Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Starting probably in next month May, my time allocation to
do will drop significantly. I'll have to continue during it
for I think, you know, the remainder of the President's
to him, just to make sure that the waste and
(00:20):
ford that we stop does not come oring back, which
we'll do if if it has the chance. So so
I think I'll continue to spend you know, a day
or two per week on govern matters for as long
as the President would like me to do so and
(00:43):
as long as it is useful. But starting next month,
I'll be allocating or more of my time to TESLA.
And now that the major work of establishing the Department
of Government Efficiency is.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
Uh, that was the plan all along, I have to
say that was that was and we've talked about this before,
but this SoundBite. I was actually thinking about this when
I was making the rundown for the program today, and
whenever he talks about stepping back, and I think it's
(01:21):
smart that he reminds people and keeps it out there
that this was the plan for DOGE all along, that
you know, I was going to stay on to make
sure that it was up and that it was running,
and then that everything was going to be okay, and
then I was always going to step back. And I
think it's important for him to remind people of this
(01:41):
because it well, as you can see, the i mean,
Tesla stocks started started bouncing back up into the stratosphere
and they started performing well. And it also, I think
really robs the narrative of the left where they they are.
They for so long have been trying to say that
(02:03):
there's this wide chasm between Potus and himself and that
basically as a way to try to undermine everything that
they've been doing with doge et cetera, et cetera, that oh,
well Trump is going to fire him. They don't get along.
You remember all of the stories that they have shared,
right that the media has put out, all of these
(02:26):
all of these stories, well, it's all designed. They wanted
to put a wedge between them, and I think him
going out there and talking to the press about that
has kind of just sort of killed that. And it's
cribbed in. And I mean, obviously they get along well,
and this was always ever the plan, but the way
that the left looks at it, they try to act like, oh, well,
(02:47):
this is us, We scored this victory. Look, he's stepping
down and that's not even remotely accurate at all. Welcome
to the show, Dana lash with you or at the
top of this first hour, and many things to cover,
including some of the latest with tariffs, because now we've
got some we've got a little bit of movement. We're
(03:08):
gonna hopefully have some updates about some of these other
deals that have been made and jump all into it.
We're going to jump all into that. But to this point,
I mean, this was always ever about finding waste, finding
fraud and abuse. I mean, that job has a shelf life.
You know, that's not a job that's going to last
for forever. It has a it has a shelf life,
(03:30):
and so we always knew it was going to be
this way. And I mean it's like I said, I
think it's smart. Speaking of trade audio sound byte one,
This was Potus talking about China. Listen to this.
Speaker 3 (03:40):
I mean, you said you're ultimately going to make a
deal with China, But where did they stand right now?
Speaker 4 (03:45):
Have you talked?
Speaker 5 (03:46):
I mean, my relationship, my relationship with Presidency is great.
Speaker 3 (03:51):
It was, it's been.
Speaker 2 (03:53):
Great for a long time.
Speaker 5 (03:54):
We've got a very good relationship. And I think what
I could deal with China. If we don't make it deal,
Will said it, we'll just set the number, and you know,
I think they'll want to be a part of the
United States. We're doing great, We're gonna this is the
golden age. As Paul said, we're talking about the golden age.
It will never be a time like this in my opinion,
and uh, China wants to be a part of that too.
Speaker 2 (04:17):
I think this is him giving them a bone throwing
not I think that he's just saying, look, we can
make a deal with China. This is something that can happen.
I think he's kind of throwing them a bone a
little bit, don't you. That's what it seems like with
us that he's he's saying because that right now it's
a tariff off and China can't win it. For the
people who say that China can win, or that the
administration somehow is blinking, I don't think that they are,
(04:40):
because they haven't moved. If they were blinking, they would have.
They would have he would cancel the teriffs, and he's
he's not doing that. But you do have to have,
as I said, all of these other nations come to
the table in order to be able to have a success,
to have success on this otherwise, I'm telling you, Uh.
One of the other things that we're going to talk
(05:01):
about coming up at the bottom of the hour is
this plan that he has where he I think he's
floating it. If you follow me on Twitter, I have
a piece coming out about it later today on substack.
If you follow me on Twitter, you've seen me discuss
all of this. But the the plan was to pay
(05:21):
people to have kids. Did you see this, Kane? Oh,
you said that very unenthusiastically.
Speaker 4 (05:30):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (05:31):
I'm not a fan of these kind of plans. We
already have like these tax incentives, we have welfare. Yeah,
but that's sane.
Speaker 2 (05:39):
I'm not like you know, sat talking in favor of welfare,
but you know we have.
Speaker 4 (05:44):
There's to be a lot of nuance in this idea.
Speaker 2 (05:46):
Yeah. Well, this so this plan that he came out with,
and I, like I said, I mentioned it a little
bit yesterday on uh uh so on on X that
he wants to pay people like it's like five thousand
dollars to have kids, and it's modeled after what Hungary did.
(06:11):
And I want to point out and like I said,
I'm going to dive into this deeper coming up. But
I want to preface it. This is the one thing
that I have seen that from the administration that I've
never hated a policy more than I hate this policy.
Speaker 4 (06:29):
I can.
Speaker 2 (06:29):
But it's a proposal. They're brainstorming.
Speaker 6 (06:31):
I can play a devil's advocate. I mean, think you
can try think about this. The left does not value
life at all. They don't value the unborn.
Speaker 2 (06:40):
So imagine wealth redistribution.
Speaker 6 (06:43):
Now that you've put a five thousand dollars price tag
on such a thing, it now has value on the
left at least five thousand dollars.
Speaker 2 (06:52):
Yeah, I don't think so. I I look at it
as it's a wealth redistribution scheme.
Speaker 4 (06:58):
That's totally. I was just playing the you know.
Speaker 2 (07:01):
Well, we're gonna talk. We're gonna talk more about it
here coming up as soon as I can get this.
Speaker 6 (07:05):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (07:05):
And and by the way, we'll have headlines and that
again with because everybody was like okay, I could see
her eye was selling it's yes, I scratched my eye.
We're rolling with it. Bear with me. I have Fox
later today too, and I've never really worn glasses on Fox,
so that'll be interesting.
Speaker 7 (07:21):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (07:21):
But I appreciate all your kind words. Yes, it's Ie
Scratch still, it's the Ice Scratch edition. So we're gonna
talk about that because I want to give it. There's
like three huge points that I want to hit in
that topic, and I feel like it needs a larger
segment for us to do that. So that's what you know,
just why I just to just to make you all aware. Uh,
but that's that's what we're gonna be jumping into. All right.
(07:45):
The next the other thing, and I'm going through all
my audio here, uh on the trade deal with China.
Coming into this audio some by three. This is the
Press secretary. Just yesterday listen, I.
Speaker 8 (07:59):
Asked the President about this poor coming out here, and
he wanted me to share with all of you that
we're doing very well in respect to potential trade deal
with China. As I mentioned, there have now been eighteen
proposals in more than one hundred countries around the world
who are wanting to make a deal with the United
States of America, and the President and the administration are
setting the stage for a deal with China. So we
(08:19):
feel everyone involved wants to see a trade deal happen,
and the ball is moving in the right direction.
Speaker 2 (08:26):
So that's it's good. We'll see how this, We'll see
how this pans out. We have to get these other
deals made though. It's incredibly important that we get all
of this, that this happens, and I have some information
we're going to be pulling up and dealing with the
technical glitch here that we're going to be pulling up
that gets into some of this, because they've they've there
was an editorial that ran yesterday in the Wall Street
(08:49):
Journal that was talking about the all of the seventy
some odd nations that desperately have to we're going to
have to have these trade deals with these these nations
coming in sitting down, having these individualized trade deals that
are more advantageous to the United States put us in
a more advantageous position. All well and good, and all
a threat to China's national security as well, because China
(09:11):
wants to dominate. Obviously, they can't do that if we
have great relations with all of these other nations. It's
just not something that they not how they would like to.
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(09:32):
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Speaker 7 (10:13):
The people out there that follow their politicians off a
cliff are a bit of a problem. Many pensions are
down billions after the market sell off from the tariffs.
Could this mean pension cuts down the road? Some people
out there fail to see the force for the trees.
Check out the Watchdog on Wall Street podcast on Apple, Spotify,
wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 9 (10:33):
And now all of the news you would probably miss
it's time for Dana's quickfive.
Speaker 2 (10:39):
Well boy, here come the economic headlines. But you knew
this was going to happen. This was something that was
going to happen. Nearly half of Americans, though, have given
up on saving money. Sixty seven percent feel that they
are behind on their savings goals. Nearly half don't believe
that they're ever going to reach their targets. Sixty three
percent of people with savings accounts have withdrawn money since
(10:59):
the into twenty twenty five for unexpected expenses that's the
top one. That's forty eight percent, everyday necessities. Younger generations
are more satisfied with their banks, but yet they're moved.
They're more willing to switch, which is interesting. That is
very Your bank is like a very that's a very
personal thing. More and more people, here's a big old
flash in war. Now this is true. You can still
(11:20):
think that this is the best way to go with
things in terms of securing long term economic stability. That
you can still think that that's the way to go.
But in reality, right now longer hail, hair, nails at home,
fewer facials. The economic warning signs are flashing at the salon.
Salon owners say that they are seeing a huge shift
(11:42):
in their clients spending and they think it's what is
ahead for a wider economy. I've heard this. I have
a friend who is a stylist, and I have heard
this that people not only they're also changing what they're buying.
So instead of buying like maybe the more expensive moisturizer,
men are like, what do you mean need you just
don't you know, wop off the water off your face
(12:04):
and collar a day? No, I know, but like instead
of the expensive moisturizer and things like that, they're actually
they're they're they're buying like the cheaper stuff, and we're
seeing it with hair. We're also seeing it with other
services like women get I think women get their nails
done for women because men don't care, do you mean
unless they're really long and they look you know, like,
you know, like ridiculous. I don't think that they care.
(12:25):
Women get it. Women get it for women. But they're
also seeing that as well. They said that they're taking
longer between their visits. Pre bookings are down this is
something that's I'm just saying we knew it was coming though.
The FDA has suspended milk quality tests amid workforce cuts,
but they're going to be mad over on pasteurized milk
(12:46):
at you know, at health food stores that operate like
a Sam's. Really, Food and Drug Administration is suspending a
quality control program for testing a fluid milk and other
dairy products. They say that's the reduced capacity is because
of well, they said that they're they're running low on
people and it's in their Food Safety and Nutrition division.
(13:06):
It was an internal email that Reuters saw and they
said there was a termination of twenty I don't think
you need a million employees to do this. I'm sorry,
you don't need like thirty thousand employees at the Department
of Health and Human Services to do all this. They're
trying to say, Trump is oh my gosh, can you
believe it? Trump is gonna kill us all with poisoned milk.
Speaker 4 (13:26):
Is this the same entity that gave us red dye.
Speaker 2 (13:29):
Forty Yeah, it is the exactly. You know what, it's
so funny that you mentioned that, yes, just making sure
and all of the other fun colors. Well, you know,
if they're that's it's true. They also say cigarettes are safe. Yeah,
just FYI. So they said that. Oh, here's the here's
the kicker. Here's what Reuter says. By the way, guys,
the suspension is another disruption of the nation's food safety
(13:50):
programs Matt, because of Trump's effort to shrink the federal workforce. Matt,
Oh my gosh, yeah, oh so bad. You know what there.
I just think that if you if you still have
thousands and thousands of employees and you can't do this
stuff anyway, something's wrong with how you're structured. Got to
say it. The top producer in sixty Minutes quits, saying
(14:13):
that he lost independence. Is anybody at all surprised about
any of those No, No one's surprised. They said that
they're facing a lot of pressure and their corporate ownership
at Paramount, the parent company of CBS, they've entered what
they call a period of turmoil. Bill Owens, who was
the executive producer of sixty Minutes, said that he's going
to resign from this long running program because he's lost
(14:35):
his journalistic independence. Like nobody, we never believe that you
had it anyway. Stop. And he said that they face
mounting pressure from both the President, who sued for ten
billion and include and then also its own corporate ownership
at Paramount. I think it has more to do with
Paramount than it has to do with Trump, and they're just.
Speaker 4 (14:54):
His independence cost him money.
Speaker 2 (14:56):
Let's be real, for real, No one believes that they're
independent over there. Come on, it's sixteen minutes, it's CBS.
Nobody believes us. Oh there's gonna be a cosmic smiley
face in the sky in Arizona. What if it's frowning?
Is that bad?
Speaker 10 (15:10):
Luck?
Speaker 2 (15:10):
Is that bad? The crescent moon is going to alige
with aligned with Venus and Saturn. Excuse me to form
an emoji like grin. It's actually a sweet little smile.
It was visible over Bangkok a couple of years ago.
Now it's going to be visible over Arizona. The'll believe
they'll be able to see it on Friday morning, and
it's going to be like a kind of a like
(15:32):
a lopsided moon and two stars, and there's supposed to
look like a smiley face. Don't think that it means.
It means God is pleased with you. He said, watching
you right now. He saw what you did. No, still low,
but they can. You can go and it'll be in it.
But I guess like only in certain parts obviously of
(15:54):
the United States. You're gonna be able to see it
in Arizona and maybe New Mexico. Let's see. Oh yeah,
and a sixty minutes it's going for sale too. This also,
let's see thirty one. So here's a poll. I saw
this and I had a couple of people send this
to me, a couple of people who were terriff angry,
and they're saying Americans are souring on the handle end
of the economy, and thirty seven percent approved. Now, hold up,
(16:17):
hold up. They were talking about specifically long the way
that they the way that they posed the question to
these respondents was about the golden age of America, including
tariffs or not, and the having that be a long
term like an established price. And the people did not
approve of that, but they're twisting it. Of course, we
have a lot more on the way. Stick with us.
(16:38):
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Speaker 11 (17:46):
The dana Is Show podcast You're Fast, Funny and informative
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Speaker 8 (17:58):
Debt cannot be wiped away. It just ends up getting
transferred to others. So why should Americans who didn't go
to college or went to college and responsibly paid back
their loans pay for the student loans of other Americans.
The Trump administration will never force taxpayers to pay student
loan debts that don't belong to them. Student loan borrowers
need clarity, and we're finally giving it to them. Borrowers
(18:20):
will now be clearly expected to repay their loans, and
those who default on their loan obligations will face involuntary collections.
The government can and will collect defaulted federal student loan
debt by withholding money from borrowers, tax refunds, federal pensions,
and even their wages. America is thirty six trillion dollars
in debt. We must get our fiscal House in order
(18:40):
and restore common sense to our country. If you take
out a loan, you have to pay it back.
Speaker 9 (18:45):
It's fair.
Speaker 2 (18:46):
Well, yeah, that's fair. I mean, you can have the
Left say whatever you want, but it's insane to have
taxpayers pay for these things that we didn't sign up for.
I mean, I don't know if left has realized that
everybody's broke. You know, we went through hell with Joe Biden.
Everybody's still trying to get over it. I mean, for
(19:08):
the love, it's the I mean, I can't think of
anything more tone death than these people expecting everybody else
to pay for their college education. Welcome back to the program, Dana,
lash with you or at the bottom of this second hour,
and all of this is so oh gosh, it's so frustrating.
(19:29):
It's I I paid everybody that I know I got,
I had scholarships, and then we paid what was left.
I can't imagine because we when we looked at the data,
it was like people that are going into grad school
and you know, people that they try to act like,
you know, they're picking up street urchins and sending them
to college. And that's that's not what's happening. It's it's
(19:53):
so disingenuous.
Speaker 12 (19:55):
You.
Speaker 2 (19:56):
I don't make people pay for my car or my house.
I don't make you know, people, I don't make any
I don't make people pay for anything that I agree
to pay, or that I anything that I purchased. So
why is this any different. It's educational aristocracy. There's no
other way to put it. So one of the other
(20:16):
things that came out yesterday, and I'm glad that the
administration really shut this down. It was a hard no
on this welfare scheme because it is free education is
kind of a form I think it's a form of welfare. Right, Yeah,
it's a form of welfare. And I'm glad that they
shut it down. Now I need them to shut other
(20:39):
some of these other proposals down. I'm pulling up my
tweet that I had yesterday because I saw this come
out yesterday and I thought, oh hmm, this doesn't seem
like this is maybe the best, the best way to
go about this. So Potis, let me pull this up.
Potis had tweeted, well, not tweeted, he was I'm ulling
(21:00):
over and I've heard this before with people in a
circle on Now, Like I said, I I think that
the deregulation is good. I shouldn't have to sit one
hundre and lay out all the things that I like,
so I can say one thing that I disagree with.
I mean, we're all adults here, right, we can all
handle it. So this is speculation, and it might just
be the team brainstorming, and then you know, kind of
(21:22):
testing the waters a little bit by suggesting that they're
going to have this New York postsas Trump Mull's five
thousand dollars baby bonus for moms in bid to reverse
declining birth rates. Well, we have that. We have that
right now. It's called welfare. We You don't need to
(21:46):
give people money to spur breeding. If you reduce the
tax burden, if you reduce government spending, if you deregulate,
you're you're going to see this happen organically to where
you're not going to have to give people five thousand dollars. Now,
(22:10):
they were saying this five thousand dollars selection or this
this choice for this, They were saying that this is
you know, it's it's five thousand dollars for people considering
starting you know, people who are going to start a family,
and it's to help I guess with like first year,
you know whatever, And some of the responses that I
saw to this were, Oh, that's great. I guess you
(22:32):
just don't want to end childhood poverty with by giving
somebody five thousand dollars. And I'm like, what where do
you come from that you think five thousand dollars is
going to end childhood poverty? Like it's five thousand dollars.
It may seem like over the span of it's not
as much as what this will cost. Let's put it
like that. Now again, they're just I get it that
(22:55):
they're just kind of like brainstorming. But I don't want
this to take root because it is it's welfare. We
have welfare. We We've had welfare for years. Kane. How
well is welfare worked out?
Speaker 6 (23:07):
Yeah, seems like it's gotten bigger, which is a problem
because there is no point in time until we actually
do the policies that he's talking about, which is, you know,
allowing these businesses to compete, lowering prices, more jobs, people
are less reliant. Until that happens, we're not going to
(23:28):
see a decrease in those uh. Sucking from the teeth
of government as opposed to contributing to the teat.
Speaker 2 (23:34):
Yeah, I guess contributing to the teeth. Look we created
an extra teat. Look at that. It's good. Why do
the people think that five thousand dollars, Oh my gosh,
it's ending childhood poverty. What five thousand dollars to have
a baby. I'm set for life. Five thousand dollars, I
never have to work again. I got five thousand whole dollars. What,
let's go to the casino. Five thousand. Seriously, it's weal three.
(23:59):
Just distribution. Here's where I'm gonna get real. Mean, this
is absolute wealth redistribution. I don't know who presented this
idea to him, but they're a communists and should be
jettison from the jettisoned from his Privy council. So why
do I say it's welfare redistribution? Well, because it is.
You guys know how much everybody pays in taxes. So
(24:20):
this is just the latest available data from the IRS.
The latest available collected data as of yesterday was from
twenty twenty two. The top one percent pay five hundred
and sixty one five hundred and twenty three dollars annually,
the average for all taxpayers now hold up, because it
gets real crazy here. The average for all taxpayers is
(24:41):
thirteen thousand, eight hundred and ninety. The bottom fifty percent
of all taxpayers, the bottom fifty percent, pay an average
of eight hundred and twenty two dollars. Now, why do
(25:02):
I say this as wealth redistribution? Why are we talking
about giving money to people who did not even pay
that much into the system. You're taking other people's tax
dollars that they earned and you're giving it to them.
This literally is indistinguishable from anything Barack Obama has ever proposed.
(25:23):
That's what it is. It's true. You either believe in
big government or you don't. There is no gray area.
We're not going to do a little end that, just
like there's no a little pregnant, right, or someone might
be a little bit of a dude. No, you either
have a weness or you don't. You either are pregnant
or you're not. There's no a little bit of anything
in this. It's black and white. Fifty percent of Americans
(25:46):
on average eight hundred and twenty two dollars. So where's
the where's the other four thousand coming from? Because it's
not them, You're giving people's money away that they didn't earn.
Can I share with you a story. I'm not caffeinated
enough today. Let me share with the story. It's one
of my favorite stories ever and it has to do
(26:11):
with Davy Crockett, not Jasmin Crockett. Heaven forbid, I don't
want to give anybody, not Jasmine Crockett. And this. There
was a book that's written about him, and it's a
great book. It's called the Life of Colonel Davy Crockett.
And it came out like in a long time ago,
and I think they redid it again in the seventies.
Davy Crockett in this, In this, some say it's low,
(26:33):
some say it's a true story. Edward Ellis, the guy
who wrote it, says it was a true story. In
the House and David Crockett was a was in the
House of Representatives. One day in the House of Representatives,
they were they had a bill that was taken up,
and it was a proposal to appropriate money for the
(26:56):
benefit of a widow of a distinguished name officer. Right,
all these people were coming up and they were making
these grandiose speeches, and the Speaker of the House was
getting ready to put the question when Davy Crockett arose
and said that he has as much as respected as
he has for the memory of the deceased, and as
(27:18):
much sympathy for the sufferings of the living, if the
suffering there be. He says, we must not permit our
respect for the dead, or our sympathy for a part
of the living, to lead us into an act of
injustice to balance to the balance of the living. He says,
I will not go into an argument to prove that
Congress has no power to appropriate this money as an
act of charity. Every member upon this floor knows it.
(27:41):
He says. We have the right as individuals to give
away as much of our own money as we please
and charity, but members of Congress have no right to
appropriate a dollar of public money. Some eloquent appeals have
been made to us on the ground that a debt
is owed to the deceased. And they said, mister Speaker,
the deceased lived long after the close of the war.
(28:01):
He was in office to the day of his death,
and I've never heard that the government was in debt
to him. And he says, every man in this house
knows it's not a debt, and we cannot with the
grossest corruption appropriate this money as a payment of a debt.
We have not this semblance of authority to appropriate it
as charity. Mister speaker, Now we can give as much
of our own money as we please. And he says,
(28:22):
I am the poorest man on this floor. I cannot
vote for this bill. But I will give one week's
pay to the object, and if every member of Congress
will do the same, it will amount to more than
the bill, asks Davy. Crockett took his seat. Nobody said
a word. The bill was put to passage, and instead
(28:43):
of passing unanimously as it was supposed to and it
would have without his speech, it only got a couple
of votes and lost. Crockett was asked why he did this,
and he said that he was thinking about the election,
or he was thinking about the summer before the election.
And he said that they were on the Capitol with
(29:05):
some members of Congress and they saw a fire over
in Georgetown, and they ran over there and were helping people,
and then they appropriated all this money and they were
sending it over there. And then while he was out
one day, he says he was taking papers from Washington
and going to the backwoods of his home, and he
was on the way to his house when he passed
(29:26):
a farmer in his field and they had words. The
farmer did not appreciate what Davy Crockett has done. David
Crockett was telling him. He's like, can I get your
vote for the next election. The farmer said, no, I
can't vote for you. I can't vote for you because
of what you did. And he was talking about the
act of appropriating all this money in Congress and handing
(29:47):
it out to people, as you know, really charity, and
he said he made the point that Crockett noted in
his speech that if some of these people in the
halls of Congress would deprive themselves of but one week,
you would have more than enough to be able to
cover charitable requests without taking it from the taxpayer. He says,
because you see, it's not yours to give. And he
(30:10):
really made him think. Davy Crockett apologized to him and
he said that I will never promise him I'm never
going to vote for anything like that again. And he
appreciated the farmer. He was humble. David Crockett was humble,
and he appreciated the farmer. Correcting him on this, and
he said, if I can have your vote, I won't
(30:32):
make a liar out of you. And then some months
later this was the speech he gave on the floor
of the House. That still is true here. It is
not yours to give. It's a welfare scheme. People always
cite hungry well Hungary, their birthright fell. They did this
(30:55):
exact same thing in Hungary where they paid people to
have kids. The birthright fluctuat. It went up a tenth
of a point and then it fell from one point
five to five to one point thirty eight. While they
were doing all of this. In every country this has
ever been implemented, it has never solved the problem. If
Republicans want to kill the Republican Party, they'll do this.
(31:20):
No good person of good moral heart or character should
ever support something like this, because, as Davy Crockett said,
it's not yours to give. We got a lot more
on the way as we roll into days of these
United States, and of course our partners that help make
the show possible. I've said for years now that our
media is just garbage. Legacy price is garbage. How does
the average person know if a news story, if the
(31:42):
source is accurate or if it's biased. Ground news can
be a great solution for that. Ground News can show
you the stories and the sources of the day, and
then they give you details about their sourcing, how reliable
the reporting is, and who owns them, and keep you
fully informed on any potential political or motivational leanings. So,
for instance, you could use ground news to read about
(32:03):
the Trump administration suing the state of Maine over participation
of transgender athletes in girls' sports. The Huffington Post said, quote,
Trump's newest political power grab is targeting Maine. The Toronto
Sun said quote DOJ is to sue Maine over trans
women competing in female sports. So same story, but two
very different headlines. Is it a power grab by the
(32:24):
president or is it in the hands of the DOJ.
You can sign up for your groundnews account today and
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(32:45):
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Speaker 11 (33:01):
Get the loaddown on the latest news with a side
of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to the Dana Show
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like SAMs through the Hour Glance.
Speaker 4 (33:14):
So are the days of the United States.
Speaker 13 (33:18):
We don't articulate as black women are pain because it's
almost like nobody ever gave us permission to do that.
Speaker 4 (33:26):
And does anyone care?
Speaker 13 (33:28):
Yeah, there's no they care that. I think we would
care if we knew, if we knew or you know, yeah,
and we have to ask ourselves.
Speaker 2 (33:39):
Are the men in our lives?
Speaker 1 (33:41):
Is?
Speaker 7 (33:42):
Uh?
Speaker 13 (33:43):
You know, why wait to be asked? You know, it
seems like what we go through is pretty obvious. I
mean maybe we're not complaining, but we're actually living nothing.
Speaker 2 (33:53):
Ann Then loud, outspoken women talking about how much they're
not heard. That's like me going, no one hears me,
Oh my gosh, I'm so oppressed. I'm so oppressed, Kane,
no one hears me. I've never been given permission.
Speaker 4 (34:15):
And look, I've ever known you to hold back feelings ever.
Speaker 2 (34:18):
Oh I'm gonna be okay, sidebar from this. So my
goal in life, now bear with me. It's gonna sound weird,
but I'm gonna bring the tug about around is to
be an old woman. Now here's why old women have
a full pass for everything. I'm just gonna be weird
(34:38):
and wild, like we're er er uh and and you
can't see me because I'll be old.
Speaker 14 (34:45):
Right.
Speaker 2 (34:46):
It's like, think about it, whenever Nana does something crazy,
like oh it's Nana. See like Granny from the Hillbilly,
you get a Nana pass. Yes, Granny past, Nana pass,
gig passed, Nana pass. However, you get a pass. So
this they nobody, nobody corrects. Everybody goes along with it, like,
(35:07):
oh that's right, Nana. Even if you think it's crazy,
you go along with it. So I really don't want
to hear nobody talk about this, right. I just feel
like women are given such a wide berth. But I
have never ever in my life felt I've never seen
an outspoken woman, a truly confident outspoken woman ever be Like,
(35:28):
I never ask permission. I don't wait, I don't ask permission.
Speaker 15 (35:31):
I just do it.
Speaker 2 (35:32):
I mean, I literally will do it. Their story I
will just do it, and then I'll and then i'll
I don't ask for permission. I'll just say hey, is
that okay? Later? This kind of how that works. But
this is so stupid. I people, women, she was the
first lady of the United States. What are you talking about?
I never asked permission. It's never nobody ever told me.
(35:53):
I God, I kind of feel like, at the end
of the day, she's the one who makes all the
final decisions in that household.
Speaker 4 (36:02):
It's the saying, well, she sounds like she gives up
all her power.
Speaker 2 (36:05):
By the way, her brother, that was her brother sitting
next to her. Oh my gosh, they're clones. I have
never seen siblings favor each other as much as those
two do. It's the spider Man mean that I did
a double take. That was wild. We have a lot
more on the way coming up next second hour. Stick
(36:26):
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Speaker 16 (37:39):
We are also requesting food companies to remove red Dye
number three sooner than the twenty twenty seven twenty twenty
eight deadline previously announced.
Speaker 4 (37:50):
These steps that.
Speaker 16 (37:51):
We are taking means that the FDA is effectively removing
all petroleum based food dies from the US food supply.
Speaker 2 (38:03):
And Democrats are gonna start chugging them. Democrats are gonna
be like, I love red dye. Whoo, love all the diyes.
Because Trump doesn't like it, we have to love it.
That's literally what they do. Welcome back to the program.
Top of the second hour. It's I Scratch Part two.
So just to let you guys know, because everybody always
asks comments like why are you going? Why do you do?
(38:25):
We were glad I'm wearing it because my sloth ie
Cane's drinking. He's taking a drink. He's like, I've heard
this so many times. I scratched my eye because I'm
a spaz. I don't know what happened. I'm so anyway,
that's what happens sewing. I'm gonna wear the glasses because
trouble scene and I did go to the eye doctor.
I had eleventy million emails. People were rageous. People were
(38:46):
met at Kane because they were like, why isn't Cane
letting you go to the doctor. And I'm like, what
Cane's do? So I'm like, no, no, no, I'm like,
I'm going. I'm good. I'm good, I'm all cool. I'm
all cool. Don't blame Kane. It's not his fault. It's
it's I'm mispads and I probably like scratched myself in
the face. I don't know anyway, So all good. But
(39:06):
I'm just letting you guys know because I've gotten fielded
some comments. You're I'm totally fine. I didn't drink any
red dye. But you know what, It's true though, Right
Trump could cure AIDS and they would be like, oh
my gosh, Trump is evil. They would be on the
side of AIDS.
Speaker 14 (39:25):
Right.
Speaker 2 (39:26):
He could cure cancer and they're like, oh, they'd be
on the side of cancer, Like that's the rage is
real cancer, I know, can you believe Trump killed cancer?
That cancer is so sad? I mean, he could do
all of these things. I don't, you know, I don't think.
I I was I was trying to think, do I
(39:50):
eat food that has dye in it? I eat pretty
whole But kin, you didn't you didn't mention that Hawaiian punch.
If I see a Hawaiian punch, I will get the
Hawaiian punch.
Speaker 6 (40:03):
And I haven't looked at it and greed. I haven't
had Hawaiian punch in a long time, or gatorad or
anything like that in a while. But if you look
on the ingredients list, I bet you that's what it is.
Speaker 2 (40:11):
You know what gatory tastes like. Gatoray tastes like it
was thrown through Hawaiian punch and then put in a
can or put in the bottle. It's weird. It's like
you expect a lot of flavor and you're like, hmm.
Speaker 6 (40:26):
The original gatorade if anybody remembered back the first time
I ever had it was in the early eighties or
maybe even late. Is it around in the eighties, Oh yeah,
And it was a it was like a powder that
you would mix and sometimes you can mix it stronger
kind of than what you should. But in reality, it's
just an electro like drink. And it's not supposed to
have a ton of flavor, color or anything like that.
(40:47):
It's just supposed to be an electroly like drink.
Speaker 2 (40:51):
The an electro like drink. I wish that you guys. Also,
I'm gonna move on to stuff. Well, but I wish
you guys could see where Cane sits. So as you
guys know, Caine, producer for the program, he sits we
face each other, you guys. You guys can't see him.
He sits at his little work desk and the in
the shadows. But he's got one, two, three, four, five, six,
(41:13):
six or five medicinal bottles. Oh my gosh, wan is
taking a picture of it. This is I just happened
to look down here, but he had the labels turned
to me like a stalker. He's got his probiotics. Do
you have two bottles of probiotics sitting over there?
Speaker 4 (41:29):
Just one?
Speaker 2 (41:30):
Those bottles like the same.
Speaker 6 (41:31):
The others are minerals, different minerals, you know, like magnesium,
you guys.
Speaker 2 (41:36):
One of the bottles is like yay hi, it's like
five hands high. What is happening over here? Why do
you have the probiotic one facing me? Just because I
was is this like subliminal messaging or something?
Speaker 4 (41:49):
This is the empty one, right? So I just said
it here so you can see. So there were two
every day.
Speaker 2 (41:55):
I swear you're paid by them.
Speaker 4 (41:57):
I just think.
Speaker 6 (41:58):
I think it's a benefit it's been to get your
probiotics from actual fermented food.
Speaker 2 (42:02):
But there's some Caine is getting ready to show everybody,
or sorry, Wane's getting ready to show everybody what I
see because this is what he's got, like a little
medicine cabinet over here of minerals. This is literally what
is happening. You guys can see on the simulcast that
is that's actually what that's on the edge of his desk.
Speaker 4 (42:20):
The supplements. This isn't medicine, no.
Speaker 2 (42:23):
But they're in like little medicinal bottles.
Speaker 4 (42:26):
It's just supplements, okay, just stuff that you don't we
don't get.
Speaker 2 (42:29):
I see I see the probiotics there, and then the
thing with the orange.
Speaker 4 (42:32):
Cap is what like that's just a fiber supplement.
Speaker 2 (42:35):
Do you have to have a giant fiber bottle it?
I'm just curious. So you're very you're very in tune
with the dye stuff, yeah, okay.
Speaker 4 (42:44):
Yeah, there's no no dyes in any of the stuff here.
Speaker 2 (42:47):
I don't think I eat anything with the dyes in it,
except maybe every now and then I'll have like maybe
a gatorade, But I don't really enjoy it.
Speaker 6 (42:53):
Yeah, I wonder, like some pills have the coating on
them and stuff, and they're red or different colors. So
maybe I even think about that, you know what I mean,
there might be some coloring on those.
Speaker 2 (43:02):
I just I mean, I'm I like that there there.
I don't have any I actually don't have any objections
to this stuff because I don't. I will say when
we went to the first time, we went to Italy,
and yeah, it was like your dream vacation. I've always
wanted to go, and I I got real, I got
(43:23):
real fit your girl, like you know, did a little
extra before we went because I knew I was gonna
eat my weight in pasta. I was like, I'm going
to eat like a fat kid in a dq I'm
gonna go nuts, and I did. Dude, I ate pasta
like afternoon. If I could get pasta in the morning,
I would because over there they know how to do
breakfast proper. They're like, oh, just because I don't really
(43:45):
like breakfast, I just do a quick thing I like
to Like when I work out, I like to work
out on an empty stomach. I don't like to have
it makes me sick. So breakfast has never been a
big thing for me. But over there, oh my gosh,
they got like the bomb baloney, they got the custard
filled don't and then you have your it's just so good.
I ate all of that, and I had gelato repeatedly,
and I literally lost eleven pounds when I was in
(44:07):
Italy because I walked over ten miles a day. Though
that's the thing you walk everyone, you don't even realize it.
But also I just noticed that I mentioned this, yeah,
starting a lot of you responded to this because you
agreed with me. I said, I'm not gluten sensitive. I
am chemical sensitive. And I had one of my doctors saying,
one of the reasons I have such sinus problems and
inflammation is because they suspect that I am gluten sensitive.
(44:31):
I'm like, I'm not gonna stop eating gluten. I love
gluten woo. Gluten is amazing. If I could eat it
just the gluten, I would. But I noticed when I
was over there, I had none of those issues, none
of the issues that I have here when we eat
our food. So I changed how I do our food.
I'm not going to grow my own wheat and grind it,
but I will only use like Italian flower and all
(44:51):
that other stuff, and I doesn't have any I don't care.
I will because I do bake a lot and I
just don't want any of that stuff in there. I
can eat this stuff that I make and be fine
if I eat it. If it's like at the store,
it's totally different. So I think it's a lot of
there's a lot of sensitivity now going into this with
the dies. How much could we actually save in terms
(45:18):
of time and cost with being preventative now think about it.
I like, so when I was in Italy, I do
the super beats. They make a thing of the turmeric choose,
which I think are absolutely amazing, and they do so
much to help infl I almost said inflation. I wish
they do so much to help with inflammation. They're a
(45:39):
partner of ours, but they don't really talk about the
turmeric choose, but I think they're one of the best
products that they have. I mean, if you have inflammation,
literally that's your jam. I go through bags of this
stuff when I was in Italy, and I think this
is because they have they have regulations about their food
and the additives and all that. You can't put all
that stuff in there. I did not have to take
hardly any of those when I was over there. So
(46:03):
then I started thinking, you know what, this is not
like a gluten sensitivity. This is a chemical sensitivity. And that's.
Speaker 15 (46:15):
That.
Speaker 2 (46:15):
I mean, that's I mean amazing, that's an amazing realization.
So think about all the time that I've spent going
to the doctor sinusitis, the medicines I've been on which
are not good for you, when you could be preventative
by removing some of the stuff from your food supply.
Think of what that does to American health. Now, think
(46:36):
bigger about it, American health, national security. It touches so
many things. So long story short, That's why I'm fine
with us, But it really is shocking. I looked at
the list of all this stuff red dye is in,
like stuff that I don't even think of. Like if
I'm thinking red dye, I'm thinking of like red foods, right,
(46:56):
like all red foods. But not necessarily. I mean it
can be yeah, I can be in like a number
of other things as well, Like it can be in
like Sherberts. There was I saw on the list. It
was like a Peach Sherbert thing, And I'm like, Peach
it's like orange. It's not even like a yellowe worn.
I'm like red dye is in this. It's in everything.
(47:17):
It is in every condiments.
Speaker 17 (47:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (47:19):
So I make a lot of my own eye well
except for ketchup and mustard, because I get the water
burker stuff of the store. I totally do. I'm not
gonna lie, but I'll I make my own dressings. So
it's in some protein powders. That was another big thing,
because I'm big on the protein powders, in the collagen
protein and all of that. Holy cow. So there's so
much stuff that it's in. What are the cherries that
(47:41):
everybody likes, the Marchino chairry. Yeah, the Marchino cherries, Oh
my gosh. But here's the big thing that really hurt
my heart the most, guys. It's in the best candy
that the Lord has ever put up on this earth,
candy corn. Oh yeah, half of you had a stroke
because I said that that's okay candy corn. Is that
(48:02):
you don't have to love candy corn as the candy
that the Lord chose for us. It's okay, No, the
best candy, but it's in I can't have candy corn.
Speaker 4 (48:09):
Now, Remember the ice cream man. He's a drive around
the neighborhood. Not in the bomb pops.
Speaker 2 (48:13):
Remember the bomb pops were the bomb. It's in that,
It's in bomb pops, It's in all of those things.
So I just assume if it's processed and it could
be kind of red, then okay, I'm not gonna eat it,
not gonna I don't need it that bad. I don't
need it so well. I just think about how much
(48:35):
money that saves preventative ice. If you could change your
diet and have you know, all of the chemicals taken
out of your your food and and all these additives,
I honestly think our overall American health would be so
much better. I think our healthcare system wouldn't be belieguered.
I think people would be healthier, they would live longer,
(48:57):
they would have more energy, all of it. I mean,
I just when you go to countries where they have
I'm and I'm not saying, this is where I run
a foul of. You know, I don't like the government
tell me what I can eat and what I can do,
and I don't like that. However, when it's so prevalent
that you literally cannot purchase unless you grow your own
(49:17):
wheat and grind it, and you know, okay, Martha, let's
go to the yard and go harvest some stuff. I
gotta go make some cake. It's it becomes a problem
that needs to be addressed, especially when it becomes a
negative on your entire country, society, and it runs up
your healthcare bill, it contributes to your morbidity rate. That's
(49:39):
those are all things you have to consider, because that's
all overall. I think it impacts national security. I think
it even goes that far.
Speaker 4 (49:46):
An ounce of prevention is worth a print of care.
That's a saying for a reason.
Speaker 2 (49:51):
I am sad about the candy corn. I'm not gonna lie,
but now I'm like, I get I'm one of those
people you tell me that something nasty is and something
all of a sudden, I don't want it ever again,
never again, I don't ever want it.
Speaker 4 (50:02):
It will look different, so maybe oh it does.
Speaker 2 (50:04):
It looks like it looks like little poison bullets. Now
candy corn. I'm like, oh my gosh, the red dye. Oh,
now I gotta go through. I haven't. I don't know
if you guys have done this, but I went through
my my little pantry and I took out like everything.
After my doctor was like, oh, you might be gluten sensitive.
I'm like, no, I'm not. I will argue with the
(50:25):
medical refreession. I'm like, no, I'm not in chemical sensitive.
Chemical sensitive. Went through everything, went with my little phone
and I'm like in there reading going through you know,
type A, going through absolutely everything and throwing everything away. Man,
it's a lot, It's in a lot of stuff. We
have a more on the way. That was my long
winded thing about why I'm actually okay with the dies
(50:45):
being removed from the foods and all that stuff. We
have a lot more on the way, including coming up you.
Oh boy. I almost hesitate to get into this topic
because people are gonna be enraged as I am now.
Texas House Republicans. Yesterday we talked to Greg Abbott while
he was telling us that they were gonna use a
two billion dollar surplus to pay down property tax the
Texas House, they decided that they were going to give
it away to crony corporatism, and in today they voted
(51:07):
to raise property taxes by three billion dollars. Wait until
you hear about this. I know you're going to need
a chair take a chair. Gold prices have surged over
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Speaker 9 (52:05):
Com And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 2 (52:15):
So let's see here we have a new Army fitness
test No more. Well, there's higher standards for combat arms
and ball, yet is standing power throw. So they're having
sweeping changes, according to an internal memo, and it includes
rebranding of this certain test, the elimination of some of
their reduced the reductions that they had for standards and
(52:40):
for soldiers in combat roles. So now it's not gonna
be the Army Combat Fitness Test. It's just gonna be
the Army Fitness Test. And nay, they said they're going
to have the everybody's super happy they're taking out the
standing power throw, where you have to hurl a ten
power ten pound medicine ball backwards over their heads, and
it's kind of ridiculed by service members.
Speaker 4 (52:59):
I don't know why, because it's more about technique than
it is strength.
Speaker 2 (53:03):
Yeah, exactly, so I don't know why you would even
have that. That's kind of goofy. But they said that
all soldiers, Army, Reserve, National Guard, they're going to take
the new AFT beginning in June, and the remaining events
of the assessments will be retained. So that's all very
good news. UAE Cabinet approves the first of its kind
AI regulatory ecosystem. They're using AI to write law.
Speaker 14 (53:25):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (53:26):
I mean, this is I'm sorry, this is stupid. We
need to be focusing right now on making tax cuts
permanent in these trade deals. I like Ron Johnson, but
we're spending Republican hearings Senate hearings on nine to eleven
conspiracy theories. Come on, come on, the it's a Renaissance
festival fire. I mean, they're really trying to be very
(53:47):
authentic with us, so authentic that they burned six buildings
to the ground in a Renaissance fire. This was in Minnesota,
the Chekhopee Fire Department. They had several buildings that burn
to the grounds of the Minnesota Renaissancesons Festival. Let's not
be too like accurate with that. We have a lot
more on the way stick with us. I've seen the
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Speaker 11 (55:06):
Not Able to catch all three hours of the Dana Show,
Subscribe to the full podcast and get news and laughs
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Speaker 15 (55:21):
We're also welcoming back former service members who were wrongly
forced to leave the military. More than eighty seven hundred
service members were involuntarily separated for not taking an experimental
COVID nineteen vaccine. Others were more informally pushed out or
decided to get out. We are welcoming actively back those
(55:44):
warriors of conscience.
Speaker 2 (55:46):
Amen, we've set letters out, we're seeking them out.
Speaker 4 (55:49):
We want them back.
Speaker 15 (55:50):
They never should have been forced come back quickly. Personal
and Readiness Department is working in real time to make
that process more and more a face, more and more
direct every single day.
Speaker 2 (56:03):
Good. They should, they should be and they should they
should get back, pay back everything absolutely because that was
insane what they did, absolutely insane. What what blows my mind?
And I brought this up. I mentioned this before we
sat down with UH Army General and Futures Command and
they were talking about recruitment. Now it's sex sectef Hegseth
by the way, just then speaking about welcoming back those
(56:25):
soldiers that were shoved out because of the rona JAB requirements.
But I remember saying something to the effect of, well,
maybe you know, we wouldn't have such a problem with
recruitment if people you know, didn't hadn't seen military members
being forced out because they wouldn't get an experimental injection
that wasn't even a therapeutic, much less a vaccine, and
(56:49):
that was just allowed to happen. It's asinine. So yeah,
they're owed a lot. Welcome back to the program, Dana
lash with you at the bottom of this second hour.
Already it's weird. I almost said first that I'm so
I am happy to see that. But now we've got
to get other things situated. I this this fall out,
over this, this, these Pentagon leagues, it enrages me. As
(57:12):
I said yesterday, you know, these people are in these positions.
They serve the You serve the office, you serve the position,
you serve the land. You don't serve a politician. You
do your duty, and your duty is not to divide
and create fodder that can destabilize national security and contribute
(57:35):
to a reduction in people who seek to serve. And
I he's got it cut out for him. I hear
from people all the time that they think that, you know,
these changes can be made instantaneously, and that just because
Trump is in the White House and hag Seth is
now where he is, that everything in the DD in
(57:55):
Pentagon is going to change.
Speaker 5 (57:56):
It's not.
Speaker 2 (57:58):
It's a fight because you have to remember how long
these people have been generationally entrenched. It would be great
if you could just do it with one appointment or
one election cycle, but that's unfortunately not how it operates.
It's not how it works. It takes a long time
to get these people out because they they're entrenched. They
were they got these positions because they were appointed, they
(58:19):
weren't elected, and they stay there and then they make
themselves indispensable because they know how everything works, and they
count on you to let them know how everything works
so they can get everything done, by the way. That's
why I one of the big reasons I opposed term limits.
I think term limits are unconstitutional. I gree with the
Founders and the Federalist papers on this, particularly Hamilton, even Adams.
(58:42):
They wrote that one of the things you have to
be aware of is if you have constantly changing you're well,
you're removing the vote from the person. Voters are the
term limit. Your vote is the term limit. Because people,
the people that I have seen who argue the most
for term limits are people who've never canvas for a
politician in their lives, phone bank, one, door to door, nothing, nothing.
(59:04):
They don't kind of be honest. These people don't do
anything at all whatsoever to get votes, and as a result,
they just want to farm out to the government for
term limits. That they want to farm out their duty
to the government for term limits. Nothing good ever happens
when you decide to juttison individual civic responsibility and give
(59:26):
it to the government. You never get it back. But
to that point, the bureaucratic class is empowered. When you
have term liments like that, you have those people that
get entrenched, the lobbyist and they mean, we have a
problem with lobbyists writing our laws. Now, what do you
think it's going to be like when those people are
always there and you just have a revolving door of
(59:48):
people every few years that come in because of term limits.
Some lawmakers I want to stay there, like Thomas Massey.
I want him to stay there for as long as
he wants to stay there, right, I think he's a
great a great example Ran Paul. I want Ran Paul
to stay there as long as Rand Paul wants to
stay there. Some others. You know, people vote for Nancy Pelosi,
(01:00:10):
you know they they I think her district is so
left they're insane. She's the Needles and Feces district. That's
literally her district. Of course they vote for her because
the rich, the super rich people that live out there,
they're not bothered by all this stuff that bothers every
other everyday people. You know, they're not bothered by any
of that stuff. So I but I agree with what
(01:00:33):
the founders had said in terms of, you know, empowering
this bureaucratic class. It's it is a danger and this
is one of the things that you have to worry
about within the d O D. And he's got a
fight on his hands. That's one of the I just
I'm it appalls me that people run to the press
(01:00:53):
instead of taking care of things behind doors. Is first off,
it's it's not New Testament. Uh, it's chaos, and it's
designed to inflict pain and inadvertently inflicts pain the greatest
amongst on the voters. Really, so big news. Dick Durban
not going to seek reelection next year. Audio sun by
twenty eight. This shocked me.
Speaker 17 (01:01:14):
Listen, the decision of whether to run for reelection has
not been easy. I truly love the job of being
a United States Senator, but in my heart, I know
it's time to pass the georch. So I'm announcing today
that I will not be seeking reelection at the end
of my term. The people of Illinois have honored me
with this responsibility longer than anyone elected to the Senate
(01:01:36):
in our state's history. I'm truly grateful.
Speaker 5 (01:01:39):
Hmm.
Speaker 2 (01:01:41):
He's been there. He's been there forever. He's been in
that seat forever. He's number two in the Senate out
of Illinois, and he is there's going to be a
battle to replace him. But he's been there for oh
my gosh, I don't even know how long he's been
there for forever. He's eighty years old. I actually think
(01:02:02):
that he seems a little younger than eighty. I'm but
I'm not, you know, trying to be nice to him,
but man alive. A lot of people thought he was
going to step aside. I just was shocked because these people,
when they get he's got a lot of seniority, a
lot of these committees, they don't like to give that
power up. They don't like to give all that up.
Eighty years old. He's been there since I was in
high school. Dick Durbin has been in his seat since
(01:02:28):
I was in high school. He first got into the
chamber in nineteen ninety six. Oh my gosh, that's crazy.
And he's been the whip since two thousand and five.
And he had a lot of influence with because of
that position. It gave him a lot of influence at
(01:02:49):
the time under Harry Reid, who you knew, who ran
the Senate. He was the he was the leader before Schumer.
And so he's going to be the fourth Democrat now.
So that so that's going to open up a number
of things, not just that seat, but it also opens
up a seat on the Senate Judiciary Committee. He was
the chairman of that in the last Congress. It also
(01:03:10):
he was he led the proceedings for kon Tanji Brown Jackson.
He's been I mean, he's on a number of different committees.
But here's the thing, this is going to be crazy.
So they have so some of the people not just
to take his seat, but also to take his position,
because you have people, I think Amy Klobach are somebody
that they've been promoting to take over some of these positions.
(01:03:30):
Pat Murray, Patty Murray and be number two in the Senate.
Brian Shatz, that's another one. But the man the fight
to replace him. There's like they say that in the race,
the primary is going to the primary is going to
be dirty. Well, of course it's Illinois Democrats. Would you
expect anything else? Isn't? Was he is? Because I know
(01:03:52):
you're feeling Illinois Kane.
Speaker 14 (01:03:53):
Is he?
Speaker 2 (01:03:54):
Was he the senator in your area? Your fam Durban?
Speaker 4 (01:03:57):
Yeah, I'm not really sure to be with you, that's
a good question. Was It's been a long time since
I've lived in Illinois, so I don't remember at the time.
Speaker 2 (01:04:06):
They have two reps that there's pulling data. You pull
this up, so it's over at Politico. This is pulling
data that was released just as a couple of weeks ago.
But they were talking about two candidates Lauren Underwood and
I'm going to unfortunately butcher this name Rajah Krishna Morphy,
and they are potentially front runners. Now, Krishna Morthy has
(01:04:30):
a nineteen million dollar war chest. Underwood only has a
million dollars in cash on hand. Representative Robin Kelly also
has two million in cash. Now, clearly not always money
in the war in the chest, isn't isn't always indicative
of who's going to be a front runner? But in
Illinois in a primary race for this kind of seat, Yes,
it does. So I'm fine with that. Let's have a
(01:04:52):
big fight. I love it when they fight, so I'm
all for them fighting each other. I think that's great,
and I think that we need more of it. That's yes,
that's what we need. But he's and he's not endorsing anybody.
He now, he he didn't endorse anybody in the video
that you saw, and he hasn't said anything otherwise. But
the Chicago Sun Times had said previously that he would
(01:05:15):
not rule out endorsing someone. I just don't think he's
going to do it in a primary. I he's got
too many tentacles and too many things. I think he's
gonna wait for things to get all tied up and
tidy and have a nice little nest egg to leave
with before he does anything like that, because once he does,
especially if he finds himself sideways with the winner, it's
kind of a big deal. You don't want to you
(01:05:36):
don't want to have something like that happening coming up.
A number of things to get into Texas Republicans just
stabbed Texas taxpayers in the back, in the front, and
in the head and kicked him. Oh my gosh, this
is crazy. We're going to talk about what they did.
We have a twenty four billion dollar surplus in Texas
and they voted to waste eight billion dollars of an
inn raised property track taxes. All of the promises about
(01:05:59):
using the surplus to paid on property taxes where a lie,
an absolute lie. We're going to talk to a state lawmaker,
Brian Harrison about that coming up. And boy o, boy
I've said for years now that our media is just garbage.
Legacy price is garbage. How does the average person know
if a news story, if the source is accurate, or
if it's biased. Ground news can be a great solution
(01:06:21):
for that. Ground news can show you the stories and
the sources of the day, and then they give you
details about their sourcing, how reliable the reporting is, and
who owns them, and keep you fully informed on any
potential political or motivational leanings. So, for instance, you could
use ground news to read about the Trump administration suing
the state of Maine over participation of transgender athletes in
(01:06:44):
girls' sports. The Huffington Post said, quote Trump's newest political
power grab is targeting Maine. The Toronto Sun said quote
DOJ is to sue Maine over trans women competing in
female sports. So same story, but two very different headlines.
Is it a power grab by the president or is
it in the hands of the DOJ. You can sign
up for your ground News account today and get access
(01:07:06):
to the mobile app, the website, the browser extension, and
exclusive newsletter so you can stay informed on the news
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Speaker 4 (01:07:37):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida man.
Speaker 12 (01:07:47):
Now.
Speaker 2 (01:07:50):
This guy seems kind of polite to the cops in
a weird way. A Florida man was caught on video
offering the cops of vodka spritzer during his car chase.
The man allegedly robbed a convenience store, led police in pursuit, crashed,
and then wrapped it by asking the police if they
had fun It was on April nineteenth and the Spring
(01:08:13):
Lake Market in Seabring, Florida, a store had been robbed.
They called the police. They identified the suspect as thirty
nine year old Richard Christopher Smith of Miami, and he
walked out with several items from the store, including alcoholic
beverge os. And when the police arrived, they saw him
in his black Chrysler pacifica minivan, driving in circles around
(01:08:33):
the store. The driver then took off grant theft. Now
he took off, spotted the authorities and they began to chase.
It lasted several miles.
Speaker 14 (01:08:40):
Now.
Speaker 2 (01:08:41):
During the pursuit, a deputy parked on the road ahead
of the driver can be heard on body camera footage
yelling for Smith to stop, but the suspect drove on
by holding a can of what authorities say was a
vodka spritzer out of the driver's side while yelling quote,
I was just going to give y'all a drink. That's it.
Then the police reported they had to use spike strips
(01:09:03):
to flatten the tires in the minivan, and then he
tried to ram two patrol vehicles. He finally came to
a halt after crashing into one. They totally tasted it
because he didn't get on the ground. And then while
he was handcuffed, he asked the officers, you guys had
fun though, right, he's being held one hundred and twenty
thousand dollars bond. I mean you gave him a vodka spritzer.
And he asked them if they had fun. Came Kane
and I are a little divided on this story. So
(01:09:24):
a Florida man was caught on camera pinning down an
eleven year old girl that he thought was egging his house.
He's said, the Hillsborough County sheriff said, yeah, you can't.
I mean he legit tackled her. He thought that she
was egging his home.
Speaker 4 (01:09:38):
All right, now tell everyone your position.
Speaker 2 (01:09:40):
Forty three year old Marris moved to okay. King's like,
that's crazy that he tackled her. If a kid was
egging my house, I would beat that kid's ass. Yes,
I would tackle them and beat them in front of
their parents, and then I beat their parents.
Speaker 4 (01:09:54):
You're a girl, you can tackle another girl.
Speaker 2 (01:09:56):
I would tackle a boy too.
Speaker 4 (01:09:58):
Yeah, you're a girl, you could tackle.
Speaker 2 (01:10:00):
So what your point is that a man can't do
this because it's a man. That's sexism.
Speaker 6 (01:10:04):
Yes, No, a man who is clearly one hundred and
fifty pounds above her is literally physically tackling her about eggs.
Speaker 4 (01:10:14):
Well, let's get real here.
Speaker 2 (01:10:16):
I think he should have confirmed that it was her
before he did it. That's his mistake.
Speaker 4 (01:10:20):
Is that really where the mistake is?
Speaker 2 (01:10:21):
Yes, that was a mistake. Mistakes should have because if
she was egging his house, I'd be like, get it.
Speaker 4 (01:10:26):
Clearly his only mistake.
Speaker 2 (01:10:27):
Yes, it's his mistake.
Speaker 4 (01:10:28):
So the tackling of the girl is.
Speaker 2 (01:10:30):
Yes, he should have tackled her until he can there's
mistakes now, No, No, he should have confirmed it first
before he tackled her.
Speaker 4 (01:10:36):
Okay, so wait a minute. He shouldn't be tackling her
in any way, shape or form because of eggs.
Speaker 2 (01:10:45):
I'm old school. I'm going to beat your kids with
whatever thing I have and tackle him, I believe. Look,
if you don't discipline your kids, I sure as hell
will I don't agree with I would expect society to
do the same. If one of my kids are out wild,
in which they never would, I expect somebody to slap
them with her.
Speaker 4 (01:11:01):
There's another side to this coin then think about this.
Speaker 2 (01:11:03):
What if it's your I just explained it. No, But
if my daughter was in someone's house, set her ans yes,
that's right. If I didn't, if I do it before
I do, because she ain't walk in after.
Speaker 4 (01:11:17):
He didn't confirm that she actually did it, He just
suspected she did.
Speaker 2 (01:11:21):
This is my whole mantra for misbehavior, kids for life,
sets for.
Speaker 4 (01:11:28):
The radio audience, she flip.
Speaker 2 (01:11:30):
Flop, totally didn't. That's the only way to deal with them.
Speaker 4 (01:11:35):
But if it's my daughter and it wasn't confirmed she.
Speaker 2 (01:11:38):
Did it in I wouldn't a tap kid if I didn't.
If I was like, well, I'm not sure, but it
could be you. Now you confirm at first.
Speaker 6 (01:11:45):
If somebody wrongfully tackled your daughter, which was my question,
what would you do.
Speaker 2 (01:11:50):
Well, I'd be like, well, what was she doing?
Speaker 14 (01:11:52):
Why?
Speaker 7 (01:11:53):
Why?
Speaker 2 (01:11:53):
Why did you? I mean if she was on your
she was on his property. I'm not saying look, I'm
not defending the guy. I'm saying he should have confirmed
it first. But I also feel like we live in
a society where you can take a knife into a
tent and stab somebody to death and hey, it's okay.
Justice for that guy. You know, I'm like, where does
it end.
Speaker 6 (01:12:13):
I'm just saying, if you're going to say that I
hate old people, it sounds like you're defending this guy.
Speaker 4 (01:12:17):
And that's where I was coming from. So you're defending
a he's forty.
Speaker 2 (01:12:21):
Three, but he's older. Yeah, but it was in Tampa.
He uh, he's a parking enforcement specialist, and they said,
oh no, he shouldn't have done this. You know, it's unacceptable.
What gets me, though, is there was a woman recording
it who just heard get All she did was go
get off her, get off her. If I was a
woman and I thought that there was a child being
(01:12:43):
manhandled by an adult and they needed help, I'm not
going to stand there and record it. I'm gonna pop you.
That's the thing. Like, he is damn lucky that there
was nobody there that thought he was trying to kidnap
this girl, because he'd be dead. He'd be dead. You
got you cannot. Oh man, there's so many variables here,
but yeah, spare the rotten, spoiled child. That's exactly what happens.
(01:13:06):
Exactly what happens. You gotta be careful some of this stuff.
A man dives into a lake to save a wounded eagle.
This guy needs to be getting a medal from Potis.
He saved a life of an eagle that fell into
a lake into his backyard. The bird was injured during
a fight with another eagle. The eagle stable has a
long road to recovery at the Wildlife Center of Southwest Florida.
Oh my gosh, right, super that's the most symbolic story
(01:13:29):
I've ever heard in my life. That actually is true.
Good point, Kaine, very good point. We have a lot
more on the way. Third hour coming up. Our partners
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Speaker 18 (01:15:05):
Got no message, They've got they've got no movement, they've
got no leader. I mean, it doesn't get any worse
than that. I mean you're defending Harvard, you're traveling Del
Salvador for MS thirteen gang members.
Speaker 4 (01:15:15):
But here's the point.
Speaker 18 (01:15:17):
You're taking twenty million dollars. If I'm looking at someone,
my vice chair of the RNC taking twenty million dollars
for another effort, it's twenty million dollars out of the
DNC's pocket. You can't be on the board of the
Fishing and Forest Company and on Greenpeace at the same time,
play account.
Speaker 4 (01:15:36):
I think it's right.
Speaker 3 (01:15:37):
Yeah, let me let me push back again. This was
not an MS thirteen gang member, and you damn well known,
come on, it was not.
Speaker 15 (01:15:45):
This guy.
Speaker 4 (01:15:49):
America, we are in.
Speaker 7 (01:15:52):
Order.
Speaker 3 (01:15:53):
We are a land of law and order, and this
administration is repeatedly showing time and time again they do
not care about what a Supreme Court says.
Speaker 4 (01:16:01):
They do not care about the rule of lots.
Speaker 12 (01:16:03):
And you cannot defend sending people.
Speaker 18 (01:16:07):
Pull think that he's immigrant, by the way, so you're
losing your effort. So if you want to try to
defend the constitutionality of deporting a legal immigrant, he's here illegally.
(01:16:28):
They check in an intel community, every intel community agency,
and the White House saying he is a member of the.
Speaker 2 (01:16:36):
I like Ryan's previous that he was talking to. Uh,
who's that little pig kid David Hawk. I mean that
dude is made of twigs and magic, like black magic.
I don't know he's like, I don't know how he's animates.
I don't know how he holds his frame. I mean
he's no tone anyway. Uh No, I'm not a fan
of him because he attacked my kids and me as
(01:16:56):
a mother and my family repeatedly on live television. Told
me that owned Congress all this stuff. He's just a moron.
It is embarrassing that he's what the vice chair of
the DNC. I mean, I want him to stay there
as Democrats because I think it's a great look for them.
But Ryan's prebus used to be the RNC chair. This
was back in like right when the tea party kicked off,
(01:17:21):
and I remember because I got no an argument with
him at a restaurant because we sat next to each other.
But then we got along because he found out he
actually realized he agreed with a lot of the grassroots stuff,
and it was like I get it, Yeah, I get it,
and ended up it ended up helping to foster a
little bit better of a relationship, but he was. He
(01:17:42):
handled that very well. He doesn't get flustered. He just
he's like Sarah Huckabee Sanders. They're just like, oh my gosh,
all right, kids, I'm gonna pull the minivan over. They
have that whole that's like the mood that settles. It's funny.
Welcome back, Dane lash with you at the top of
this third hour, but that was they were on CNN,
right oh sorry, MSNBC and for him David Hall going
(01:18:05):
ABC sorry, David Hall going yeah, and you damn well
know it. He cusses like he thinks it's gonna give
him like a plus fifteen toughness buff or something like.
The way he said it was so like he practiced that.
Speaker 19 (01:18:18):
Woh.
Speaker 2 (01:18:19):
Have you noticed a lot of lawmakers doing this on
the left particularly, They think that that somehow is a
good substitute for wit or policy, or that it makes
them appear tougher, and it doesn't. I'm gonna tell you
the person that remains the calmest and the coolest. Those
are the people that are chill when this stuff happens
(01:18:40):
and speak real calm. Those are the ones that I'm like, ooh,
that's the person you don't want to mess with because
if they can handle it when it's this hot, Uh,
what is it? What is it like when they do unleash?
That's what it's the it's a you know I these
people that do all this performative outrage on the left,
(01:19:00):
it's just so meaningless. Yeah, like Steve, Like Steve was
telling us the Tim Wallas, like, mind your own damn business.
Oh my gosh. It's so it's just cringe to watch
them do this. But him is the vice chair. He
really has no idea what he's talking about. And then
of course everybody's that's it's the conversation over the dude
who was in El Salvador that we've been discussing this
whole time, and this guy who absolutely was an illegal
(01:19:25):
immigrant here in the United States and then he was
taken back to El Salvador where he was born and raised.
By the way, here's something I was thinking of when
he said and now this was proven false in court
because the gang didn't even exist anymore. But and that's
why his asylum claim was denied. This Abrigo Garcia guy,
(01:19:50):
when he said that other gangs were targeting him, weren't
they targeting him because he was in a gang, isn't
it Hawai. It's like he health on himself. They had
other ones going down there, didn't they have other lawmakers?
Like how many lawmakers they had going down there? They
had that one dude from Florida go down there, and
that one Democrat? Who else? I had this bolded. They
(01:20:10):
sent several others down there like they were. Like I
said the other day, they're just taking turns going down
audio sound by eighteen. Now this one, they're going to
visit mach Maud Khali. This uh, this is the guy
who was the Columbia student, remember, And he was saying, oh,
it's so mean that they denied me the ability to
be there with my first born when my child's being born.
(01:20:33):
And I thought, well, you violated the terms of your stay.
You shouldn't have done that risked missing this as a
consequence audio sound bite nineteen Democrats went to an ice facility.
Now they're going to do it with this guy. Listen, well,
right now there they are. Look at them all walking through,
Marianna Presley walking through They're all walking through to meet
(01:20:54):
with this guy. Just I mean, it's shameless, it's absolutely shameless.
They I don't know. I can't believe I'm playing this.
This is newsome. I'm telling you he's positioning himself for
twenty twenty eight as the moderate. There's a real threat
here audio sund Bite nineteen.
Speaker 10 (01:21:15):
This is the distraction of the day, the art of distraction.
But's tough case because people are really are they defending
MS or thirteen? Are they defending you know, someone who's
out of sight, out of mine in El Salvador. It's
exactly the debate they want because they don't want this
debate on the terrace. They don't want to be accountable
in the markets today. They want to have this conversation.
(01:21:36):
Don't get distracted by distractions.
Speaker 2 (01:21:38):
Don't get distracted. But now you see how I'm going
to say something that might be seen. But I'm saying
this as a warning. He is a very good, very
good messenger, or he's very good with messaging. He is
similar to Claire mccaskell. He's that was his specialty before
getting into public office. Apparently he is very good with
(01:21:59):
me messaging. Did you see what he just did there?
He's like dividing the baby. He's like, yes, don't don't
be distracted by a distraction. At no point he said,
you know you're risk you're risking the appearance of defending
this guy. He didn't tell them not to do it.
He just said, don't be distracted. He didn't he didn't
justify the objections by siding with those objections, and he
(01:22:21):
didn't really technically condemn the motivations for these democrats doing it.
He just said that what he intimated, what the statement intimates,
is that other people are going to define you by this.
So don't don't you know, don't get baited and don't
fall into it. So he's giving the appearance of making
(01:22:42):
it look like he's condemning them for what they're doing
and seeming reasonable about it, while simultaneously not condemning them
for what they're doing, and yet not really actually going
to that reasonable position that he hopes others thinks that
he's taking. Does that make sense, He's he's The way
that he messaged that was very interesting. No, just don't
(01:23:02):
be you know, you're gonna you're gonna you're you're gonna
risk being defined by this. Uh, don't be distracted by distractions,
Like what does it even mean? What is the distraction?
Speaker 7 (01:23:13):
Here?
Speaker 2 (01:23:14):
Is the distraction? What they're saying, or is the distraction
like using this guy as a PR stunt. It was
like a nothing burger statement that wasn't It's very interesting
he's doing this little this stuff and making these little
quips about current events and letting it, you know, kind
of hang out there without clarification, and that way he
(01:23:35):
can look like he's moving to the middle on it
and he seems like the reasonable Democrat. He's already started
building his case for himself for twenty eight to look
like the reasonable person. Because I'm telling you what this
is what's gonna happen going into twenty twenty eight. First off,
midterms if we don't have any trade deals.
Speaker 14 (01:23:56):
Dude.
Speaker 2 (01:23:57):
I know that Democrats have been worried about losing more
seats in the House, but that could easily switch the
other way. This very fragile coalition that we have. The
biggest threat to it is Republican in action. The biggest
threat is that, and it's a something that I just
don't see them doing anything really to thwart. I don't
(01:24:19):
think Republicans have their eye on this. I have no
idea where the RNC is that, where's the RNC, Where
is the hell is the RNC with the stuff. If
you don't have these trade deals, you don't have reduced taxes,
that fragile coalition that all came together for just two things,
two tenants, it's gonna just blow up. It's gonna be horrible.
(01:24:39):
I'm just saying this is a warning because I don't
want this to happen. And then by the time twenty
twenty eight comes around, everyone, the media and they will
have convinced enough independence they will think, oh, that was
a very chaotic term under Trump. Oh gosh, total chaos,
high prices. You don't want any more of that. Let's
go to the reasonable moderate. That's what they're gonna go to.
And by that time, Gavin Newsom, because he's playing in
(01:25:02):
the periphery, is going to be making this case that
he's this moderate guy, and he's been doing so without objection.
He has these people from the right that go on
his show that use that allowed that mean he uses
him as props. You might think, well, that's great. You
know they're finding common ground. Isn't that what it should
be about. If you don't know how Gavin Newsom works,
that's an easy thing to say. He is one of
(01:25:23):
the most insidious people in politics. Next to Claire mccaskell,
she was very savvy. He has all of this baggage
and he's been able to last this long because he's
got money and he's savvy. That's why you have got
to be aware of this. I'm not saying that he's
he's smart in everything, but he's smart in uh messaging,
(01:25:44):
and he's very quick on his feet with that. Not
every Republican is, not every Democrat is. That's going to
be a problem for Democrats if they do not get
the rest of this stuff done. Oh my gosh. But
that's you know, that's that's how he's positioning it. But
they shouldn't. Democrats need to or Republicans really need to
(01:26:06):
hammer it even more. I don't think they're hammering it enough.
I mean the photo ops, did you see there was
one photo? Did that guy have one or two? Margarita's
the gang member? Because there was like two glasses with
a little thing on him, And I'm like, there's three
people sitting here and there's four Margarita glasses? Was that crazy?
(01:26:27):
I counted for Maybe I'm wrong, I don't know, but
my eye can count better than democrats. I'm just saying
I wanted a couple of other things that I want
to get to. Let's see here. Oh goodness, So Randy
Wineingarten went on Fox. It didn't go very good. What
(01:26:48):
do I want to play first? Steve? Six or seven?
Both of them are bangers. Let's start with six. So
she's talking to Martha McCallum, AFT President Randy Winegarton. They're
talking about class indoctrination, well talking for nowalism.
Speaker 19 (01:27:03):
But you don't want to indoctrinate children. You don't want
a child to hear a book read to the whole
classroom and go home and say why am I being
taught that I was born a girl? But that was
just a guess. I mean that is going to freak
out some children. They are not They're going to be
very confused at four, five and six years old. And
I know you said that you don't agree with reading
(01:27:24):
this in the classroom, but I'm saying this is the problem.
Then you got to then that same kid can't read
and is pushed all the way to eighth grade and
they still can't read.
Speaker 14 (01:27:33):
So so Martha, yeah, I suspect that you and I
agree on more that we don't.
Speaker 2 (01:27:39):
I know you don't believe me.
Speaker 14 (01:27:41):
My mind said that. What I'm what I'm saying to
you is that I saw that case. And you know
when you if you have not socialized books with parents,
and a book that may be controversial and you haven't
actually talked to your parents of your kids in that
in that classroom, that's going to be a problem regardless
(01:28:03):
of what's in the book.
Speaker 2 (01:28:05):
So, no, you're talking about sexually inappropriate material. You're talking
about I can't even actually tell you it's in the book. Again,
I'll get in trouble. How do I say this case?
I can't even say what's in it.
Speaker 4 (01:28:20):
I mean that should alone tell people how crazy this is.
Just the fact that we're having this conversation.
Speaker 2 (01:28:26):
Well, they have a big debate and they melt down
later and we'll play that later. But man Alive. Also
coming up Texas State Rep. Brian Harrison. Texas Republicans just
voted to increase property taxes and they spent eight billion
of a twenty four billion dollar surplus on not property taxes.
They have their spending it on everything from crony corporatism,
all their little special interests. We're going to dive into
(01:28:47):
that coming up as well. As we move. We got
headlines on the way our partners. I always tell people
to carry. I will always carry. I will always encourage
people to carry. I get that some people want to
diversify their weapons or ray I understand that, especially like
when we were just talking about gun free zones. I
have friends who were All I can say is that
they work in the media in New York, Washington, d C.
(01:29:09):
They are out at night because, as you know, apparently
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(01:29:31):
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(01:29:52):
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(01:30:16):
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Speaker 9 (01:30:27):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 2 (01:30:33):
A plane passenger sparked an emergency landing after the guy
convinced himself that there were snakes slithering on an easy
Jet flight from Gatwick and the crazed hallucinations they stemmed
from a snake pattern on his own clothes. Calls coming
from inside the house, the guy that's that's he was
(01:30:54):
wearing a T shirt with a snake pattern on it,
and then he felt like at thirty thousand feet he
went berserk. They said he thought that there were snakes
on the plane, slithering around the plane. Families looked in
horror because he was starting to become abusive and threatening,
screaming that they needed a land They were going from
Gatwick to Marrakesh, and they took They had an emergency
landing in Portugal. Ooh boy. Yeah, they said that they're
(01:31:18):
one hundred and eighty pass. Nobody was hurt, thankfully, but
can you imagine being delayed like that because somebody, yeah,
freaking out. Let's see, Oh boy, this is a wapt
A man lehand's a joint to a Richland officer during
a traffic stop before a major bust. He looks like
he doesn't give a care. Marijuana joint has led to
(01:31:38):
several pounds of drugs, including shrooms in ecstasy, that were
confiscated in Mississippi. The guy admitted during the traffic stop
that he smoked weed. They pulled him over for traffic
of violation, and the guy's Carl Demino fifty eight of Story, Arkansas.
He literally handed the coppa joint pretty sure. He yeah,
he can't be doing stuff like that. Oh my goodness.
(01:32:01):
I don't know why this is bad. I agree. Thirteen
Bozeman police officers were caught playing crime bingo while on duty.
Why is that caught like That's it was called midshift bingo,
like a drug dui things like that. That's silly. Stay
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Speaker 11 (01:33:24):
Make some common sense of the crazy headlines with the
Data Show podcast. You're on the go guide for getting
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Speaker 2 (01:33:37):
Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash with you. We're
at the bottom of this third hour. You can listen
coast to coast across the nation, terrestrially, hundreds of markets,
and of course digitally, and don't forget the stream. Channel
three forty seven the chats at rumble x, Facebook, everywhere.
All Right, So one of the things we've been talking
about a lot, red state rohyino hunting. This story has
me really mad. I'm glad we just came in off
(01:33:58):
a nice little break because I get real riled up
over this. Some choice words. I was firing off some
texts to some folks in Austin. One of them, I'm
guaranteeing never going to hear back from that person again.
That's totally fine. It was pretty caps lock. I'm trying
to figure out what the heck is happening here. This
is insane. Now, Texas red republic, red state, and we
(01:34:22):
are turning into a blue paradise. For the lack of
a better way to put it, this is part of
our red state rhino hunting one. It's not official to
throw the graphic up. We're getting there. We're getting there.
It's a fancy graphic, you know, but this this is
a We talked a little bit about this earlier on
So what ended up happening is, you know, Texas, I know,
(01:34:43):
voting for Republicans, you're supposed to. We were promised that
we're going to have property tax. Really, if we're promised
a whole bunch of stuff. It is not happening, according
to Texas State rut Brian Harrison, who represents the tenth district,
Native Texan. He also worked in the Trump administration as well,
and he joins us now. Representative Harrison, oh my goodness,
you are keeping us up to date with everything, and
(01:35:04):
we are grateful for it. Okay, so let me make
sure I understand this correctly, and then I'm gonna turn
it over to you. We have a twenty four billion
dollar surplus and instead of using it. I mean I
literally had on Greg Abbott, Governor Greg Abbott yesterday while
he was talking to me, that is I mean, I'm
not kidding you, Representative. Seven minutes after he left the show,
(01:35:25):
that's when you said, oh my gosh, the House just
voted to spend three billion on crony corporatism and you're
not going to get any property tax relief. And then
today you stated that they are spending eight billion dollars
of a twenty four billion dollar surplus on who knows what,
and they're voting for a property tax increase. What is
(01:35:46):
happening in Austin.
Speaker 20 (01:35:48):
You either have to laugh or cry or I spend
them a lot of time. Is just being angry, and
if you're a voter in Texas, you have every right
to be angry. Let me let me I'm not going
to sugarcoat this data, because Texans deserve the truth. I'm
tired of the politicians in Austin breaking their arms, patting
themselves on the back when they're not even doing the
bare minimum of what voters.
Speaker 12 (01:36:08):
Elected them to do Texas.
Speaker 20 (01:36:10):
Texas voters re elected President Trump by fourteen points, but
the Joe Biden Kamala Harris agenda is alive and well
in the swamp of Austin. Okay, this may go down
in history as the most anti taxpayer session in the
history of our state. It is impossible, and we're almost
all the way through session of this one. It is
impossible to overstate how much I think the Texas government
hates the taxpayers that pay the bills down here. Let
(01:36:34):
me give you just a couple examples and you hit
the highlights. Okay, we've had a twenty four billion dollar
surples and despite what some politicians down here are telling you,
we don't have this surplus because we've been fiscally conservative.
We have been the opposite of fiscal conservative. We have
a surplus because we have been over taxing Texans and
we're sitting on a twenty four billion dollar pile of
(01:36:54):
your money. And by the way, that's sitting right next
to a twenty nine billion dollar pile of your money
in a rain day fund. So we're talking almost sixty
billion dollars of your money that we're just sitting on
down here in Austin. Actually, it's worse than just sitting
on it. We're spending it, and we're spending it on
basically every left wing pet project, woke initiative, you can
(01:37:14):
imagine dei transgender ideology.
Speaker 12 (01:37:16):
And you just mentioned a.
Speaker 20 (01:37:17):
Few House bill too, perhaps the worst bill I've ever
seen since getting elected. It piles eight billion, So other
twenty four billion dollar surplus. Eight billion was set a
blaze to go on top of an already overfunded, failing
government monopoly which we're already spending one hundred billion dollars
a year, eighteen thousand dollars a student on without any reforms.
(01:37:39):
It's gonna actually make our public schools worse. That's eight
billion dollars of the twenty four billion dollars surplus just yesterday. Look,
I want nuclear power as much as anybody, but the
way to do it's by slashing taxes and slashing regulations,
not by chrony corporatism. So we spent two billion dollars
of the surplus yesterday on nuclear What did we do today?
We're not done yet, as President Trump is reining in
(01:38:00):
and trying to cut the federal NIH National Institutes for
Health because of how much taxpayer dollars that's wasting up there.
Speaker 12 (01:38:07):
Yeah, the Texas House.
Speaker 20 (01:38:08):
Voted to set up stood up the Texas in IH
to study dementia. How much is that going to cost?
Three billion dollars? Is there any guarantee any good's going
to come of that?
Speaker 12 (01:38:18):
Absolutely not. And let's talk about doze. Okay.
Speaker 20 (01:38:21):
President Trump's dozes is cutting government, reigning and spending, slashing
the bureaucracy, firing thousands of bureaucrats.
Speaker 12 (01:38:27):
Well, the Texas House has a doze too. But what
is the Texas House doze done?
Speaker 4 (01:38:30):
Oh?
Speaker 20 (01:38:30):
It's grown, government expanded, the bureaucracy increased with increased spending,
and even after the Supreme Court shut down the bureaucrats
best weapon, which is called Chevron deference. Yeah, the Texas
House Doze just protected Chevron deference in Texas courts, meaning
Texas courts are now more liberal than DC courts. Wow,
(01:38:51):
this is the most anti taxpayer session in the history
of Texas. Let me tell you what I on my own.
I went through the Texas budget. I'm on the Appropriations Committee.
I identified nine d billion dollars that we could cut
without breaking a sweat if we just stopped funding agencies
that were doing DEI and left wing transgender ideology. And
that means we could cut people's property taxes in half
(01:39:14):
tomorrow without breaking a sweat. Put our state on a
path to eliminating property taxes. We would become the economic
juggernaut of the planet. But instead the Austin Swamp is
doing the opposite. We're spending the surplus, we're growing government,
we are reducing liberty.
Speaker 12 (01:39:30):
And I've had it.
Speaker 2 (01:39:30):
I mean, I got this guy for a reason, my
little stress ball. This is crazy what I'm hearing from this.
We're talking to Texas REMP Brian Harrison, who's been a
watchdog for the taxpayer on this. So I think it's
safe to say we're not getting property tax relief. We're
gonna get a hike.
Speaker 12 (01:39:47):
Let me tell what they're gonna say. There's a twenty
four billion dollar surflus.
Speaker 20 (01:39:50):
All right, let me tell you the gas lighting that's
about to happen of the twenty four billion dollars surplus
they have set aside.
Speaker 12 (01:39:56):
They're so generous three.
Speaker 20 (01:39:58):
Point five billion of the twenty four billion for new
property tax relief. You don't have to take my word
for this. I got the Legislative Budget Board director to
admit to me in a hearing. You can watch it
on tape. It's only three point five. But what they're
about to do, Okay, they're gonna gas light you because
of mathematical errors on last session's tax relief package. It
actually costs more when they lowered some rates. What they're
(01:40:21):
gonna do is go back and just fulfill current law.
But because their math was wrong, they have to add
about six or seven billion dollars just to make up
for last sessions property tax path property tax relief package.
Speaker 12 (01:40:35):
But they're gonna pretend that.
Speaker 20 (01:40:37):
That's new to this session. So they're gonna just they
haven't done yet, mark my words. They're gonna come out.
They're gonna announce a ten billion dollar property tax relief package,
which number one is pure gas lighting.
Speaker 12 (01:40:49):
It's a lie. The real numbers three point five billion.
Speaker 20 (01:40:51):
But even if it were true data last session we
passed a twelve point five billion dollar property tax leaf package,
and what happened, property tax bills went up. Texans are
sick and tired of swamp politicians telling them they're cutting taxes.
Meanwhile they're down here cutting deals with Democrats to fund
every Joe Biden and Kamala Harris initiative that anybody has
(01:41:14):
ever cooked up in this town and making the.
Speaker 12 (01:41:16):
Texas or the taxpayers of the state of Texas who.
Speaker 20 (01:41:19):
Are being taxed out of their homes paid for it,
all the while telling them they should be applauding the
hard work of the great Republicans who are fighting for
small government down here in the swamp of Austin. It
is outrageous, and I'm going to continue calling it out
quite frankly that I don't care.
Speaker 12 (01:41:35):
Who what pisss off down here. Hexans deserve the truth.
Speaker 2 (01:41:38):
You got a lot of people behind you, so if
they come for you, they come for a lot of us.
And that's a promise. Talking to State Rep. Brian Harrison,
Texas representative, you also noted that they were trying to
force the Appropriations Committee to vote in secret.
Speaker 12 (01:41:51):
You so yesterday, this is they've done this like five times.
Speaker 2 (01:41:55):
I at least know that that's against the House rules.
Speaker 20 (01:41:58):
That they voted for that they ran down our throats.
The irony is like, I voted against the House rules
because of the amount of power gave to Democrats, but
at least had this one provision.
Speaker 12 (01:42:06):
I guess they didn't. They accidentally left in there that says.
Speaker 20 (01:42:09):
That Appropriations Committee hearings have to be held in public
with TV cameras and microphones and.
Speaker 12 (01:42:13):
Get this so much worse data. They've a point. If
you ever hear.
Speaker 20 (01:42:16):
Someone tell you that the House doesn't have Democrat chairmen,
know you are being lied to. The Appropriations Committee has
multiple Democrat chairmen. They wrote the budget in secret, So
the House budget was written by Democrats for Democrats. It
funded Democrat priorities, and it was written in secret, in
black and white, violation of the House rules. And then
the Appropriation share this rhino Greg Bonnen in order to hide.
Speaker 12 (01:42:38):
Ahead we haven't talked about this yet, in order.
Speaker 20 (01:42:40):
To hide what he wants to do, which is take
five billion dollars of the rainy day fund, okay, which
we're about to blow through the cap. Instead of giving
it back to the taxpayers that I want to do,
he wants to take five billion dollars hand it to
rich investment firms so they can make a fortune managing
your property tax dollars, your your sales tax dollars. But
(01:43:01):
he didn't want to do it with the cameras rolling,
so he forced us to meet in a small room
in a corner of a museum. And fortunately I had
my staffer there to start recording this. When I had
to read the rules to him and force him to
cancel the whole meeting, and so I was able to
temporarily kill that bill.
Speaker 12 (01:43:16):
But don't worry that one's gonna come back.
Speaker 20 (01:43:18):
They're going to rob you a five billion more dollars
that should go to property tax relief, so they can
hand it to rich investment firms on Wall Street. This
is insanity.
Speaker 12 (01:43:26):
Give us some names who well, Greg Bonham's the chair
of that committee.
Speaker 20 (01:43:30):
Let me tell you, let me tell you the worst
way to talk about the names, Dana that this hurts
my heart. Some of these people are my friends.
Speaker 12 (01:43:34):
Okay, the most egregious.
Speaker 20 (01:43:36):
Bill we've had so far is HB two, the eight
billion dollar most liberal bloated boondoggle I've ever seen since
getting elected to the public office. There were only four
Republicans that had the courage to vote against this Democrat
and Rhino constructed bill. Four Republicans had the courage to
(01:43:58):
vote against this, and we have eighty eight Republicans in
the Texas House. That is how bad things are. And
I've had it with Republicans campaigning like Ron Paul but
governing like Mitch McConnell.
Speaker 12 (01:44:09):
But that's what we have every day here in the
Texas House.
Speaker 2 (01:44:11):
That's a very good point. We're talking with Texas r
at Brian Harrison. I noticed that someone was saying, oh,
Brian Harrison couldn't show up, even though he was complaining
you were in another hearing. You were. What gets me
is it was a public hearing, so this did I
don't want to give him too much attention, but he's
an editor at this it's a propaganda thing over down
(01:44:33):
in Austin, and he was trying to accuse you of
not showing up when they try to hold a hearing
on your legislation because you were literally in another public
hearing that was also streaming at the same time, I
guess he doesn't read well.
Speaker 20 (01:44:48):
You know what, I thought that the bloggers and the
reporters in DC were liberal and low IQ. I had
no idea what low IQ was on bloggers until I
got elected to the Texas House and came down here
to Austin.
Speaker 15 (01:44:58):
Okay.
Speaker 12 (01:44:58):
So these ankle you know, liberal bloggers. Yes, they tried to.
Speaker 20 (01:45:03):
Concoct this smear that I wasn't at work, trying to
somehow find some way to discredit me, to takes me
out because they can't.
Speaker 2 (01:45:10):
They can't go after your points, so they're gonna come
after you.
Speaker 7 (01:45:13):
No.
Speaker 20 (01:45:13):
But the truth is, if he had turned on the
other TV screens, he would know that I was literally
voting on bills. I'd been the Capitol for three hours.
I was voting on bills in another hearing. It was
only for ten minutes when I was voting on bills,
and somehow in a day long hearing during that ten
minute window, my bill, which by the way, it was
a bill to stop up esg in Texas. He calls
up my bill, knowing I'm not in the room, and
(01:45:34):
then withdraws the bills, something that never happens. They usually
just wait till the member comes and here's the bill.
So what they've actually done I just tweeted this out
in their like cheap stunt that they thought, Okay, we're
gonna smear this conservative Brian Harrison because he's making us
look bad and he's exposing us.
Speaker 12 (01:45:50):
All they've actually done to Texans see through this.
Speaker 20 (01:45:53):
All they've done is help the ESG supporting leftists by
protecting ESG in the state of Texas. That's what their
cheap stunt actually accomplished. But you know what, it shouldn't
be surprising that they did something today that helps ESG
supporting leftists because Democrats, Because the truth is, Democrats control
the Texas House.
Speaker 2 (01:46:11):
Yeah, Democrats are apparently running a red state. What can
voters do? You know, I feel like, you know, they
call an email, but then a staffer reads it and
it goes right into the trash can.
Speaker 12 (01:46:21):
Yeah, so here's what you do.
Speaker 20 (01:46:23):
Yeah, call them email, but do it with a very
specific question. Don't ask them about conservative, liberal, Republican Democrat.
They all have the right answers. They know what to
say around campaign time, and that's what they're going to
say to the voters.
Speaker 12 (01:46:33):
Ask them a.
Speaker 20 (01:46:33):
Specific question, say we know that the leadership of the
House is corrupt, say we know Democrats really control the speaker,
So ask them, give me an example where you have
publicly stood up to the failed, corrupt, Rhino Democrat controlled
leadership of the Texas House. Give me an example you
(01:46:55):
can point to where you have stood up to House leadership.
And if they don't give you an answer, find them
on Facebook or worse, find them on x. I promise
you if you if you tag them in a tweet
or on x I guess it is on a post.
Speaker 12 (01:47:07):
On x they will see it.
Speaker 20 (01:47:09):
Ask them to explain to you how they are fighting
for you, what they have done to advance liberty and freedom,
and how they have stood up in a tangible and
visible way to the correct leadership in the Texas House
that is colluding with Democrats to bankrupt the next generation
and destroy liberty in the stay.
Speaker 2 (01:47:26):
They're running people out of Texas, is what they're going
to do.
Speaker 20 (01:47:28):
And well, the state, but they're running conservatives. They're running
small government, liberty loving Texans out of this state.
Speaker 12 (01:47:34):
But it's worse than that.
Speaker 20 (01:47:36):
They're bringing in wealthy liberals from all over the country
by stealing property tax money from individuals and mod on
post shops and make who they're making pay full freight
on their property taxes. But then they're offering tax a
babmis to rich multinational firms to relocate.
Speaker 12 (01:47:53):
Here and not making them pay a dime on their
property tax bill.
Speaker 20 (01:47:57):
It's the most perverse set of incentives people could possibly
imagine for this state.
Speaker 12 (01:48:02):
It's harming individual Texans.
Speaker 20 (01:48:04):
And it is enriching which most rich will multinational firms
who are bringing their left wing voters to the state
of Texas.
Speaker 2 (01:48:11):
Texas Representative Brian Harrison, you do an amazing job for
us in Austin, and keep at it, and we're here
right with you. You just let us know what we
need to do to put the heat on some of
these folks, because some of us like putting the heat
on the folks that deserve it. So you let us
know we appreciate all you do in your time.
Speaker 20 (01:48:28):
Well, the only way good things happen in Austin is
when people feel the precious, So let me reciprocate. Thank
you for the kind of words, but thank you for
what you're doing data to shed a light on this
and bring transparency to the swamp. I would say transparency
is like kryptonite in the swamp.
Speaker 12 (01:48:40):
So I appreciate what you're doing as well.
Speaker 2 (01:48:42):
Well, thank you. We'd love to have you back. I
know we will and we'll talk again soon.
Speaker 12 (01:48:45):
Thank you so much, Austin Data.
Speaker 2 (01:48:47):
It's Texas Representative Brian Harrison. You should go find him.
He's at Brian E. Harrison on X. You're gonna get
mad though. We've got all the stuff that he's been revealing.
Just FYI, we got a lot more on the way.
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Tell them Dana.
Speaker 11 (01:50:02):
Isn't you on the go and need a quick news
fix with a fun twist? Follow Dana's Absurd Truth podcast
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Speaker 2 (01:50:16):
I'll be on with my friend Will Caine on Fox
later today. Make sure you tune in in the meantime.
Today's Stupidity King.
Speaker 4 (01:50:21):
All right, it's cut thirteen. This is Jasmine Crockett. I
think she thinks IQ and IQ test stands for interesting questions.
Listen to this.
Speaker 12 (01:50:31):
He also called you lo IQ I'm sure you're aware
of that.
Speaker 11 (01:50:34):
Would you be willing to take an IQ test publicly
adds ahead against.
Speaker 3 (01:50:38):
The pattern of the nhsolutely.
Speaker 4 (01:50:42):
Raise your hand if you'd love to see that.
Speaker 2 (01:50:45):
Yeah, I mean goodness, I think we all know who
to bet on. Folks that does it for us today,
make sure you go sign up at substack, Chapter and Verse, YouTube, Facebook,
like and subscribe. I'll be back with you tomorrow.