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November 25, 2025 90 mins
Ilhan Omar calls Somalians part of the “fabric of this nation”. Dana shares the true meaning of the First Thanksgiving and how it remains at odds with what the woke left is preaching about assimilation and American values. A 38-year-old able-bodied single man with no kids is upset about losing his SNAP benefits.

Ruben Gallego promises legal retaliation over the military's investigation into Mark Kelly’s video telling military members to defy Trump’s orders. Transportation Sec. Sean Duffy encourages everyone to dress better at the airport and “try not to wear slippers and pajamas”. A biological man is crowned the 'World's Strongest Woman', spurring rightful Internet outrage.

More crazy footage resurfaces of Tennessee Democrat Aftyn Behn, who was caught on tape TRASHING Nashville, the city she wants to represent in Congress.14:30 - Matt Mowers from EU-US Forum joins us. 

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Somalis are not terrorizing this nation.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
We are helping it thrives.

Speaker 3 (00:06):
Somalis have always seen as a fabric, has seen themselves
as a fabric of this lation.

Speaker 4 (00:12):
So not only are we not going anywhere, not only
are we not going anywhere, we.

Speaker 5 (00:20):
Are not going to allow.

Speaker 6 (00:22):
Anybody to make us feel less Minnesotan or less American.

Speaker 4 (00:26):
Well yeah, we will, especially when you act like welfare
queens and you come over to the United States and
you end up stealing taxpayer dollars from people only to
use it to pay for your cars and your houses
and all this. I mean, we talked about this last week,
how they were playing the taxpayer funds for getting money

(00:49):
for autism, and so you have like a three hundred
percent is actually over looking at my notes, it was
over three hundred percent. Actually a three hundred percent increase
in these cases that they where they were claiming where
they were claiming them claiming that they had you know,
these kids had autism.

Speaker 2 (01:06):
I mean, it just skyrocketed.

Speaker 4 (01:08):
And of course it was incredibly high in the Somali
community who knew well, I mean we did, I mean
we were pointing it out. But massive, massive fraud to
the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars that we
all paid for, and not just Minnesotans, but a lot

(01:28):
of people paid for. I mean, if you're a taxpayer,
you're paying for it because all this stuff is fungible.
And so yeah, we absolutely are going to say something
to you in that regard.

Speaker 2 (01:40):
We're also absolutely.

Speaker 4 (01:41):
Going to say something to you when you come over
here and you bring barbaric practices, barbaric tribal practices.

Speaker 2 (01:49):
I mean, I can't even believe that.

Speaker 4 (01:50):
Even to understand the mayoral race that was happening over there,
you had to start. You had to learn about the
Somali tribal warfare, because apparently those lines also immigrate with
people coming over.

Speaker 2 (02:01):
This is what people object to.

Speaker 4 (02:04):
The Left doesn't want to say melting pot anymore because
they desperately need all of these different identities at odds
with each other. So they want everyone to keep these
different cultural boundaries in checks so that there is purposeful division.
It's not like the melting pot like it was when
the country was established. And so when you bring things

(02:25):
like female genital mutilation over here, when you bring Islamic
jurisprudence in the existence of sharia courts that don't even
follow civilized law. When you bring uncivilized traditions to a
civilized country, there's going to be problems. That's some of

(02:47):
the problems we're seeing, some of these problems. So, no,
you just came over here. You don't get to be
the onmbudsmen. You don't get to tell us people who
were born over here and whose family shed blood in
order for you to enjoy the freedoms that you're enjoying today,
so that you could be the bouncer for who gets
to define liberty, et cetera. No, but this is what

(03:10):
the left always does. They always do this, and the
left just gives Islamism a complete open door with this.
You know, I was thinking, we talk about this every year.
I know Russia Inbitt used to do it. I actually
didn't hear it first through him. I actually heard about this.
It was the one professor that I had in college

(03:30):
who was not a super far leftist, which.

Speaker 2 (03:33):
I know is weird.

Speaker 7 (03:34):
It was.

Speaker 4 (03:34):
I mean, now you can't even find anybody who's even
remotely moderate who is.

Speaker 2 (03:40):
A professor. But back in the day, you know.

Speaker 4 (03:43):
Back in like ninety eight ninety nine, I had a
professor who was kind of a moderate, sort of a conservative,
big time, big, big historian, and I heard about all
of this first from his class. And it gets into
the very heart of kind of what she's talking about, right,

(04:05):
She's talking about who gets to determine, like, you know,
making these claims, about making these claims about this, you
know these I'm sorry, some people need to realize we're
on air, we're live on air, making claims about what

(04:25):
they're doing in Minnesota and who's staying where and et cetera,
and making excuses for the law breaking that's happening. This
is it just kind of this is typical for the left,
and it brings me back to all of the stuff
that these the tricks that the left has pulled to
try to get people to embrace you know, far left
European communism and Marxism and everything else. And you see

(04:47):
it with how they're trying to the Islamist community particularly
has really embraced it in Manhattan with Mandannie, in Minnesota
and even in parts of Texas where it's something that
they're selling, this idea of everything's free socialism Marxism. This
is another problem. I don't think that people who come

(05:09):
over from Third world hellholes, should immediately be able to
run for office in the United States and replicate the
Third world hellhole here in this manner.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
And it brings me back to the establishment of.

Speaker 4 (05:24):
Really capitalism in the United States, because if you remember
the very first, the very first one of the first
colonies in Plymouth was not didn't go so very well.
It didn't go so very well at all because of
well the socialism that they were practicing. The governor of
Plymouth at the time, William Bradford, he wrote these memoirs

(05:48):
after all of this has happened, and he noted how
when they first arrived in the New World, when the
Pilgrims first arrived, they had this grand idea to everybody
had this commune, right, a happy hippie commune, basically where
they have collective property ownership. Everybody owns, you know, everybody

(06:11):
owns the same thing. Everybody is. You know, they all
work together. It's all happy. They can all share the
fruits of the labor. And it sounded great on paper, right.
They thought they were going to be just showering in abundance.
The first Thanksgiving, right was not, I mean the first

(06:35):
Thanksgiving was the celebration of what really happened, actually overcoming
what really happened.

Speaker 2 (06:39):
Though they starved to death. Half of them died.

Speaker 4 (06:43):
They starved to death because people did not want to
work to feed someone else's kids. No one's going to
love your kids as much as you do. And I
think it's parental abuse to expect other people to work
their backsides off to provide for your family. That's grifting.
That means you hate your kids. If you don't want
to work to feed your kids, you hate your kids.

(07:04):
Bottom line, If you don't love them enough to even
do that, then you're a horrible excuse for a human.
It's disgusting and this is what killed people back in
the day. This is what got half of these colonists killed,
is because people did not want to work to feed
other people's kids. Some of the people did not want

(07:27):
to work, some of the men did not want to
go and plow fields, some of the women did not
want to cook for other people's husbands. So the result
was that no food was being prepared and the fields
were completely untilled and unplanted.

Speaker 2 (07:43):
They argued, they bickered.

Speaker 4 (07:47):
Famine just devastated that first colony in Plymouth devastated. But
how could this be? It was a collectivist utopia. It
was all a foundation all about communal sharing, social altruism.

Speaker 2 (08:11):
How in the world.

Speaker 4 (08:12):
I mean, they wanted to recreate what was found in
Plato's republic. Everybody works and everyone shares in the result
of that work. No one had private property, no one
had any self interested acquisitions. Nothing. So the memoirs of

(08:33):
Governor William Bradford at the time he was the head
of the colony, he noted that the colonists they for
a time, they collectively cleared, they collectively worked the land,
but they did not bring that bountiful harvest that they
had hoped for. They also didn't bring the shared He's
noted the shared and a spirit of shared and cheerful brotherhood.

(08:55):
The people that you had some lazy people in the colony.
They were slow plotted along. They didn't have any incentive
to work because they knew that no matter what happened,
they were going to get food for themselves and their families,
not just some food, but an equal share. See, this
is what equity is. It's not it's a guarantee of outcome,

(09:22):
regardless the labor that is invested in the return that
gets that outcome, so they had they didn't have any
reason to work hard. Why would they They're going to
get fed either way. So the harder working colonists got
understandably mad and incredibly resentful that all of the stuff

(09:46):
that they were doing was going to be taken and
redistributed to the other neighboring, their neighbors in the colony
who just didn't want They were workshy, they didn't want
to work, and so that began to infect the hard
working industrious colonists. They saw they were being penalized either way.

(10:07):
If they worked hard, they.

Speaker 2 (10:07):
Didn't get anything extra.

Speaker 4 (10:09):
There was no extra reward for their extra efforts, so
they soon too began not showing up and were less
diligent in their work. And this is something Bradford explained
that for the young men that were able and fit
for labor and service, he said that they they should

(10:30):
spend their time and strength to work for other men's
wives and children, but they didn't want to without recompense.
He said, the strong or men of parts had no
more division of food, clothes, et cetera than he that
was weak and not able to do a quarter that
the other could, and this was thought injustice, He said,
the aged engraver men to be ranked and equalized in
labor and food and clothes, et cetera with the meaner

(10:52):
and younger sort. They thought it was They were indignant,
and they thought it was disrespectful to them. And for
men's wives to be commanded to do service for other men,
like dressing their meat, washing their clothes. They thought that
that was slavery. And their husbands could not deal with
it either. They tried this for two years, two years,

(11:12):
and they starved to death, famine death, and then they
only after the second year they only had a fraction
of the original Plymouth colony. So Bradford realized, oh boy,
we're gonna have to redo this entirely. He and the
elders of the colony they decided they would introduce private

(11:33):
property and the right of the families to keep the
fruits of their own labor. He said that it turned
out to be a very good success. It made all
hands very industrious. So as much more corn was planted
than otherwise would have been by any means that anybody
could use. They said they had they had better yields.
The women went willingly into the field. They took their

(11:53):
little ones with them to set corn, they cooked, they
they experienced a great bounty of food. People train, they
had their private land, and when harvest's time came, they
said that not only every family produced more than what
they needed, they had surpluses, and they began freely exchanging
it with their neighbors for mutual benefit and improvement. Out

(12:15):
of the goodness of their own hearts. They were incentivized.
So when harvest came, they rejoiced and they thanked God
for the bounty.

Speaker 2 (12:28):
They felt blessed. They saw the effect.

Speaker 4 (12:31):
Of their good planting and their planning, and the experience
taught them that collectivism there isn't success there individualism, this
social contract. Working and being able to enjoy the fruits
of your own labor, and then realizing that you have

(12:54):
been blessed, that you through the blessing you have received,
you want to bless your neighbor. They realized that socialism
was entirely incompatible with the American experience and really human nature,
and Bradford even wrote that compulsory altruism and collectivism were

(13:17):
inconsistent with the nature of man, and so they gave thanks.
They're in the wilderness. They got together and broke bread
and they gave thanks for surviving through two years of
hallacious collectivism and socialism. And that was the lesson that

(13:38):
was learned. It was the first lesson in civics in
this country. And now look at what it has borne.
Can it be kept?

Speaker 2 (13:48):
Is the question?

Speaker 4 (13:50):
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Speaker 2 (15:12):
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Speaker 8 (15:13):
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Speaker 5 (15:43):
Like SAMs through the hour glass.

Speaker 6 (15:45):
So are the days of the United States.

Speaker 1 (15:49):
Some boots Nelson Scott is on the verge of losing
access to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. He
is thirty eight, non disabled, doesn't have any kids, doesn't
go to school, and.

Speaker 5 (16:01):
Doesn't have a job.

Speaker 1 (16:03):
Those are just some of the reasons he's no longer
eligible for SNAP benefits. How much should SNAP help you?

Speaker 5 (16:09):
They have me a lot, gotta get two ninety two
a month.

Speaker 1 (16:12):
The US Apartment of Agriculture crackdown is led by President Trump,
who signed the One Big Beautiful Bill into law in July.
The government shut down stalled the November first deadline for implementation.

Speaker 4 (16:24):
What is wrong with that guy that he can't work?
He's walking around doing everything. He's a young man. He's
walking around and can do anything. You know, he's able bodied.
Why can't he work? Neither shall you work nor shall
you eat? So why can't he work? There's so many
of these instances, and you know, people are upset if
I guess they had their benefits terminated and they were

(16:47):
showing no inclination to work. But you know, you should
have to work if you're going to get any kind
of taxpayer benefit. That's you know, I mean, it's our money,
it's our money. This is exactly what I was talking
about with the first with the earlier colony in Plymouth.
You know, you had all these people, had a number
of them that didn't want to work, and when they
were all living communally, the other colonists they did not,

(17:09):
they were they were resentful. When you redistribute the hard
the fruit of everyone else's heart labor in this regard,
you make people resentful. And that might also be the goal.
To drive down production, to drive down incentive, to drive
down motivation, to drive down ambition, all of it. That
could very well be a part of the point in

(17:31):
doing that, but it's it's it causes people to be resentful.
You can't force you can't have compulsory altruism. That's something
that when people are able to benefit from what they earn,
they are then motivated and inclined to do that. Whenever

(17:52):
you have periods of high taxation and you know, heinous
like right now, government strangulation of the economy still, then
you always have dips in charitable giving, because that's one
of the first things to take the hit.

Speaker 2 (18:09):
It's charitable giving and it decreases, so you can't you
can't force.

Speaker 4 (18:17):
Altruism and it's not edifying to have it forced either
does that doesn't do anything to help anyone. And government
care is mediocre. I mean that's almost worse than not
no care. In some instances it probably is worse than
no care. But just as we learn from the colony
that almost failed Plymouth, you can't force this stuff, not

(18:40):
at all. So coming up in our second hour number
of things, Uh, the issue that Republicans got to deal with.
They have to stop spinning and look that midterms might
be affected. They got to get their messaging on the
economy right and foreign policy. There's a little bit of
a schism in the administration. We'll discuss stick with us.
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Speaker 10 (20:06):
Bigation into Senator Kelly, what is your level of trust
in the US military justice system if it were to
get that far to handle this?

Speaker 11 (20:18):
I trust I trust them actually a lot, and for
a couple of reasons. Number on, these are professionals. They
are also swearing to the Constitution of the United States.
They know that there will be fallout and consequences if
they are used in a in a you know, a
hard uh. You know, uh way to to basically railroad
someone like Sara Kelly because Donald Trump's gonna be gone

(20:39):
a couple of years.

Speaker 4 (20:40):
Uh.

Speaker 11 (20:40):
And if you're part of the military that is going
after sitting senators, sitting members of Congress, and part of
you know, the weaponization of government, there will be consequences
without a doubt. So you know, I think there's gonna
be a lot of officers that will be part of this,
uh you know, uh potential tribune if they want to
call that, they're going to be looking over their shoulders
because they know that Don Trum will be gone and
they will not have the protection. They're gonna have to

(21:01):
do the safest thing possible, which is while the concerts
in the United States and you'll be fine.

Speaker 4 (21:09):
I think it's so asinine that they're surprised that anything
would be said of the video that they made. That's
Ruben Galleco, who is a congressman. He was talking about
them looking at the names of them, the six Democrats
who made the video encouraging members of the military to
just refuse quote unquote illegal orders. And then what's more,

(21:31):
we played audio yesterday of Slockin Goodlender and Jason Crowe,
all of whom were in this video, and they were
all asked, to the credit of the lefty reporters, that
we're talking to them.

Speaker 2 (21:44):
I was actually kind of surprised at this.

Speaker 4 (21:46):
They were all asked, well, what were the illegal orders
that Trump gave? Like, what were they? If he gave
illegal orders, what were those illegal orders? Not a single
one of them could actually articulate what those illegal orders were. Well,
I don't don't know, or well, we're just saying, so,
what hypothetically you decided to make a video telling military

(22:07):
members to ignore these vague illegal orders that you refused
to name from the President of the United States, Like,
why would you make the video knowing you're gonna get
a lot of feedback on this? Why would you make
this video without in the video or after explaining what

(22:30):
the illegal orders were and why you thought they were illegal.

Speaker 2 (22:35):
This is what's so stupid about this.

Speaker 4 (22:38):
They made this video and they put themselves out there
and they had no idea, Well what illegal orders specifically, Well,
we don't know. You don't know, Oh, you don't know,
he doesn't he doesn't have any Oh okay. Even Kelly
was asked that he couldn't list a single thing. I

(23:00):
watched a I think it was on miss now sounds
like a only fans site. And he said, this is
what his answer was. I'm reading it to you. He
was Kelly was asked and he couldn't list anything, and
he said, well, you know, just you know, politically, political motivation,

(23:23):
and he couldn't. He was They asked him again, Gosh,
his answer is something even more ridiculous than Kamala Harris.
The thing is is that there isn't There wasn't anything
that that that was said. I mean, specifically what what
hag Seth had said. There's vague rhetoric and ambigity in

(23:43):
the military. Vague rhetoric and ambiguity undermind's trust creates hesitation
in the chain of command in a roads cohesion, he said.
He said that we already have clear procedures for handling
unlawful orders, and it does not need political actors injecting
doubt into an already clear chain of command. Of course,
that's you know, exactly what they did. So now they're
going to look and see and determine whether or not

(24:06):
there was wrongdoing in this. And it seems to me
like it kind of is. It seems to me like
they're kind of is that sounds like an insurrection. By
the way, you're telling people to disregard members of the military,
to ignore the executive and just disregard orders. That's what

(24:29):
really they want to say. They just said, well, illegal orders,
because they don't want to say, well, just disregard the
orders from the executive because then then you could really
make a case that they're talking about sedition. But what
they said was no, no, no, well illegal orders, knowing
full well that there aren't any illegal orders. But they're
hoping that people don't really pay attention to the specifics,

(24:51):
just orders period.

Speaker 2 (24:53):
That's what they're hoping.

Speaker 4 (24:55):
I mean, it's it's like a Mott Bailey in a way.
It's just very not a single one of them. No
interview have they given or they've been able to state, yes,
this is, this is this will do it, this is
four So this is the big one. Gallego then same interview,

(25:18):
he is he's promising legal retaliation. So it was bad
enough that they said illegal orders, right, but now he's saying, well,
if anybody investigates Mark Kelly, is this the one we
open with. I thought we played the other one. I
thought there was another one. Well, he was saying that
if there's any investigation in a Mark Kelly that we're
going to retaliate, we'll retaliate. How what do you mean retaliate?

(25:45):
Like do what?

Speaker 2 (25:46):
What are you going to do?

Speaker 4 (25:47):
I mean that's something for the military to determine. That's
not something that Gallego's privy to. If they make the
determination that what Kelly did is in and he's treating
on his previous service as a way to encourage sedition,

(26:08):
then if they determined that that's, you know, an actionable offense,
they will, But at the very just the very minimum,
I'm not quite sure, especially if Democrats can go out
there and say that January sixth was an insurrection. I
sure as hell can say that this video was sedition.

(26:29):
But they put the whole illegal orders, Well again, what
illegal orders are you talking about? Which ones in particular
are you talking about?

Speaker 2 (26:39):
What illegal orders? They can't name them.

Speaker 4 (26:43):
I will say that I think the administration needs to
be careful and how hard they go after Kelly, because
he desperately would love to be elevated to be at
the same level as Gavin Newsom, and he is looking
for an apparatus. He is looking for something that he
can use to leverage himself into that seat, something that

(27:05):
he can use, that's what and this could be it
for them. Maybe it just all depends. But it's a
problem that they created. I mean, this is this is
so asinine that they're even objected, that they're shocked that
they would you would even have this. Now, Trump was saying, look,
this is sedition, and you know what that is. You

(27:28):
know what that means. And they're all accusing him of
saying execution. He had said, in the olden days, if
you said a thing like that, that was punishable by death,
and he said that seditious behavior is punishable by death.
It is. And I mean, these are people who said
more that and more about Trump and people who voted

(27:50):
for Trump.

Speaker 2 (27:51):
It's true.

Speaker 4 (27:54):
He had he tweeted seditious behavior punishable by death, and
then and he reposted a couple of things.

Speaker 2 (28:01):
One of them was hanging them George Washington would.

Speaker 4 (28:06):
So these people are angrier that what they're being called,
their actions are called sedition, for which the punishment is
that is death.

Speaker 2 (28:15):
They're not.

Speaker 4 (28:16):
But then you have Mark Kelly going out and telling people, well,
he said he's going to execute.

Speaker 2 (28:20):
Me wait a minute.

Speaker 4 (28:21):
You guys were all big and bad a second ago
making these videos saying ignore the ignore the executive. Now
you're claiming that he wants you to be executed. That's
not going to fly. Kelly was like, well, I said
something real simple and non controversial. No, you actually didn't.

Speaker 2 (28:41):
You.

Speaker 4 (28:41):
You claimed that military members should ignore illegal orders and
then you failed to articulate illegal orders. This is here,
We'll play this again. This is cut three, just so
you understand what he said.

Speaker 12 (28:52):
Listen, well, Rachel, I said something that was pretty simple
and non controversial, and that was that members of the
military should follow the law. And in response to that,
Donald Trump said I should be executed, I should be hanged.
I should be prosecuted. He even went on and said

(29:14):
something about go get them, I guess sending a mob
to round me and the other folks up.

Speaker 2 (29:21):
So this is always the victim.

Speaker 4 (29:26):
I love these people who are so badass, and then
the moment you push back like Roper's, they're like, oh me, me,
they're the victim. Suddenly what Trump said was this is
seditious behavior. Sedition is punishable by death. And he reposted
someone else who said, well, Washington would have hung them.
He's not calling for you to be executed, not like

(29:47):
what you guys have been saying about conservatives and Republicans
for over ten years. We're going to We're not going
to allow you to do this, to tell people to
basically commit sedition to overthrow the government and rebel and
then suddenly you're going to coward your little safe space.

Speaker 2 (30:02):
Oh he hit me.

Speaker 4 (30:04):
He said he's gonna execute me. I mean again, I'm
gonna say this one last time. If January sixth is
an insurrection, this is sedition.

Speaker 2 (30:13):
These are your rules.

Speaker 4 (30:14):
You guys got to play by your rules. If January
six was an insurrection, oh, this is definitely sedition, seditious behavior. Absolutely,
I mean, these are your guys rules about definitions, right.

Speaker 2 (30:30):
Absolutely.

Speaker 4 (30:31):
I actually think even on its face, this is a
hell of a lot closer to sedition than anything January
six was about.

Speaker 2 (30:36):
It was not an insurrection.

Speaker 4 (30:38):
That's the stupidest, most uneducated thing I've ever heard describing
that event. I'm glad that the people who cause damage
got in trouble because my tax dollars got to fix
that stuff. And I don't like that. But to act
as though objecting to the verification of different ballots from
different states that got rid of things like signature verification

(31:02):
and date verification. These are facts. Georgia had to amend
their own state constitution for this. For COVID objecting to
that isn't overthrowing the government, nor is it an insurrection,
nor is it trying to stop a free and fair election.
We didn't Republicans didn't do what Democrats did in twenty sixteen.
We're not letting these people write rewrite history on this.

Speaker 2 (31:24):
But these are the rules. This is sedition. This is
how this works. So I don't know.

Speaker 4 (31:30):
And Mark kelly Pin playing the victim, I don't think
that's going to go very well except to you know,
maybe his base, but that might be it lawlessness and disorder.
Though I wanted to get into some of this too.
With the time we have, we'll have to talk more
about it after headlines. But I'm sure you guys, this
is on the L train in Chicago. This story is Asinine,
a guy, career criminal who has arrested seventy two times.

(31:53):
Let me rephrase that, a violent repeat offender whore, but
was arrested for seventy He was right, said seventy two times.
He was only out like maybe what a week before
he set this woman on fire, this devout Christian woman
and set her on fire and killed her on the train.

(32:14):
The judge after he had punched a social worker and
a separate case in August, even though it was acknowledged
that he posed a danger to the public because he
was so violent, the judge let him walk. Cook Hunty
Judge Teresa Molina Gonzalez freed him despite the fact that
everyone was saying he is dangerous. We're going to talk

(32:35):
about this coming up as we move. People who upbring
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Speaker 6 (33:28):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's quickfive.

Speaker 4 (33:34):
I did not have this on my bingo card for
end of the year craziness. But a politician named Adolf
Hitler is set to win election in a Southern African country.
Oh yeah, it's a real story. It's absolutely true. This
individual name Adolf Hitler, Adolf Hitler Hunona, fifty nine is
poised to win a second local election in Namibia on

(33:56):
November twenty six tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (33:58):
He's going to hold his seat.

Speaker 4 (34:00):
He got eighty five percent of the vote in twenty twenty.

Speaker 2 (34:04):
Yeah, he's a member of a very left wing party.

Speaker 4 (34:07):
And he said that I guess his dad liked the
name and that named in that because he apparently saw
it in the news and liked the name. And he
just said that publicly, he doesn't go by Hitler. He
just admits Hitler, but he everybody calls him Adolf. But
he said he's not going to change his name.

Speaker 2 (34:27):
That's wow.

Speaker 4 (34:28):
And also apparently his car does have a swastik on it,
at least that's what the New York Post says. Might
be a little bit more than he likes the name.
Just thinking. Scientists issue an ominous warning over a mind
altering brain weapons that can control your perception, your memory,
and your behavior. They say the tools to manipulate the
central nervous systems today confused or even coerci, are becoming

(34:51):
more precise, more accessible, and even more attractive to different
states for use. It's in a newly published book from
two professors at Bradford University and they say that China, Russia,
US and even ukban researching these so called central nervous
system or CNS weapons since the fifties, and they said

(35:11):
it's become so advanced that it actually could be created,
which they said is terrifying. And I agree with that.

Speaker 2 (35:18):
Volcano in Ethiopia has erupted for the.

Speaker 4 (35:21):
First time in twelve thousand years. That's crazy, twelve thousand years.
Thick plumes of smoke up to nine miles shot up
into the sky, according to the Toulouse Volcanic Ash Advisory Center.
It's in Ethiopia, is a far region, about five hundred
miles from northeast of Attis Abba, and they said it

(35:44):
erupted for hours. The volcano rises about fifteen hundred yards
in altitude, sits in a rift valley, and there's two
tectonic plates that meet there. So they said there's a
lot of activity, but still for hours.

Speaker 2 (35:57):
It erupted for hours.

Speaker 4 (35:58):
It's a lot the This Thaie woman was found alive
in a coffin after she was brought in for cremation.
According to the Associated Press, this is insane. This woman,
she shocked the staff they brought so they brought the
coffin in and she began moving. Kind of scared the
bijeebers out of the staff because they were.

Speaker 2 (36:20):
Getting ready to literally, like you know, cremate her.

Speaker 4 (36:23):
And apparently they saved her because she was still. She
opened her eyes and was moving. It's kind of scary.
Everybody's worst nightmare. Stick with us. We've got a lot
more in store. The folks who won't make the program possible.
It's our friends over at Patriot Mobile. This is my
cell phone service. I really so appreciate everything that they do.
Patriot Mobile helps mobilize and they well, first off, yes,
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Speaker 9 (37:45):
The Dana Show podcast You're Fast, funny and informative news
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Apple or wherever you get your podcasts out.

Speaker 3 (37:56):
Are coming in. But I think we have to think
of but how do we do.

Speaker 5 (38:00):
A better job.

Speaker 3 (38:01):
How do we, you know, maintain maybe some of that
frustration we have as we travel this Thanksgiving season. Maybe
we should say please and thank you to our pilots
and to our to our flight attendants.

Speaker 5 (38:13):
I think again, I.

Speaker 3 (38:15):
Call this, uh just maybe dressing with some respect. Uh,
you know, whether it's a pair of jeans and a
and a decent shirt, I would encourage people to maybe
dress a little better, which encourage us, encourages us to
maybe behave all a little better. Let's try not to
wear slippers and pajamas as we come to the airport.

Speaker 5 (38:34):
I think that's positive.

Speaker 4 (38:35):
God love him, he's trying so hard, right, I feel
him on that Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash
with you or at the top or bottom of the
second hour, even if it's a red eye flight. I mean,
you can dress comfortably, But ain't nobody need to be
seeing your bedroom slippers and the airport that's nasty.

Speaker 2 (38:51):
That's nasty, And what are you going to do?

Speaker 4 (38:53):
Take them slippers back home and walk around in your
home with them after you've been walking through the airport
with him nasty? So gross.

Speaker 2 (39:02):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (39:03):
I've taken red eye flights, I've taken transatlantic trans Pacific flights,
and I've done overnight flights, and it's you know, you
can dress comfortably, doesn't mean you have to look like,
you know, a slob and like stained sweatpants and that,
you know, doesn't you don't have to look like that.

Speaker 2 (39:25):
But I do think that.

Speaker 4 (39:26):
It is, you know, just it's just shows a just
a modicum of self respect and also respect for fellow passengers,
because nobody likes being next to the sloppy, disgusting person,
and everybody has one of those stories on the flight
where you're next to somebody who's just whether it's proper

(39:48):
hygiene or dressing in a way that doesn't have stained
food on it, it just, you know, is know what
I'm talking about. I really I that's one of the
things in the days of YR, at least that they
got right is that they dressed the part they dressed
and they looked nice people when they would stop. It

(40:10):
did matter what your background was, did matter where you
came from. You just stressed nice. You don't have to
dress designer. You just stress nice, right, You just you know,
you take care of yourself. I have seen some stuff
at the airport. Let me tell you something. I have
seen some things. I've even seen people who have gotten
into arguments with gate agents over the stuff that they've worn.

(40:35):
I've seen everything. It's usually women who are the offenders.
They're usually the biggest defenders of this rule. I haven't
seen it as bad with dudes, although I have seen
it poorly with dudes before. But usually it's you know,
dressing like Slavs. Really, I've seen more women than men,

(40:55):
but I think it's just easier. I think it's harder
as a woman to dress up more because there's so
many different options. Right where guys you got like one
uniform kind of But anyway, just don't wear slippers in
the airport, don't wear your pajamas in the airport, even
if you're going on a red eye, you just wear like,
just wear something soft and comfortable. It doesn't have to

(41:16):
be jammys, though I have seen I've seen dirty pajama
pants before with dirty, disgusting slippers in an airport where
the bottoms of them were like black, like with dirt
and stuff. Oh I can't. And you know these people
are gonna just wear them right home, wear them right home.

Speaker 2 (41:35):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (41:36):
That's just something I just can't abide by. Just dressed decently.
Poor Duffy, poor Secretary. Duffy's trying to roll hard with that.
So I guess let's just hit this. This is cut
twenty the I don't know if you guys saw this,
but there is there's a lot of outrage over well,

(41:57):
it's the South Park episod come to life with the
Strong Woman, where you have a dude that wins the
strong woman competition. And that's what ended up happening at
the twenty twenty five World's Strongest Woman competition because the

(42:19):
guy who won it is literally a guy, and he's
a former porn actor and he's trans now and it
took place just a few days ago here in Texas.
The guy, Jammy Booker, he's a transgender athlete, so he's
a male who pretends to be a female on the

(42:40):
pro Strong Woman stage. He's done three international performances and
he won the biggest of the year, and a lot
of people people found like videos of his old life
where he was a dude. He went by the name
Jammy j apparently according to a number of like fitness

(43:02):
Vault has it where he was listed as a transgender
adult film actor. Anyway, there's a lot of fury at
this because it's called the Strong Woman Competition, and he's
a pretty big dude. By the way, he's a large dude.
I don't I don't know. You can watch this. This

(43:24):
has cut twenty Wow. This is one of the people,
the woman who should have won, who came in second place.

Speaker 2 (43:31):
This is what she had to say about it. Watch
for her.

Speaker 4 (43:46):
She just walked right off. She's like, I'm not even
dealing with it. She just walked right off. She said,
this is BS, and she just walked right off because
she should.

Speaker 2 (43:54):
It is BS.

Speaker 4 (43:55):
She should be first place. She's a woman. It's the
Strong Woman Competition, and this adult male won it. This guy,
he's gone through puberty as a dude. He's lived a
lot of his adult life as a dude. He's just
he decided to start identifying as a woman because apparently
women's sports and women's athletic competitions can be treated as
JV and he ends up winning. It is literally the

(44:19):
South Park episode, which I wish we could play but
we can't because you know, licensing and all that stuff.
But yeah, they had the guy who ended up winning
the Strong Woman competition. It was just so far. I mean,
it's South Park come to life. It has absolutely come
to life now. But there are people who are criticizing

(44:42):
the second place winner for walking off the stage. When
why would she stay up there and debase herself. It's disrespectful.
I mean, you have a man who is beating all
the women to take the trophy, and the woman for
whom the competition was created and named Strong Women is

(45:05):
now kicked to second place.

Speaker 2 (45:09):
They should not be competing in the women's category. They've had.

Speaker 4 (45:11):
It's this, It's literally South Park right here. This is
what happened in Arlington, Texas at the Strong Woman competition.

Speaker 2 (45:17):
That's it. That is absolutely that's what happened.

Speaker 4 (45:21):
They could have there's a reason why you have You
don't have women pretending to be dudes going into.

Speaker 2 (45:26):
Dude, sports, because biology is real.

Speaker 4 (45:29):
If there was a construct, then you would immediately adapt
to whatever strengths that men have. You would immediately your
body would reflect it. You could morph into it like
a were wolf, like a ware trans could just morph
into it, and you would immediately adopt all those strengths.

Speaker 2 (45:48):
But that's not how biology works. Doesn't work that way.

Speaker 4 (45:53):
It's not This is not about science, and it's not
about fair competition, and it's and it's not even about women,
even though they're trying to say that it is not
about women at all, and that's not fair. So I
don't know why how would this encourage anybody to even
continue competing in this competition when you know that you're

(46:14):
not going to get a fair break at it, you're
not going to get a fair crack at it at all.
That's you know, I don't know. This is what Sophie
Cunningham said. This is cut twenty one talking about this issue,
which it's true.

Speaker 10 (46:30):
Listen, I think, and this is my personal opinion, but
if you are a professional football player, basketball player, really
any sport, but let's just take a basketball because that's

(46:51):
where we're both at. Like to me, like, if you're
in that elite level group. Yeah, you should be able
to beat the girls. Like I'm not I'm not surprised
by that, Like that is not U. But I just
don't get why it's continuing to get brought up and
like if women are are saying that, like he couldn't
beat them, Yeah he could. Any NBA, any NBA star

(47:14):
or player could beat a female in high school.

Speaker 2 (47:16):
Yeah, absolutely, because they're dude. Yeah, they're dudes. Because there dudes.

Speaker 4 (47:20):
You had a soccer team here in Texas that beat
the women's USA team because they're guys.

Speaker 2 (47:27):
It's different, it's different.

Speaker 4 (47:31):
That's why I can't even be like we have to
have basic education on biology, like we're gonna have to
do that now. It's just so weird to me. It's
so weird that this is. It's so weird that this
is that it's that's I feel bad for this late.
I feel bad for the lady that worked so hard
and had to stand, you know, second place up there
on that podium, had to stand, was on the podium

(47:53):
second place because the man took her spot, took her
rightful spot.

Speaker 2 (48:00):
That's something.

Speaker 4 (48:02):
And it's more and more it seems like it's happening,
although finally at least the Olympics came around. We have
we're gonna have Florida Man on the way, and then
a couple of the other things that we're going to
get into lawlessness and disorder. This insane judge in Chicago
who allowed this psycho to walk after he had punched

(48:23):
a social worker, attacked a social worker, and then he
set this woman on fire on the train. I don't
know how many times it's going to keep happening on trains. Also,
Customs and Border Patrol are getting a lot of pushback
for something that.

Speaker 2 (48:38):
They had tweeted.

Speaker 4 (48:39):
They had a post that included a bunch of cash
that they confiscated, and they tweeted, it's not a crime
to carry over ten thousand dollars, we just want to
know about it. CPB officers seized over seventy thousand dollars
in unreported US currency and they said, Knine found the
money concealed in the vehicle. Well was it there money?

(49:01):
Was that their money? It took place at Brownsville and
you have to declare you know any money that's over
ten thousand dollars, which I think that that's a weird.
I feel like that's stupid and seizing somebody's cash because
they didn't report it. How was that not a violation
of fourth the moment, we're going to talk about this
and more so as we head into the holidays. It's
not just about gifts, it's about gratitude and protecting what

(49:22):
really matters, family and the future and your financial security.
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Speaker 2 (49:34):
I mean, think of it.

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Speaker 6 (50:26):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions.

Speaker 5 (50:33):
It's time for Florida man.

Speaker 7 (50:36):
Hmm.

Speaker 4 (50:37):
This is a crazy story. A Florida woman who was
accused of attacking her estranged daughter was stabbed by the
eight year old girl protecting her mother. This is horrible.
Eight year old stab her grandmother with a kitchen knife
to stop her from attacking her mother. They said the
victim's estranged biological mother, whose name is Sirple, enter the

(51:00):
home uninvited through an unlocked door and attacked the victim
with a serrated knife. While trying to protect her mother,
the victim's eight year old girl grabbed a kitchen knife
and stabbed her in the arm. Goodness, the Sheriff's office arrived,
they were able to They said the biological mother was
the one in the wrong and she tried to flee,
but they were able to get her. She's being charged

(51:20):
with attempted second degree murder. The kid wasn't hurt thank heavens.

Speaker 2 (51:24):
But my word.

Speaker 4 (51:26):
Also, let's see the woman drives a tank to a
McDonald's drive through, like an actual tank, a ripsaw tank
through McDonald's drive through. This it's a civilian tank. You know,
people can own tanks, and it's a ripsaw civilian tank.

Speaker 2 (51:41):
It's road legal. The base price is five.

Speaker 4 (51:45):
Hundred thousand dollars and it can go maybe about forty
miles per hour.

Speaker 2 (51:50):
Oh and it gets a.

Speaker 4 (51:51):
Glorious four miles to the gallon. Guys, Oh my gosh,
it's so great. I still would drive it, but real slow.
But yeah, the woman took it through. I'm actually surprised
that it fit into the drive through because most of
the drive through lanes are kind of small, and man,

(52:12):
the treads on that sticks so far out. But yeah,
they were able to drive it through a McDonald's drive
through and they was able to do it.

Speaker 2 (52:21):
So there you go. Five hundred thousand dollars base price
for that.

Speaker 4 (52:25):
Like, where would you be able to drive it for
five hundred thousand dollars? I mean, I guess if you can,
you know, I don't know. Uh, let's see here, we
got a couple of other ones. There's a FedEx delivery
that led to a twenty two thousand dollars Rolex theft
in Boca Ratan. So apparently a Rolex got delivered to
the wrong address and the guy who signed for it

(52:46):
and got it pawned it for ten thousand dollars.

Speaker 2 (52:50):
That's insane.

Speaker 4 (52:51):
The guy twenty five confessed to signing for the package,
opening it, and then he gave it to a friend
who pawned it. Who just has a Rolex sent to that? Like,
why wouldn't you go if you're going to spend that
kind of money, I mean, that's twenty two thousand dollars.
Why would you just have it like sent where anybody
could sign for it.

Speaker 2 (53:09):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (53:09):
That just seems this seems kind of irresponsible. It's a
Rolex GMT Master. It was bought and then shipped overnight
to what the victim thought was his current business address,
but apparently FedEx delivered it to the old address that
he had and signed. A guy signed his name for it,

(53:30):
and he had to visit the address. He spoke with
the guy who admitted to signing for it, opening it,
giving it to a friend, and then they pawned for
ten thousand dollars and then he apparently gave he told
the victim to give him six thousand dollars. The guy
already spent twenty two thousand dollars on this and it
was the pawn shot placed the watch in an evidence
hold after police intervened. And yeah, so anyway, he was

(53:54):
arrested on grand theft, a felony for property value between
twenty five and one hundred thousand.

Speaker 2 (54:01):
He's still at Palm Beach County Jail.

Speaker 4 (54:03):
But what about FedEx for like like delivering to the
wrong address or did this guy have the wrong address listed?
That's the million dollar question. Let's see here, got a
couple of others. Oh, there's well, I don't know why
people do this. Naked a Boca Raton woman burglarized a

(54:24):
bagel shop in the buff I hope she stayed away
from all the food. It was in West Palm Beach.
A book A Raton woman is facing multiple felony charges.
She walked into a bagel shop in the buff Yasmine
albla twenty six arrested charge with burglary. Oh, this explains it. Felony,
possession of fentanyl. Oh, also prisoner escape. Oh. Also giving

(54:47):
a false named law enforcement and possession of drug paraphernalia.
Police were flagged down by an employee of the shop.
It was closed for the day, but apparently she just
walked inside and they found her drinking orange juice and
she was wearing a store.

Speaker 2 (55:01):
Jacket and that was it.

Speaker 4 (55:04):
And then before they arrested her, she tried splashing water
on herself in the bathroom, stating that she just needed
to take a shower. They found this is okay. They
sh had a backpack and some at least shoes. They
found a glass pipe with burnt residue in her shoes
and a small baggie in her backpack and it was fentanyl.
And she said that she has an issue with fentanyl.

(55:26):
Oh my gosh. That's so she was apprehended and she's
still in jail, Palm Beach kind of jail.

Speaker 2 (55:33):
Twenty thousand dollars bond.

Speaker 4 (55:34):
That's it.

Speaker 2 (55:35):
We have more in stores.

Speaker 4 (55:37):
We roll towards the third hour of the program and
on the way CBP money confiscation and more. Stick with us.
The folks who help make it possible. It is the
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Speaker 2 (55:54):
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we've talked about many, many times, that the issue of
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(57:00):
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burnout dot com tell them Dana sent you.

Speaker 8 (57:09):
Apparently you said, I hate the city, I hate the
Tennessee bachelorettes, I hate Petal taverns, I hate country music.

Speaker 2 (57:15):
I hate all the things that make Nashville.

Speaker 5 (57:17):
I hate it. Now in the audio part.

Speaker 2 (57:20):
Is a little bit fair, isn't it.

Speaker 7 (57:22):
It's so fair.

Speaker 2 (57:23):
Sure, weigh in on that often, But.

Speaker 8 (57:25):
What would you like to say about this clip that's
floating around?

Speaker 4 (57:29):
So I'm gonna say something I haven't said, and I
think it's funny how my parents don't kill me. But
I did not hate country music.

Speaker 2 (57:35):
I was conceived after a George Strait concert. I can't
believe you. And also that's gross.

Speaker 4 (57:42):
We don't even I mean, I don't need to keep
hearing more about this woman. This is her what is
her name? Aten? She's got this, she's got a bachelorette
name aften Ben. And that's after she was saying that
she hated country music and she hated everything about Nashville.
But yet she's running for office in the district in

(58:04):
which Nashville resides. And you remember she went off and
was saying that she hated everything about Nashville and country
music everything, Like she just went off on everything. She
seems a little extra, especially if you want to look
and see what this is from twenty nineteen. This is

(58:25):
cut Siggs one twenty nineteen where she had to be
forcibly removed from Governor Lee's office. So she seems like
a drama seeker.

Speaker 2 (58:38):
Watch we will.

Speaker 13 (58:54):
Okay?

Speaker 2 (58:55):
Are you okay?

Speaker 5 (58:57):
Really anassy?

Speaker 4 (59:11):
Good?

Speaker 2 (59:11):
Heavens, she's super extra.

Speaker 4 (59:13):
So she was told to leave, she didn't leave, and
then I guess they had to forcibly make her leave. Yeah,
she seems kind of like a handful. We're not big
fans of hers. She seems incredibly dramatic. Like all the
things that she says that she hates, it seems like
it's all and she is all of them. She's all

(59:37):
of those things. Oh but there's more. So this is
she really hates married women, and I think she's I
think she's single. She really doesn't like married women. This
is let's see cut. Let's start with cut eight where
she's talking about people who give birth. I know, listen
to how I said that, Listen to what She says.

Speaker 14 (59:59):
I think an organizer and as an activist, like, we
really have an opportunity here from this country to talk
about what type of policy, progressive policies we want to
see as young women. And I think we have you know,
as as birth or you know, as women who can
give birth, men and women who can give birth. We

(01:00:19):
can maybe leverage that as collective bargaining, which is the
basis of this book that I'm not I've just started reading,
but called birth Strike.

Speaker 4 (01:00:28):
And how so she the ment so she doesn't even
understand basic biology? Oh well, the you know like men
and women who get Also, what was happening I'm sorry
to point this out. What is happening with her chest
in that photo? It's like she's got pillows shoved under
her sweater. I don't understand that. It's like they're all
misshapen and weird. What is even that? That's weird? Right,

(01:00:50):
I'm not the only one who's seen that, right, that's
what is that?

Speaker 2 (01:00:54):
What is that? It looks like she's.

Speaker 4 (01:00:56):
Got like why is it shaped like that?

Speaker 2 (01:01:00):
Anyway? I just I can't.

Speaker 4 (01:01:04):
But then she says this also cut so she went
in and she was talking about men and women who
can give birth, which isn't a real thing, and then
cut seven. Oh, here's that third, third and fourth wave
feminism we hate so much.

Speaker 13 (01:01:18):
Listen to this. My therapist always asks me to transcribe
my dreams when they happen, And the recurring dream I've
had is.

Speaker 15 (01:01:31):
Standing up in a cafeteria full of women.

Speaker 13 (01:01:33):
I don't know why I was there or whatever, and
saying I don't want children, I want power, and just
screaming at the top of my lungs.

Speaker 15 (01:01:41):
And for someone who grew up with my mother telling
me never have kids, because you will. You know, you'll
have to give up a lot, You'll have to sacrifice professionally,
which is what she's saying, and.

Speaker 13 (01:01:55):
Grief where I am now with seeing the con sequences
and the ramifications of women having kids and being in
the political field and what they're able to achieve because
we don't offer you know, it's like the political field
hasn't met the challenge of working moms. They really haven't. Also,
the deeply patriarchal structures that these women are are involved

(01:02:20):
with because they've chosen marriage and they've chosen to raise children.
And I think in the South it's it's incredibly difficult.

Speaker 4 (01:02:28):
It's not a patriarchal structure.

Speaker 2 (01:02:29):
It's this is so goofy.

Speaker 4 (01:02:31):
And you know, maybe if she had kids, she would
understand the you know, that nurturing aspect. Maybe if she
was inclined to even have children. I'm glad that she
doesn't breed. I'm glad that she doesn't have kids, because
I can't imagine the kind of snot knows brat a
woman like that would raise, or a female like that
would raise.

Speaker 2 (01:02:49):
First off, what really gives me?

Speaker 4 (01:02:51):
She was like, well, I don't want to have kids
because I want power in her dream for she immediately
sounds like a crackpot. She opens with while I was
telling my quack, I mean my therapist, you know that
made dreams and I have to write down mad dreams
and all that so dumb. She doesn't even understand that
children are power. Children are your stake in the next generation.
It's your legacy that is power. It is incredibly powerful,

(01:03:14):
and it's always, you know, unfortunate when you have clueless
chicks who don't understand that. I mean, if you don't
want to have kids, fine, don't have kids, but don't
look down on everyone else as that they're playing a
part in some sort of patriarchal structure. I mean that's asinine.
Good heavens, this is what third and fourth wave they
still keep operating on these old fantasies of you know,

(01:03:39):
a nineteen like forties structure. It's it's just it's asinine
and it does a disservice to women. But then at
the same time, though in the other clip, she was
saying men and women who can give birth, So she
actively says one thing, and then she undermined her own ideology.
Is she can't even keep it straight. She undermines it
with her next with her comment, but having children has power,

(01:04:03):
that is powerful, and she just seems like she has
never grown up. Lorraine says it's a wonky uniboot. That's
what she says, is why it looks like misshapen pillows,
saying that's what your couch pillows look like after some years?

Speaker 2 (01:04:19):
Is what is that? But she just.

Speaker 4 (01:04:23):
Sounds whenever I hear her talk, she's always tearing down
other women. Have you noticed that she's tearing down other
women going to Nashville, calling them bachelorettes, making fun of them.
She tears down women who want to have kids and
have families. She's saying that they're participating in a deeply
patriarchal structure. It sounds like she is a jealous female

(01:04:48):
who doesn't have a man, doesn't have a prospect of
marriage or family, and is projecting her anger at that
onto everybody, all these other women. That's what it sounds like.
She sounds dissatisfied and discontent, and she thinks that everybody
else is responsible for it, because that's why she targets

(01:05:10):
women so much. I mean, almost every single comment that
I've heard her make, aside from the one where she
claims that she was conceived after a George Strait concert,
which grows, but every single comment that she makes, it's
always about she's whipping some other chick. Every single time.
She has no words of praise for them, and she

(01:05:32):
keeps coming back to the whole Nashville bachelorette thing like
That was the third the audio that we played for
you today, that was the third. I've seen actually two
other cuts where she was going off on this. I
don't understand the obsession other than she is dissatisfied with
her own life and is holding responsible other women whom

(01:05:55):
she is envious of. That's just what I get from her,
because she has all of these behavioral attributes that she
claims that she doesn't like in other people, but they
are all manifest within her. I mean, for crying out loud,
she sounds like a dits. I can't even imagine somebody

(01:06:16):
like this running for Congress, to say nothing of how
she hates the area that she represents. It's weird, all right.
So a couple of other things I wanted to pull up.
I saw this post. It was from Customs and Border
Patrol and they have a rule, or I guess you know.
Our statute is that if you come over with currency,

(01:06:40):
you have to declare however much, you know, if it's
like ten thousand dollars are over and so in Brownsville
they apparently seized seventy seven and forty nine dollars in
bulk unreported US currency at the International bridge there during
an outbound inspection. And they said that, you know, they

(01:07:02):
look at inbound and outbound and the seizure took place
about a week ago, and they said that it was
in a bag in the car and a canine found it.
They seized the currency. They're investigating the seizure they said,
it's not a crime to carry more than ten thousand dollars,
but it is a federal offense to not declare currency
or monetary instruments totaling ten thousand dollars or more to

(01:07:26):
a CBP officer upon injury or exit from the US,
or conceal it with the intent to evade reporting requirements. Now,
I know that they want to do this for drugs
and all that other stuff, but this is theft.

Speaker 2 (01:07:43):
What that is is theft.

Speaker 4 (01:07:45):
If it is your money, you should be able And
I know what they say, Oh, but yes, but you
have to declare it. There are people who are insistent
on well, you have to declare it. I know that
it's still your money. That is your money. So they're saying, wow,
it looks like you got a lot of money here.

Speaker 2 (01:08:04):
We don't.

Speaker 4 (01:08:05):
We don't really like that, so we're gonna go ahead.

Speaker 2 (01:08:07):
And seize it.

Speaker 4 (01:08:08):
So they stole it. So, yeah, that's doesn't I don't.
I think that was a They've been CBP has been
doing really well on x and with their messaging and
then this was an absolute face plant. And by the way,
seizing cash simply for failing to report it. How is

(01:08:36):
that not a Fourth Amendment right violation. That's another thing.
How is that not a violation of your fourth which
that's protection against unreasonable searches and seizures and the Fifth
Amendment where you're taking someone's property without due process. By
the way, this is where I where red flag laws

(01:08:56):
fall run a foul of the constant. Now, I know
people say, well, the search is warranted, these rights don't apply.
You know, they're warranted. It's you know, it's it's the
seizures legal. Because you cannot bring ten thousand dollars in
without a declaration.

Speaker 2 (01:09:15):
I think that is not I mean, it's theft. This
is what that is. And I think it's asinine that if.

Speaker 4 (01:09:23):
It's your money and if you want to go you know, wherever,
and you want to take a large amount of cash
with you for whatever reason, then it's your money you
should be able to.

Speaker 2 (01:09:36):
Without you but you got to declare it.

Speaker 4 (01:09:39):
Well, then what happens if you declare it? You're is
aren't you kind of like you know, violating your your
your giving witness against yourself at that point.

Speaker 2 (01:09:48):
But they cut the money.

Speaker 4 (01:09:50):
And a lot of times these seizures like this, a
lot of times people don't get their cash back. This
was a real miss with Customs Border Patrol. They've been
doing so good, but this was not good to tweet
about like this. This was not good because it looks
like they're celebrating the news that they took somebody seventy
thousand dollars and that looks bad. And you've got to

(01:10:12):
remember you're talking to a bunch of people who are
tired of being abused by all of these different departments,
all of these different agencies, and this looks looks like
more of the same. That's how people look at it.
Are partners that.

Speaker 2 (01:10:22):
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Speaker 6 (01:11:32):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 4 (01:11:38):
So a body was found in Frederick County and a
guy calls the radio station but not the police. That's interesting.
I mean it starts this DC area. It started out
as a phone call to the station and then it
ended up with a death investigation in Frederick, Maryland. Because

(01:11:59):
this he called the morning show there and said that
they found a body in the woods. And he said,
this may sound sid but I've always wanted to, you know,
come across something where you know, I can call the
cops or something like that. He calls the station and
the station had to this is all on aar The
station had to tell them to call the police. So yeah,

(01:12:20):
so they're investigating. My gosh, it's just why would you
that not be your first call? Your first call is
to call the radio STATIONED. I don't know, I don't
get it. A man wrapped a truck with twenty eight
thousand Christmas lights for a good cause. It was for
a project focused on men's mental health. I'm just curious

(01:12:40):
as to how what is paint looks like after Like,
what is the paint job on a car that has
that many lights on it? What does that look like
after that? Not only the only question. Airlines are canceling
flights to and from Venezuela amid rising tensions. Well, that's understandable.
A lot of flights actually have been canceled. A number

(01:13:00):
of different airlines as well have all canceled their flights
into Venezuela. There's a couple that continue to operate, but
they said that they're exercising extreme caution because the tensions
in the area. Let's see ah entitled instagram. Vandals tore
down a five hundred year old castle wall to take pictures.

(01:13:23):
How much it's British. Yeah, they it was like a
perimeter wall and they tore it down in Sutherland to
take pictures part of oardrec Castle.

Speaker 2 (01:13:33):
Now they're in major trouble. They have crazy finds.

Speaker 4 (01:13:35):
Stick with us because we got a lot more, including
UUs Forum.

Speaker 9 (01:13:39):
Next, make some common sense of the crazy headlines with
a Dana Show podcast. You're on the go guide for
getting up to speed on today's most important stories. Subscribe
on YouTube, Apple or your favorite podcast platform.

Speaker 4 (01:13:55):
Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash with you. It's Thanksgiving, Eve, Eve. Oh,
it's that crazy time of the year. We were telling
you all we gosh the trap. Thankfully, travel's gotten a
lot better. You can listen Coast to coast, the chats
at Rumble and of course channel through forty seven Direct TV.

Speaker 2 (01:14:10):
I was looking at the story.

Speaker 4 (01:14:11):
And I wanted to bring our next guest on to
help kind of explain some of this, because you know,
here it feels like we just went through the Green
New Deal and you know, at least reset some things
with the administration, and now we have the EU with
everything from environmental regulations to tech regulations and that they're
proposing and I'm just wondering why anyone in the United

(01:14:34):
States would subscribe to or allow EU authority to control
and dictate what our businesses do and the metrics that
our business is set. Joining us now Matt Maers, who
is the founding member of the EU US Forum formerly
with the Trump administration in the State Department.

Speaker 2 (01:14:50):
He joins US now. Happy Thanksgiving, Matt, good to the you.

Speaker 5 (01:14:53):
Happy Thanksgiving? Ev Yeah right, referred to that before, But
I like it.

Speaker 2 (01:14:58):
There you go, I will you know, I'm excited. We'll
take it. It's one of my favorite holidays.

Speaker 4 (01:15:03):
I wanted to ask you about this, and I appreciate
your time joining us on this because you're talking about
in terms of some of these regulations with the EU
CS three D, CSRD. There's by the way, there's so
many different proposals and so many different letters. I feel
like they do that on purpose, and they all have
some variation of CS and D in them. But these

(01:15:26):
are rules that would essentially dictate how our businesses in
the United States operate. And I'm immediately hearing increase, price increase,
cost of business increase in all of that. Tell me
a little bit about what is happening, and then what
are we doing to kind of counter that.

Speaker 2 (01:15:45):
On our end?

Speaker 5 (01:15:46):
Yeah, well, first of all, you're exactly right.

Speaker 7 (01:15:48):
Anytime of bureaucracy needs so many letters in the acronym,
you know it can't be any good, right, So so
let's break it down a little bit.

Speaker 5 (01:15:56):
So you got CSRD and cs triple D.

Speaker 7 (01:15:59):
CSRD is the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive see as triple
D as the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive, And essentially
what they do is they work hand in hand to
hamstring businesses both in the European Union, but also any
business doesn't matter where they're headquartered, doesn't matter where they're based,
that wants to do business in the European Union, which

(01:16:20):
is essentially any US company that does anything in the EU,
and what it would do is subject American companies to
the same exact, onerous regulations that have stifled their own
economy in Europe.

Speaker 5 (01:16:33):
Here in the US.

Speaker 7 (01:16:34):
That means additional, you know, legal support services needed to
comply with all these laws. That means complying with these
radical environmental policies which actually don't really save the environment
but just actually hamstring innovation. It means complying with a
bunch of bureaucrats and Brussels that we didn't vote for.
If you're a US business, and you want to do

(01:16:55):
business there, and what you're exactly right is going to
drive up costs for Americans as actually going to reduce
the number of businesses that may even do business in
Europe let alone. If they do, it's going to just
increase the time and costs associated with it.

Speaker 5 (01:17:08):
It's going to hurt American businesses.

Speaker 7 (01:17:10):
And we have a unique opportunity right now at this
moment to have these two issues brought up in the
ongoing trade negotiations with the EU. You know, President Trump's
done a tremendous job advancing American causes, advancing American interests,
protecting American workers and businesses, and these trade negotiations, they
can make this front and center right now those negotiations

(01:17:30):
and help protect American businesses by doing so.

Speaker 4 (01:17:34):
It just sounds, you know, to hear the stuff that
they have proposed. It hasn't helped their economies, I mean
with climate, with tech, it hasn't helped any of these
EU member nations, with with any anything economically, anything with business.
I mean some of the restrictions that they have or
just they put their business sector in a choke hold.
Why would why would they think that would be attractive

(01:17:55):
to the United States. That's the I mean that is
that the cost of doing business with the EU is
that we have to entertain their proposals.

Speaker 7 (01:18:02):
Well, because they think they know best in Brussels, right,
and they don't ignore the facts on the ground. You know,
German economic outputs down about ten percent, the rest of
the EUS essentially flatlined.

Speaker 5 (01:18:14):
Or decreasing and shrinking.

Speaker 7 (01:18:15):
When was the last time you heard of a great
new innovative technology company coming out of Europe?

Speaker 5 (01:18:20):
You just have it.

Speaker 7 (01:18:21):
And the reason is because these onerous regulations or restrictions
they place on their own businesses. So why then, are we,
as the United States, where we are seeing economic growth,
where we are seeing a revitalization manufacturing, going to subject
our businesses to those EU regulations. You know, it's exactly
the opposite of what we want to see happen here.
We believe in America first, we want to put American

(01:18:43):
businesses in American workers first, and that means standing up
to Brussels. And by the way, the American people are
totally with us on this, which is unsurprising.

Speaker 5 (01:18:52):
EU US Forum.

Speaker 7 (01:18:53):
We just did a bunch of polling came back in
the last week over seventy percent worry that foreign rules
on US firm sets it agers precedent that we shouldn't
be governed by Brussels bureaucrats seventy one percent. So the
EU driven compliance would actually raise cost American families involving
groceries and gas and housing bills. And also voters overwhelmingly

(01:19:13):
say that the EU regulations would unfairly hit American businesses
that need to compete. And by the way, because this
matters everything's politics, over half of those Americans that are
in our poll said that they'd be more likely to
back a member of Congress who encourage President Trump to
use these negotiations to stop these EU rules. So we're
on the right side from a policy perspective, and the

(01:19:34):
politics are with us.

Speaker 5 (01:19:35):
The American people are with us on this.

Speaker 4 (01:19:37):
For those just joining, we're talking with Matt Mauers with
the EU US Forum. You can find them at EU
usforum dot com as well as on x Because this
covers climate tech, including AI and so much more, these
different proposals, and that's I read literally just yesterday as
I was getting ready to talk with you, forty percent
of our GDP growth is coming from AI related expenditures

(01:19:59):
that such a significant portion, and we I mean obviously
that tells us that we can't roll back. I mean,
we we're here. We have to go through power through it.
We have to fight for protections however we can. The
last thing that we need is European restrictions, Like what
are some of the things that they're that they would
that they're proposing, and how does that stemy our growth?

Speaker 7 (01:20:22):
Well, so let's talk about AI. What's the biggest need
AI has right now? It's energy, manufacturing and production. Right
we talk about everyone in America recognizes our biggest shortcoming
towards an AI revolution right now and actually really fast
forwarding through it.

Speaker 5 (01:20:37):
Is a lack of power.

Speaker 7 (01:20:38):
Imagine if we have the EU power policies right that
say you can't have anything that's not electric, that actually
disincentivize gas, gas and oil, the hamstring any sort of
energy diversification. Let's not forget they've had rolling blackouts in
places like Spain as a result of their poor energy policies.
Let alone, if you then are utilizing AI advances that

(01:21:00):
use a lot of power, they are incredible job driver,
economic growth drivers.

Speaker 5 (01:21:05):
They create a lot of new jobs, They use a
lot of power.

Speaker 7 (01:21:08):
We need to diversify or energy supply and you follow
the EU regulatory framework around energy alone.

Speaker 5 (01:21:14):
That's the type of hamstring that we would have here
in the US as well.

Speaker 7 (01:21:18):
We don't need the United States to be going twenty
four hours without an energy supply and power grin going
right now. You know you're not going to have that
type of economic growth for the AI sector if you
limit power and growth like that. You know, we did
a poll last year of five different countries in Europe
in over seventy percent so that they believe the EU
energy policies limited their economic development and hurt their national

(01:21:42):
security interest. Remember, all the same bureaucrats and Brussels who
are saying that we shouldn't be using gas and oil
that are still getting their gas and oil because they're
not manufacturing it or producing it locally and domestically there.
They're actually relying on places like Russia as a result
of it, and so it actually hurts their notional security
in addition to their economic security.

Speaker 4 (01:22:02):
Yeah, that's that is a major national security concern. It
looks though, from what I've seen, that the administration is
really open to in terms of leveraging those for negotiations
and you know, getting you know, a more advantageous position
for the United States, and this they are you pleased
with how they've countered this so far.

Speaker 7 (01:22:22):
Look, the administration, President Trump and his team, whether it's
US Trade Rep. Jamison Greer, whether it's Secretary Lutnik, Secretary
Vessent obviously Secretary of Ruvio, have done a tremendous job
advancing America's interests, especially through these trade negotiations. But we
need to continue to ensure that there's focus on CSRD
and cs triplity. These are live wire negotiations right now,

(01:22:44):
you know, Jamison Greer and Secretary Lutnik, we're just negotiating
with the Europeans as recently as this week on this
trade deal. They are far from getting to the finish
line right now. I mean President Trump and Ursula von
Leyden from the European Union have announced a framework for it.
They did that this past summer, but there's a lot

(01:23:04):
of detail still there. We need the administration doing what
they've continued to do best, which is putting American workers
in American businesses first by ensuring that CSRD and SS
triple D do not apply to American companies. If we're
about to sign the European Union trade agreement, there's no
reason why we should be having bureaucrats and Brussels dictating
those types of policies to American businesses.

Speaker 2 (01:23:26):
IM into that.

Speaker 4 (01:23:26):
Yes, I mean, it's there's a reason, as you said,
why we've been leading in so many of these sectors
and we cannot give that up, especially and we have
these new numbers out about what's really, you know, driving
our growth, and I mean, that's it. We're here in
that moment. We've got to keep going forward. Matt Maurs,
So good to see you.

Speaker 2 (01:23:42):
Thank you so much for giving your perspective. Have a
happy Thanksgiving you too, my friend.

Speaker 4 (01:23:45):
Happy Thanksgiving. We'll talk against sun God bless thatnks great.
We have more to come folks as well. And yeah,
that is true up to it's anywhere around forty percent
of GDP growth. Obviously, a lot of that is driven
by data center investments, and that's been the primary driver
of the economy, even outpacing consumer spending. And we I mean,

(01:24:08):
so the theory is that our GDP growth would be
significantly lower without the AI investment in all of that,
the data centers, the equipment, the energy infrastructure, all of that.
So there's a piece that came out yesterday in the
Wall Street Journal titled how the US economy became hooked
on AI spending. So all of the all of the

(01:24:29):
stuff about AIS here, you got to deal with it.
You have to deal with it in the safest way possible.
I watched a video of one of the you know,
I would say fathers of Artificial Intelligence warning everyone, you
know as to the sentience, what happens, you know what
what humankind mankind.

Speaker 2 (01:24:47):
Needs to be prepared for.

Speaker 4 (01:24:49):
Uh So it's we've become very, very dependent upon AI investments.
So if that boom goes to bus, there goes the economy.
So it's got that's why you can't have these EU
restrictions in there.

Speaker 9 (01:25:02):
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Speaker 4 (01:25:17):
There are two separate stories that I was reading, one
from The New Yorker and one from the New York Times,
both of them about people who entered the country illegally.
Overstayed their terms of entry and then kept going on
to come at more crimes that hurt a lot of
innocent people. One of them was this is the New Yorker.
A Jamaica national who lived in New York for fifty

(01:25:39):
years was shackled and put on an ice flight to Swatini,
and he said it helped me to imagine how the
slaves might have felt, going to land in shackles and
change and change the problem. The reason the guy got deported,
and how whyse green card was revoked because he was convicted.
He wasn't just merely accused. He was literally really convicted

(01:26:00):
of murder and armed robbery and forcible theft with a
deadly weapon. So yeah, that's why his visa was revoked,
because he murdered somebody. That's insane. And then it gets
even crazier. I know, that's pretty crazy. The New York

(01:26:22):
Times had a piece about how an illegal immigrant literally
stole a guy's identity and caused absolute chaos. This story
is insane. This is literally this is the headline. Two men,
one identity, and they both paid the price. Thousands of

(01:26:43):
undocumented workers rely on fraudulent social security numbers. One of
them belonged to Dan Clover. Uh wow, it is amazing
the headline that they used. I thought it wasn't two men,
one identity. It was one man and one identity, an
illegal alien who stole that guy's identity. And the illegal alien,

(01:27:06):
by the way, killed someone in a car accident, just
so you know, had multiple DU's, killed somebody in a
car accident. That's just the beginning of the list. Oh,
he had been deported multiple times and kept coming back,
and he plays the victim throughout the entire story. And

(01:27:27):
the illegal alien he went to a church where they
shielded him from deportation. So he's a criminal because he
stole this innocent man's identity and then he broke into
the country repeatedly, which that should have been enough to
send him back home, but then he drank and drove,
so he had multiple DUI's, killed somebody in a car accident,

(01:27:47):
and then acted as though he was the one who
was the victim. And in the meantime, I think the
other thing that is even crazier is the guy Dan Clover,
who was the victim. He had the irs come after
him repeatedly to pay taxes on money that he wasn't
earning because that wasn't him, and they went at him

(01:28:12):
and they were prosecuting him. I mean, I'm looking at this.
He had to spend tens of thousands of dollars in
order to fight what was being done to him. They
were trying to make him pay. They docked his tax returns,
they garnished his paychecks because they were confusing him with
the illegal alien who was using his Social Security number.

(01:28:34):
I mean, they almost ruined this. Well, they did kind
of ruin his life, and they just about drained him
financially of all of this. So the only man who
paid the price one identity. They both paid the price.
The illegal alien didn't pay the price. The innocent man
was the one who paid the price. He had his
identity stolen. He spent thousands upon thousands of dollars trying
to fight what was happening because he had no idea

(01:28:56):
that his identity was being used by a repeat under
illegal alien.

Speaker 2 (01:29:02):
The way that they.

Speaker 4 (01:29:03):
Framed this is the craziest thing I've ever seen in
my life. I Mean, this poor dude went through it,
and they have and they present it like, oh, well,
you know, they both paid the price.

Speaker 2 (01:29:18):
No, they didn't. No, they didn't.

Speaker 4 (01:29:22):
In fact, in the piece, there's a huge part where
they get into how the guy's church was helping him
to commit crimes. And I mean, I just it's just
I haven't even seen I've never seen anything like this. Unbelievable.
So I know usually we do Today's stupidity, but I'm

(01:29:44):
going to say this too because I will be back
with you guys next Monday. Going to be out for
Thanksgiving as well, so I'll be out today, I'll be
the last show before Thanksgiving, and then I'll be back
behind the Michael Monday. But just a big thanks to
our audience out there for supporting us throughout the year,
for supporting our podcast, which you should can sign up
for for the newsletter over at substack, chapter and verse.

(01:30:06):
Big thanks to the people in the chat who help
make every day fun and Lorraine who moderates the chat
and adds a lot of good stuff over at substack
which you can go read.

Speaker 2 (01:30:15):
And also just everybody out there.

Speaker 4 (01:30:17):
Who has supported us and listens every day, joins us
and fellowships. You guys make all of the craziness of
politics that much more fun and bearable. So we're grateful
for you guys. I hope you all have a blessed Thanksgiving.
Be grateful we live in a great nation. I'll be
back with you next week.

Speaker 2 (01:30:35):
God bless
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