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December 10, 2025 104 mins
Democrats flip the Miami Mayor’s office for the first time in 30 years. Dana explains how Republicans need to wake up. Jasmine Crockett says it’s not her goal to win over Trump supporters. Three driverless Waymo cars bring a San Francisco street to a standstill halting traffic and blocking people from leaving.

Marjorie Taylor-Greene says the Republican men in Congress marginalize women who don't take them seriously. CAIR Florida holds a presser to denounce DeSantis for labeling them a foreign terrorist organization. A Muslim man in Dearborn, Michigan donated a $10,000 Christmas tree after the tree the city ordered didn’t arrive. Tucker Carlson jealously bashes Bill Ackman and Bari Weiss’ successes over them being Jewish and calls them “dumb”

Charlie Kirk’s widow, Erika, finally speaks out and UNLEASHES on Candace Owens over making thousands off the ruthless lies about her family. Former Rep. & Pastor Mark Walker joins us to explain how his nomination to lead U.S. global religious-freedom efforts is stalled in the Senate & why they MUST act.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Look at that prices are coming down, FIP prices.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
It's a hoax.

Speaker 1 (00:07):
They just remember they said this is going to be problematic,
this kind of messaging coming up. I'm telling you it's
going to be problematic because that's people are going to
be reacting to that, going to going to the to
the ballot box. Welcome to the radio program, Dana lash
with you. It's going to be problematic because we got
to talk about the Miami race last night. And this

(00:28):
is a list. There's a list of other races too.
And I know, I you know, I'm not trying to
despirit everyone, but I gotta be honest with you. You know,
there's there's a reason why we talk about these things,
and we talk about the uh turnout. Turnout was abysmal
last night. We're gonna set some of the narrative. There's
there's a couple of narratives that are wrong about the

(00:50):
Miami race because it flipped from red to Democrats went
from red to blue last night. And that's a big
And this is just a long list of this is
this is a long list of issues because we've had
a number of races. It's not isolated to blue states
and It's not just like a couple of one offs either.
It is a problem that's been building and half of it, yes,

(01:12):
some of it has to do with turnout, but you know, jeeves,
come on, people, do we have to sit here and
baby people. I just feel like I grown ass adults
can't get their lazy asses to the ballot box and
vote on the damn election day, then you deserve the
government you get. I'm sick and tired of like trying
to cajole people into caring more about the Republic than
the people who don't even live in the area they

(01:33):
live in. And if I sound mad, it's because I am,
because I'm tired of it. We have people who participate
in welfare activism. They're welfare addicts. They want to go
out and have everybody else go and do all of
the work for them. In every county in the country,
I bet you can find a small group of people
that do all of the heavy lifting. They do all
the door to door stuff, they do all the canvassing,

(01:55):
they do everything. And you're not supposed to say this
stuff because voters feel get hurt. Well, I'm not seeking
anybody's votes, so I don't give a rats backside. It's
just ridiculous and it's got to stop. I mean, it
really does. So we're gonna dive into some of this
as well, and uh get into some of the latest

(02:15):
with what those numbers look like, and then kind of
what the trend is as well for the rest of
the nation, because I'm telling you this, there also was
no outreach last night, and a lot of people think, well,
it's just it's just Miami. It's not. Well, it was
significant because you had a Republican there. It's an area

(02:36):
that Trump won, and it goes to show you that
we're not winning anything if Trump isn't on the ballot
and Republicans have gotten super lazy, super lazy. I am
so livid with the Republican Party right now. I'm there,
do nothing in every state. They're in Kansas. What are
you guys doing in Kansas, Republicans, Where's what is the

(02:56):
Republican Party of Kansas doing? You guys lost some school
board races up there. What are you guys doing? What
are some of these Republicans doing? It's so incredibly frustrating.
I have a friend who lives in Miami and the
only reason that he even knew about some of the
stuff with the races is because he's just super tuned in.

(03:17):
He's just super tuned in, is why. And that's why
he was able to kind of follow along, and that's
why he knew some of this stuff. But you know,
by and large, they had no ad bys. They had
they had no canvassing, there was no phone banking. Where
were they doing. Oh, everybody was getting drunk off their
backsides in DC. This is another thing I hate about Republicans.

(03:37):
And yes, I hate the uniparty. It's a uniparty. That's
why I don't like any of them. It's a uniparty.
Why in the world you people want me to come
to your states and fundraise for you? I will never understand,
because you're in for a shock. Those of you who asked.
Just gird your loins at your little dinners, okay, because
what do you guys do? You're supposed to show up

(03:58):
and cover them with adoration and compliments for doing what nothing,
not a damn thing. Have you guys had Obamacare repealed? No?
Do you guys still have insane property taxes in your state?
Do you guys? Do you guys for those of you
who have their income taxes determined by like individual like
individual counties and things like that. Have you guys found

(04:20):
any relief with any of that. No, I don't think
you guys have found any No, you haven't. You haven't.
You haven't found any of it. In Texas, we always
go on and on about getting rid of the property tax.
But you know that's just that's determined locally. And guess
who's in charge of everything locally, who's in charge of
Who's in charge of Arrant County? Kane, Well, no, Republicans.

(04:44):
Republicans are in charge of Arrant County, and they get
really mad when you say stuff like this. They get
really mad when you bring it up. I don't care
get mad. I get hate mail from some people, and
some of these Republican parties, they get mad, Like Dana,
you shouldn't say yes, I can. I've been doing this
longer than you've been, so I get aggravated about it.
And so, you know, I look at this, I'm looking

(05:05):
at it, and I'm mad about this stuff. A couple
of things, though, I want to set straight about Miami.
Let's just set something straight about Miami right now. So
one of the things that people were saying is that
it hasn't been like what did they say? It was
something like it it's flipped for it's been Republican for

(05:25):
like thirty years or something. I don't know where some
of that. You got to be careful with some of
the people that you get your information from, because so
you had I have heard they had thirty straight years
of Republican mayors. That's an absolute Who's saying this stuff
someone who doesn't live in Florida. Manny Diaz was throughout
the aughts. He was the mayor and he was an independent.
He was a Democrat, but he was more of a

(05:47):
moderate Democrat if that still exists anymore. He was a Democrat.
He went on to chair the Democrat Party in Florida.
And then the race is they so the thirty year
streak is just the lie. But it was a bad
night and it was a bad night for Republicans last
night in Miami. Remember how everybody was so excited because
it flipped and it went from red to blue or

(06:09):
blue to red. And it was very popular. I mean
the Palm Beach County and Miami Dade they went red.
They went blue to red in the last election. And
now the mayoral race a lot of it is. There's
a number of things that go into it. First off,
Democrats ran an actual good candidate. They didn't run an

(06:32):
AOC type idiot. They were out there in the streets,
they phone bank They've been doing this on all of
the races and Georgia, in all of the races where
Republicans were competitive. This is what Democrats have been doing.
They've been running actual races. They've been doing all of
this stuff. And so Democrats in Florida were really smart.
Can't say that about Democrats and other states in the

(06:53):
Union or even the National Party, but they were smart
in Florida and they went out there. They mobilized, they
got their people out. Do you realize that you had
less than twenty percent of Republican voters that went out
and voted last night in that race. So I don't
feel bad for anybody. I've told people when I've had
people that come up to me and complain, I go,
how did you vote in your local and munciple? I

(07:16):
literally will walk away from you mid conversation. You can
go to straight to hell. I will have nothing. Don't
sit here and complain to me when you can't even
get off your lazy keyster and go vote. And some
of these voters. Honestly, I get it that everybody's used
to the left baby and everybody about their gender and
everything else. But we ain't doing that here. If people
can't stand the accountability of not voting and not showing up,

(07:37):
if they can't stand it, then maybe America is not
for them. That's one of the most Unamerican things you
can do is not go vote. And if you're a Republican,
I spit on you. If you don't go and vote
and you're somebody who votes Republican and you just don't
show up, I don't care about your excuses. I've heard
every damn excuse possible. I'm going to tell you something.
One when we went to early vote, we met a

(07:58):
woman who is going to vote. This was I can't
remember when this was a municipal election. Her husband is
a Vietnam veteran, had a leg amputated, and this man
is like pretty much house bound, can't even get out
and he makes sure that he votes every election. If
this old Vietnam veteran with one leg can get out
there and vote, by God, you can too. So I

(08:20):
don't want to hear any excuses, and these Republicans are
too scared of you to tell you to wake the
blank up, so I will. I don't care if Trump's
not on the ballot, get over it. It's un American
to not show up just because your favorite candidate isn't
on the ballot. You got to work with the cards
you have. I don't care if it can't think I'm
being mean, I don't care. People can step off. I'm

(08:42):
so tired of this. I get so many complaints from people,
and I can't tell you the number of people who
tell me that they don't vote in these local elections
because it's not national spare me. So I get really
I get mad about it, and you ought to get
mad about it, because those of you who get up
there and you pay attention and you go and vote,
this is what you're given. How is that fair? I mean,

(09:06):
it's not I'm being retorted. It's not fair. It's not
fair at all, not fair to you, it's not fair
to other people in the country. So it's frustrating. We're
going to talk more about that because there's others there's
other elections as well, and people keep saying, oh, well,
this is leading up it's a it's a Democrat narrative
warning people about midterms. No, it's not. And if you

(09:28):
want to lose, go ahead and listen to the people
who keep telling you there's nothing to worry about. If
you want to lose, you go ahead and you listen
to those clueless people who have never moved the needle
in their lives. You go ahead and listen to them.
I want to win. I want to win so bad
that on election day when my political enemies, when they
walk away from the ballot box, they collapse in the
street before they make it to their car because they're

(09:49):
so overcome with grief at losing, and not just losing,
but losing so badly that their grandchildren feel the loss
and they're scared of becoming loser. Democrats like the people
the adults in their life who voted. I don't care
if that's harsh. That's winning. That's what it takes. You've
got to turn out end of I don't know how
you know how many times you got to say it,

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(11:18):
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Speaker 3 (11:19):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 1 (11:25):
Can I just say the song that we came in
with You can't listen to it if you're online because
we don't have the licensing for that. But terrestrially it's Steelers.
Weal stuck in the middle with you. It's one of
my favorite songs because it's one of my favorite scenes
in all of cinema from Reservoir Dogs, And I mean,
I just feel that scene so much sometimes, and I got,

(11:46):
it's so amazing. I just see it and I got,
I get warm fuzzies and I'm like, what, It's an
amazing scene, all right? So, uh well, I'm gonna die.
Less than seven hours of sleep is linked to shorter
life expectancy across the America. We're all gonna die, well,
those of us who the people who are like I
slept nine hours. You're a Martian. Sleeping fewer than seven

(12:08):
hours per night is linked to a shorter life expectancy
across all in the eyes. Wait, you don't believe it.

Speaker 3 (12:15):
I'm a victim.

Speaker 1 (12:16):
You're a victim. I'm actually surprised about you because I
just I don't know. I thought you would be one
of the people who's like, aren't garmery in hours?

Speaker 3 (12:24):
No, I don't get eight hours? Oh god, I dream
about eight hours.

Speaker 1 (12:28):
I don't think I could sleep for eight hours if
I wanted to. I don't think I can sleep past seven.
I think it's a thing. They said. Sleeping fewer than
seven hours per night is linked to shorter life expectancy.
Sleep in sufficiency ranked as the second strongest predictor of
reduced life expectancy. Blah blah blah blah blah blah, and
there you go, we're all gonna die. Well, no, I

(12:49):
mean it's I do you just know that you? I
think that people need different amounts of sleep. Different people
need different amounts of sleep. Trump doesn't sleep more than
five hours a night because he's also a martian. And
I the people who sleep more than eight hours. I
don't understand you people. You guys are like, you know,
hibernating bears, don't. I don't get that. I got to
hit like six seven? Maybe? Oh my gosh, did I
just do that?

Speaker 4 (13:09):
On?

Speaker 1 (13:11):
All right? We're done? Cut the camera. We are so done.
How did that even happen? I swear to you that, Okay,
let's just move on here. Police are swapping suspect sketches
for AI. I feel like this is going to go poorly.
You think they started in an Arizona and they said

(13:35):
the aim Like for instance, they had one image out
and it said this AI image is based on victim
witness statements. Doesn't depict a real person. See, I feel
like you need it to depict a real person though,
Like what how is it?

Speaker 3 (13:45):
I mean, it's no less of a sketch. It's actually
probably a better way to do it.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
I don't know. I don't know how I feel about that.
Centuries old payment method could disappear just weeks after pennies
are retired. What do uh? They said it hurts the
old people that they checking services could be winding down.
I haven't used I haven't written a check. Everything's auto.
I have not, and then I co check it every month.
I have not written a check in forever.

Speaker 3 (14:13):
What do you mean they want you to go digital
with everything?

Speaker 5 (14:16):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (14:16):
That I obsess over everything.

Speaker 3 (14:19):
See, they're getting rid of checks. I don't like it.

Speaker 1 (14:20):
I'm like Mick Jagger with my finances like that. I
just I want to know everything.

Speaker 3 (14:24):
You know, everything has to be like a promisory note.
You want to just promise to pay some money money?

Speaker 1 (14:31):
Do you like the checks you got to carry like it.
I don't like carrying a big bag you got to carry. Well,
I know that the grandparents are gonna be upset over
this one. I mean in our family, probably your family too.
Send it. Democrats have introduced a bill to block Trump
from putting his face on the dollar coin. Is that
a thing they need to be worrying about right now?

(14:51):
I mean, I don't know if you guys have seen
some of the stuff that's been happening in this nation lately,
but I don't know. It feels like something else. Ooh ooh.
Archaeologists found a cube shape human skull in Mexico. Now
that's probably you know what I think about this stuff.
I get money python about it. Like what if somebody
wrapped their head with you know, cotton or something to
make it shape like that because it thought it was attractive,

(15:11):
And then here we are all these years later. Oh,
it's a new point of person. They're trying to figure
it out at Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History.
It's a middle aged dude, so they think that he
actually molded his skull that way. So thank heavens for
some brains there. We got more in store. Stay with
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(15:33):
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(16:14):
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Speaker 2 (16:25):
Not Able to catch all three hours of the Dana Show,
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Speaker 1 (16:40):
Welcome back to the program, Dana lash with you. I'm
sure I'm gonna get some hate mail because I was
really mad at the GOP because of the Miami stuff yesterday.
Twenty one percent. Twenty one percent, dudes, that's insane, that
is insane. There are more people who go to like
roller skate in today's world than have been going out

(17:00):
to vote for the in these local municipal elections. It's crazy,
and I'm worried because, you know what, the reason I
get so upset with why you know, the turnout is
the way it is when Trump isn't on the ballot,
is because, dear heavens, what if we get stuck? Now,

(17:21):
I'm just just hearing me out. I'm using this as
an example. What if you don't have turnout like in
an important race like oh, I don't know, say Senate race,
and you end up getting us stuck with Jasmine Crockett.
Can you imagine that could happen? I know you guys
are like Dana. That could never happen. I'm telling y'all,
I have seen I have done over the years. I

(17:47):
don't even know I've been to every state in the Union.
I can't even remember how many fundraisers I've done for candidates.
And I'm not one of those grifters like a lot
of the con inc podcasters that you see, where I
charge to go out and all these different politicians are
for issues and I, I mean, I just I want
to win. That's you know, what I want to do.

(18:08):
And I want people to be empowered in their own communities,
so I don't have to go back out there. Sounds mean,
but you know it's true. There's only so much you
can do. But I can't tell you how many different
areas that I've been in. I first started seeing this
back in two thousand and nine in person anyway, when

(18:29):
I was going out and we were helping different grassroot
groups fight back against Obamacare, and a lot of the
Democrat candidates that were running for like state legislature or
that we're running for just like different smaller more localized races,
or those even who wanted to go for Congress, et cetera.
If it was an off year, it was like beating

(18:52):
your head against a brick wall trying to get people
to care about it. I was at an event once
with John Stossel, and so I'm kind of brought in
as like the closer and talking to these people. And
it was a beautiful Saturday, and I flew with one
of my kids, beautiful Saturday, and we were in the

(19:14):
East Coast and I'm trying to remember what state we
were on we were in. It was on the East Coast. Anyway,
it's not the point. The point is that I asked people.
I said, well, how many people because they came out
for this meet and greet and all this stuff and
a rally. Everybody loves coming out to rallies. And I'm like, okay,
so how many of you are going to stay and
do like phone banking and things like that after, because

(19:35):
that was kind of the purpose of having this event,
Like how many of you were going to come out?
How many of you were going to phone bank? And
two hands? There were like four hundred people there, not
even kidding you. And it shocked me. And I just
stopped where I was and I almost I literally almost

(19:56):
dropped the microphone. It slid my hand on and I
just I was shocked, locked and I lost it. I
went from real nice to lost it, and I'm like, I,
you know, I told people, I said, I'm gonna you know,
I came here. I'm not being paid to be here.
I'm not making money being here right now. I took
a Saturday away from my family, brought my son with me,

(20:18):
spent a weekend day I work away from my family,
come into your state where I can't even vote, to
help you. And then I just like like went into
you know, a story about the greatest generation and all this.
By the end of though, I did my job, and
there were probably there were a lot more, not the

(20:39):
whole room, which should have not even half the room,
but there were a hell of a lot more people
that raised their hand and they stayed and they helped out.
But I was just I could I was shocked. And
even here in the county that I live in, super
Red County, the same people that are it's the same
people all the time. They do all of the active

(20:59):
all the head lifting, all of the advocacy, They watch
all the deadlines, and it gets hard and it builds
a lot of resentment. If you can't do it, then
you encourage the people who are doing it. If you
can't do it yourself, then you be there and you
encourage the people who are doing it, like maybe their

(21:21):
phone banking for a candidate or an issue. Maybe you
could send them pizza or bring them coffee or do something,
even if you just stop by and say, I appreciate
what you're doing, because they're doing it for you. And
this is where I get the welfare activism from. They're
doing it for you. Encourage them. If you can't do it,

(21:43):
then you be their strength when theirs is depleted. That
is the least you can do, because it will come
to a point where you are looking down the political
barrel of socialism or freedom. And it's happened in a

(22:03):
number of states. Look a Manhattan. I have a Republican
friends that live in Manhattan. One of them works in finance.
Gave up like five years ago, six years ago in
trying to do any kind of activism in New York,
not just because they're out number, but because people are
apathetic and they're like, oh, well, it's just not going

(22:23):
to work anyway. If you can't do it, please, I
can't tell you how much that means to people. There
were times when we would be phone banking and it's
like nine o'clock at night, and you know, I'm trying
to finish my list so I can get home and
you know, see my kids and do all of this.
And the people that would come in and they'd bring

(22:45):
like donuts or coffee or something, They're like, we just
you know, we just got off work ourselves and we
just wanted to say thank you so much. That means
a lot. It means a lot to these people. So
please do that. If you can't do it, but you should,
you should at least try to do it once in life.
The biggest problem that Republicans have going into midterms as Republicans,

(23:11):
it's not Democrats. It's not people like Jasmine Crockett. It's Republicans.
Twenty one percent voter turnout. It's probably that's some of
these races and school board races in Wichitah. That was
one of the problems too. I heard from people that
wrote me and said that they had to turnout. Problem

(23:32):
there too, same thing in some of these other races.
It's a real thing. And then you got where's Joe
Gruder's that guy, the Florida guy, he just got re
elected as party chair. What the hell is he doing?
He's the RNC party chair. Where's the RNC? This is
the time, and I'm sorry I'm spending so much time

(23:53):
on this, but this has really been at the forefront
of my mind. Where is the rn C organization in this?
There's I've seen good organization, you know, after Romney h
screwed the pooch in twenty twelve and it was disastrous.
I don't think you guys remember that they had to
get out the vote app that was supposed to get people,

(24:16):
you know, find people who haven't registered or who haven't voted,
et cetera, and get you know, all this stuff. And
they didn't test it until the election day and it
failed horribly. After that, they got new leadership and they
were really trying to restructure, and then they were really
active and very organized, to the point where it was annoying.
I want to be annoyed by how overactive the party is.

(24:41):
I want to be so annoyed at all of it.
And I don't want text from different candidates begging for money.
I want RNC updates. I want updates, GOP updates in
my area. I don't just just don't want people making
up stupid stories and asking for money. But where is
the where's the RNC in this wor's Joe Gruter's post
all these damn photos of himself at the White House

(25:02):
and places of government, which seems a little anti Founder
by the way, I don't think our founders would be
rushing to go take selfies at different places in government,
but whatever. But he's all over taken photos of himself
doing this stuff. I see him all getting drunk at
the little cocktail parties in DC, all with their red
noses and everything. Ho ho ho. I see all that,

(25:24):
but I don't see any action. All the people that
I know that live in Florida, for instance, like I said,
they were saying, we didn't see any get out the
boat stuff. And I've been hearing this from people in Jersey,
in Kansas, in Georgia, and Tennessee in Texas. We got
a problem. I want to win, so I need it

(25:48):
to get corrected now because we can't be doing this
coming up on mid terms. Can you imagine think about
think about this audio sound by This is Jasmine Crockett.
Now I want you to listen to this messaging. Listen
to this messaging. Let's cut it.

Speaker 6 (26:09):
How will you make voters who previously have voted for Trump,
particularly given that you have been an outspoken critic and
he has inserted himself. Just take your campaign video as is.
He has inserted himself at every turn. When it comes
to your commentary, How will you convert those who are
supportive of him to voters for you?

Speaker 7 (26:31):
Yeah, I don't know that will necessarily convert all of
Trump's supporters.

Speaker 1 (26:34):
That's not our you need to.

Speaker 7 (26:36):
Our goal is to definitely talk to people. No, we don't,
We don't need.

Speaker 1 (26:40):
To, you know, I was looking at this. Democrats have
lost not a quarter of their base, but just about
so many people have left that party. And if they
haven't registered as Republicans, then they've been independents. What if
the you actually do need them, unless you live in
a weirdly drawn day strict that's drawn in such a

(27:02):
way to favor your party, you have to have them.
But did you hear what she said? Their Democrats don't
care about convincing you because they don't care about you.
They don't care about the issues. They care about power.
They don't care about putting a win on the board.
They just care about power. They don't care if they
have to debase themselves. Guys, that is the most dangerous

(27:22):
type of ambition I can think of. You will debase
yourself just to be adjacent to power. You will debase
yourself and stab your loyal base in the back just
to be able to pull the levers. What she said

(27:42):
saying there in that interview is that she doesn't care
about messaging. She doesn't want to convince you on any
kind of issue. I mean, like she could. But even
if she doesn't care about that, because she doesn't need you.
She's not running to represent you. She's not running to
even hear you up, running to address you. She didn't

(28:03):
need you. Democrats don't need you. That should be a
campaign ad for the RNC. Why are they not cutting this?
Why are there not ads about the Somali diaspora in
Minnesota bilking taxpayers of all this money? Why isn't Why
aren't there ads all over? I see a million ads. Look,

(28:23):
I know I've said this before. I don't care if
Christineoam literally wears stilettos and leather leggings. I don't care,
just as long as the borders closed. But you know,
I see a million videos of Christineoan with her right here.
It's like a South Park skit but in real life,
and she's like, well, you know, and we've done all this.
She they can put those videos out. The hell are
all these videos? Where's the rest of it? Why am

(28:45):
I not being pummeled with ads on Facebook and x
and Instagram. The only people that are doing it are
ICE and DHS those that's literally the only agency doing this.
I don't see any any part. I don't see any
of that.

Speaker 8 (29:04):
HM.

Speaker 1 (29:05):
Can I play one more cut? This is cut ten?
This is Crockett still also a little nugget in this. Listen.

Speaker 4 (29:12):
Let me tell you something.

Speaker 7 (29:13):
Mandami has not backed down whatsoever from his rhetoric against
the president in the Oval office. He stood there and
he said what he said about him being a fascist.
Yet he was able to win those voters. So Democrats
that believe the only way that you can win is
by being soft and sounding like a Republican, that is
not true.

Speaker 8 (29:32):
What people are looking for are people.

Speaker 7 (29:33):
That are tough and are fighters and are going to
fight for them.

Speaker 1 (29:36):
Yeah, that's what I want her to go with. New
York is like not the rest of the nation. Kine
is over there. What you're like talking to a ghost?
You're just is it.

Speaker 3 (29:46):
Tough to call somebody a fascist without any proof of fascism.

Speaker 1 (29:51):
I don't think she knows what tough means. But I
don't think she has any idea what that means. But
I digress. I don't think she has any idea. I mean,
that's not tough. It's it's yeah, it's it's pretty amazing.
But what she's saying there is is that she wants

(30:12):
to be more like that. She thinks that they need
to be more in your face and more aggressive and
more and nastier, et cetera. That's what she's arguing. It
has not worked for them. No, no, no, you can't
do that. You can't have better ideas. She didn't have
better ideas and they know that, so they just want
to be nasty. I want them to keep doing this.

(30:32):
But she thinks that that's what it takes for Democrats
to win. I mean, obviously it doesn't. If you've seen
some of these races. New York is just it's an outlier.
It's not like it's not the blueprint. But I want her.
I want them to think that it's the blueprint. I
want them to think that New York is the way
to do it. You run that play in Texas and
you see what happens. So I think we should let

(30:55):
her cook and encourage her in being nasty because it's
also more content for me. So I'm okay with that.
Stick with this because we have a ton more stuff
coming up. Let me do I got aliens. Do you
think Trump's gonna make an alien announcement? There's a lot
of whispering with the whistleblowers, guys. I'm just saying, just

(31:16):
gonna throw that out there. And also there's a weird
story that happened in Dearborn, Michigan, where a Muslim businessman
bought the town. Well, he and this tree farm bought
the town a Christmas tree since they had some problems
and they were't gonna have a tree lighting ceremony. We
got to talk about this. The folks who helped make
the program possible. It's the people over at Preborn. It's

(31:37):
a great organization that meets women where they are women
facing unplanned pregnancies. They don't have to do it alone
and they don't have to feel unempowered. Preborn Ministries, which
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Speaker 2 (33:05):
Get the loadown on the latest news with a side
of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to their Dana Show
podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast,
like SAMs through the Ali Glans.

Speaker 3 (33:18):
So are the days of the United States.

Speaker 1 (33:22):
So the waimos calls them, you're traveling to Oh wow,
these are all the driverless cars. This isn't did they
just like that?

Speaker 5 (33:32):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (33:32):
I just pulled out of the garage and I saw
this going on.

Speaker 6 (33:35):
It's like, why are you most standoff?

Speaker 1 (33:37):
They all do that. It's a way most standoff. They're
all facing each other in four different positions and they
it it did those two did two of them collide?
It looks like two of them almost collided. So you
have way mos that are facing off. Two of them
are bumper to bumper and they had to call this

(34:00):
this is we've had a WEIMO run over a dog.
We had a WAYMO take a dude on a wild
ride and lock the door and would let him out.
Would you I would not get into a Weaimo. There
is no way in the world I would get into
a Weaimo. Ever, I am not getting into it. Uh
huh No, not happening. A I like to drive. I
don't like to be a passenger at all. I hate

(34:20):
being a passenger. It's and it's like being driven like well,
I like it. Would you get in a weaimocaine?

Speaker 3 (34:27):
No? I don't think so. I mean i'd try it
with somebody else that they're with me.

Speaker 1 (34:31):
Maybe. How does that help traffic when they cause traffic?

Speaker 3 (34:34):
It doesn't.

Speaker 1 (34:35):
We have another video which I think we're running out
of a time, but we'll get to of. Is it
a DoorDash driver, Yeah, a doorgrass driver who put pepper
spray on food that she delivered. So it's like, what
if a Weimo delivered your food? Would you trust the way?
I don't trust any of those anymore? Stick with the
second hour coming up? It is the uh folks over
at burn a gun I'm always going to carry and
I'm always I have zero, zero issue fafo using lethal

(34:59):
four or so if someone decides to get froggy with
me or members of my family. But I also know,
you know, maybe you're a college kid and you're under
twenty one and you live in a college town and
you want to make sure that you're protected and you
can't carry, or you know, maybe you have to go
to a place for work or whatever, and you know
private property restrictions or municipal restrictions, you can't carry. So
what do you do? This is why I talk about

(35:20):
diversity with your weapons array. BURNA is a and well,
it's a device that shoots chemical irritant projectiles that can
deter threats from up to fifty feet away. And there's
different projectiles that can use. It's highly effective. And here's
the thing. No permits, no background checks, no waiting periods,
no fees. You just buy it and they send it
right to your door, and it's made right here in

(35:41):
the US of A. When you compare it to regular
stunt guns, which maybe hold like I don't know, one
or two rounds, this is a fifteen round or fifteen
cartridge capacity, and you have a lot more chances, and
it allows you to stay safe and get to safety.
You can check it out the cel it's the compact launcher,
the burn a cl bernat dot com slash Dana b

(36:02):
y r Na. It can be a gift for a friend,
it can be a stocking stuff, or it can be
something for your college kid. It can be something if
you have somebody that goes again to places where they're
not allowed to carry b Why are inna Berna dot
com slash Dana ready when you are?

Speaker 8 (36:16):
It was masterfully written and she's right, And this is
something that I've been speaking out against for for quite
some time now. It is extremely frustrating as as a
rank and file Republican member and the in our majority
are Republican majority, that many of us women are not
taken seriously and are our legislation is not taken seriously.

Speaker 1 (36:37):
It was. I don't believe that at all. I think
that's an excuse is because she fell on her face,
and I don't you know, I don't really care to
get involved in the Trump versus Marjorie Taylor greenfight. I
think that you know, when you politic a certain way,
and you you know you you. I think some people
mistake opportunistic people as being people who believe in fealty,

(36:59):
and I think that that's kind of what's with green.
You know, you when the scorpion stings you, are you surprised?
Welcome back to the program. Top of the second hour,
Chats at Rumple Channel three forty seven. Uh Direct TV,
thank you. But actually, YouTube's the best place to watch us.
It's the best place to watch us. Now. We've got

(37:20):
a lot of stuff coming up in the first of
the year. What we'll talk more about that later. But anyway,
so I think that's lame and dumb, that's gay and lame,
which she just said. I don't. I don't feel that.
And also I have never been in a situation and

(37:43):
I don't like to go to DC, as you guys
know famously, because I don't like I'm not good at
small talk. I'm not saying this as like a flex.
As Kine knows, I'm embarrassingly bad at small talk. It's horrible.
It's so bad and there and you know what you've
seen it. I can't no, I'm not I can't stand
the little I can't stand the whole cocktail circuit. I

(38:05):
don't no, I just don't. I don't do that. I
don't do that whole power adjacency like Green does and
all that. And I think in all of the situations
that I've been in, I have never once felt uncomfortable
or felt as though I was being treated in a
sexist manner. And anytime it even got near that point,

(38:32):
I am the type of person that I love a
challenge and I will flip it right back on you.
So I've never had an issue with that ever in
my life. I just don't. I mean, I think that
speaks to her weakness and not to the weaknesses of
other female Republican women in DC. I know some female

(38:54):
Republican lawmakers who don't roll it that way, and they
don't have any issue at all the committees they're doing
this stuff. She's mad because she wanted to run for
Senate and the numbers were abysmal for her. I don't
know why she just didn't stay in her house seat,
Like what's so bad like build up seniority, What is
so bad about you staying in your house seat? The
story goes, and my sources were telling me this is

(39:16):
a one hundred percent correct The story goes that she
wanted to run for Senate and they weren't allowing that
or the polling wasn't allowing that. The numbers the internals
did not support that. It showed that she was not
going to be a formidable candidate, and she was trying
to get Trump to kind of help change that. I

(39:40):
guess she thought that he could just go and tell
people to like her more and then that was going
to solve the issue. And he looked at the numbers
and got back to her and was like, you just
need to stay where you are. This isn't going to
work out. And then you know, she was apleplectic and
all hell broke lose. That's what this is. She's a
spurned woman and she's been going everywhere to bitch and moan.
I'm tired of hearing Marjorie Taylor Green bitch And if

(40:01):
she felt so strongly about all of these issues, and
why didn't she do more during her time in Congress,
why weren't there more bills that she pushed forward. I mean,
she made sure to get on camera and fight with everybody.
I mean, I think that this is also part of
when you try to turn politics into entertainment, you get clowns.
So I don't really have a dog in this fight.
I don't dislike her, but I'm not like a major fan.

(40:25):
I just you know, I'm not a major fan of
most lawmakers. There's some that I like more than others,
and that's about it. I think it's an abuse of
the word to say fan. But she's not helping anybody going.
Is she trying to audition for the View? That's the
only other thing I can think of. Is she trying
to get on the view, because that's not going to
go overwhelm. They didn't never hire her, they will never

(40:47):
hire her. Let's switch it up ker Florida Council for
American Islamic Relations, so they got mad and held a
press conference to denounce Ron DeSantis for labeling I'm a
foreign terrorist organization, which they are. This is cut twenty seven. Listen.

Speaker 9 (41:05):
The National Lawyer's Guild condemns Florida's unlawful and discriminatory designation
of CARE as a terrorist organization. This designation is without
legal or factual basis and constitutes a dangerous escalation of
anti Muslim political rhetoric weaponized to suppress constitutionally protected advocacy
and civil rights work.

Speaker 1 (41:28):
Well, it's not discriminatory if it's true, and that's not discriminatory.
That's just observing something. I mean, they were un indicted
co conspirators in the Holy Land Foundation trial and where
that was about sending money to terrorists. Basically they had
a number of convictions. That was this case where they
were funneling You had a major Muslim charity funneling millions

(41:54):
of dollars to Hamas, millions upon millions upon millions of
dollars to Hamas. And there were tons of people that
were convicted on this, and you had Care that was
involved in it, and it was with the Muslim Brotherhood,
it was with Care, all of these and it was
this was like you had two trials and it lasted
for a number of years, and they were involved in this.

(42:15):
They have really complicated purposefully so connections to Hezbollah, Hamas,
you know, things like that. There Islamists. And they were,
by the way, they were involved in the seven trial
since there were two, and that was by the way,

(42:36):
the largest US terrorism funding case. And they were the
Holy Land Foundation and that's the charity that was funneling
all of this money to Hamas. They were convicted of it.
Care they were involved, and they tried to say that
because they weren't convicted and weren't charged that they're squeaky claimed. Well,

(42:57):
we all know that that's not necessarily the case. But
they are Islamists and they're upset that they're being targeted.
They're not being targeted, they target other people. This is
the reaction to that. That's like saying, oh my gosh,
the Muslims were targeted by the crusaders, how many hundreds,
how many centuries had passed before the Crusaders finally reacted.

(43:20):
I'm just that's what I just roll my eyes whenever
I hear that. It's like Ammas saying that it's being attacked.
How many years were you attacking everybody else before someone
finally responded? How many times did you violate a ceasefire
before someone finally responded? So they had this press conference
to denounce DeSantis for this, uh, and he's seems to

(43:42):
be pretty jolly about it. He seems to he wants
to go into discovery. I don't think that they're prepared
for that. You know what that means, right, discover? Everybody
knows what that means. That means they're going to be
discovering all kinds of thiff and emails and you know,
all their records, anything written. Don't destroy anything, kids, Yeah,
but it's all going to be poured over. Don't destroy anything.

(44:04):
You're unnoticed. Just saying, but it's a way for one
of the ways to get power is to pretend that
you're the victim and get sympathy and then use that
as power and make everyone and penalize everybody else for
seeming like the bullies that's been happening in city after

(44:25):
city after city all across the United States, which brings
me to this because they share this in slack. Didn't
I put this in slack the other day or last night?
I think this was in Dearborn pulling up my notes now,
so Dearborn Heights. They were having trouble getting a Christmas

(44:48):
tree for their annual Christmas tree lighting, and they add this,
Both a Michigan farm and a businessman decided to partner
together and they got this ten thousand dollars forty foot

(45:11):
Norway spruce. Can I just interject here real quick, it's Michigan, right.
Can you spend the time in Michigan? They got trees
up there, don't they? Okay, can you tell me why
somebody couldn't just you know, Clark Griswold it out to
the woods and go and get you a tree and
put it on top of the family rambler.

Speaker 3 (45:32):
I think they wanted an especially tall breed of tree,
and I think that's why they went with the.

Speaker 1 (45:38):
Norway sing his forty foot tall and the guy. So
it was Hugh Farms and then Sam Hussein, owner of
J and T Crova, and they donated it and apparently
they covered the cost of the tree and made sure
it was delivered installed in time for the holiday season.

(46:00):
We are calling it a Christmas tree, right, because my
first thought was, well, that's a pagan symbol. I mean,
I have a tree, don't get me wrong, but I'm like,
that's a pagan symbol. But if you're calling it a
Christmas tree, it's not like people got a Nativity. I
don't know how to feel about this, because half of
me wants to go, okay, well that's a good gesture,

(46:21):
and you know, the Christian part of me that I'm
trying to listen to more seems to say, if I'm
quiet enough, well it's good. You need to acknowledge things
that are done well. But then the other half of
me is like I became an adult shortly before nine

(46:41):
to eleven. Nine to eleven changed everybody's worldview. And from
then we have seen a lot of bad stuff happen,
and we're seeing things, bad things happen in Minnesota. We're
seeing bad things. I mean, we have the care story
that I was just talking about. We see the stuff
that's been happening over in the UK and the Christmas market.
It's in France and in Germany and in Austria and

(47:03):
in Italy and all of this stuff. And I'm I'm,
I'm just I don't have a word for it. I
don't want to say suspicious because it doesn't fully mean
what I feel. Does it make sense? Because I is
this Okay, let me just say, is this a Trojan horse?

(47:25):
Let me just say it.

Speaker 3 (47:26):
Well, I mean, if what's supposed to be inside the
Trojan horse is you to feel fuzzy and warm about Islam,
then yeah, oh.

Speaker 1 (47:35):
I'm not feeling fuzzy and warm about Islam. I mean
it was nice that this tree was donated, but for
what why?

Speaker 3 (47:44):
I think it was design so that people would look
at this during the holiday season as some sort of
you know, genuine gesture when it could be placating to
you know, Christians.

Speaker 1 (47:57):
What does the chat think about this one?

Speaker 4 (48:00):
Like?

Speaker 1 (48:00):
Is this a is it like that's a good gesture
or because a lot of people are like, well, takiya, takiya,
I don't know which means you know, you can It's
it's okay to lie and do bad things in pursuit
of the overall good for Islam.

Speaker 3 (48:16):
The deception is acceptable as long as it's good for Islam,
which it could be that. I'm not saying that it is,
but that is a possibility, clearly.

Speaker 1 (48:26):
I really just want to see good deeds and be
able to go that's a good deed, and you know,
I'm glad for it.

Speaker 3 (48:30):
I missed those days.

Speaker 1 (48:32):
But I can't trust anything. And Islamism has been so
rampant and it's spread that it's hard to trust anything.
And that's not a condition we created. That's a condition
that Islamism created. So let's immediately before we even go
further in that discussion acknowledge where that schism came from.

(48:55):
So I don't I don't know, it's weird. I don't
know how I feel about this, So I'm curious the
Chat's gonna chat about it while we have headlines and
we got a hat tip our sponsors as well. Think
about this one. How do you feel about it? I
really again, I really want to say, that's a good gesture,
and I'm glad and I want to see more of it.
But at the same time, I'm also like, is this

(49:16):
supposed to change hearts and minds towards as lom as?
I don't know. How weird is it that we have
to sit here and evaluate everything by these standards and measures.
Now again, we did not create this system, by the way,
I just want to make that perfectly clear. The people
who did that to us did all right, we got
more in store. We got to get going. The folks
who will bring you the program, it's the folks over

(49:36):
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Speaker 3 (50:29):
Now all of the news you would probably miss. It's
time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 1 (50:34):
What is this?

Speaker 10 (50:35):
So?

Speaker 1 (50:35):
Apparently Zach Brown's making people mad because he performed in
the Vegas sphere and people are saying that some of
the projections on the screen were satanic. It was a
skeleton that had a crown. I mean, that's all it was.
I mean, I didn't think it was satanic. It's just
a skull, right, did you think it was? Kane? I didn't.

Speaker 3 (50:53):
I wasn't there.

Speaker 1 (50:54):
I mean, but you see the images.

Speaker 3 (50:55):
I did see the images, and I guess, I mean,
you could interpret them that way if you're a guess
whoever's talking to the reporter in this story.

Speaker 1 (51:02):
Yeah, I'm like, how is a skull by itself is
not satanic? It's just not stop. I don't I don't
know why. And I didn't see the whole show. I mean,
if he came out was like the is good. The
devil is your pal? Then yeah, that's a problem, you know,
I got that's that's yes.

Speaker 3 (51:17):
I don't like the hook on that.

Speaker 1 (51:18):
Yeah, that one's not as good. That's that's yeah, double
is your pal. That's that's not a great not a
great chorus. Let's see silver and copper eclipse gold as
top metals bets on supply fears. Well, yeah, silver's exploded.
It's exploded, Kane true, and it's replaced gold as the

(51:39):
hot metal trade. Heading into twenty twenty six, it's nearly
double this year. So make sure you go to noblegold
dot com slash Danna and most of the games occurred
noblegold dot com slash Dana in the past two months.
Due to a historic supply squeeze in a benchmark London market.
There's a surgeon demand from India and others. So interesting. Also, Oh,

(52:00):
gen Z is burning out at work more than any
other generation, and suck it up. I'm not even diving
into this. It's full stop, suck it up.

Speaker 3 (52:09):
Work.

Speaker 1 (52:09):
That's what it is. You gotta work, you gotta do
your job. Oh my gosh, stop it. I sound like
Joseph Joe Star. Oh my gosh, stop complaining. Ah, everybody,
you know what. Everybody works. Everybody works lots of hours.
I had a couple of nights already this week where
I was working till ten ten thirty. Shit, nobody, No,

(52:30):
this is not You're not special. It's not unusual. I
don't want to burst your bubble, but let's suck it
up a little bit. There are more than a million
social media accounts held by users under sixteen that are
going to be deactivated in Australia. It's a world first
band that's being watched elsewhere. That's what happens when parents
are lazy and they don't parent their kids. We got
a lot more in store. Stick with us. It is
the good people over at Patriot Mobile, the only Christian

(52:52):
conservative cell phone service that is out there. Patriot Mobile
wants to save you money, and they also want to
make sure that you're that you spend your hard earned
money for your service is actually going to amplify your
votes and amplify the things that you want to protect.

(53:13):
So they're not donating money to gun control and DEI
and all of that other stuff and trans issues nothing.
I can't promise that with any other cell phone service,
but I can with Patriot Mobile. They have a one
hundred percent US based team. They can get you set
up and activated in minutes. And right now you can
get a free Samsung AG sixteen with code data free

(53:37):
smartphone using code Dana right now, unlimited data, mobile hotspots,
international roaming, you know, the whole nine yards plans that
suit your needs, and I mean a portion of your
bill is given to organizations that fight for your God
given rights. So visit Patriotmobile dot com, slash data or
call names of into Patriot and use promo code data.
This is a limited time offer to get that free

(53:59):
smartphone using code Patriot Bubble dot com slash Dana nine
to seventy two Patriate promo Codena makes.

Speaker 2 (54:05):
Some common sense of the crazy headlines With a Dana
Show podcast, You're on the go guide for getting up
to speed on today's most important stories. Subscribe on YouTube,
Apple or your favorite podcast platform.

Speaker 1 (54:18):
Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash with you. I
haven't kept track with all of Groper Inc. Lately unless
it just like comes up into my timeline. And I
think this is for the people who are super hyper
online because the rest of you, who are normal people
with all of your brain cells, you don't God love

(54:40):
you for holding down the same line, holding it down
like we need you, protect you at all costs. So
I haven't really been following a lot of the Groper
Ink stuff lately, So I haven't been able to keep
track of who is responsible for killing Charlie Kirk. You know,
he's got a book that has been planned for some

(55:02):
time that just came out and he his wife, I know,
is doing the promo tour for it, which can't be easy.
But I'm looking people have been very helpfully keeping track
because you know, I can I just say I think,
and I haven't been talking a lot about Candice Owens

(55:23):
because I just think that it's grift ory trash. I mean,
I just I don't elevate someone who is a protege
of Al Sharpton, who as recently as twenty sixteen was
literally had founded a website doxing conservatives and going after people,
and then when they realized, you know, you can make
all this money being a Republican, then decided to become
a Republican and apply the grift there. And that's all fact.

(55:44):
By the way, that's all facts. Some of you all
got taken in, I know, but if you're keeping track,
apparently she has accused everybody from the French government, the
French Foreign Legion, the thirteenth Brigade specifically Israel, Israel Operatives Net,
and Yahoo himself. Let's see gign Jewish donors, the US government,

(56:05):
the FEDS, the FBI, Deep States, CIA, Turning Point USA,
his own wife, Erica kirk Blake, nef pastor, Rob McCoy,
Josh Hammer, Freemason's Yahoo like the website. Okay, the Bolsheviks, Egypt.
I mean the list is lengthy. Oh wait, that's right.

(56:25):
The latest was the US military. Isn't that the thing
that came out yesterday? She has no clue. She has
no clue. I mean, honestly, Candace Owens has made more
bank off of Charlie Kirk getting killed than I think
anybody else. It looks suspicious. Quite honestly, it looks super suspicious.
I have never seen anybody try to lift themselves up

(56:45):
on some bite using someone else's corpse more more than
the gun control stuff. This is like, I haven't even
seen gun control advocates stand on dead bodies as much
as I've seen Candace Owens stand on dead bodies to
try to gain advantage for herself and elevate herself as
she is on the legacy of Charlie Kirk. And that's fact.

(57:07):
So the next in the whole Graper establishment, I came
across this SoundBite, and it doesn't it pains me to
say this because we were always friendly. I would never
consider as like best friends or anything, but I've known
I did. I used to do election coverage with Tucker
before he had his own show at Fox. I remember
when he had three million dollars from Foster Freeze, who

(57:30):
who I met, knew, and he was fantastic. This was
back in the day when Daily Caller first was created.
Tucker got money from Foster Freeze, created a Daily Caller,
and then now he has this Tucker Carlson Network, which
was founded with muzzle money, which is true. I mean,
I'm not saying that as a pejorative, It's just true.
I think, you know, if you want to talk about
dual loyalties or something like that, you know, I think

(57:51):
it's important when you have millions of dollars that create
the company that you run. You know, I think there's
kind of a question is to dual loyalty and something
like that, since that's a favorite top book amongst the
graper establishment. So I saw this video fly past me,
fly on my timeline on X and this is what cut?
Is this?

Speaker 8 (58:11):
This?

Speaker 1 (58:11):
This cut? Eleventy million? Yeah? Yeah, yeah, so thank you?
So this is he's doing? Is this not when he
was speaking in Doha, right? This was like some other
forum and he was asked about Bill Ackman and people

(58:32):
like Barry Weiss, Bill Ackman and and you know Ackman.
He's this hedge fund manager. He's a billionaire, super smart dude.
His wife, I think, by the way, is like friends
with Brad Pitt. There was like this rumor, fun fact,
his wife is beautiful. There was this rumor that his

(58:52):
wife was like Brad Pitt's girlfriend. For a while, and
it's just she's like this professor, she's an art professor,
super pretty. And everyone was like, had all these rumors
about Brad Pitt and Nary Oxman, and it's just Bill
Ackman's wife. They're all friends anyway. So they're on stage
and he's talking about I guess the media landscape in

(59:16):
this forum, and this is what he had to say.

Speaker 10 (59:18):
Listen, oppressive like Bill Ackman, same thing. Bill Ackman's worth
like eight billion dollars or something. It's fine, I don't
care if Bill Ackman. Whatever Bilackman does. By Noel Backman,
he's kind of dumb. He's not ever created anything. He's
totally noncreative. How do these people wind up running our
biggest institutions? And the reason that's significant is because if
you pay close enough attention and you realize that the

(59:41):
people running everything are stupid, then you think, well, actually
the system is truly rigged on behalf of people who
do not deserve these positions at all. It's not just
that I disagree with Barry Wise, or she's calling me
names or calling her names or whatever. It's like, in
no fair system and no meritocracy would Bury rise above
secretary like actually, and I mean that I've been in

(01:00:04):
this business, mynd hole. I've been in this business as
Barry Weiss was breastfeeding. Okay, there's no world in which
Barry Weiss rises to the top of a news network
except a rigged world.

Speaker 1 (01:00:14):
Well, I mean, I guess he just can't imagine where
anybody would rise up to be the top of a
news agency without Muslim money. I don't know. I mean,
I'm just you know, thinking out loud here. I thought
that was a very odd thing for him to say.
He sounds resentful and bitter, and that's not a good
look for anybody. Barry Weiss was at the New York Times,
and she was very good at what she did, and

(01:00:35):
she was very I mean she she's more of a
moderate conservative, but she made them all look like, you know,
straight up bolsheviks over at the New York Times, and
she ended up being run out because she was too
conservative for the old Gray Lady. And then she created
the Free Press and then that got purchased and she's
made some really smart decisions. The stuff that she does

(01:00:56):
gets a lot of traction. People are really sharing their articles.
I mean, you can see the traffic online and she
didn't have to go out and get Katari money or
get Iranian money either. Just a really quick fun thing
here if you wanted to look at it. Because it's
also ancestual. So a lot of the money that came

(01:01:16):
into creating the Tucker Carlson networkers from Ohmied Malik, who
is Pakistani and Iranian, and he created he has a capital,
a firm that's called seventeen eighty nine Capital, and I
think Don Junior actually just joined and it's part of
the rock Bridge network. He created it along with other
people including Rebecca Mercer, et cetera. They raised a lot,

(01:01:39):
they raised a lot of money, and he's been behind
a lot of the funding for the Tucker Carlson Network.
And also what is it that nicotine pouch thing, the
AUP thing, but no, it's like that. Yeah, it's like
the new thing. And they apparently they're part of that

(01:02:00):
cash ptel apparently co founded or co created that with
Tucker Carlson, which I think is weird. It's just also incestuous.
But he got a lot of money from a foreign
government or from for He got a lot of foreign money,
in fact, a lot of payments through this and I'm
looking at I mean, Axios had a piece on it.
But also it's just open records, you know. I mean,

(01:02:20):
there's you can go to open secrets and you can
run all of the how the money shifts, and you
can research it all dire. For instance, some of the
payments for acquiring different things for his company were run
through a Qatari state investment entity. It's the al Udid
Media Fund. That's where all of the accusations about Katari

(01:02:42):
money come from. And I mean it sounds like it's
part I mean, it almost sounds like it's part of
like a government coordinated media laundering campaign. Honestly, that's kind
of what it sounds like. Uh So, I don't know
if any of that's ever been disclosed publicly or discussed,
but I just think that when you have things like
that and your financial portfolio, maybe you should tone down

(01:03:03):
your resentment of other people's success before you start lobbing
bombs at them because they're Jewish. Because let's be honest,
what do Bill Ackman and Barry Wise have in common?
They're Jewish? Right, they're the quote unquote homiceaters in that
Tucker Carlson talks about, Right, isn't that what that is
I mean, it seems like the only objection is that

(01:03:23):
they're Jewish. I don't know. I feel like if Israel
had given him money, then he would be like singing
the praises of Israel or something. I don't know. I
just can't. I can't explain it. It's very difficult when
you see someone that you thought you at least kind
of knew act in a way that is completely contrary
to everything that you actually initially assumed about them. I mean,

(01:03:45):
it's just it's to say that that these people are dumb.
And Bill Ackman is not a dumb guy. He is
very very smart financially. He's made a lot of really
good decisions, some which might have seemed really risky at
the time, but he made he knew what he was doing.
He's made a lot of really good decisions, and he
he's he identified undervalued assets and he built this, you know,

(01:04:08):
this company, and Barry Weiss did something similar with a
media entity. So to sit here and say that they
are dumb and then to try to like use your
age over it that she was breastfeeding when he was
getting started, Yes, and she didn't have to take Katari money.
I mean she didn't have to be in the pocket
of a government administration in order to find success. She

(01:04:29):
didn't have to sell out in order to find success.
She didn't have to turn and start, you know, repeating,
you know, really, you know, weird rhetoric in order to
try to get a slice of the digital audience. Pie.
It just seems resentful and bitter. And you know, honestly,
I think that that was that sounded silly and emotional.

(01:04:50):
He sounded I mean, he sounded like an emotional woman. Well,
since she was breastfeeding. I've been out here and she's
further than you. So what is that say? I mean,
that's kind of a self owned Is it not like
what happens with people? This is why I hate DC

(01:05:11):
And Lorraine reminds me too, what is this? Is this
what we're talking about when it is Tucker hating America
because he's criticizing other people, because people who criticize Tucker
are accused of hating America. But remember that only goes
one way. He can not even criticize. I don't even
think either of those are fair criticisms. To call them

(01:05:32):
criticisms means that I'm accepting that they have some form
of logic, and I just don't. It just sounds resentful
and overemotional. It seems like he's violating the rule that
he expects everyone to follow when it concerns him, but
he doesn't want to follow it when it concerns everywhere
else is no enemies to the right thing. It seems
like he's got an a lot of enemies and they're

(01:05:53):
all Jewish, at least in his eyes. I find that
incredibly sad. I mean, we live in an age where
people can create media companies right and left and you know,
and they don't have to necessarily disclose everything, and he's
using his platform to do more to tear down the
right than anything I've ever seen. I don't see any
of the the He hasn't been talking about any of

(01:06:14):
these elections. Tucker Carlson hasn't had hasn't been talking about
any of these special elections. He's not talking about redistricting,
he's not talking about the lay of the land. He's
having Nazi twinks on his show. And he doesn't have
the balls to push back and actually ask serious questions.
And all of the people who are just desperate to
be in business with him, none of them have the

(01:06:35):
balls or the spines to point this out because they're terrified,
terrified over jeopardizing business relationships. They don't want to jeopardize
their ad network, they don't want to jeopardize any kind
of investment, they don't want to jeopardize any kind of association,
professional association that elevates them in the digital sphere. So
they say nothing, and they pretend they don't see it.

(01:06:58):
They say nothing. But this has done more to cause
problems on the right than anything that I've seen from
the left to date. We're all agreed that the left
is crazy, but now what I see are people. It's
interesting because it's like, right after Cutter gets involved, and
you know, Cutter's been spending a ton of money. We're
not supposed to talk about that. We're supposed to obsess

(01:07:19):
and have a fetish with Israel and APAC even though
they donate a pittance, they spend a pittance on lobbying
compared to Cutter, And it's very easy to find these
monetary amounts on this thing called the Internet. But we're
not supposed to talk about that. We're only supposed to
talk about the Jews, and we're supposed to talk about

(01:07:39):
APAC bad. But we're supposed to celebrate cutter work towards
partnerships with cutter Have we forgotten history? Have we forgotten
the point of all of it? We got a lot
more on the way it is. The good people over

(01:08:01):
at Patriot Mobile, the only Christian conservative cell phone service
that is out there. Patriot Mobile wants to save you money,
and they also want to make sure that your dollars
that you spend your hard earned money for your service
is actually going to amplify your votes and amplify the

(01:08:21):
things that you want to protect. So they're not donating
money to gun control and DEI and all of that
other stuff and trans issues nothing. I can't promise that
with any other cell phone service, but I can with
Patriot Mobile. They have a one hundred percent US based team.
They can get you set up and activated in minutes.

(01:08:42):
And right now you can get a free Samsung AG
sixteen with code Data free smartphone using code Dana right now,
unlimited data, mobile hotspots, international roaming, you know, the whole
nine yards plans that suit your needs, and I mean
a portion of your bill is given organizations that fight
for your God given rights. So visit Patriotmobile dot com

(01:09:04):
slash Dana or call nine seven two Patriot and use
promo Coddana. This is a limited time offer to get
that free smartphone using Codena Patriotmobile dot com slash Dana
nine to seven to two Patriot promo Codena.

Speaker 3 (01:09:16):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida.

Speaker 1 (01:09:24):
Man, all right. So first up, I've seen a lot
of excuses before, I never seen one like this. So
a man crashes a stolen BMW and then he says
that he had been teleported into it. Felicia kind of

(01:09:45):
Sheriff's office. They said a man left his BMW unlocked
in the park, the keys in a closed cup holder,
which was stupid. While the man was walking his dog.
Why didn't you take your keys? So dumb? His car
was stolen. A few minutes later, it crashed at an intersection.
Witnesses got the driver out and they told deputies. The driver,

(01:10:05):
thirty six year old Calvin Johnson, he was speeding over
one hundred miles per hour. He said that he didn't
steal the car, he teleported into it. Oh, it was
against his will. He just teleported right into the car.
He has been charged with grand theft of a motor
vehicle and driving with a suspended license. The footage is
pretty that's the footage he would just he said he

(01:10:27):
was He was telling deputies he was teleported into the vehicle.
I don't think that's how that works, you know. And
you so Eve, Wait, you were teleported in the vehicle
and then you just started it and drove it off.
I mean, you're missing a key component here, my dude.
I mean, it didn't start by itself, you know, just
saying it did not start by itself. So hmm, let's

(01:10:49):
see a coral springs me and tried to beat his
mother to death with a frying pan over a dementia diagnosis.
According to police, this is horrible. Oh my god, they
arrested this man. He tried to beat his eighty two
year old mother to death. Oh, he tried to smother
her as well. Keith Woodward, he wanted to kill her
because her early dementia and need for constant assistance. I'm all,

(01:11:12):
I mean, I don't believe in abortion, but I do
for this guy. I believe in a late stage abortion
for this guy. I'm just saying. So, we got a
frying pan, entered her room, and then began beating her
over the head, trying to kill her. A violent struggle ensued,
and she apparently tried to smother her. She ultimately escaped.
So he's a big giant pansy because he couldn't even

(01:11:33):
beat up an eighty some year old lady. I'm just
not saying you should, but good grief. Right, So he's
held without bond, he can't have any contact with his mother,
he has to undergo a mental health screening. I think
he's just evil of this guy. I mean, I'm not
saying that if prison justice were to occur, I would
love to donate to the commissary of anybody who might
be behind it. I'm not saying that at all, But

(01:11:54):
I'm just saying, you know, fate has a funny way
of working things out in the prison system. You know,
let's see. No, I don't want to talk about this
good will one, Kane, don't maybe do this one. This
is so why why of all the places to be nasty?

Speaker 5 (01:12:08):
Right?

Speaker 3 (01:12:08):
Well, we are running the time, So look at you.

Speaker 1 (01:12:10):
I mean, and there's another a drunk Florida woman who
was walking down the street with her liquor in hand
and no bridges there's that story too. I mean, we
got a lot of them. Stick with us Third Hour
on the way, Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash
with you top of this Third Hour. So, the late

(01:12:30):
Charlie Cook Kirk has a book that is out. It's
out now this week, and the and it was already played.
He had already been writing it and it was already
I think everything was pretty much done except for like
the illegal reads and all that stuff, you know, the
stame old stuff I'm publishing. And so now it's out
and his wife, Erica Kirk is doing the the promoting

(01:12:52):
the book for him this week, and she was on
Fox recently just a little bit ago and for the
first time addressed those cannspiracy theories head on. So it's
the sound by you've been waiting for.

Speaker 4 (01:13:06):
Listen, come after me, call me names, I don't care,
call me what you want, go down that rabbit hole whatever.
But when you go after my family, my turning point,
USA family, my Charlie kirkshow family, When you go after
the people that I love, and you're making hundreds and
thousands of dollars every single episode going after the people

(01:13:30):
that I love because somehow they're in on this.

Speaker 1 (01:13:34):
No, you know, I have to say it. I've never
seen you like that.

Speaker 4 (01:13:38):
No, I'm very this is righteous anger because this is
not okay. It's not healthy. This is a mind virus. Yes,
I believe in our judic jewdicial system. I do. We
have a hell of a team working on this. Excuse
my French, but this is not okay. So you want

(01:14:00):
to put these people back in the box where they've
been creeping from. I don't care what box you're in,
but just know that your words are very powerful, and
we are human. My team are not machines, and they're
not robots. They are human. We have more death threats
on our team and our side than I have ever seen.

(01:14:20):
I have kidnapping threats, I have you name it, we
have it. And my poor team is exhausted. And every
time they bring this back up, what are we supposed
to do relive that trauma all over again. They watched
my husband get murdered. I have no idea how I
would have reacted if I was there that day, and
think the Good Lord that I did not have to

(01:14:40):
see that happen. But my team, they are rocked to
the core. So why every single day do they have
to be dragged through the mud, analyzed, hyper analyzed, you know,
sit in a corner and cry at the antela position.

Speaker 1 (01:14:56):
Sometimes you see things in life you wonder, well, what
does this mean? Why does this person come from this background?
Why does this person like I? You know, if you're
not familiar with Erica Kirk's story, she's a pageant girl.
And I'm not saying that that's not a pejorative. I'm
I'm just that's you know, she was in pageants for
a long time and I think she won a number

(01:15:18):
of really impressive titles. And when you start young in
that industry, that circuit, you develop the habit of always
being very put together, always being very ready, especially at
the upper levels. You're always ready. You're always put together.
Remember when people were trying to criticize her for how
she dabbed her eyes, that's literally that's a TV thing too,

(01:15:40):
it's pageant TV thing you do that you don't mess
up your makeup and smear everything. And she already had
a business, Christian business, and she did apparel and accessories
before she ever met Charlie Kirk. She was a successful
She had a business in New York where it's hard
to create and maintain a business. And she was already

(01:16:01):
successful in her own right, and she was always very
put together because of that pageant background, right, And when
you all it made sense to me for the first
time when we were at the funeral service, because I thought, Oh,
all of these things in her life have prepared her

(01:16:23):
for the storm. Isn't it interesting how when you get
in the storm you suddenly realize how all the things
in your life prepare you for that. What she said here,
and this is the first time that she's ever addressed
any of those ridiculous conspiracy theories, and she'd I mean

(01:16:48):
righteous indignation. Indeed, And as I said on X, with this,
she has every right to be right. She has every
right to be angry, and she's angry in the classiest
of ways. Here there's such a clear difference between her

(01:17:09):
and these grifters like Candis Owans. And as I said,
Candis Owens was an Al Sharpton protege who was doxing
conservatives in twenty sixteen. She can't compete her poorly researched
conspiracy chitching theories. They can't compete with this real and

(01:17:31):
righteous indignation. It's just not possible. And honestly, kudos to
the way that Erica Kirk addressed it. I don't think
she needs to say anything else to that grifter. No
more pearls for swine. After that, there was an interview
that Erica Kirk gave too. This was a when she

(01:17:54):
started promoting again Charlie's book. And you know that's part
of the contract too. When you come out with a book,
you promote it for that first week. And I know
that she's probably, you know, really pushing to fulfill all
of those obligations. She was on this book summit thing.

(01:18:14):
It was a New York Times Deal book summit, and
this was Wednesday of last week, and she was asked
about the Second Amendment, and you know, in light of
what happened to her husband, and she outright rejected it.

(01:18:36):
She said it is not a gun problem. It's a human,
a deeply human problem. And she said, you will always
have individuals that will always resort to violence. She says
that she doesn't wish what she has endured upon anyone,
and she says, I support the Second Amendment as well.

(01:19:01):
That right there, telling you what, folks, that's pretty impressive.
That's strength. Candice Owens looks like a clown compared to that.
That's that can't compete. Next, sweep the stage, get the

(01:19:24):
get the salmon at the apollo, and pull that clown
off the stage. She's done, and that's it's super powerful,
super super powerful. She also said this too, because you
know they got this trial with this murderer coming up.
This is cut twenty four. Listen to this.

Speaker 4 (01:19:43):
We have a trial coming up. Unfortunately, that trial is
in a long time. What I want to be mindful
of for people is that this was a murder. This
is not something that What I don't when I have happened,
is for this to taint the jury pool. I don't.

(01:20:07):
I want my husband. I want justice from my husband
more than any other person on the internet, any other
person in this world. That was my husband and the
father to my kids. We will make sure and we
have been turning over every single stone, going down every
single lead. So when these people say, oh, they haven't

(01:20:28):
talked about this or done that, how do you know
you're not in those those meetings with the attorneys and
the prosecutors.

Speaker 1 (01:20:35):
You have no idea, And why she just gave me
an idea? What I mean, honestly, can we ask if
Candace Owens is trying to help Charlie Kirk's kill her
by tainting the jury pool with her stupid, poorly researched
absolute trash rat conspiracy theories. Fair That's a fair question,
isn't it super fair question? Maybe she can ask her

(01:20:57):
gay husband about it. Oh, don't expect, don't not even
I just get you see someone who's hurting, and I
see hurting. I see people trying to hurt hurt people,
and I want to go after the people who are
trying to hurt hurt people. I enough enough, No more

(01:21:17):
pearls before swine. We've had enough of the swine, have
we not. We want a fair trial, We want a trial,
and we want this guy to capital punishment. I think
serves it best. But that was powerful, super powerful stuff.
But I was thinking, like I said in the beginning,
you know, it's class, it's grace. And for the people

(01:21:39):
who are saying, well, you know, she's out there an
awful lot. You know what, let me tell you something.
She is in this industry. And because of the nature
of things, where do you think that she can go
to get a job if she needs one? Nowhere? It's
hard it's hard when you are stereotyped as a conservative,

(01:22:01):
especially in today's world. So strike while the iron's hot.
Shore up what you can for you and your family
so that you don't have to worry about that in
the future. I don't begrudge anybody that I do. And
for the people who get mad at her because she
smiles when she's out in public, I feel, you know,

(01:22:21):
you must be touched by luck to not know grief.
You must not know what it's like to find just
a moment of peace in a storm where you can
just smile, you know. Apparently widows are never supposed to smile.
They're supposed to stay mired in their grief and suffering
for forever. That's what those people criticizing her are saying.

(01:22:43):
I'm done with that. I'm done. I don't want to
hear from a single fecal bird. I'm not going to
say the word I usually say, criticize in a widow.
Leave it alone, have class, leave it alone. But I
really do think that she's been prepared for this, maybe
not knowingly her whole life. I don't know if you've

(01:23:04):
ever seen this, Oh gosh, what is the.

Speaker 5 (01:23:09):
U?

Speaker 1 (01:23:10):
Let me look this up. It's an m Night Shamelin movie,
and it wasn't actually one of his more well received ones,
but I actually think it's brilliant. It was called Lady
in the Lake. I'm not going to give it all away,
but I really if you've never watched it, you should
because it gets on one of our interviews, she mentioned Namayah, which, interestingly,

(01:23:33):
that was my morning devotional, And that's odd, now that
I think about it. She mentioned Niamiyah when she was
on Fox earlier as an example of teamwork, and I'm like,
holy kyw, that literally was my devotional this morning. It's
very near my esque Lady in the Lake. And you
have a group of people living in an apartment complex

(01:23:53):
dealing with a supernatural event, and every single person has
their own eccentricities, and in the end of the movie,
it has the same revelations like the usual suspects, you know,
when the detective realized who Kaiser Soose actually is. You
have that level of revelation towards the end of this
movie where you see a great puzzle being placed piece

(01:24:15):
by piece together before you by all of these people's,
these apartment complex dwellers, all of their little eccentricities each
of them. You realize now that there was design in it,
that there was a design in the way that they
were all living here, there was design in the way
that they have all of their little eccentricities. There was
a design in the way that they do everything that
they do. And they've come to know everything that they know,

(01:24:37):
and they have the relationships with each other that they have,
and it is a really humbling, awesome thing when you
realize that. And you look at this at the end
of this film, and in a lot of these instances,
I see the same things. I see the same thing
in this. There's certain things that happen in life, and
it's always usually something tragic, but it is in the

(01:25:01):
the victory of overcoming the tragedy that you see these
things come into play. And that's what I see in this.
It's ah, you should watch that. It's a it's a
when was it twenty twelve? Maybe Lady in the Lake,
m Night Shamal And it's good Bryce Dlis Howard is
in it. Uh, there's some really good actors in it.
And it wasn't one of his most celebrated ones, but

(01:25:22):
I think actually the message is one of the most
powerful ones. He always does very thoughtful films.

Speaker 3 (01:25:28):
So and now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 1 (01:25:35):
So I watch Uh Mayor of Kingstown, and I saw
the one episode where they had drones delivering drugs and
I thought, oh, that's kind of interesting. I wonder if
that actually happens. Oh well, Associated Press as a drone
dropped steak and krab legs for a prisoner feast, but
South Carolina guards found it first Bishopville, South Carolina, twice

(01:25:56):
three weeks before Christmas, and in the prison yard a
drone package was found by a god with steak weed
and crab leagues, crab legs and cigarettes for days and
also included a tineveld bay. Literally that happened at Lee
Correctional Institution prison yard, according to the South Carolina Department

(01:26:17):
of Corrections. Yeah, and they seized it. They said, no
arrests have been made. They said, I guess the people
expecting the package or crabby that's actually kind of funny.
That's very thoughtful gift for them prisoners. Let's see local
Oh nope, not doing that. One Humanoid robots and an
Iranian tech expo turned out to be humans in disguise,

(01:26:39):
humans in disguise autobots. It was a pair of advanced
humanoid robots that literally were just two people like dressed
up to be like robots. They were fake robots, they
were actual just people coming up religious freedom in the
administration of more.

Speaker 2 (01:26:56):
Stick with Us the Danish show podcast You're fast, fun
and informative news companion for those always on the move.
Subscribe on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.

Speaker 1 (01:27:08):
Welcome back, Dana Lash here with you. I'll keep it going.
It's Little Nat King Cole. Oh Holy Night. It's our
first Christmas song of the season. I think those are
my favorite Christmas song. And it's really impossible as a
Church of Christ or to not immediately kick in my
alto part and start harmonizing when I hear this. It's
taken everything I have right now. But I love this
song and I love the history behind it. So it's

(01:27:32):
it almost sounds like a joke. You know, you have
an atheist and a Jewish person and then an abolitionist
that walk into a bar. But that's kind of like
the origins of this story without the bar. So this song,
there's there's many different versions, but Oh Holy Night started.
It was a poem that was written by an atheist,
a French atheist. He was a local poet and a

(01:27:54):
wine merchant place sid Caupo and he was asked by
this parish if you could just please craft a poem
for Christmas, and so he did, and then later on
the accompanying music for it was a Jewish man named
Adolph Adam. He heard the poem, he put this music

(01:28:16):
to it, and then in eighteen forty seven it went
from there, and then it came to the Americas where
an abolitionist named John Sullivan Dwight he heard it and
the one line you know Chain's show he Break really
really resonated with him. He was a huge abolitionist, and
so he translated the lyrics and amended some of them,

(01:28:39):
and it became now it is what it is. It
had been banned in France for a while because an
atheist wrote the original poem on which the song was based.
And now it's one of our best loved Christmas songs.
And I found it interesting because I told you this
morning my devotional was the story of Nehemayah. And then
you had Erica kirk On with on Fox this afternoon

(01:29:00):
mentioned Neami and I'm like, well, there's a theme here.
We got a theme happening. I think all of this
is important, not just because it's Christmas, but because some
of the things that we've talked about on this program,
the attacks of the Christmas markets in Austria and Germany
and France, the things that we've seen in the United Kingdom,
even the things that we've seen here in the United States.
It all comes back to it is a spiritual war.

(01:29:21):
It's not a war between Republicans and Democrats. It is
a war between the heavenly realms and the dark forces,
as you see in Ephesians. And this is why I
think it's incredibly important to have good people, people of
strong faith, advising the powers that be in this administration.
Which brings us to our next guest. So, I had
a friend of mine that reached out and said, oh

(01:29:42):
my gosh, this is a serious issue. You know, you
have stories of Christians that are being killed in Niger
and Sudan, tortured for their faith daily around the world,
thousands more faith imprisonment. So a few months ago, Potus
had nominated former Congressman and pastor Mark Walker to kind
of lead the charge for this to be as an
ambassador at large for international religious freedom. And he's on

(01:30:06):
the waiting list. He's got the support of I think
every faith leader, a lot of people in Congress, and
he needs to have a hearing and he joins us now.
Mark Walker, congressman, former congressman and pastor, it's good to
have you. Thank you so much for joining us. And
Merry Christmas.

Speaker 5 (01:30:23):
Thank you, Merry Christmas to you. It's a privilege to
be here as a form. Before I became a senior pastor,
I was a music and worship minister, big choir and
orchestra doing that Oh Holy Night, there's nothing like in
my opinions, it.

Speaker 1 (01:30:34):
Is one of the best. It's so beautiful to hear
all the parts song. It's just it's one of my
absolute favorites. I wanted to ask you so you're so
have us understand you're on the waiting list. And I
know a lot of there's a lot of nominees for
different posts that have just been languishing on these waiting
lists that need these hearings, and it's getting all tied
up in the Senate, and we know that President is

(01:30:55):
quite upset about all of this, what is happening, and
then I want to talk to you about the importance
of yours.

Speaker 5 (01:31:01):
Yeah. So you know it's been since April. President Trump
called me and said, Marca wants you to serve in
this capacity. With your background as a minister, but also
in the House as a former ranking member on Intelligence
and counter Terrorism for our Homeland Security Committee. We've traveled
the world extensively and have looked at these issues as
a former ministers. We've minister, we've been in these countries,

(01:31:22):
we've worked in the refugee camps. We had some idea
and I think that's part of the reason that he
saw that we had the credibility to engage this. Obviously
we are our conservative history is certainly not in doubt.
But there has been some gamesmanship, I guess on the
Senate side, and we are trying to figure out where
the issue is. We've got great support from the Cabinet,
from many of the senators, everyone we've talked to. We

(01:31:45):
don't have a single no, but for whatever reason, there's
been a little bit of an issue getting over this
last hurdle, and we're just trying to do what we
can to follow through what President Trump's asked us. But
even on the larger context, the amount of people that
are suffering across the world is just is heart riching
and heartbreaking. And we've got thirty people in the staff

(01:32:06):
department ready to go that need the guidance, that need
the push you to be able to engage in this level.

Speaker 1 (01:32:11):
Yeah, and this essentially the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, they
need to put you on their nominations. They're hearing this
for tomorrow, for Thursday.

Speaker 5 (01:32:23):
It would be great. I think there's one remaining spot
for have been named that usually do five or six,
but it would be wonderful to get there, get the vote,
get sworn in, and start working in the different places.
In fact, there's about nineteen countries we're focused in right
now where we've seen an uptick either in two things,
one the blasphemy laws or to the outright islamis killing

(01:32:43):
that we see a lot of the subs of Haran,
African area.

Speaker 1 (01:32:46):
And this is so incredibly important. If you guys are
just joining us, we're talking to our guess. He's a
former congressman and also senior pastor Mark Walker, and his
appointment as Ambassador at Large for International Religious Freedom. You
have an interesting background too, because you were talking about
counter terrorism. I tend to think, you know, when we
have this this thing in our churches, our church here

(01:33:06):
in Texas, where we support missionaries that are overseas, and
when I hear their stories, the first thing I think
of is that's actually the first line, because I do
think at some point, you know, this is coming down
to it's spiritual warfare, but also it's you know, where
you're fighting Islamism, and you know Christian people are under attack,
and as we've seen in Sudan and Nigeria and elsewhere,

(01:33:28):
the national security implications of something like this, it's asymmetrical warfare.
And I think not enough people see the granular, for
the lack of a better way to say it, how
important this issue is. Talk a little bit about this,
because I mean, it's more than just like a faith
based exercise. It really is a national security issue.

Speaker 5 (01:33:52):
Dana. You just broke that unpacked it beautifully, you really did.
That's why you have to go through all these different
levels of security clearance is to make sure because there
are intelligence components my denomination. We've got missionaries in one
hundred and fifty countries and sometimes these missionaries are buried
even deeper than our assets, or have an understanding getting

(01:34:12):
information of where the next attack might be. Obviously we
know what they would like to do us as the
Great Satan, but the underlying message you're talking about this
is a national security issue, but it's also a spiritual
issue that has to be dealt with because of the
Islamist groups. If you look, if you watch some of
the footage in the videos of what these Islamis do

(01:34:32):
where it's spoke of her i'm Al Shababis Whalker, other
groups that go into these countries, it is pure unadulterated
evil to see the glean the pleasure that they get
from torturing even young boys and girls. I won't even
get into the graphic nature of what their ultimate goal
is here. But this has to be combated and that's
why I was in London recently in the Baroness Emma

(01:34:54):
Nicholson and in her late eighties work with Margaret Thatcher.
She came up and she put her hand on my
chest and she said, Congress America is the last hope
for religious freedom. And she said the reason why is
you're the only country that ever wrote it in its
law so we have responsibility both as believers and as
Americans to get out there and advocate for those who
are brothers and sisters suffering across the world.

Speaker 1 (01:35:16):
That is an incredibly important point. What needs to happen
for you to be on that list tomorrow.

Speaker 5 (01:35:22):
Well, just for the Senate Committee Chairman, Chairman rich just
to make it happen. That's kind of where we are
right now, and we're wanting to do everything that we encourage. Look,
we know they have lots of nominees, they have lots
of work. I get it from somebody who served at
least on the House side, served in leadership as RSC
chairman as well, familiar with the process. But this isn't

(01:35:44):
necessarily about just me. This position is the principal advisor
to Secretary of State and to the President of the
United States on all things international religious matters. It's the
ranking ambassador of whichever country this position or which what
I would be, would go into because these matters are
so serious. That's why this law was passed through Republican

(01:36:05):
legislation in nineteen ninety eight.

Speaker 1 (01:36:07):
Wow. And it is like, as we've said, it's incredibly
important as well, and whether it's Nigeria, whether it's Sudan,
whether it's the Islamism that's in Europe, or even you know,
encroaching here in the United States. I mean, our leaders
need this guidance more than ever. What can the audience do,
I mean, is there anyone that they can just besiege
online or phone or email in order to make it happen.

Speaker 5 (01:36:31):
Well, I just think encouraging the reaching out to the
Senate Form Relations Committee. They have a phone number, reaching
out to the chairman Rich there and just talk about
the importance of this issue. There are many pastors, many
people that are being detained. We've seen to uptake in
India with mody and increasing the blasphemy laws.

Speaker 1 (01:36:49):
That's an even we've been seeing this in South Korea.

Speaker 5 (01:36:52):
Pastor Son who's just is detained as we speak in
prison for simply having the same faith that you and
I do. Dana.

Speaker 1 (01:37:00):
That's just stunning to me because that really surprised me
coming out of South Korea, to be honest, Yes.

Speaker 5 (01:37:05):
When I went over there eight or nine years you
could see the work that Billy Graham did in the
fifties with all the different churches. So it goes to
show you how quickly and first of all, how blessed
we are that we have a foundation of our First Amendment,
though we have many on the left that like to
undermine it and wish it would go away. But those
countries that do not, how quickly culture can change and

(01:37:26):
lose that opportunity, to lose that ability to simply share
and talk about your faith.

Speaker 1 (01:37:30):
Yeah, I completely agreed. Well, I hope to see you
on that list tomorrow because I think that especially, I mean,
we're just some weeks before Christmas. No pressure or Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, but just you know, some weeks before Christmas,
and it just seems appropriate, and also it's needed considering
the forces that we are facing spiritual warfare and also

(01:37:50):
you know, more traditional symmetric warfare that we're facing as well.
So we wish you all the best of luck in
that and we'll be watching, of course Congress at Mark Walker,
retired Congressman. Of course in your pastor we appreciate what
you do. Thank you for sharing your faith and fighting
for Christians. Harry Christmas, Merry Christmas to you. We have
more to come, folks, as we wrap up this segment,

(01:38:10):
and that is incredibly it is a very important thing
as we said, you know, in our churches we had
and his point too, that he said, where some of
these missionaries are very deeper than our assets is incredibly important.
We can't even in our church, we can't even discuss
where they can't even disclose where these missionaries are. When

(01:38:30):
they go there, they have to stay there uncontacted for
an indeterminate amount of amount of time, and then they
can come back to the United States because you don't
want it to be detected. That that's because in a
lot of these instants, a lot of these places where
they're going, it's very hostile towards prostalyization. They don't want
you sharing your faith, they don't want you evangelizing, they
don't want you sharing the Bible or sharing scripture anything

(01:38:54):
like that. So and it does come down to it,
that's the first line. And I don't think a lot
of people realize how important that is and how many
people who's who have been brought to Christ through these
mission efforts overseas. I mean, there are some amazing stories,
stunning stories that we hear from these missionaries. And also

(01:39:15):
you know, these missionaries they go with their families. It
doesn't make sense for just you know a couple of adults,
they bring their families with them and they live in
the community and they they work with the community, and
that builds up a lot of credibility. And they these
you know, people in these areas that have not heard
have or read the Bible, or not heard the story

(01:39:36):
of Jesus. They you know, they're their right shoulder to
shoulder with these families, and they see these families living
with them. So it's incredibly important.

Speaker 2 (01:39:44):
On the go and need a quick news fix with
a fun twist, follow Dana's Absurd Truth podcast for bite
size and formative episodes, perfect for your busy schedule on
Apple or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 1 (01:39:56):
It is one of the best Christmas songs. The people
on TV can't hear Wonderful Christmas Time by Paul McCartney
right now and Wings really because he's simply having a
wonderful Christmas Time. My favorite has been the kids sing
in the choir. Oh, that's so funny. This is one
of the best. It's not Christmas un let's say hear

(01:40:17):
Donnie Hathaway Bing Crosby, Nat King Cole and Paul McCartney Wings.
I have to hear those four songs are crooners. I
gotta hear them otherwise it can't. We can't do it.
It can't. I mean, it's like, doesn't feel like Christmas, right,
White Christmas by Being Crosby, Oh Holy Night by Nat
King Cole, Wonderful Christmas Time by Paul McCartney Wings, and
then the Donnie Hathaway Oh my gosh, Donnie Hathaway song

(01:40:43):
Shake a Hand, Shake a hand. Oh yeah, such a
great track. It's this Christmas. That's a great track, Donny Hathaway,
This Christmas. That's just that's me sitting in the backseat
of my mom's green Oldsmobile driving and looking at all
the rich people Christmas lights while Donny Hathaway singing This
Christmas on the radio. That's that's my That's what I remember.

(01:41:06):
And you're looking at all it was like driving by
like a bunch of home alone houses. That's that's what
it was like. Right, Can you feel that? Oh so good? Oh?
Is it weird? Okay? Is it weird to stop by
people's houses and like when they're all decorated and you
take photos of yourself in front of their houses, Because
I totally.

Speaker 3 (01:41:24):
I think people expect that any more. These days.

Speaker 1 (01:41:27):
There's a house that's in a neighborhood near us that
they do a whole. I think they have little kids.
They do a crazy, big frozen thing. Like every year.
They've got the store where the guy's like, oh you
were just almost said, they got that, and that guy,
that's Vin guy, they got him there. They got like
all this stuff and I've got to drive by it
every year. Those people who put out all those Christmas

(01:41:48):
lights bring so much joy. I love those people so much.
The more the better, I would. My husband reins me
in because I would have I want an attack on
tight size nativity and my front yard came. I would like,
can you imagine having a Nativity bigger than your house,
like right in your front yard, and you got it

(01:42:09):
all lit up? You know, Baby Jesus is all lit up.
I even know how I'd like the manger. I even
know how I would light it up. Does anybody else
go a little overboard too?

Speaker 4 (01:42:20):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:42:22):
My mom one year, she gonna kill me. I shouldn't
say this. I don't know where she got it. She
did this. It is the southern Missouri thing. She did
that where it was Christmas lights but in plastic, clear
plastic solo cops, and so it was like a Christmas
light disco ball. That woman for a period went through that.
That was that was her vibe for a couple of

(01:42:43):
Christmases in a row. And it only looked good at night.
During the day You're like, what are all these plastic
cups up here for? What is this? But at night
it looked like a dream. But during the day it
was just a hot mess. It just didn't look right.
She's I'm gonna get hate mail from my own mother.
If she sends me hate mail, I will read it
on air for money. Don't test me, Nana? All right?

Speaker 7 (01:43:07):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (01:43:08):
Today and stupidity King, what we got?

Speaker 3 (01:43:10):
I'm curage something all right? Cut fourteen. This is Adam Shift.
Now we all know everyone got it wrong as it
relates to Russia hoax, the Russia collusion hoax. So he
was given an opportunity here, Adam Shift, to sort of
get out of it and explain, but instead this is
what he did.

Speaker 1 (01:43:27):
He talks a lot about Russia, Russia, Russia hoax, hoax, hoax.
Did you get anything wrong about that?

Speaker 2 (01:43:33):
Uh?

Speaker 5 (01:43:33):
No, I don't think we got anything wrong.

Speaker 1 (01:43:35):
What I do think that at the end of the investigation.

Speaker 3 (01:43:38):
There was nothing that they got right. What did they
get right? I think would be the follow up question
to that you didn't get anything wrong? Oh well, then
what'd you get right?

Speaker 1 (01:43:46):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:43:47):
What'd you get right? Because it was nothing?

Speaker 1 (01:43:49):
Yeah, I don't see that. Yeah, I agree with you folks.
That does it for us today. I hope you have
a great rest of your evening. Make sure you find
us on YouTube, Facebook. I can subscribe the podcast Chapter
Verse over at Substate. Back with you tomorrow
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