
It's horrible, always so bad, like you got to use
it first and then just give it up. Then you
just give it to God after that because that's you know,
only he can help after that point. So I get it,
(01:35:08):
you want to get off the plane, right, But I
think there's like ways to be polite about it. But
also people don't want to be polite. In today's society
for whatever reason, it feels like there's less of it.
I think there's less of it because people are tired
of putting up with stuff. They're just tired. People are
just tired, and there's too much. There's too much happening.
So audio Sun Bite seventeen. This is at Fort Lauderdale
(01:35:30):
Hollywood International Airport. This woman went on a tirade because
she was getting criticized by passengers for getting up and
moving forward to get off the plane before the passengers
in front of her were able to get off. Now,
I don't know how all of this kicked off, because
you know, it's always we have all of these it's
(01:35:51):
like Bigfoot. We have phones and all these video recording things,
but you know, nobody gets bigfoot. So I don't know
exactly how bad it got to get to this point,
but audio something by seventeen. This is what happened right now.
Speaker 10 (01:36:05):
What your mouth?
Speaker 12 (01:36:06):
The people?
Speaker 2 (01:36:08):
Oh my god, you're all whining for no room.
Speaker 12 (01:36:13):
Let the people got the way you want to.
Speaker 2 (01:36:17):
You just just a cameon and that's just the way
it is. Deal with people. My god, why did you
all show up? It's not affecting any of you. Yours
are so funny. You are the Karens about it, because
(01:36:37):
you're the ones. You're the one to make a noise.
Nobody call and not even in your pot.
Speaker 12 (01:36:43):
I'm sorry, do you have my permission to record me?
Because you've never said one? I can tell you, oh yes,
I can give him.
Speaker 2 (01:36:55):
Your would do or nothing? He just sitting back there.
You can just you're not going to al because of
an accident.
Speaker 12 (01:37:03):
We're not doing that with your finger out, Yeah, change
when they say eight, and they talk.
Speaker 10 (01:37:10):
About low I Q I use AIDS and I'm I'm
in a doctoral program.
Speaker 2 (01:37:14):
Oh my god, I don't say eight. Do you even
know what races means? Oh my god, you're white racist.
We're talking about accent. Maybe get a vocabulary.
Speaker 12 (01:37:31):
Why when we get off this plane, I'll meet you
out there with my bark.
Speaker 2 (01:37:36):
Everybody, everybody is sure. I'm sorry that everybody on this
plane is insufferable. They're all horrible. Everyone is horrible. If
I was the pilot, I would have dove it into
the ocean. I'm like, Wow, gone doing mankind of favor.
Oh my gosh, where do you even start? She was
trying to get off that she wanted to go off
(01:37:57):
the plane before every I've been, I've seen that before.
Most most of the time, people are nice. The only
time that I ever said anything on a plane when
people were trying to rush forward was actually my oldest
son was with me. I can't remember where we were going,
but there was an elderly lady who was right across
(01:38:17):
the aisle from us, and she was like really elderly,
and apparently like talk to her a little bit. She
her husband had passed earlier. That year she was going
to see her sister, whose children had placed her sister
in a nursing facility. So I'm already like, my heart
was already hurting for this lady, right, and we helped
her put her suit case up and helped her get
you know, situated, because she had she wasn't she didn't
(01:38:38):
have mobility issues, but she was like eighty something. She
was very it was she still an independent lady. Sharpa's
attack and she had every right to fly, but you know,
just have a little consideration, right, So when the plane
landed and everyone's getting up and my uh son was
actually making sure she got up and had her toe back,
there was a younger woman and then people just started
coming forward. One woman literally pushed past her to get
(01:39:03):
to the front and almost knocked this woman on the
other two passengers in the seat, and then everyone else
it was like murhmurrh. They saw this one lady going
up and I'm you know, I'm like immediately trying to
help this elderly lady. Because the flight attendants were in
the front, they're opening the door, they're doing they're not
right there in your section, and I'm like, this woman
is gonna get trampled, and all these people came up.
(01:39:25):
So I got up and I was like, can you
please wait? You know, I'm still trying to literally get
her up from the aisle. And this was probably like
in two thousand and nine, twenty ten, and they kept pushing,
so finally I lost my cool and I did yell
at people. I was like, can you guys just chill
the hell out for five seconds. I'm like, we're all
going to the same place. I'm like, can I let
(01:39:47):
her get up first? Because she got knocked down by
one of you. And I was so mad that they
didn't even notice that this woman was literally knocked over
in the aisle, and I made sure she got out
before us, so if they were gonna like try to
run her down again, at least they would hit me
and my child first. But you know, getting off the plane,
and she was just slow getting up. She wasn't like
(01:40:10):
slow walking, it was just you know, she's eighty something.
And I was just like, and I think the people
realize what happened, and they saw her kind of trying
to get out of it, because when you fall in
between those aisles, you know how hard that is to
get If you're not eighties. It's like hard to get
up anyway because you're on your stuff. You can't move
the sea, you can't get up. It's awkward, and I
think they realize, oh my gosh, we got a chill.
(01:40:33):
We knocked this little lady down, and then they were
fine after that. But I literally did have to yell
at people. That's the only time I ever did. Otherwise
I just don't care. I'm not in a rush to
get off the plane. I always whenever we have connecting flights,
so there's only been one time that it's been close
because there was nothing else. But I always give myself
tons of time if I got a connecting flight somewhere A.
I avoid connecting flights, but if I have to take when,
(01:40:55):
I always give myself tons of time. And not everybody
can prepare that, you know, plan that far in advance,
but just try. But I mean, what is it going
to save you a couple of minutes to rush forward
if that? This doesn't make any sense. But the problem
with this is that I don't know. If she had
a connecting flight, I don't know. She could have been
a heck of a lot nicer and everybody else could
(01:41:18):
have been. But she didn't say Kane at any point
that she had a connecting flight that she had to
get to or anything like that. She was just like,
you know whatever, I mean, lady live.
Speaker 5 (01:41:27):
If I had a connecting flight, I would say, yeah,
all right, you guys, you got me. But you know
I have a connecting flight.
Speaker 2 (01:41:32):
So that's why I got up the yeah, yeah, yeah,
because I've been on planes where they're like, if you
don't have a connecting flight, you know, can you let
other people go forward? And it's like, I don't, you know,
I don't have an issue. I'm not in a rush
to get off the plane, and I my husband likes
to get off the plane like as soon as possible.
But I'm like, h chill, we don't got to be
in a rush. It's all good. It's all good. Seriously,
(01:41:53):
clearly some people got places they got to be. Just
let it go. It doesn't really doesn't really bug me.
But what bugs me is like when I see older
people like that lady. I don't know if I've ever
been that mad in public in a long time, like ever,
I was so mad for her. I just could not
believe this. I'mone just like powered through and just not
I mean literally knocked her in between the seats like
(01:42:13):
she was butt up and her I mean almost like
a downward dog position. They had knocked her in that
seat and it was really awkward for her to get up,
and the other seat meet passengers, the other passengers in
her row were trying to help her. I'm trying to
help her, but everybody on that plane was just not
helping the situation. Not helping the situation. Clearly she felt entitled.
(01:42:35):
She was snotty. You know the point where it went
really downhills where the other lady was like, I'm an
adoctorate program. Oh my gosh, nobody cares. Just stop. Stop,
don't engage with stupid because stupid loves it and stupid
feeds off it. You do not have to. I always
tell everybody you do not have to attend every fight
(01:42:55):
to which you are invited. You do not have to.
Just let it. Some people just need to show their backsides.
Let them do it. But it just got it, and
I'm like, there's kids on this flight. I felt bad
for the one dude who was just sitting there eating snacks.
Did you see him? He was the only guy who
would not bothering a soul on this flight. He's sitting
(01:43:16):
there just eating his snacks and she turns around and
starts at him. I was like, that, poor man, he's
eating his snacks, probably eating them plane whatever the plane
trail mix. Did they even offer it her to the
people with peanut allergies get upset? I don't know. The
whole thing is just just too much.
Speaker 5 (01:43:34):
That dude was my spirit animal, right, I'm the same
way if people are are in a rush and they
would just let him go. If you're in the plane
and you're not in a rush to get off the plane,
having three or four more people in front of you
as you're heard it off the plane through the jet bridge.
Speaker 2 (01:43:48):
Is you're not You're not gonna get a special award.
Speaker 8 (01:43:50):
You're not gaining anything.
Speaker 2 (01:43:52):
Yeah, they're not gonna They're not gonna be at the
end of the thing like you were. The first stuff.
Here's a million dollars. You guys are losers because you
didn't get off the plane. No one's doing that. There's
not those types of.
Speaker 8 (01:44:02):
Role fifteenth, I'm a better person.
Speaker 2 (01:44:06):
Put that on my tombstone. First off the plane, you know,
just but it it just yeah, I and I don't
like being in crowds where you're jostling like that. I
don't Oh man, I can't stand it. So I will
totally just chill, let them, let it, let them go by,
and then do what I gotta do, right And because
(01:44:27):
I already have I pack light anyway, I already have
all my stuff. I only ever do carry on, So
it's like one in one and I'm out. But there
are a lot of nice people that'll they'll see you,
because if you don't go, then it's like the current
of people just and then you just you know, you
just sit there until the whole plane gets off. But
every now and then there are people nice enough that
are like, oh my gosh, go ahead and go, like
you're you're sitting here ready to go. I'm just not
(01:44:48):
going to like fight with people to get off the
plane because I don't have that much patience in life,
so I like to reserve it, you know what I mean,
for like the times that it would really would matter, right,
like picking up an elderly woman gets knocked over in
the aisle, that's you know, things like that. But this,
I see things like this, and it makes me not
want to fly. I already don't like it. But I
(01:45:09):
don't know what I'm gonna do on this cruise, guys,
I don't even know. I was looking at the boat,
the boat ship. I don't know. I literally all everything
I know about getting on boats is from lakes, fishing
canoes and then having a power little power boat like
in the Zoomas and going you know, driving around that.
And I know how to I know ties and know
(01:45:31):
how to navigate. I know how to read nautical maps
because there was no way I was taking my family
out in the open ocean without ever being able to
do that, because insane. But we're on a big boat
and came we're going to be in the Fiords, which
is basically like there's no ground. It's just you look
around at it's water and rocks, that's it. Sheer cliffs
that goats couldn't even get on, Like a goat couldn't
(01:45:53):
even like one of those weird ones couldn't even get
up there.
Speaker 8 (01:45:55):
It's not a carnival cruise you're going on. No, no, no,
it's I think you'll be okay.
Speaker 2 (01:46:01):
I don't know. All I'm worried about, like food poisoning
and everybody having diarrhea and like.
Speaker 8 (01:46:06):
Oh god, I guess those are valid concerns, or.
Speaker 2 (01:46:11):
Like what if oh my gosh, I don't know, what
if the boat what if there's a drunk captain that
happened you guys remember that story. What if there's a
drunk captain, they hit something and the we capsize in
a fjord and then a lockness monster from Scotland eats us.
Speaker 8 (01:46:24):
I don't know for recapsize, you just drink with him
so that he's not drinking as much.
Speaker 3 (01:46:27):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:46:28):
I'm just it's real. I don't know how this is
gonna work. So yeah, we'll see. That's gonna be very
very Those are going to be fun times.
Speaker 3 (01:46:37):
Subscribe to the Dana Show podcast because who says you
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own personal time. Subscribe on YouTube, Apple or wherever you
get your podcast.
Speaker 2 (01:46:48):
So who boy, this justin all new. This is all
new new news. Yeah, that's right, new news. So Angela Paxton,
who's a Texas state senator, posted quote today, after thirty
eight years of marriage, I filed for divorce on biblical grounds.
I believe marriage is a secret covenant. I have earnestly
pursued reconciliation, but in light of recent discoveries, I do
(01:47:13):
not believe that it honors God or is loving to myself.
My children were kin to remain in the marriage. I
move forward with complete confidence that God is always working
everything together for the good of those who love Him
and who are called according to His purpose. Now, Angela Paxton,
she said, Ken, that is Ken Paxton's wife. He is
the Age of Texas and he is running against John
(01:47:35):
Cornyn in the primary for that Senate seat. Wow. I
also heard that apparently Cornyn was at the White House
visiting with Potus, and that the White House I guess
trying to get the White House involved in this race,
which I thought. I always thought Potus had a good
relationship with Ken Paxton. I can't see them sad, you know,
signing up next to Cornyan right now. But all very
(01:47:57):
man alive, very interesting. So what do you mean recent discoveries? What, dude,
I don't know.
Speaker 8 (01:48:09):
I could she be getting fed false information or do
you suspect this is accurate stuff?
Speaker 2 (01:48:22):
I have heard stuff before about. I don't like to
get into people's like marriages and personal businesses, and I
don't know, people in Texas gossip more than anybody else
I've ever Like, in Missouri politics, they gossip, but in
Texas it's like an art form. It is a whole
new level. And I have heard a lot of stuff,
(01:48:44):
and I'm not repeating any of it because I have
no idea whether or not it's valid or but I've
heard a lot of things, so I don't know. They
she was accusing him of adultery, and and that's according
to Kut and a couple of other sources. And they
(01:49:07):
said that they in her filing. It was apparently in
the petition she was accusing him of adultery and so
that they had stopped living together in June of last year. Wow,
So what does that mean for that Senate race? Because
Cornyn may not be the quickest, but his operatives are
(01:49:27):
so man, that's gonna get real spicy, real fast. So
we'll see how that goes. That's very there. And she's
gonna regardless of what is happening in their situation, She's
they're gonna go at her because they're going to look
at her as helping Cornyn. So all right, that's all.
Have more on that tomorrow. I'll have something up at
substat coming up kind of looks at the lay of
(01:49:50):
the land on that today's stupidity came.
Speaker 5 (01:49:51):
Oh it looks like Michelle Obama and Juliet luied Dreyfus.
Oh God, they're claiming that man life is difficult, difficult
life for American women.
Speaker 8 (01:50:02):
Listen to this, women.
Speaker 11 (01:50:04):
We have so many in the world landmines and barriers
and don'ts and limitations. It's you know, I mean, Craig,
you're the guy at the table, But I think it's
important for all guys listening, especially men raising daughters, to realize.
Speaker 8 (01:50:24):
That this is what Michelle's pushing these days in her
IMO podcast.
Speaker 2 (01:50:28):
Everybody wants to be oprah. I don't get it, folks.
That does it for us today. Make sure you find
us on Substack, Chapter and Verse, YouTube, Facebook, I can subscribe.
I'll be back with you tomorrow.