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October 9, 2025 98 mins
President Trump announces phase 1 of a historic peace deal between Israel and Hamas which includes a ceasefire and releasing the hostages. Katie Porter TEARS into her staffer in a newly released video following her disastrous CBS interview. Dolly Parton releases a video over Internet speculation that she is dying. J.B. Pritzker says even though immigrants came here illegally, they haven’t committed a crime. We go live to Trump’s Cabinet Meeting. Americans’ ratings of six prominent federal government agencies have deteriorated markedly since last year. Navy SEAL and “Terminal List” Author Jack Carr joins us live in studio to discuss drone warfare, the China threat and much more. Hakeem Jeffries and GOP Rep. Mike Lawler had a knockdown drag out argument in the halls of the Capitol. Trump signs a proclamation to affirm Columbus Day. Dave Rubin joins us to react to Trump’s Israel-Hamas peace deal, Katie Porter’s disaster interview and much more. Trevor Noah makes a joke about Charlie Kirk’s assasination.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
As you know, we have major sanctions underran and lots
of other things. Would like to see them be able
to rebuild the country too.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
So this is Potus. He is going over this Hamas
peace plan. Yes, and it's phase one, so there's a
caveat to it. It's phase one of this peace plan,
and it's I don't know, I understand everybody's hesitancy about it.
I get it, I really do, because we have gone

(00:28):
through this for years and years. I mean I was
going through I would kind of labor the point if
I just sat here and went through and looked at
all of the different times that they've gotten close to
the table and all of the times that Hamas has
then afterwards breached any kind of a ceasefire or anything else.
And so I get it. However, this is the closest

(00:52):
that we've gotten in this particular situation, and I think
that that Potus deserves a lot of credit for that,
because he was really driving all of this hard, and
he was even pretty at one point, he was even
pretty caustic towards Netan Yahoo saying that look, you know,
you cannot fight the world. That's apparently what he told

(01:14):
him in a phone call that was widely reported that
he kind of raised his voice at some point because
it's tough because Israel is in this position where they
have every right to defend themselves, but you have most
of the world that believes somehow they're the enemy, and
I just it's the craziest thing I've ever seen. That's

(01:35):
the way it is, and Potus is trying to help
them navigate that, and sometimes that means raised voices. Welcome
to the show, Dana Lash with you now. I wrote
about this last night. If you're a subscriber, you get
this because this plan and I've written about it before.
It's the twenty point piece plan, and I'm reading it now.
If you get the newsletter, you already have this, and
you've already read it this morning, if you're one of

(01:57):
the subscribers that gets the daily prep. So the twenty
point plan. One of those is remember they have to disarm,
they have to release hostages, and the hostage release is
the twenty remaining living hostages in exchange. This is what
I don't like in exchange for and as nine amount

(02:19):
of detainees in Israel's custody. And I say detainees, when
really it should be terrorists, because these are people who
have been apprehended in the act in the process of
committing a terror act, whether it is they're trying to
stab somebody, they're trying to blow somebody up. And that's

(02:39):
one of the reasons why they're always very widely reported
when these people are taken into custody, so there is
a record and people can see, oh, this person was
arrested because they're a terrorists, and they were taken into
custody because they were trying to kill innocent people simply
because they don't like who they are. So that's that's

(03:00):
the one. The only thing that I would be kind
of a stickler about the groups that they're talking about freeing.
I mean, some of the people that Gaza is demanding
be freed in exchange for the twenty living hostages include
some of the terrorists who paraglide it in to the

(03:23):
Nova Music Festival. I'm sorry, but I think that if
you were responsible. First off, I think if you were
a terrorists, you should just die. But I think if
you were responsible for October seventh, my only anger about
this is that Israel hasn't put them to death first already,
that any of these terrorists would still be living. If
you're caught paragliding into a music festival to kill innocent people. Sorry,

(03:46):
I don't believe that you get a trial. I believe
you get led to the head and that's it, right
there in the field, one and done. We're going to
save everybody a lot of money. We're going to save
the bureaucracy all of the process. That's just kind of
how I look at it. You're when you're committing an
act that's an act of war, and if you want
to go that way, then we're going to suspend regular

(04:07):
protocol if you're caught doing that. That's my only gripe
is that any of them would be any of them
are alive, even in custody. So I don't know. I mean,
it's never worked well before, I think whenever any of
these terrorists have been previously released, because they go back
to doing terrorist stuff. So we'll see. But I realized,
you know, in a kitten it's not a perfect world.
It's not a kittens in sunshurine world. They're trying to

(04:29):
de escalate everything and then go from there and we'll see.
I don't know, I bet that's king. What do you
think you think this is a good deal. I feel
like here we are again re enacting the scene from
A Glorious Bastards.

Speaker 3 (04:40):
Yeah, I mean, would you take that deal? I would
if I'm Hamas.

Speaker 2 (04:45):
Well, if you're Hamas. But I don't know. I mean,
I just feel like they don't know. How in the
world is anyone kine if I bust into your house
and like killing members of your family, how in the
world do I get to tell you, well, you have
to release some of the baddies that helped me in
order to get some of your family members back.

Speaker 3 (05:02):
Yeah, that's a that's a tough one.

Speaker 2 (05:04):
See, that's what I'm saying. That's that's that's the problem
that I have, And I just feel like it's as
nine to even expect them to do that. At some point,
enough is enough? Right, enough is enough? At some point?
I don't know. So this is this is one of
the things I can't get over it. This is one
of the points of the twenty point piece plan. Now,
of course they also have giving up jurisdiction, I shouldn't

(05:26):
say jurisdiction administration of the area, as well as you know,
disarming leaving the area. We'll see I mean, if the
hostages are freed, I think that that's regardless, that's going
to be viewed as a major win for Trump, regardless
anything else. If the hostages are freed, that's going to
look like a major win for him. And honestly, I

(05:46):
know that a lot of people are talking about the
Nobel Peace Prize. I really I just am not. You
guys know how the Nobel Peace Prize came to be right?
The whole thing about the Nobel Peace Prize. Alford No, Well,
you know, he created dynamite and he realized there was
the story of how his death, his death was prematurely announced,

(06:12):
and he had read about it in the paper, you know,
getting up in the morning. Somehow it came out that
he was dead and he wasn't dead, but he read that, oh,
the inventor of dynamite and it cost all these lives,
and it just sort of stuck with him, and so
he ended up creating He was called the Merchant of Death,
that's what they had called him. It was a French
newspaper and it was like in the late eighteen hundreds

(06:33):
and they said, oh my gosh, the Merchant of Death
is dead, you know. Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite,
and he became rich. They said he became rich because
he invented ways to kill more people faster than ever
before with dynamite. And he was horrified. He was reading
this about himself. You know, this is his obituary in

(06:55):
this French paper. It mistakenly announced that he had passed,
and he was just horrified. So he made an effort
to promote to promote peace afterwards, because he didn't like
the scathing obituary that was accusing him of profiting off
of all of these deaths. Lea Monchan de la more So,
he said it was described by people around him as

(07:17):
a very shocking wake up call, and he realized that
he did not like public perception of him being that
of a killer as opposed to a benefactor. So he
really got involved in philanthropy. He created the Nobel Peace
Prize as well as awards for science, etc. Things like that,
and the Nobel Prize, and that's how he wanted to
go out and that's why that award continues today. When

(07:38):
we were in Oslo, we were actually outside of the
headquarters for them. It was very interesting and also interesting.
The headquarters is right by a spot where the Nazis
had to surrender excuse me, to the Norwegians after they
were trying to run rough shot in the nation and
then finally they were defeated. So very interesting. So my
whole point is, I don't know why some people don't

(08:00):
feel like you have to kiss the Nobel Prize Committee's
backside to do this, because look at the people that
they've awarded a Nobel Peace Prize before. I mean for
crying out lot Barack Obama, what did he do? Nothing?
I mean Trump should have gotten it with the Abraham Accords.
But I digress. So I don't know. I just feel
like seeking validation from the Nobel Committee is like seeking
validation from the New York Times. Do you really need
it in order for it to be considered a success?

(08:22):
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Speaker 3 (09:22):
Planned parenthood and now all of the news you would
probably miss It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (09:29):
So this is confusing to me. A Vegas man claimed
that he was attacked by a group of three people
that were trying to steal his twenty six hundred dollars
jackpot at a Vegas casino. Joel Kutierres filed a negligence
lawsuit against the Bolaggio. They said that they did not
protect him. During his December twelfth visit, he was playing
a Mummy themed slot machine. He won the Jackpop prize

(09:50):
of twenty six hundred, but he had to wait for
an attendant to process the payout and had moved to
a nearby machine to continue playing. He claimed that two
men and one woman, who were named his defendants, approached
it upon seeing the price displayed, began loudly claiming they
had won. He approached the group to say that that
was my prize money, and they immediately got hostile and
started threatening him. The group told him to leave and

(10:12):
said it was theirs. One of them stepped forward and
got into his face. He threw a punch to protect himself.
Everybody was on the ground. Security guards were not present.
That's actually really bad for the Blaggio. I mean, when
those things go off, y'all better be having an attendant.
Like right, I don't gamble, but y'all better be having
an attendant right there to handle that. So he apparently

(10:33):
he got hit, he got physical injuries. He's seeking fifteen
thousand damages. So it's not crazy, you know. But yeah,
that cannot happen like that, y'all. When that thing goes off,
you better be there because people have no man that
people just are soulless anymore. Gene Simmons is hospitalized after
a Los Angeles car crash. He apparently passed out behind
the wheel of his seuv and oh, man, I hope

(10:55):
he's okay. I've met him once. He was very nice,
seventy six years old. He was on the Pacific Coast
Highway Tuesday, ended up passing out. It sent his car
went veering across several lanes and then slammed into a vehicle.
And he said he's doing okay right now. He's recovering
at home. But apparently he lost consciousness. I don't know
what if he's dealing with a health issue. But in

(11:15):
speaking of health issues, Dolly Parton says she's not dead
yet in a video. We'll have more on that later.
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(12:21):
slash Dana.

Speaker 4 (12:22):
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Speaker 5 (12:33):
And the state could lose.

Speaker 2 (12:36):
You're out of my shots.

Speaker 6 (12:39):
That's actually correct, It's not that it's electric vehicles.

Speaker 2 (12:42):
It's that, Okay, it does.

Speaker 7 (12:47):
Okay, you also were in my shot before that, stay
out of my shot.

Speaker 2 (12:54):
Okay, I'm gonna start again with holy So that's Katie Porter.
By the way, kudos to that staffer who not only
did not take that, but was like, by the way,
you're talking about EV's and you're wrong and corrected her.
And Katie Porter's response was yeah, there's still like a
my saw, my gosh. These people are insane. They're insane.

(13:17):
Welcome back to the program, Dana lash with you. She
it was an aide who said she simply wanted to
correct something that she had said about electric vehicles. This
was published last evening by Politico and it was seven
several minutes in the conversation, so this was it from
I think this was like a July twenty twenty one,
which is why that staffers wearing the face mask, and

(13:40):
she was like in view a few minutes. She was
going through some stuff in the background. Porter screamed at
her while yelled at her, and then she said, well,
what you're wrong what you were saying there? You know,
She's like, I just fyi, And so kudos to her,
but oh my gosh, this is And by the way,
was this while she was talking to Jennifer Granholm. So
I'm curre was Jennifer Granholme like connected with her at

(14:03):
that point, because I'm because at that point, Jennifer Grnholme's
already the Energy Secretary. Katie Porter is not. You know,
I don't know she was in Congress, and I don't
know why she I just can't believe she thought she
could act like that to somebody and scream at somebody
like that. That's insane, am I said, I would. First off,

(14:25):
the shot is horrible anyway. You have your refrigerator in
the background. I mean, for crying out loud, you can't.
There's not a blank wall that you could situate yourself
in front of or something to where we don't see
all the debris by your sync and everything else. The
woman in the shot was the least problematic, to say
nothing of Katie Porter's attitude. I mean, I'm looking at

(14:48):
I'm sorry, but I gotta get real picky about this.
I'm looking at everything in the background, and she's got
all of this like debris like all stacked up on
her butcher Block little island, and then I mean, I
can see dish so I can see the dish soap,
I can see all of this stuff and the stuff
on the fridge. I just think that that's more problematic
than anything else. The staffer in the shot is the

(15:11):
least kane want you guys, wouldn't accept a shot like that.
That looks hokey to have all of that stuff in
the background. She's not in a corner. She done got
a wall behind her.

Speaker 3 (15:23):
Yeah, it's standard to keep the background as less busy
as possible so that your focus is on the content
of what's being said in the video. And obviously that
wasn't a concern of hers.

Speaker 2 (15:35):
Hmmm. So I don't know. I think that's kind of
the staffers the least of my concerns. I'm really nosy.
Can you just bear with me for what is that
in the background? What does she have? You can tell
a lot about somebody by this stuff they have that
I see dish soap? What else do I see? What
is this? I know it doesn't matter. And the people

(15:57):
who are not watching the radio show on three forty
DirecTV or in the chat at Rumble watching it, or
like Dana, who cares what? But like, what what is that?

Speaker 5 (16:06):
It?

Speaker 2 (16:06):
Looks like a box of just like junk that she's
got to sign on, and then all others she looks
like a hoarder. And then it's like all in the like,
what in the world you don't have to have like
a better homes and garden set up?

Speaker 6 (16:18):
Right?

Speaker 2 (16:19):
I don't know. I just think that that's just and
for her to have that attitude and then to yell
at that staffer, Katie Porter is indicative of this. I
don't know how to describe it. Current level of the
what's currently happening with the Democrat Party where you've got

(16:42):
I keep telling you the ones who are who are
like fifty and younger that are coming up have major issues.
They all have major issues. I do not recognize them
as part of my generation. They all have issues, all
of them. Think of it. Uh, you've got man Donnie,
Man Donnie. You've got some of the Bressels in Texas,
you got the crockets, you got all of these. There's

(17:03):
just I don't know there they are. It's like they
pulled people off of the street and it just staffed
their party with them. They are representative of like the
worst inclinations of the Democrat Party. So anyway, you have,
you have Katie Porter. She's struggling, by the way, she
really is not having I mean, she's you know, maybe

(17:24):
perhaps the leading Democrat, but she's got major anger issues.
She's running for governor. As you know, she's trying to
replace Gavin Newsom. Have you noticed Gavin Newsom hasn't really
touched her. Maybe it's just because it's a primary so far,
but he's not gotten involved in it. So's clearly if
she was the anointed one, they would all be behind her. Already,

(17:47):
it's a pretty divided field. So she's going against Zabia
or Bessera and now Zaviier Besserra was ag of California
who became a HIHS under head of HHS under Biden Harris,
and now he's running for California governor. And then you've
got that Los Angeles mayor. And then that's just on
the Democrat side. And then there's like I think Steve
Hilton is the Republican he's a British guy, and then

(18:08):
a bunch of other people no one knows. So in California,
it's the top vote getters that if they are the
top vote geters, they advanced to the November ballot regardless
of what their party is. So she doesn't have a
major lead. Her big thing is that she has name
recognition because she was a congresswoman from the burbs around LA.

(18:35):
So that's literally the only reason I think at this
point why she's maintaining some kind of why she looks
like she's in the lead in this primary. Now, I mean,
these videos are really going to help with that name recognition,
but not in the way that she's hopes or her
staff would hope, because you have the CBS thing that

(18:56):
fell apart, and then you have this her screaming this,
and I I mean, and the way she handled if
I could go back to that interview that she did,
the CBS interview, that is that is just first off,
she didn't handle the questioning correctly because the questioning, the

(19:19):
question that was asked of hers, well what do you
say to the forty percent of because they're talking about
because you get Trump voters, And the reporter had asked, well,
what do you say to the forty percent of California
voters who that you you need to win this race?
What do you say to that forty percent that voted
for Trump? Now, she could say, well, you know, it's
a one party state, so it doesn't really matter. She
can't say something like that, But there was a way
that she could have more gracefully handled it. And if

(19:42):
that's the toughest question that Katie Porter has ever been asked,
which I kind of think it may be, and she
just failed that spectacularly, Guys, I mean, how in the
I don't know, man, I don't know. It's so bad.
I mean, she could have said, well, it's, you know,
technically it's like kind of a one party state, or well,
you know, that's that's you know, it's that's a tautology.
So technically it's a logical. But let's listen to this

(20:04):
real quick. Listen to how she handed the question and
how she handled it, because the question is actually kind
of a logical. Listen.

Speaker 8 (20:09):
So, and the question is what do you say to
the forty percent of voters who voted for Trump?

Speaker 7 (20:14):
Oh, I'm happy to say that. It's the do you
need them to win? Part that I don't understand. I'm
happy to answer the question. That's for the question as
you haven't written, and I'll answer.

Speaker 8 (20:21):
And we've also asked the other candidates do you think
you need any of those forty percent of California voters
to win, and you're saying, no, you don't.

Speaker 7 (20:28):
No, I'm saying I'm going to try to win every
vote I can. And what I'm saying to you.

Speaker 8 (20:32):
Is that, well to those voters.

Speaker 2 (20:34):
Okay, so you I don't want to keep doing this.
I'm gonna call it. Thank you. So, Katie Porter, first off,
you have to understand democrats or reporters, even if you're Democrats,
sometimes and they don't like you, they're going to ask
you a tough question that you might not be able
to answer easily. But she should have been prepared for that,
especially because this question has been asked of other candidates.
Either her staff didn't prepare her or she well, I

(20:57):
mean I regardless, I think even if they did, she
wouldn't have been able to handle it. All she would
have to do is say I would love to win
every voter. You know, but historically California is a pretty
one party state, so it kind of washes out in
the end. I mean that you could have said something
just as innocuous as that, and then she could have
monologued a little bit and commanded the interview and taken
it to a place where maybe she could have thrown

(21:17):
her a bone with some sort of you know, a
on a different issue, but she didn't do that because
she's not talented. She's not talented, and she's not a
quick thinker. She's short tempered, and she's she's intellectually stumpy.
She's not she's just not fast. And that's very evident
every single time I've seen her in a back and forth.

(21:39):
That's you know, it's pretty evident. But that's not a
hard question to handle, right, That's not a difficult question
to handle at all. I mean, I've actually I can't
believe him saying this. I can't remember where it was.
Joe Biden was doing some sort of press avail during
the campaign and the lead up to twenty twenty, and
they were talking about, not necessarily verbatim, the blue Wall,
but they were talking about miss in some of these

(22:00):
other states and you know, like you know and going
into like more rudder counties and they're like, well, what
do you know some of these counties you know you
might lose because they're red. What do you say to
the do you need those voters? And Biden's like, I
would love to have all those voters, and he's like,
you know, and if they don't vote for me, you know,
I'm still going to figure out a way to win.
I mean, he's for crying a lot, was barely sentient,
and he was able to answer that question better than

(22:21):
Katie Porter. I mean, it was basically the same question,
just different variables. And it's not even a gotcha question.
I know the reporter would love to have the sound
bite where Porter or the reporter would love to have
Porter saying, well, I don't need Trump voters to win,
and that's ultimately what she was going for. Any Democrat
that's not prepared to answer that question is a moron.
And you can't tell me that the staff didn't prepare her.

(22:42):
I mean, technically, I guess it's a possibility that they didn't.
But if you're someone who's already been in Congress and
you're portraying yourself as a quick thinking, seasoned, you know,
political veteran, that's child's play. I mean, that was actually
kind of a softball considering the level here. You're talking
about the gubernatorial race and the fact that she couldn't
even rise to that occasion. You don't rise to the challenge,

(23:03):
you fall back on your skill set, and Katie Porter's
skill set is being a bitch, and so she fell
back on that. That's the truth of it. I mean,
that's just crazy. If I was advising her campaign, I
would have quit. There's no way in hell, there is
no way the fact that you couldn't have answered that.
And I will never forget because I remember that Biden

(23:23):
and people were trying to say, look, you know, Trump
says he doesn't need Democrats, Biden says he would love
to have Republican voters, and they try to make a
big thing out of it. I remember when that happened,
and I just it made me think of that when
watching actually the second clip and just thinking that she
has an anger issue, to say nothing of the fact
that she dumped potatoes on her hot potatoes on her

(23:44):
husband's head, which is really weird. But okay, it's just
not she's got a lot of She's got a lot
of issues. Now does she have as many issues as
Jay Jones has. That's something that we're going to discuss,
because he's trying to so hard stay in this race,
and there were there was some internal polling that was released.

(24:05):
Oh yeah, she got really mad about her lighting. She's like, oh,
the lights are killing She was just really rude about it.
But Jay Jones, he there was a last night there
was uh somebody had posted some of the latest internal polling.
That's what campaigns used to refine their messaging, et cetera,
et cetera. So she, uh, this this, this internal polling

(24:27):
came out about Jay Jones, and a lot of people
are saying it's Spamberger who potentially released it, and that
there there is a building quiet pressure to get him
out of the race because it's not going anywhere. And
I have a feeling that there's a lot more stuff
about him that is being drip drip dripped out. That's

(24:48):
I really feel that, and I feel like a lot
more of it's going to be coming, and they're just
sort of girding their loins about it. We're living in
a time when truth feels dangerous and silence comes at
a cost. Vic Torria was scared and desperate when she
took the abortion pill at planned parenthood, and she immediately
felt the weight of regret and even thought about ending
her own life. But by God's grace, she reached out

(25:10):
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(25:53):
pound two fifty and say the keyword baby.

Speaker 4 (25:56):
Get the load down on the latest news with the
side of laughs.

Speaker 5 (26:00):
You want.

Speaker 4 (26:00):
Subscribe to the Dana Show podcast on YouTube, Apple or
wherever you get your podcast like SAMs through.

Speaker 5 (26:08):
The Holy Glass.

Speaker 3 (26:09):
So are the days of the United States.

Speaker 9 (26:13):
Hey, Natalie, bring your camera over here.

Speaker 2 (26:16):
I want to say something.

Speaker 9 (26:18):
Well, today's October the eighth, and obviously I'm here doing
some commercials for the grand Ola Ibry, which is why
I'm griss, kind of like a country western girl. But
before I got started, I wanted to say, I know
lately everybody thinks that I am sicker than I am.
Do I look sick to you, I'm working hard here. Anyway,

(26:41):
I wanted to put everybody's mind at ease, those of
you that seem to be real concern, which I appreciate,
and I appreciate your prayers. Because I'm a person of faith,
I can always use the prayers for anything and everything.
But I want you to know that I'm okay. I've
got some problems as I'm back when my husband Carl

(27:02):
was very sick. That was for a long time, and
then when he passed, I didn't take care of myself,
so I let a lot of things go that I
should have been taken care of. So anyway, when I
got around to it, the doctor said, we need to
take care of this, we need to take care of that.
Nothing major, but I did have to cancel some things

(27:22):
so I could be closer to home, closer to Vanderbilt,
you know where. I'm kind of having a few treatments
here and there, but I wanted you to know that
I'm not dying.

Speaker 2 (27:32):
I love Dolly Parton. I also loved it later how
she goes and can you believe what did she say?
People put up an AI video of me, and would
she said Loretta Lynn or Reba McIntyre. She goes, we
look like we should have been buried about died. She's hysterical. Well,
I saw because we had it like her sister was saying,
you know, she needs prayers in that, and everyone's like, no,
I mean, I really think that Dolly Parton would inspire

(27:55):
humanity to take up arms against death itself should anything
happen before we are ready to have her leave. But
she's I love her, and she's always been real nice,
and she's never gotten super political. And I just feel
like her body of work and all of her goodwill
means she didn't have to get super political and she
does not have to qualify her associations or her political

(28:15):
beliefs to anybody. And I kind of like that. I
like that there is still a place to go and
people who still offer a place to go where you
can get away from the politics and it doesn't have
to seep into your entertainment and doesn't have to seep
into the things that you leave politics to get a
break from, get a break in it. I like that
she is working hard. So look at her, Dolly Parton,

(28:38):
because I was getting real nervous. We all were. We're like, oh,
but then Keane's like, I.

Speaker 10 (28:42):
Think she pre recorded it.

Speaker 2 (28:45):
I think so she said October eighth.

Speaker 3 (28:48):
I know it is, yes true, I could record something
today and say it's October eleventh.

Speaker 2 (28:53):
What in the world would that just stop it? My gosh,
I realize you've got to think with old people. But
you know, Dolly's different. You know, not every old person
is trying to trick on you, not every one.

Speaker 5 (29:06):
That's not fair.

Speaker 2 (29:08):
So I'm glad that she's okay because who was the
other one that we saw there was, I know, someone
kept every time somebody dies. Now I get everyone's like, well,
your grandma's rule of three, and I'm like, I don't
even know how that grandma boots and we called her
boots and we have no idea why. There's no logic
to the rule of three. It's just if you if

(29:28):
someone kicks the bucket, then two other people that you know, celebrities,
et cetera, or just pro high profile people will also
that's her rule. But I don't know how that applies.
If you know them, then other people don't know them.
I don't know how that works. And is it just
like celebrities and I don't know she never I should
have asked her to explain it, like it's a logical thing,
but it is. Now. See now you just told me

(29:49):
somebody Kane, I don't know who this person was. No,
I don't know this dude. I never seen him in
my I wouldn't know him if I fell over him
in my living room. That no, I don't. I don't
know who Ron Dene. I feel bad because I don't,
but I don't. All right, we got our second hour

(30:10):
on the way. You don't want to miss more to
com stick with us our partners that bring you the program.
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Speaker 5 (31:33):
That's your message.

Speaker 11 (31:33):
Final questions to the people here of the state of
an only the people of the city of Chicago as
this incursion by the federal government. These troops are on
the streets of the state of this city. What do
you want them to do? This A big protest schedule
for five thirty pm tonight.

Speaker 12 (31:48):
Well, first, we've made sure that people know their rights
and they know how to find out what their rights are,
because we don't want them picked up off the streets
just because they're brown or black, just because they happen
to be undocumented and have committed no crime.

Speaker 2 (32:02):
Okay, Well, I mean just because he was in the
store taking items off the shelves, shoving into his pants
pockets and running out of the store doesn't mean that
he's like a criminal, doesn't mean that he's gone out
to commit more crimes. That's so dumb, you know. I mean,
entering the country illegally is a crime. And I can't
believe we keep having to say this over and over again.
It's really annoying because then we can't say anything new

(32:23):
because we have to keep going back and try to
stop that from becoming a thing. Because the left one
stopped saying it. That was JB. Pritzker. By the way,
I don't know, nor do I care who the reporter is.

Speaker 5 (32:33):
But JB.

Speaker 2 (32:34):
Pritzker was saying, well, no, I mean they you know,
just because they happen to be here illegally, they haven't
committed a crime. What if you're driving without a license
and you get pop for it, that's illegal. If there's

(32:58):
a million things, just because you're you're you go on
to do something else after you commit an illegal act,
doesn't mean that the act that you committed wasn't illegal
by nature of you going on and doing other things.

Speaker 3 (33:08):
Correct, If someone breaks into my home, that's still breaking
and entering.

Speaker 2 (33:13):
What if they go to like Walmart after Kane, Yeah, if.

Speaker 3 (33:15):
They just walk out and didn't take anything, it's still
a crime.

Speaker 5 (33:19):
Sorry.

Speaker 2 (33:21):
And if people don't believe that, I mean, if I
mean JB. Pritzker, if he doesn't, if he really believes that,
I mean, just maybe then why does he have like
such a secure estate. He's got the governor's mansion and
then he's got all kinds of other properties, So.

Speaker 3 (33:41):
Sure he locks his doors and his gates and.

Speaker 2 (33:43):
Have security and cameras to keep unwanted guests from entering.
Why does he hate people? What if I want to
be able to walk into the governor's governor's mansion. Why
does he hate people? Oh gosh, bigot, I mean, it's
it's same. It works right, That makes sense because the
logic is the logic is consistent. It's true. Back again

(34:04):
to the program. We were just listening to Potus. He
was holding a cabinet meeting and allowing the press to
come and ask some questions before that all gets kicked
off and get some insight there. So, and of course
we're still dealing with shutdown madness. Nobody knows what's going
to happen. Nothing new. We're still dealing with shutdown madness.
But the U and Democrats, by the way I was pulling,

(34:27):
let me pull this up. This was something I marked
this morning. Give me fire half a second. Here we go.
H This was from Gallup. It was released this morning
and it headlined Americans job ratings of six key agencies worsen.
And it's a new survey that is really really bad

(34:52):
for Democrats actually in this shutdown, and Republicans need to
kind of look at this. It looks at so of
these major government agencies that have really deteriorated in the
past couple of years. So you have FEMA, the CIA, CDC, FEMA, CIA, CDC,
FDA EPA IRS. They are at the lowest points in

(35:15):
Gallops trend. Now it says the decline in agency job
ratings for these agencies is the greatest for FEMA. You're
looking at minus twenty. That's a big drop. CIA drop ten,
CDC drop nine, FDA EPA they fall in seven each,

(35:35):
IRS down six. Their performance ratings as excellent or good
range from twenty five to thirty one percent. These are
record lows for all but the IRS, which was one
point lower than twenty thirteen. Now, why is this bad
for Democrats and shutdown? Well, because no one likes these agencies,
and these agencies are all frozen because Democrats want to

(35:58):
undo the cuts that were made in the one big,
beautiful bill to set agencies. Democrats are fighting to give
more money to agencies that have dropped, you know, anywhere
from twenty to ten points in terms of public perception
or public approval literally within the past year. Is anyone

(36:20):
in the Democrat party paying attention to any of this stuff?
If I'm looking at this, if I'm a consultant, if
I'm a strategist, and I'm looking at this, I'm saying Democrats.
You need to stop defending these agencies. You need to
stop defending the federal workforce. People are not buying it
because these people, look, you have federal work are still
getting paid even when everyone else was forced to stay
home and they weren't getting paid. There are a lot

(36:40):
of people still, I think underestimating the rage that people
have for that still is very, very very dangerous. Republicans
need to be you wan't to talk about seizing. Republicans
need to be seizing on this. This is actually a
huge thing. You know why, because if these if people
loath these agencies as much as being reflected in this,
then guess what, that makes it a hell of a

(37:02):
lot easier for Republicans to go out there and sell
the American public on cutting government bloat, cutting the expansion
of these agencies, especially the expansion of the IRS with
eighty eight thousand additional workers. Cutting funding, it makes the
reductions in terms of expense so much easier when you're

(37:25):
messaging that to the public. And I have no idea
why we don't have Republican leaders just sailing on this
right now. I mean, this is this democrats are they
need to call the Democrats bluff. You know, the only
agency that actually saw an uptake and improve an improval

(37:47):
approval sorry, according to the story, it's the Department of
Homeland Security. Department of Homeland Security, according to this piece,
at Gallup has seen a significant increase, significant improvement in
its job rating. Do you want to know by how much?

(38:07):
Particularly amongst independents and Republicans fifty nine points, So you
know what, people not Christy know them and look, I
do you know. I'm like, oh, my gosh, shot her
dog and a gravel pit. However, they're like, oh, she
always has cameras. I saw a tweet out there making
last night making fun of her for always having cameras

(38:28):
and showing her doing all of this. Well, you can
argue she understands populism, and she understands it. In order
to constantly make sure that you have that approval rating,
that you've got to be out there messaging this to
the people every single damn day, and that's what she's doing.
So maybe instead of like attacking her for and ask
why approval for her agency now has shot up by
fifty nine percent. The folks over at super Beats, who

(38:49):
have been a really long time supporter like such a
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Speaker 3 (39:57):
And now all of the news you would miss. It's
time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (40:03):
So in Kentucky, a man was charged with a terroristic
display over a Halloween decoration. Stephen Markham, He's fifty eight
years old. He was charged with terroristic threatening. The display
featured body bags labeled with the titles of local government officials.
It didn't have anybody's name in it. It just had

(40:24):
like district judge, what's the other Like they're just mayor
just the titles. A local prosecutor reported the display to
the police after driving past his home in Stanton, Kentucky.
One of the Powell County Judge executive drove past it.
He was unsettled, despite the fact that he was not
named on any of them. He said he knew him
as he knew the guy for decades. Said he was

(40:45):
someone who can be a good person. But disagree. I'm sorry,
but I really. They ceased his decorations and took it
to a police station. He's being held on five thousand
dollars bond right now. Yeah, apparently yeah yeah, yeah, Now
in order to find and this is so, this is it.
This was in Kentucky that they did this. And what

(41:08):
gets me is this is a British newspaper. The reason
the British newspaper is writing about this is the examples
that they give below, all of the examples at Liverpool
and Manchester and another one that was in Britain. All
of the other examples they give her in Britain because
you know, there are arresting people for memes and things
like that, and they're trying to defend themselves. The reason
they ran this in this British publication is so they

(41:29):
can be like, look in America, the free speech bastion
of America. I feel like this guy's got a lawsuit
on his hands. I really do, really do. That's insane.
NFL finds Jerry Jones two hundred and fifty thousand dollars
for flipping off fans. He says that it was unintentional.
Do we believe that it was unintentional? He said he
didn't mean to do it. He said it was in
the middle of of an interaction with New York Jets.

(41:52):
Multiple fans recorded him interacting with them and apparently he
held up his middle finger before pointing at someone and
waving to somebody else, and some people said he was
just simply trash talking. Should he have been fine, that's stupid.
I mean it's sports, you know, smack talking is. If
you can't do it, then and if it hurts your feelings, please,
dear Heavens, stay out of sports. Please do not, because

(42:14):
it makes it fun. We enjoy this stuff. Good night.
We've got a whole bunch of other stuff to get
into as well. It's the folks over at Chapter. Chapter
is a great group of advisors that can help you
walk through the whole Medicare annual enrollment season. And you're
just getting beaten over the head with robo calls and

(42:35):
texts and mailers. And my mom is just so every
time she gets them, I think she argues with them,
and I'm like, I think they're bots. Don't don't do that.
Don't don't argue with the butts, because they just they'll
just they'll keep they'll keep texting you. Medicare plans can
change every year, so even if you like your current plan,
you still have to check what's coming for twenty twenty six.
And if you don't review your options, you could lose

(42:56):
coverage that you depend on. You've got to call the
partners over at Chapter. It's a great Medicare partner for you.
They can review every plan across the country to make
sure that you are not over pain. They've been saving
people over one thousand dollars annually, and their advisors are salaried.
They advocate for you, not for the insurance companies. And
I know it can be a major hassle dealing with

(43:18):
all of this stuff, but I may promise you this
takes like under twenty minutes. Actually does take under twenty minutes.
That's how quickly they can do this. That's a lot
more in terms of saving you time than having to
deal with calls and emails and texts relentlessly from Medicare
and annual enrollment season. So if your current plan is
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(43:41):
advice from experts who know Medicare inside and out. It's
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Speaker 4 (43:56):
Not able to catch all three hours of the Dana Show,
Subscribe to the full podcast and get news and laughs
delivered in short, easy to digest episodes ideal for your
busy lifestyle on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 2 (44:12):
Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash with you at
the bottom of this our second hour. It feels like
it's still the first hour. So yesterday I said down
with my friend Jack Carr. You might know him. He
is the author of the Terminalist series. It stars Chris
Pratt on Amazon Prime. In fact, actually it's the It
began as a book series and he began. They turned

(44:34):
the book series into a series on Amazon So Chris
Pratt Terminalist, that's the first season. Now Darkwolf is now
the second season on Amazon Prime. And then, of course
Jack just came out with a new book called Cry Havoc,
which takes place back in Vietnam. And we sat down
yesterday and had a very in depth discussion including we

(44:54):
talked about everything, not just about his projects, but because
of his military background, we also talked about drone warfare
and China and a lot more. Here's a little bit
of a here's an excerpt of that. Listen when you're
thinking of future projects, because the future of warfare is changing,
and you and I were talking a little bit earlier
about drone warfare. Are you thinking about all of that

(45:15):
stuff in terms of, like you how you're Because it's
changing pretty quickly, and if you write something, I mean, obviously,
as you know, like ten years from now, it's going
to look so foreign compared to war fighting in Vietnam,
like back in the sixties and seventies, it's going to
look so different. What are your thoughts on all of that?
Because the drone warfare is a terrifying It's a terrifying thing.

(45:36):
I think the first time we actually saw it really
implemented was with kray.

Speaker 13 (45:39):
Yep sat there. I put it in True Believer, So
there as a drone attack in True Believer, and we
actually filmed that for the series, So that's in there.
But that was in twenty That book came on twenty nineteen.
I started writing it in twenty sixteen. But what was
great about this book, and I'll go back to the
drone warfare in a second, is that there weren't drones
to consider here, there wasn't weren't really satellites to consider.
There weren't cell phones, there weren't teslas, There weren't cameras

(46:02):
on every corner. There wasn't facial recognition technology. You could
still forge an ID like all of those things you
could do in nineteen sixty Eight's like to be school exactly.
I could use old school spycraft tradecraft and not have
to brite a chapter and be like, oh, why didn't
someone just text him and call off the attack? You know,
like you you know, I'm gonna have to search for
not even a quarter, like a dime or something to
find a payphone or something here. But but so cell

(46:26):
phones have really changed the way you write through and
way we filmed things too. How many times are we
seeing someone just pick up a phone and have a
conversation on a cell phone or to be a text
in TV and film today? And it's just because that's
how we are as people as well, unfortunately. And you
know that's something that I was talking about yesterday, is
that phones and communication it used to connect us with

(46:46):
family and friends that were far away, and now these
things disconnect us from people. We're sitting right next to Yeah,
it's just it's just crazy to think about.

Speaker 2 (46:54):
I think there's too much connection. I read a headline
where it said people max out having like social interactions
and friends at a hundred and fifty people, and that's
really put in.

Speaker 13 (47:02):
That seems a lot.

Speaker 2 (47:02):
That's a lot, and they're like, yeah, it with some people,
it's like fifty kind of maxims out. There is something
to be said for that.

Speaker 13 (47:08):
Yeah, I believe you're right. And I don't think as
humans were boom beings were meant to handle all that
sort of input. But people can take advantage of it
now as well. It doesn't benefit us as citizens, doesn't
make us better spouses, is better mothers, fathers, citizens. It
just just divides us and benefits maybe political parties and
of course the tech overlords. There's a I'm trying to

(47:29):
push reading so much, and reading being a reader is
being is a new type of rebellion against the digital tier.

Speaker 2 (47:35):
Yes, nothing replaces a tangible actual exactly.

Speaker 13 (47:39):
I mean you put pull out a book and start
reading a book that stands out today. Pull out a
cell phone, you'splent din with everybody else. So I'm trying
to get pushed the reading is an act of rebellion.

Speaker 2 (47:50):
Nice.

Speaker 13 (47:50):
I like that, Yeah, me too, but for this that Yeah,
the drone warfare, I'm so glad that I got out
of the military before these the drone warfare stuff really hit.
It is so scary seeing the drone attacks in Ukraine
in particular, and of course different nations are using them
in different different ways. We saw Israel use one about
a year and a half ago, now a year in
a couple of months ago, where they used drones as
a blocking force. So blocking force is like a let's say,

(48:13):
a group of rangers that comes in and blocks or
contains and which are different things but similar tactics, and
then a special smaller special operations force goes within that
perimeter and does what they need to do in there.
And Israel did it with just that smaller group of
people to go into a certain target in Syria last
about a year and three or four months ago, and
instead of having people be that blocking force, they use

(48:35):
drones as the blocking force, which is really interesting. I
hadn't heard of that being done before. And then of
course for seeing those drone attacks in Ukraine and you're
seeing these drones hunt people down in these trenches, and.

Speaker 2 (48:45):
That's from what you're going on to build a rum goes.
What Masad did with in Iran was that was that
was pretty spectacular.

Speaker 13 (48:52):
Yeah, to see that, and of course the enemy is
always learning, always adapted.

Speaker 2 (48:55):
Then I got a little nervous because I'm like, if
they're able to go into Iran and build a drum
base within Iran, then who's to say that that could
not happen in the United States. I think a CCP
on Farmland. I think the little trial ballone that went
over the whole country country. Nobody did anything. They were
just out, you know, and gets out there. Yeah, that's
a that's a little scary. It definitely could happen here.

Speaker 5 (49:17):
Sure.

Speaker 13 (49:18):
I mean we're always learning. The enemy is always learning,
always adapting. Typically the enemy does it a little faster
than we do because we're a gigantic pureocracy and the
enemy is not. In many cases. And when I say enemy,
I mean Iran, China, Russia and North Korea. Super empowered individuals,
terrorist organizations, they can adapt a little faster than we
can because they don't have as many constraints. We've had

(49:38):
a technological advantage for a long time. But because because
of how technology has dispersed really across the world. Maybe
we don't have quite the advantage that we thought we did,
or it's leveling up. I think we still have it,
but I think it's leveling up also, So someone certainly
could do some things similar to what Israel did in

(49:58):
Iran right here in this I don't even think they
need the land to do it. I think, yeah, it's
already exists.

Speaker 2 (50:03):
And that's what's scary, because I hope that we have,
for the lack of a better way to put it,
a whole stockpile of really spooky stuff that we can use.
I mean, that's where I'm totally okay with my tax
dollars going, like I just want some super lethal, super
spooky stuff, just stockpilot because I look at you know,
China and ai and the drums that they're making. I mean, granted,
you know, it's kind of a war of attrition with them.

(50:23):
It doesn't matter the quality. They can just produce a
million of you know something, but you know, the chips manufacturing,
like with Taiwan and all of this other stuff, and look,
I just feel like we are really behind the ball
on this and not even really aware of it. We
see it happen, and around we're like, oh, wow, that's
pretty cool there, and wow that's really scary yeah over there.

(50:44):
And I just feel like not enough are putting two
and two together here, and yeah, questioning.

Speaker 13 (50:48):
That, sure, No, you have to always put yourself in
the enemy's shoes and ask, hey, what would I what
lessons would I take from this if I were the enemy? Okay,
maybe this? Then how would I adapt? What would I do?
How would I think that the United States is going
to try to counter what I'm doing right here? What
they think are anticipating that I would take? Oh, then
I'm going to do this instead. So that's it's a
constant game of adaptation, and typically who adapts faster than

(51:10):
the adversary is going to end up on top.

Speaker 2 (51:12):
Do you think this administration is correcting some of that,
that the mistakes that have been made by you know, previously.
It doesn't seem like they're trying to bring us up
to speed because I think you obviously, I think I
trust your perspective on this more than mine. Well, but
from what you're seeing, I mean, are you pleased with
you know the changes that have happened so far?

Speaker 13 (51:30):
Yeah, I think we're on the right path. And it's
I'm not saying that the administration got the Department of
War thing from me. I'm just saying that I never
heard anybody talk about it until I talked about it
after the Afghanistan withdrawal in twenty twenty one.

Speaker 2 (51:45):
So I think you've even talked about it on the web.

Speaker 5 (51:48):
We did.

Speaker 13 (51:49):
Yeah, So the Department of War and in the nineteen
forty seven it changes from the Department of War. Why
is it offense? Why should people know the precision and
language reflects precision and thought. And when you have something
that was called it Department of War, that has a
certain connection to the vocabulary and it means something and
you change that to the Department of Defense, now that
means something. That's a different word war in defense, those

(52:11):
are different words, and words are meant to be precise,
and when you defend something, that is very different than
going to war to crush something. And so I advocated
for that back in in twenty twenty one. But it's
interesting people are saying that it's now called the Department
of War. But if you look at the statement from
the White House, it's worded very once again, very precisely.

(52:32):
So here they were very precise. So they say that
you can call it the Department of War. We are
calling it the Department of War. But I think it
really takes an Act of Congress to change it moving
forward to the Department of War. So those are different things.

Speaker 2 (52:45):
Yes, So that bureaucracy you're talking about there. Yeah, the
news SEC War can't say SEC deaf anymore. I like
seg war better. The Secretary of War came out I
think this was last week, and had all the generals
a mass, and I was the press was going crazy,
Why are all of these generals going and meeting with
Secretary of War? It's Donald Trump's going to get us
in World War three. That's kind of what they were

(53:05):
intimating in the headlines. Then he gets them all together
and he's like, all right, we got to have news.

Speaker 13 (53:09):
We got to have He says, you guys are not
going to be fat anymore.

Speaker 2 (53:11):
No more fatties, no, no trainees, no fatties, none of us.

Speaker 13 (53:14):
They thought we were here for an announce World War
three and you're just telling me to do some more
push ups.

Speaker 2 (53:18):
Yeah, yeah, exactly.

Speaker 13 (53:19):
What a big letdown for some of those guys. They're
probably like, oh, she's I wish she was gonna now
it's so sort of warrior said, I'm enough to go
do this PK test. You know, it's possible, it's possible.
I've walked by some of those guys. Yeah, they know
who they are.

Speaker 2 (53:30):
Was that in your estimation? Is that a long time coming?

Speaker 5 (53:33):
Oh?

Speaker 13 (53:33):
Yeah, I mean it's uh, it's it's a pretty big
correction because we've gone so far in another direction. I mean,
we look at how many admirals in general, so flag
officers there were in World War Two, and I won't
give an exact number because I don't know it, but
it was very small compared to the amount of flag
officers we have today. And yes, we are a larger
country today, but you are a very top heavy organization today.

(53:55):
It really was a profession of arms back then, and
it's meant to be a profession of arms once again.
Language but it became a career for some and there's
a difference between a career and a profession and it's
a different mindset. And would say it became a career
for some of these people, which means they're just trying
to climb the ladder. Just trying to impress the person
that's higher up on that ladder and instead of And

(54:15):
that's what you have to do still for evaluations and
fit reps. And maybe it's gotten better. My information is
a little little dated. I've been out for a moon
or two now, But what really matters is that competence
and how your peers see you and the people that
are below you in the chain of command.

Speaker 5 (54:29):
See you as well.

Speaker 13 (54:30):
So hopefully they're looking at things a little more holistically.

Speaker 2 (54:33):
So that is that's an excerpt of our discussion with
Jack Carr. Now you can watch the full discussion tomorrow.
What time it says right down there at five pm
Eastern fourth Central. I'm like, what time is? What time
do I do it? Kane? What time do we do?
It's right underneath me. But you can watch that at

(54:55):
four pm Central, five pm Eastern tomorrow. Yeah, so, and
you'll be able to watch the full discussion because we
talked about everything from uh, we talk about everything from
the book project, the stuff that he's got going on,
and then this. So it's all very good stuff, all

(55:15):
very good stuff. But you can watch that in full
and you'll be able to see it tomorrow. All good
all good things, for all good discussions. We might do
more of those. So that was, as you know, that's
the same set. That's the same set that we have here,
and we just kind of switched it out. And so
we're experimenting and doing a couple of different things because
sometimes we want to have longer discussions with some of

(55:36):
our guests. But the live radio format is very different
from a podcast format, and what works in radio doesn't
necessarily work digitally, and what works digitally does not necessarily
work radio, So you kind of have to, you know,
gotta be careful on high split that baby. It's got
a it's a very very very delicate thing. But it
was a great discussion. And if you haven't watched Darkwolf

(55:59):
on Amazon, it is. It's fantastic. It's so good you'll
you'll love it. Terminalist was great too. I really like
I mean, I like Terminalists. I really like Dark Wolf. Also,
I think I'm I might even prefer Dark Wolf because
it was very hard to see Chris Pratt go through it.
And that's all I'm gonna say. If you haven't watched
The Terminalist, and then you get to see what he's

(56:21):
like before he goes through it and you're like, and
that just makes you angrier. And it's getting to the
point where everything starts, you know, all the Dominoes starts.
So very good, fascinating, fascinating series. We have more on
the way. We got Florida Man coming up to our
partners that make it possible, our friends at Amos Squared.
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Data show.

Speaker 3 (58:01):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions.

Speaker 5 (58:07):
It's time for Florida.

Speaker 2 (58:09):
Man, all right. So this was just reported in this morning.
A Coral Springs, Florida man is facing domestic violence charges
after he hid his father during an argument that began
when the father asked the son to remove the lady
of ill repute that he had brought home a prostitute,

(58:32):
lady of the night king. That's right, a hooker, yeah.
According to Coral Springs, police, officers responded to a family
home where the victim told his son that he had
spent the day drinking with a woman he described as
a prostitute. Was she a prostitutor? Was she just an
unpaid She did it for free? You know what I mean,
like a skank. I mean, there's the difference is money

(58:55):
in case you're wondering. So when he asked the woman
to leave, she applied. But then the son became enraged,
shouting threats, telling his daddy was going to beat as
they had double snakes, and then they came to fisticuffs
and nine one he called nine one one. The son
hit him in the lip. He's just described himself as
visibly shaken, and or the police did, and the victim's

(59:17):
wife and daughter corroborated, et cetera. And so now the
son was arrested. He posted two thousand dollars bond. That's sad.
He sounds like he's got some problems. The sun like
he didn't get beaten enough when he was a kid.
Let's see, this is such a good dog. Dogs are
just the best people. I just you know, if you're
like would you rather spend your day with a very
enjoyable person or a dog? I'd be like a dog.

(59:40):
So this was in Okaloosa County. A dog was deemed
a hero because he alerted a deputy to his owner,
a grandmother who had fallen on a sidewalk. A man
called nine one one frantic after his wife had not
returned home for a more dog walk. Body camera footage
shows the man telling the deputies that responded that his
wife has normally only gone ten to fifteen minutes, but
she even gone over an hour. It then cuts to
the deputy driving before hearing her say that's the dog.

(01:00:04):
And they find the dog and they ask the dog,
where's your mom? Go find us find where your mom is?
And then the dog led them do the woman who
was lying on the sidewalk, and the woman asked the deputy,
the dog would brought you over, and he wouldn't leave.
He kept coming back to her. He wouldn't leave her alone.
He ran up to the patrol car and led them
to the woman and they call him e Or. The
dog's name is e Or, and that dog is the
best boy. I hope he gets tons of treats. I

(01:00:26):
shouldn't say that out loud, because if the TV's on
our dog, wic K will jail break the I'm not
like Hassan Piker. I'm not going to keep I'm not
you know, a piece of scum wrapped in meat. Who
is going to keep my dog on a little square
for four hours while I rail incessantly Nepo baby style
in my compound and then zap it with a shot collar. No, no, no,

(01:00:50):
my dog, Well he didn't do that. He didn't believe
he didn't. He can't stay in here. Came wants him
to be a studio dog. You don't know what you're asking.
An alligator walks into a bar in Florida. For real,
It's Florida. What did you expect? So an alligator? Legit
and Stuart, Florida. It was a local tiki bar in Stuart, Florida.

(01:01:11):
And they got a special friend today. All the people
at the bar got a little friend. It was a gator.
He walked into Harlow's hideout like he owned the place,
and they and he didn't he, you know, very dramatically,
and they called officers in Florida Fish and Wildlife. They
arrived on the scene, that gator was taken into custody.

(01:01:31):
He was very compliant without incident, and no injuries were reported.
And they say that the gator was relocated to a
quote more suitable venue where the only cocktails are in
the swamp and the sun never sets on happy hour
end quote. But I don't know, that's such a dawn joke.

(01:01:52):
If I would have seen a gator walk and they
have photos of him, He's just a little guy. He's
not a huge gator. You can pick him up and
carry him like a baby if you wanted to, saying
I would, you know, but just saying, but I would
if I see that in the bar, I'm not gonna
be scared. I'm gonna be free, pet, free pet.

Speaker 6 (01:02:09):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:02:10):
I'm not dumb enough to be like a Yellowstone and
walk up to a moose or do anything dumb like that.
But if I see, you know, if you can eat it,
you can get it, you know what I'm saying, Like,
if it's yeatable, then it's gettable, And so I would
it be my pet. Just saying We got a lot
more on the way coming up. Third hour stick with

(01:02:30):
us our friends at the folks at Bernagun. I look,
I have zero problem throwing lead down range. I've told
you this a million times. I have zero issue using
lethal force to protect myself or my loved ones. This
is not even up for debate. But I also realized
too that it's important to have diversity in terms of
what you have for weapons and do you whether it's
municipal or private property restrictions, blah blah blah. You guys

(01:02:52):
know the drill. It's you have different calibers, you have blades.
I just think that it's smart to incorporate something when
everything else is trying to disarm you, so you can
still have a means of defending yourself. Burn a gun
shoots chemical irrit and projectiles that can deter threats from
up to fifty feet away. And they've got I think
it's like, what, fifteen rounds in one of their cartridges,

(01:03:13):
whereas think about regular stunt guns. You got regular stunt guns,
you got like one or two rounds, that's it. But
with burnegun, you've got a fifteen round shock capacity per cartridge.
There's no recoil. Everything's made right here in the US
of A. And it does not care about gun free
zone signs. So if you're a college student who's allowed
by age of eighteen to go in a foreign land
and carry a fil auto and defense of your country,

(01:03:33):
but you can't legally carry a firearm here while living
in a town and going to college and defensive yourself,
Bernegum might be an option for you. Doesn't care about
gun free zone signs. There are zero background checks. They
can be shipped right to your front door. There's no
special fees. It's accessible to everybody. The cl the compact
launcher is the best one purpose and it's perfect for
this particular situation. Visit Berna dot com slash data. It's

(01:03:57):
the BURNACL byr NA dot com slash standa.

Speaker 5 (01:04:02):
It's a it's a vote it for the one thing
we go correct.

Speaker 10 (01:04:06):
I voted for a large build that gave the largest
tax cut to Americans in history. Voting by the way,
the average New York are getting a four thousand dollars
tax cut.

Speaker 5 (01:04:15):
Are you against that? You're embarrassing?

Speaker 10 (01:04:17):
You want to you want to cut the standard deduction in.

Speaker 5 (01:04:19):
The largest MEDICI. You voted for that fraud and abuse
by the way voting.

Speaker 10 (01:04:25):
Tom Dnaple, the Democratic Controller of New York, question pointed
out that one point two billion dollars waste.

Speaker 14 (01:04:31):
You you're not gonna talk You're not gonna talk to wasted.
You're not gonna talk to me and talk over New
York because you don't want to hear what I have
to say. Why don't you just keep your mouth shut?
Because you showed that the way you showed up. You
showed up, and so you voted for this one. You
can extend it permanent extension of massive tax breaks for

(01:04:55):
your billionaire Americans. You can get a permanent America take
the standard deduction?

Speaker 5 (01:05:01):
Is that right?

Speaker 10 (01:05:02):
Ninety percent of Americans take the standard deduction?

Speaker 1 (01:05:04):
Right?

Speaker 10 (01:05:05):
If you had your way, the standard deduction would have
been cut in half. That would have been a massive
taxing griss on Americans all.

Speaker 5 (01:05:10):
Across the country.

Speaker 14 (01:05:12):
Unfortunately, you're again lifting the cap on a billionaire.

Speaker 10 (01:05:16):
The billionaire donors, lifting the casualt We put a income captain.

Speaker 5 (01:05:20):
Why are you here right now? And where?

Speaker 7 (01:05:23):
Republican each other?

Speaker 5 (01:05:24):
Where the republic.

Speaker 2 (01:05:26):
Not even like a major Mike Lawler fan, but holy wow, man,
I really King Jefferies is just a goober. I don't
know how else to put it. What is that King's
over here mad? Do you mean you're hitting the desk?
You're man? Yes, get it.

Speaker 3 (01:05:40):
The big beautiful bill was passed in July July fourth,
by the way, the familiar date. And all we're doing
is extending what has already been assigned.

Speaker 2 (01:05:49):
The current by level spending. What I think is so
funny is that Republicans are all its still current by
levels spending. You guys voted for this eleventy thousand times.
By the way, Round seven just failed, and the Senate
so still the shutdowns in effect, which I'm totally Democrats are.

Speaker 3 (01:06:07):
Still holding the American people hostage.

Speaker 2 (01:06:09):
Democrats are mad because they wanted the funding from the
merr and they're trying to sit here. What is this?
This is their new talking point. First off, welcome back,
by the way, Dane lash with you. Top of this
third hour, Dave Reuben joins us at the bottom, uh
chats at rumble. They got everybody there has the has
their own ship. You gotta make your own before you
get in there. And then we also have to You

(01:06:30):
can watch the radio show Channel three forty seven DIRG
TV felt like I needed to say that forgot it,
so the new talking point and I think I put
the Did I put this in slack for you earlier?
I did?

Speaker 9 (01:06:43):
Right?

Speaker 2 (01:06:44):
Did I put the the the uh? They're trying to
argue that, oh, well, medicaid funding, where's the sat Let
me pull this up real quick because I have a
million other Oh here does this is ABC piece? ABC
news piece. They're trying to say, oh, no, emergency medicaid
for illegal aliens. I don't say undocumented immigrants just so
I don't like, I don't say things like assault weapons

(01:07:05):
or a man can be a woman or something like that,
right because this doesn't exist like Palestine. So they said
that emergency medicaid for illegal aliens accounts for it. Now
this is what their ABC news is. All of the
Democrats are tweeting this right now. It accounts for less
than one person of state spending according to the stad
Mri University. And the problem with this is that this

(01:07:26):
is based a on fiscally you're twenty twenty two number one,
number two, it's state based number three. It doesn't get
into nor does it doesn't include at all any kind
of like if you go to you go to an
emergency room. That's you de facto get care regardless of
an ability to pay. That's literally has been a federal
offer forever doesn't include that, and there's a bunch of

(01:07:47):
other stuff that it doesn't take into consideration. Did you
not something else too with that? Or am I missing something?

Speaker 3 (01:07:52):
Or did I make that it was about the salt
the thing was it's state spending. It's definitely twenty twenty two,
but also it's the salt cap stuff. This might is fungible.
What they get from the federal government is then distributed
and they don't count it in regards to what they're
getting and putting towards medicaid and the state.

Speaker 2 (01:08:10):
So well, let me explain it like this. So like
say Hunter Biden wants to buy crack rock. Okay, how much?
What's what is it going rate for a crack rock?

Speaker 5 (01:08:18):
For a crack rock?

Speaker 2 (01:08:19):
Like just keep it something.

Speaker 3 (01:08:20):
Easy and so probably a spit painting.

Speaker 2 (01:08:22):
Let's say one hundred dollars, okay? Is that I have
no idea who knows never bought the crack so crack
rock he's gonna Hunter Biden wants he's got one hundred dollars.
He wants to buy a crack rock. Actually, say he's
got fifty dollars and he wants to buy a hundred
dollars crack rock. And he's like, what am I gonna
do here? Huh?

Speaker 3 (01:08:40):
I don't have enough money here.

Speaker 2 (01:08:42):
Yeah, So say that he's got fifty dollars, Say Joe
gives him a hundred because Hunter Biden also has to
pay his rent and he's got to buy who wants
to buy his crack rock? And he's like, I can't
do both of these things. You know, crackrock is one
hundred dollars my you know, rent's like fifty whatever. I
don't know, just making it up. So Joe Biden slips
slips him one hundred. So he's able to take money
that he already has and he buys a crack rock
with it. So in terms of fungibility, it's essentially just

(01:09:06):
one in, one out. You just trade it out. That's
all it is. I mean, you're you're It empowers you
to be able to do things financially because someone gives
you money that makes you more financially secure Layman's terms.
So that's what we're talking about here. So they're trying
to my I mean, if I was just going to
be a ridiculous smart ass, I would say, well, is
one percent greater than zero? Okay, because that's still my

(01:09:28):
tax dollars. And I just explained to you why the
math is funny, and it's actually significantly higher than that.
But I digress. And we've talked about this before, state
by state, the millions and billions that are actually going
towards this, we talked about it quite a bit. So
you know this idea that I don't know. By the way,
I just saw this. Trump signed a Columbus Day proclamation

(01:09:49):
and said, We're back Italians. I am. I'm just this
is so funny. It just cracks me up. He says, uh, yeah,
We're We're back Italians. Isn't he Irish? But or no, wait,
he's English, right, Scottish and they'll take him New York

(01:10:10):
Italians will take him because he's very He's he's got
those mannerisms. He goes, we're calling it Columbus Day, where
back Italians love the Italians.

Speaker 5 (01:10:18):
Here.

Speaker 2 (01:10:18):
Let me drop this in because this is gonna be
I like the thick when he had that taco salad
the one one time on uh uh was it Sanco
de Mayo, and he was like, I love Hispanics, and
everyone's like he said, he loves Hispanics. He's a reason insane.
But this was actually from this cabinet meeting where he
was sitting between Uh, Marco Rubio and Pete. Hegseth and uh,

(01:10:42):
that's funny. So and then you have the people that
are going, oh, Italy didn't exist as a niche. And
during the time of Columbus he traveled or shut up, Columba,
shut up, you know what him in America Vespucci, they
were Italians and they went and they got the favor
of the Spanish court because Italy was all broken into
different kingdoms. And then in the eighteen hundreds they came together.

(01:11:03):
But that's a long story and well, you know, another time,
but this idea, they were Italians Americo Vespucci. Interestingly enough,
one of his cousins, Simoneta Uspucci, who married, well he
Simonetta married his cousin. There it goes back and forth
that Bodicelli had her, was secretly in love with her,
and had her as his muse. But then also some

(01:11:24):
people say that she was just the ideal avatar for
Florentine beauty back during the era, so very interesting. She
was part of that family and had that connection to Bodicelli.
And as you know, Americo, Vespucci technically was the first
to discover America, but they didn't call it America, which
I actually liked. That were not Americas. I like Americans better.
Just works. But anyway, you didn't need to know any

(01:11:45):
of that, but I shared it with you anyway because
it's Thursday. If you have that, play that for me,
because this is funny, this cracks me out. This is
Trump right after what we were just talking about. Listen
another words.

Speaker 5 (01:11:55):
We're calling it Columbus Day.

Speaker 2 (01:11:58):
Yes, that was.

Speaker 1 (01:12:05):
The press that broke out in the close.

Speaker 5 (01:12:10):
That I've never seen that happen before.

Speaker 1 (01:12:13):
The press. The press actually broke out in Uplaus. Good
Columbus Day. We're back Columbus Day. We're back Italians. And
we loved the Italians.

Speaker 2 (01:12:25):
I like, says the two. We love the Italians so great.
He's he's, he cracks me up. Oh man. So the
uh A lot of where to even go? Where to
go from here? So one of this, let's see I
had posted this up. So now we just had the

(01:12:47):
seventh round failed, and I told you this was last hour,
and I'm just saying it again because I think that
this is important for you to know. This Gallop survey
that came out that shows American job approval or the
Americans approval rating of these the jobs that these different
agencies are doing. They had fifteen agencies and among them

(01:13:08):
they had FEMA, CIA, CDC, FDA, E PA, I RS.
They're at or near the lowest points in Gallop's trend.
The decline is pretty significant. So for instance, FEMA dropped
twenty points, CIA ten, CDC nine. The only one that
saw an increase was Department of Homeland Security, which saw
like a fifty some odd fifty plus some odd increase

(01:13:29):
in its approval rating fifty nine points in fact, and
it even beat sect War, even beat the Department of War.
They saw plus thirty eight in terms of the year
to year gain in public approval. And so I bring
this up because this is messaging that I have not
seen Republicancies on like, look at the absolute disapproval with

(01:13:53):
which Americans view these agencies, and we the Republicans, are
trying to streamline them more so they're more efficient and
get rid of the bureaucracy, the bloat, and that's why
we're not committing to democrats demands for increasing spending. We're
only continuing the previously approved democrats current level of spending.
I wish that they will go out. I think that
would even be more helpful to them if they wouldn't

(01:14:14):
message in that particular way, because that's I mean, that's
they have the people on their side. This is really
bad for Democrats. And then where's the story that I
just let me pull this up and then we're going
to get into the stuff with J Jones here. Then
you have this story. The IRS is now announcing new
federal income tax brackets for twenty twenty six, and there's

(01:14:38):
a lot of their people are furloughed, and I'm like,
make it permanent. I don't want them doing nothing. Make
it permanent. So completely unconstitutional. Now, speaking of J Jones,
as I just mentioned, so, there are a couple of
polls that came out, and one of these polls that
came out is one that J Jones is I'd teck
a push poll that they're running, and they're trying to
say that, oh, this is really great for Jay Jones.

(01:15:02):
They're trying very very hard to stay in the race.
And I just I think it's going to get more
and more difficult for him as it goes because these
text messages, and it's not even just the text messages,
it's everything else too, are so detrimental to him. It's crazy.
And uh, it looks like this poll that came out, well,

(01:15:28):
that was released yesterday evening. It's from Heart Research. This
was an internal poll that was conducted from Saturday to Monday,
and this is the one that Jay Jones is really
desperately trying to use as a way to say, look,
I'm still competitive. The Heart Research poll shows Jones only
plus one over the incumbent ag Miarez. And as you remember,

(01:15:52):
Jay Jones is the Democrat nominee for Attorney General for Virginia,
and he was the one who in text messages was
talking about shooting a Republican delegate because the Republican delegate
had the audacity to say simply nice things about a
recently deceased Democrat delegate. And he said very nice things

(01:16:14):
and said he was praying for his family. Nothing negative,
He didn't qualify anything. He just said he was a
nice man, and you know, he was sad about it,
and j Jones apparently didn't like that, and then told
another lawmaker that he wanted to put a bullet in
the guy's head and also kill his children in front
of them. He wanted the wife to watch her children
die like he got graphic in these text messages. And
then what's more, it comes out all of these other

(01:16:35):
instances where Jay Jones had major, major rage problems for real,
whether it was you know rage, you know, road rage
or whatever. So now and this was the poll that
they came out with that they were kind of trying
to like hang on to it. Well, there's also an
interactive poll. I haven't broken any of I haven't broken
these down, but it shows Jason Miarez a head of

(01:16:59):
j Jones. And back in the beginning of October it
was sixty forty in favor of Jones, and now it's
precipitously dropped in Meres's favor, and now we're looking at
him being ahead by about three points that this Mira
is being ahead about three points at this at this moment,
So very interesting stuff that could and you, honestly, that's

(01:17:21):
what you want to see because can you imagine somebody
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Speaker 3 (01:18:36):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (01:18:42):
Okay, so this is totally appropriate here. I saw Babylon
B headline. You want to know what the headline said,
Hitler brings peace to Israel and they had a picture
of Donald Trump because the Left always calls him Hitler
and Nazi and everything else. I thought that was pretty funny.
Well played, Babylon B. Well played. Let's see also what
we have this? Okay, here we go. So only in

(01:19:04):
Saint Louis, Kane, it's our hometown. A fella wearing the
same underwear during an alleged robbery leads to a rest.
Now this is in the east side, says the Saint Louis.
This is over the river. A man's face in multiple
charges because he robbed a Dave's Hot Chicken and Chesterfield
over the weekend, and according to probable cause. Kanele sanguitely.

(01:19:27):
He entered the restaurant on Saturday of October fourth, within
and he was armed. He had with an armed pistol.
That's how they wrote this, that guy who knows deer
heavens with an armed pistol. Okay, they said he was
wearing a ski mask enter the manager's office, and they
apparently they got a witness described a description of him.

(01:19:51):
They had a description of him. They had him on
surveillance camera and apparently his bridges that were captured sticking
above his pants that helped identify and that led to
him being caught.

Speaker 15 (01:20:01):
For more below.

Speaker 2 (01:20:02):
But yeah, yeah, oh well yeah, it was hanging low,
that's right. And apparently Disneyland guest suffers a medical emergency
at the Hunted Mansion later dies, so that actually tracks.
I mean, it's Disney but also Haunted Mansion and all
that stuff. So we got more on the way. Dave
Ruben joins us next as we move the folks who
help make the program happen. It's Patriot Mobile, the only
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(01:20:23):
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Speaker 4 (01:21:29):
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Speaker 11 (01:21:44):
Do you think the President deserves a Nobel Piece prize?

Speaker 15 (01:21:48):
Well, I mean, if this sticks, I think the whole
point of having a Nobil Piece prizes for ending wars
and per brooning piece, and now I'm going to make
a direct appeal to the president.

Speaker 2 (01:22:01):
I mean that's I completely agree with that. Of all
the things that people get nominated for when they get
the Nobel Peace Prize, I mean considering this is a
pretty significant thing. Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash
with you. You can listen coast to coast terrestrially. You
can also watch the digital stream of the radio program
Channel three forty seven Direct TV, also at rumble x, Facebook,

(01:22:23):
everywhere on the Weber Nuts. Joining me now my good
friend Dave Rubin, host of The Ruben Report. He joins
us from his super swanky set via video. Always good
to see you, Dave. This is a good thing. I mean,
I mean, think about it, like the birds are singing,
We're agreen with John Fetterman. You know, it's like, I
don't know, like rainbows and stars and kittens and sunshine,

(01:22:45):
and it's just this is something good. What are Democrats
going to bitch about?

Speaker 5 (01:22:50):
I kid you not.

Speaker 6 (01:22:51):
There is a bird that magically appeared in my kid's
nursery about an hour ago that's still flying around their room.
The window wasn't even an open in the room. We're
not even sure how it got there. Yeah, there is
a lot of good stuff happening right now. Yes, Donald
Trump deserves the Nobel Peace Prize for this. Regardless of
whether this is actual peace like Kumbaya, everybody's gonna love

(01:23:12):
each other, or it's just that this two year disaster
is coming to a close. The hostages will come out,
the Israeli troops will withdraw, the map will likely look
a little different.

Speaker 5 (01:23:26):
I'm not Pollyannish.

Speaker 6 (01:23:27):
I don't think we're going to just magically have peace
tomorrow and everyone's gonna be crossing borders and loving everybody.
But Donald Trump has painted a vision for the world
that is different than basically everyone has done in about seventy.

Speaker 5 (01:23:43):
Five years in that region.

Speaker 6 (01:23:45):
And we already have evidence that it can work when
you think about it differently, because we have the Abraham Accords.
We already have evidence it can work differently if you
think about it differently, because he was able to move
the embassy to Jerusalem and all hell didn't break loose.
So I think there's every reason for us optimism right now.
And Dana, as I'm sure you've pointed out already on
your show this morning. I mean the fact that Bernie Sanders,

(01:24:07):
Rashida Talib, Chuck Schumer, the laundry list of lefties who
have been screaming about genocide for two years, which of
course this was not a genocide, it was an active war.
They have not tweeted about it tells you all you
need to know. They all they have wanted to do
here was destroy Israel. It had nothing to do with
saving the Palestinians. The Palestinians could have all been saved

(01:24:30):
on October eighth if they would have just released the hostages.

Speaker 5 (01:24:33):
So there's all goodness here.

Speaker 6 (01:24:35):
There's a lot of good signs, and I'm very bullish
on maybe this can heal some of the wounds that
we've been seeing on the right, because the oh we're
going to destroy Israel crowd is looking pretty silly right now.

Speaker 2 (01:24:45):
I know, maybe that Katari money you'll still keep coming
in the CCP slash Katari money. We'll see how that goes.
Talking with our friend Dave Rubin, you made a great
point on X just a little bit earlier this morning,
and I wanted to touch on this because you were
you were QUO tweeting about the strategy that Israel implemented
and the partnership, the strategy that came from the partnership

(01:25:08):
of the United States and Israel, talking about Lebanon and
then Syria and Yemen. The point that you made was
winning the actual war is still more important than winning
the Instagram war. Because there were questions of well, is
Israel going to be able to be successful if they
lose the PR war? But what does it matter? I mean,
can you even win a PR war if you're Israel?

(01:25:29):
I mean, sometimes you know it seems like a rhetorical question.
Clearly they won the real one.

Speaker 6 (01:25:35):
Right, Well, look, the real war is that they've been
fighting a seven front war and their enemies are all
basically destroyed. Ask Hasbala, how's it going? Ask Iran, how's
it going? Ask the who these how's it going? Ask
Kamas how's it going? The West Bank? Judae and Samaria
is the proper term for the West Bank. I mean
that's largely been quiet. So their enemies have basically realized, boy,

(01:25:56):
we just can't take these guys out. And the iron,
of course is if they would just get over it,
which I do think perhaps because of Trump is happening
right now. They're going to find an unbelievable partner in
Israel that will help them literally make the desert bloom
just like they did in Israel. You want drip irrigation,
you want desalinization, just like Jordan, which now imports most

(01:26:17):
of its water from Israel. Like, just get on board
that the Jews are gonna have this little place the
size of New Jersey. You guys still have all the oil, Like,
get over it, and there is a chance for prosperity.
So again I'm not just like over the top, Oh
my god, this is the greatest thing ever. But it
is a massive, massive movement that ends a seemingly intractable

(01:26:40):
problem for now and then we see what happens on
the other side. But nobody will look even the Kataris,
who You're right, they've dumped at a ton of money
into our you know, into our influencer side and Instagram
and TikTok and all that stuff. You know, they got
hit by the rocket from Israel about three weeks ago
going after the Hamas leaders, which didn't quite work out.
But I think they were suddenly shook. They were suddenly

(01:27:01):
like boying, We're not even that safe. So I do
think some of that Katari money might be might be
drying up. And by the way, even Al Jazeera now
has fired a bunch of their most crazed anti Israel
people because Trump is leaning on these guys.

Speaker 5 (01:27:14):
This is the true genius of Trump.

Speaker 2 (01:27:16):
And I mean for all of that. You made a
good point too with Rashida Talib and these others who
haven't said anything about this, because I was told reliably,
we're told us at twenty sixteen and again in twenty
twenty four that Trump is going to get us in
the Middle East. We're going to kick us off into
World War three any day now. So we're all just waiting,
where's the World War three at? Where's this at? We

(01:27:36):
thought we were going to be fighting with Iran. That
hasn't happened. And even what's crazier is that this rehabilitation
of Syria and their leadership just because it's advantageous to
us and it kind of keeps the peace in the
area because in order to control brutes, you need a
brute and that's been working out incredibly well. He hasn't
gotten enough credit for that either. And regardless of whether

(01:27:59):
or not people love it or hate them, I think
that that needs to be recognized because this has been
sound foreign policy and I want to see more of it.

Speaker 5 (01:28:06):
Your thoughts, Yeah, Paul, it's peace through strength.

Speaker 6 (01:28:09):
I mean, it's not rocket science, right if you show people, Look,
somebody's going to lead the world one way or another.
And if it ain't Us at this point, it basically
is China. So if you believe that Western values are good,
if you believe the freedom is good, that doesn't mean
we have to bomb all these countries into living like us.
But it does mean what Trump said when he went
to Saudi Arabia about six months ago, he basically was like, look, guys,

(01:28:32):
We're not going to tell you exactly how to live,
but there are certain preconditions, not much, but certain conditions
you're going to have to accept if you want to
enjoy the success of America, if you want to be
part of our economy, and things of that nature. And
I think that that speech really was the beginning of
the shift here where all of these countries are starting

(01:28:52):
to realize, boy, we can go against America.

Speaker 5 (01:28:55):
It's just not going to work out that well. I mean,
think about it. Yemen, this tiny, ridiculous country.

Speaker 6 (01:29:01):
They could have so much success they get it right like,
and instead they chose, Okay, every other day, we're going
to fire four rockets.

Speaker 5 (01:29:07):
It Israel.

Speaker 6 (01:29:07):
It's like you're doing nothing but destroying your own people.
So if you get over it, you will see that
America is standing there like, hey, we'd love to partner
with you and help you. We'll build some hotels for you,
how about that.

Speaker 2 (01:29:18):
Yeah, and you're right too. Six months ago when he
went over and was speaking to Mohamma ben Salmain, when
he noted that he was going to start removing sanctions
against Syria, and Salmain stood up and applauded. Because we
played that clip on air, and I thought, that's really significant.
And then all of these other you the Amoradis that
stood up and began applouding, and then when Syria pulled

(01:29:39):
their air cover over Iran, then you knew it was
over after that because they were on disguise, werein Israel's
and it was done. And then you had the drones
that came up. It was I mean, it was pretty spectacular.
So Dave, what do you think China is thinking of
when they're looking at this now.

Speaker 6 (01:29:53):
Well, I think they're realizing that America is asserting itself again,
you know it really in some sense, I think we'll
look back, like twenty years from now, it was sort
of a miracle that we survived the Biden slash auto
pen four years.

Speaker 5 (01:30:05):
We did not lead in the world. We almost destroyed our.

Speaker 6 (01:30:07):
Own country via you know, the open borders, which which
despite everything Trump has done on the positive side on that,
we're still gonna have to deal with the reckoning of
we don't know how many people are here and all the.

Speaker 5 (01:30:16):
Things that that will entail.

Speaker 6 (01:30:18):
But I think China's realizing woy, America's asserting itself again.
And I would say that perhaps as it pertains to Taiwan.
They're a little maybe less bullish of going in right
now because they realize who knows what Trump is going
to do, and America does seem to have new alliances forming.

Speaker 2 (01:30:33):
Yeah, that's I mean, this is huge. We're talking with
our friend Dave Rubin. You can find him at Reuben
Report and Ruben Report Show on x as well, entrepreneur author,
all these good things. So one last quick thing about this,
because the Nobel Peace Prize part of me is like
Trump needs to get it, he deserves it for this,
Give it to him. And then the more rebellious part

(01:30:53):
of me wants to just stick a finger in the
air and say, you know, screw you guys. We don't
need you, we don't need your validation. So you know
where do you fall at this?

Speaker 6 (01:31:01):
You know, data, It's a little bit like when one
of us writes a book and if we get on
the New York Times bestseller list, right like, we kind
of know it's fraudulent, we know it's part of an
institution that hates us, and yet you get.

Speaker 5 (01:31:11):
The call that morning.

Speaker 6 (01:31:12):
When I got the call, even though I was like,
this is all garbage and it's literally made up it.

Speaker 2 (01:31:17):
Is, Oh I missed it, Russell I sold more than
Russell brand and he got on it and I didn't.
So you know right.

Speaker 5 (01:31:23):
Right exactly. They definitely don't like you.

Speaker 6 (01:31:25):
They're probably not thrilled with Russell, but every now and
again they got to throw a bone to somebody.

Speaker 5 (01:31:29):
But it's sort of like that.

Speaker 6 (01:31:30):
So does he deserve the Nobel Peace Prize on merit?

Speaker 5 (01:31:35):
Of course? Did Barack Obama deserve it? And he got
it for literally doing nothing? Of course not. Would it
be nice if he gets it? Yes? Is it going
to happen?

Speaker 6 (01:31:45):
I don't know, But it's like, you know what, Trump
just in this case take the accolades of all of
the sane people in the world and run with that.

Speaker 5 (01:31:52):
How about that?

Speaker 2 (01:31:53):
I want to ask you about Katie Porter because you're
out in California.

Speaker 5 (01:31:56):
Yeah she could.

Speaker 2 (01:31:57):
Are you scared that this crazy Karen could be your.

Speaker 6 (01:32:01):
Wait, dann it did you just say I'm in California
in Florida?

Speaker 2 (01:32:04):
You're in Florida?

Speaker 1 (01:32:05):
Now?

Speaker 2 (01:32:05):
Oh my goshz please.

Speaker 5 (01:32:07):
That was of all the.

Speaker 6 (01:32:08):
Things that people have said to me over the years
on air that have offended me, that might be.

Speaker 2 (01:32:12):
Gonna get Dave is going to fly over here and
kick my backside. That's what's gonna Okay, never mind eyes.
So you don't live in California, I don't care about
your I'm kidding no, but Katie Port because I thought
you were in California for a while, and then you
know I was, I was. I got out, so you
got out into thank Heaven. So you don't have to
worry about this you're in, I.

Speaker 5 (01:32:28):
Don't have to worry.

Speaker 2 (01:32:29):
I'm actually jealous.

Speaker 6 (01:32:31):
Yeah, No, however, look, she's she's an absolutely terrible candidate,
but that is what they have left.

Speaker 2 (01:32:39):
You would never talk to anyone in your staff the
way she screams at people. Well, you would never be
like in my shot. You're in my shot while you
have like all of this debris in the background in
your kitchen.

Speaker 6 (01:32:52):
I'm known to smack my guys around, but I would
never speak to them with that language.

Speaker 2 (01:32:56):
Yeah, you wouldn't shock your dog like Hassan Piker.

Speaker 5 (01:32:58):
Either, So that I know death that one. I would
definitely not do that one. I would definitely not do.

Speaker 2 (01:33:03):
She is she does? She actually I keep seeing I
keep seeing conflicting reports that she is a top tier
Democrat and she's one of the top considerations. But also
the only reason that she is even in the lead,
or even leading, I should say, because it's pretty competitive,
is because of name recognition. So there's still time for
her to like, you know, flame out.

Speaker 6 (01:33:23):
I just don't even know what the name recognition is.
I mean, I've watched enough videos of her between the
thing yelp, you know, telling the employee to shut the
f up who was trying to help her, by the way,
or then the interview that she sat in where she
just got up because she was asked the followup question.
I mean, she has the emotional temperament of a six
year old, so she's sort of a perfect progressive. But look,
it's up to the people of California at this point.

(01:33:43):
And unfortunately, you know, about a million people have left
in the four years around COVID, so good people leave.
People dependent on the states stay and they keep voting
the same way. So look, whether it's Gavin Newsome doing
what he's done for these last couple of years, or
it's just Katie Porter, like, I don't sense that it
would be any great change. They had chances over the
years to go the other way. They seem to not

(01:34:04):
choose it.

Speaker 2 (01:34:05):
Yeah, I agree. Hopefully they don't follow you to Florida
and we don't want any more closed. Yeah, just put
up signs and direct them to other states and pretend
that that's Florida. Be like, no, Mississippi's actually Flora. Just
stop there.

Speaker 6 (01:34:17):
No, no, people are getting eaten by alligators here every day.
It's very scary, humid, the mosquitos. Please don't don't come.

Speaker 2 (01:34:23):
Really, don't come. Don't come to Florida. Dave Rubin at
Reuben Report. Always a pleasure to see you, my friend,
and I so I can't believe I forgot that you
had really, I know you've relocated to Florida. I don't
know why that slipped my mind. But when you come
to Texas, we'll go shoot some stuff and get brisket.

Speaker 5 (01:34:37):
So well, yeah that now we're talking there you go.

Speaker 2 (01:34:39):
Good to see you, my friend. Appreciate you.

Speaker 4 (01:34:42):
Subscribe to the Dana Show podcast because who says you
can't make fun of people while staying informed on your
own personal time. Subscribe on YouTube, Apple or wherever you
get your podcast.

Speaker 16 (01:34:53):
Meanwhile, here comedians are king themselves.

Speaker 5 (01:34:56):
Don't don't say anything about Charnie Cook.

Speaker 16 (01:34:58):
I wasn't gonna say anying about ye, but don't say
anything abo. I wasn't gonna say anything about Charlie Cook,
but don't there's nothing funny about it on now you
tested me.

Speaker 11 (01:35:06):
I mean, there's.

Speaker 16 (01:35:07):
Nothing funny about it. You can't say there's nothing funny
about it. Now, there's nothing fun No, don't say that
because there's a comedian. I'll be like, I'm sure there's
something funny about it. The guy was shot while defending guns.
Do you understand how I'm not even writing that as
a joke. As a human you have to admit that
is an incongruous funny thing that happens. You are there,

(01:35:28):
You're like on stage, You're like, let me tell you
why people should have guns.

Speaker 2 (01:35:31):
Ah hmm. First off, he wasn't shot while defending guns,
by the way, that's a lie. He was shot while
he was discussing trans Tifa and how the question was
about there are no trans I mean all of the
increase in violence has been coming from the trans sector.

(01:35:54):
That is verbatim what he was discussing when he was shot.
And he was shot by a dude who was banging
a trans a guy who pretended to be a girl
and who would dress up as a furry. So he
banged a furry cosplaying trans TIFA member. So that's the
accurate way to state it. That's the real way to

(01:36:18):
state it is that he got killed because of trans Tifa.
I mean, it's easier if you want to slide and say, oh,
it was about guns, because that means you're an intellectual
coward and you can't face what actually was the motivating
factor behind his cold blooded murder, and it was the bloodthirstiness,
the bloodlust of trans Tifa. That's what did it. So

(01:36:40):
at least be honest about it. If you're going to
act like, you know, a heart ass and you're gonna
get up on stage and he's like, by the way,
one of the most unfunny people ever, and I've always
thought that he's not as mean spirited, but he's just
dishonest and not funny. I just think if you're gonna
get up there and try to crack jokes, at least
be somewhat factual. At least be honest, because is it

(01:37:01):
funny that he got killed by a guy who was
banging a furry? I mean, let's talk about that. What
is up is there? Jokes? And why trans Tifa gets
so blood lusty. I mean, we could I do you
just Trevor Noah find that funny? I'm just curious. I mean,
why doesn't you make a joke about that? Oh, it's
probably why, Probably a good reason why he's not just saying.

(01:37:22):
Maybe he's worried that he'll be marked by Transtifa. Two,
today's stupidity.

Speaker 3 (01:37:27):
Came all right, well and this is cut seventeen Democrat
Eric Swalwell. Why well, by the way, other Democrat senators
are still holding the American people hostage as it relates
to getting the government back open, and while the Democrats
are holding us all hostage, this is what Eric Swalwell's doing.

Speaker 15 (01:37:43):
Look at this No King's rallies.

Speaker 6 (01:37:45):
It's a couple of weeks away.

Speaker 5 (01:37:46):
I have partnered with No Kings here.

Speaker 10 (01:37:48):
Check out our merge.

Speaker 3 (01:37:50):
He's merchant rally No Kings.

Speaker 2 (01:37:53):
By the way, Eh, what is that stupid shirt? Gosh,
he is so gross?

Speaker 3 (01:37:58):
Is he fart at the end there? I couldn't tell,
won't cut the audio out, But yeah, that's what he's doing.
He's out there, merchant, he's child. Democrats are holding you
guys hostage.

Speaker 2 (01:38:08):
He's trying so hard to just seem I think he
I don't know. I don't have anything nice to say.
All right, folks, I am off here tomorrow for some
family stuff and then back on air with you Monday.
So you can find us on substack, Facebook and YouTube
black and subscribe. In the meantime, have a great rest
of your evening. Back with you Monday,
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