All Episodes

October 27, 2025 109 mins
Benefits for SNAP recipients are set to expire during the second longest government shutdown in US history. The Indian illegal alien truck driver who was charged with killing 3 in a DUI crash in Ontario on Tuesday, has a California CDL. Zohran Mamdani claims his aunt stopped taking the subway after 9/11 because she “did not feel safe in her hijab”. Do you remember when his dad said “America is the root of all evil”? Dana reacts to “The Poltergiest” house in Simi Valley being available on Airbnb. Gavin Newsom went on the “All The Smoke” podcast and debuted a new accent, fabricated a backstory claiming he was so poor while growing up that he had to eat bread and mac and cheese just to pay the bills. Townhall Columnist Michael Hout joins us to break down his piece, “Calling Out the Cancer Within the Right”, including the infighting, Charlie Kirk conspiracy theories, Israel and more. Zohran Mamdani says the quiet part out loud by stating, “It is the government's job to deliver dignity”. Dana rejects the narrative that “conservatism is dead”. Gavin Newsom claims “anti-woke” is racist because it’s just “anti-Black”. Dana reacts to a musical called “Slam Frank” centering on Anne Frank seen through the lens of intersectional multi-ethnic genderqueer and Afro-Latin hip-hop.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Billing, and now that's what's happening. But very quickly, before
I let you go, we're now in the second longest shutdown.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
In US history.

Speaker 1 (00:07):
When will President Trump meet with Democrats to try to
bring this shutdown to a close and get federal workers
their paychecks back again, mister Secretary.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
Well, Christy, I'm going to have to reject the premise
of your question. Why did President Trump have to meet
with Democrats. Democrats just need to go into the Senate
and vote to in the shutdown.

Speaker 1 (00:31):
President Trump has said in the passage up to the president.

Speaker 2 (00:36):
And no, he said that in the past.

Speaker 4 (00:38):
He said, you have to be a leader.

Speaker 1 (00:40):
The president has to lead. You have to get people
into a room. You have to get a deal. When's
he going to do that?

Speaker 3 (00:46):
Well, he is leading, and there's no deal to do
with Chuck Schumer. Chuck Schumer is trading off his polls.
What's different than when he passed the clean cr in
the spring. It's his you know, he's We're the whole
country's being held capped to AOC's polls. Well, let's look
at the numbers. It's fifty two to three. Fifty two

(01:09):
Republicans have voted. I believe it's eleven times to reopen
the government, three Democrats had and right here, right now,
I would urge moderate Democratic senators to come across the
aisle reopen the government because I'll tell you we're starting
to eat in the muscle healing.

Speaker 2 (01:26):
And now that that's Scott Besson talking Sunday morning, the
ongoing shutdown is this? Did I did I read correctly
that this is the longest in American history that we've
had in terms of a shutdown or am I mistaken
on that because we're going into what day twenty seven

(01:50):
I think for this, so I think it actually is
one of the longest that we've seen. I mean, and
I've got to tell you, I'm very I am very
interested and very pleased with the way that Republicans have
kind of kept to the kept to the to the

(02:13):
to the plan here, kept to the plan and have
refused to fold. And that's incredibly important. I can't tell
people how important that is, because good night, how long
have we been through this where every single time we've
had one of these incidents where we're fighting over shutting
down the government, previously you would have Republicans that were

(02:38):
terrified and they wouldn't want to stay on message. They
fight with each other, and then they some of the
other ones would use the opportunity to go after each
other for primaries or whatever. This is really I got
to tell you how unusual this is to see Republicans
sticking together like this. I mean, it's really weird to me.

(03:00):
So welcome to the program, Dana lash With you were
at the top of this first hour on Monday, and
we're going to get into all of the latest with
us weak up some things to touch on, and of course,
you know, I have my debate coming up. That's going
to be next week, so should be well, we'll talk
a little bit more about that. Should be fun. But

(03:21):
this ongoing, I mean, we keep hearing the headlines about
snap and I just was anybody else shocked by the
way that so many people I mean I knew that
there were a lot of individuals that were receiving the
supplemental you know, the government food stamp program. It is
a really shocking number. I mean, really, the number of

(03:41):
people that are on it, it's I mean, how what's
the percentage of the American population. I mean, that's a
significant number of people. All because Democrats don't want to
come to the negotiating table, and it's really all them.
I don't know how anybody can sit here and make
this out. And I don't think, like I said, the
public is buying it. I keep an eye on, you know,

(04:02):
some of the approval ratings for the administration and Democrats
are not faring well, and I think part of the
reason why is because they're still talking about all the
stupid stuff that costs them the election. I mean, they're
still talking about illegal immigration. They are discussed, I mean,
still everything. They don't even have a strategy. They don't

(04:24):
have a plan. I don't even know what their plan is.
The only person who is at least I can't even
believe I'm saying this maybe kind of throwing some policies
out there. Actually besides John Fetterman might be Bernie Sanders,
But I mean, it's all socialist nonsense. So this is
a very very interesting thing. I'm just and good on

(04:47):
Republicans for holding their ground. So that's the latest. We've
got some of the longest the shutdown longest so far
in recent memory. And then the snap expiration is set
to hit forty million people. That's a lot. Forty million individuals.
So currently the benefits that are due out next month

(05:08):
are eight billion, and we only apparently have five to
six billion in the coffers for it, So we're going
to be running into the We'll be running into the
red with it. So we have we have it's eight
million or eight billion a month. That's eight billion dollars
a month. That's that's a lot. So eight billion dollars

(05:28):
a month getting into this, we have five to six billion.
There's a memo that was reported by Axios from the
USDA and they were looking at the contingency funding. They
said they can't use emergency funds for food stamps. Didn't
Trump get like some billionaires to cover that in some
of these other states. We literally had that headline last week.

(05:51):
You know, maybe if we had a better, better economic environment,
we would have to have so many people on food stamps.
Maybe if we didn't have the IRS swindling people out
of af their income every year, you wouldn't have to
have so many people on food stamps. Just might be
a thought. We none of this is going to get
fixed from the top up. I mean that's pretty obvious.
So this MAMO said, can't spend no emergency funds for

(06:13):
this they have, I mean, they have what I told
you about in the bank in terms of a contingency.
But that's going to hit all that's going to hit.
So how is that going to work for the left?
They're really trying to get ahead of that messaging the
website of the US government on snap eligibility. You got

(06:34):
to see what they had up on their website. They
said Senate Democrats have now voted twelve times to not
fund the food stamp program. So bottom line, the well
has run dry. This is literally on the government site.
And at the same time they said there will be
no benefits issued November first. We are approaching an inflection
point for Senate Democrats. They can continue to hold out

(06:56):
for health care for legal aliens and gender mutilation procedures,
or they can reopen the government so mothers and babies
and the most vulnerable among us can receive critical nutrition assistance. Now,
I'm with you in terms of big government and government entitlements,
that's not what's the issue here. The issue is that
Republicans with this messaging are playing to the middle. For sure,

(07:18):
there's nothing wrong with what they said. I mean, it's
really one party that's preventing this from passing. I mean,
it's literally only one party that's preventing this from passing.
And so the push on this and the messaging with
the legal immigration that's a good one because that's one
thing that independents flocked to the right on every election

(07:40):
since twenty sixteen. And so now now we have this,
this is how we're Democrats going to deal with this
when it all comes to pass. I think we're going
to probably, well, maybe we can run out the clock
and then get some of those pocket recisions in. Maybe
we can do that. That's a good play. I mean,

(08:01):
if Democrats don't want to come in put those pocket
recisions out there, I'm just saying there's some there's some
options here. Now we're going to come back to this.
In addition this story, Bill Malugin was reporting on this.
He's been covering this all weekend. The issue with the
illegal alien truck driver. Do you guys remember the one

(08:23):
who got into adi crash in Ontario? This was Tuesday
of last week. He had a Californian commercial driver's license.
But they're saying it's the fault of the Feds because
they gave him the work permit. Now, who was the
President of the United States when his work permit came
to pass in twenty twenty two, across the border illegally

(08:43):
in twenty two he was released into the United States.
Who was in the White House at that particular point
in time. It wasn't Trump, it was Joe Biden. So
he crossed the border illegally in March twenty twenty two,
was released back into the United States, and then he
was given his CDL And the official with the California

(09:07):
State Transportation Agency had said that that guy's CDL is
a federal real ID and that so essentially he's got
a federal ID. So I would refer you they sent
him when they were when Malusian was asking questions, he
was referred to the California Transportation Agency. The government referred

(09:29):
him to the DMV. So this all happened under Joe Biden.
This is something that Newsom is really struggling with in
terms of messaging. He won't really address it other than
to say that when something like this happens, it's the
fault of the FED somehow, except when these people have
come in, they've come in under the previous administration and
have benefited from policies passed by the previous administration. I

(09:52):
mean it happened under the regime literally that that Gavin
Newsom is not only a part of because he's a
Democrat and that was a Democrat administration, but it happened
under an administration that he supported. I mean he endorsed
Biden Harris, he endorsed all these policies. He operates, excuse me,
a sanctuary state in California, and they were the ones

(10:15):
that issued the license to this guy who is the
governor of California at the time, Gavin Newsom. So this
all comes back to Gavin Newsom every single time. And
if you can still work, if you can apply for
work authorization and you come to the country I legal
and then you make an asylum claim and you're here
for six months while that's processed, why how are you

(10:37):
able to apply for a work authorization in that period
in Italy? Hell, you can't even buy a car. Why
do you? But you can sit here and get a
commercial driver's license in the United States of America. This
is asinine. Go look it up. You can't. In fact,
you have to buy under a certain horse power. When
you're allowed to buy a car, go check out some
of these other nations for people who come into the country,

(10:59):
and those are just if you come in legally, very
different if you come in illegally. We have more on
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Speaker 5 (12:18):
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Speaker 4 (12:37):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Data's Quick five.

Speaker 3 (12:43):
Well.

Speaker 2 (12:43):
They finally had two people arrested over the theft at
the Louver over the jewels. Two suspects were arrested a
prosecutor prosecutor in Paris their office so that one of
the men had been taken into custody. He was apparently
trying to leave the country and board a flight from
Charles de Gaulle Airport. They had I mean, I think
it ended up being over one hundred and two million

(13:04):
dollars the estimated value or the not estimated, the measured
value of these jewels. They knew how much they were worth.
They said that the security protocols failed and now the
country has a terrible image. Yeah, it's kind of true.
We're going to talk more about that here. Coming up.
Tropical storm warning issued along the US coast as Melissa
explodes into a Category five. So this is the storm

(13:28):
that's coming up the east coast. They have the alert
issued for stretches of water from south of Bermuda to
east central Florida, and the winds are building in strength
rough seas, and it reached a Cat five status this
morning and is expected to make landfall as it barrels

(13:49):
towards Jamaicas. It's going to hit Jamaica first. And then
they said, I mean, still kind of it seems weird
because after that you could either go up into the
Bahamian Archipelago, or you could go more to work. It's Cuba,
there's several ways to go. So it is going to
hit Jamaica though they are convinced of that. That's terrifying.
Category five. Also, this car play. I keep hearing more

(14:11):
and more about this. This does not want to open.

Speaker 6 (14:13):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (14:14):
The General Motors decision to get rid of CarPlay. They
announced that they're going to ax it from that in
Android Auto from all of their gas vehicles, and a
lot of drivers on Reddit are trashing it. I think
it's there. There's a lot like why are you nodding
like that? Kane doesn't have his Robert Evans A class.

Speaker 4 (14:33):
Because because they're going to use this as an up charge.
You're seeing these new cars now where they're like, oh,
you want heated seats, that's going to be ten bucks
a month. You want access to this, you want access
to that, it's going to be this much a month.

Speaker 7 (14:45):
This is them attempting that upsell and that purchases like
with a vehicle, that's annoying, like you just and this
So the car play, that's like when you plug your
phone in and then it will show up you know,
or it'll it'll it will connect wirelessly and it shows
up on your car's display and then you can access

(15:06):
your maps and messages and your music and all of
that stuff.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
But some I feel like this is a lame excuse.
Ford CEO said they don't like the execution of it,
and they said that some of the concerns were that
it gives Apple deeper access into their hardware so it
could see too much control. That's lame. I don't believe
that you just plug your foone. That's so stupid. That's
that's dumb. So I don't know. I agree with you.
I don't. We don't need the end app purchases with

(15:31):
this stuff. That's goofy. Third person. I should say this
for Florida Man, but it's not a Florida person. But
it has to do with the death at a Disney
resort in Florida. This is like the third person in
two weeks. So that's why I really can't have this.
It's not really a Florida man story per se, but
it happened. This is what three times now in two weeks.
And the deceased man they haven't determined his cause of

(15:54):
death yet, but it was at the Contemporary Resort hotel
literally two weeks ago. We're an other woman passed away
and wasn't like one of these is suicide. I think
they were told for this guy was a medical emergency,
and that's all they know that nobody else knows anything else.
It's kind of weird. It's gonna be totally haunted there.
I'm saying, like the happiest place in that maybe Dudleiest.

(16:17):
A strange UFO like aircraft is being tested in secret
experiments at the US weapons base known as skunk Works,
So that's interesting. They said that the test and facility
has been known for housing secret objects and has developed
a lot of classified technology. And some of these people
on YouTube have been camping out near the land and

(16:38):
they look out over it and they've been watching, like
these the tests of some of these things, and they
said that they caught a mysterious UFO like aircraft. Look,
I don't want to see that be leaked out into
the public, although I think that it's probably planned. I
think that the military wanted it to leak out like this, honestly,
because how are you, I mean for crindent out Like
you can't even get to that what area fifty one

(17:00):
in New Mexico or not New Mexico, Sorry, that's in
Vegas or Nevada, right, yeah, go up there. You can't
even get near there. They have you in their sights,
they're going to come and intersep So. I really find
it hard to believe that somebody just posted on top
of a ridge and was able to oversee all this stuff.
We have a lot more on the way stick with us.
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Speaker 8 (18:40):
Some common sense of the crazy headlines with a Data
show podcast. You're on the go guide for getting up
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Speaker 6 (18:52):
I want to use this moment to speak to the
Muslims of New York City. I want to speak to
the memory of my aunt who stopped taking the subway

(19:13):
after September eleventh because she did not feel safe in.

Speaker 4 (19:15):
Her hit jet.

Speaker 2 (19:20):
I don't believe you, by the way this is all
an emotional ploy to try to really claim the hurt
and indignation that Americans justifiably felt following nine to eleven,
to rob people of that sentiment and weaponize it to

(19:40):
emotionally blackmail people into endorsing or voting for a candidate
who not only refuses outright to condemn jihad. And that's
what that means when he refuses to condemn the phrase
globalize the antifada and weaponizing it, using it against people

(20:05):
so that they can't criticize him for doing things like
campaigning with the mom who is one of the big
nine to eleven unindicted co conspirators. This is all just
it's an emotional ploy. Welcome back to the program. Chats
at Rumble channel through forty seven is where you can
watch us do the radio program. It's a big, big deal.

(20:29):
He's you remember that Norm McDonald tweet and Norm McDonald
was an actual friend of mine. Do you remember that
tweet that he had put out where he had said,
and this was on December sixteenth, twenty sixteen. He goes,
what terrifies me is if isis were to detonate a
nuclear device and kill fifty million Americans, imagine the backlash

(20:51):
against peaceful Muslims. Ma'm donnie is doing the tweet. He's
like the tweet in real time. That's it. He's worried
about his made. I don't believe that story about his aunt.
I think that he's a liar. Do you believe that
this is the original Norm McDonald tweet? He's the tweet,
ma'm donnie's the tweet right now? What did he say

(21:14):
about the unindicted co conspirator Surajwajaj, the guy who actually
testified on behalf of the terrorists whose kids, all of
his kids are serving life sentences for kidnapping and running
a legit terror training camp for kids in New Mexico.

(21:35):
I mean that guy donated, He was able to raise
money from Mam Donnie through care. This is crazy. There's
a piece that we have that's going to be coming
out later today on Substack, on my subtect that gets
into that Lorraine has drafted that gets into the Mandanni campaign.
And the New York Post had already gotten him for

(21:57):
accepting illegal donations. I think it was from foreigners that
were like getting up into something like thirteen thousand dollars.
But now it looks like he's taken. I mean, he
has thousands of dollars from the CCP, he has thousands
of dollars in illegal campaign donations from foreigners. He's taken

(22:18):
money that was raised by this unindicted nine to eleven
co conspirator, whose kids again all of his kids, like
all of them are in jail because they were running
a kiddy terror training camp. Remember Saraj Wajaj's kids some
years ago. They were arrested after one of them kidnapped
a kid and went from Georgia to New Mexico. And
then they were running this terror training camp and the

(22:41):
one of the things that they did was they were
preparing to send them into schools to shoot up schools.
It's like one of the things that came out, they
raided it. And so that's what he did. The Wahaj
had funneled money through care through their Unity and Justice
Fund Justice Fund. So that's that is. I mean, this

(23:02):
is a thing that and we're gonna we'll get into
more of this tomorrow. But he's got a lot of
questions and New York Posts got into I mean, he
had taken a lot of money. Reports in New York
Posts from a lot of these foreign, foreign contributions, anything
that he can to deflect from the suspicions around his funding.

(23:26):
And I just don't believe that with his aunt. Do
you believe that with his aunt. Let's make that all
about you, man, Donnie, Let's make it all about you.
Get in there and make it about you. I don't
believe that about your aunt. To say, what do you
think of the families? How does he think the families
felt who had their who had loved ones murdered by
the sort of Islamism that he refuses to condemn. I mean,
you forget about your aunt and your self victimization. Let's

(23:50):
look at how the real victims felt and whether or
not people lost someone. At nine to eleven, it was
an attack on every American. How do the real victims
feel with us? That's the big question. But I don't
believe him. He's trying so hard to weaponize all of
this into some kind of identity politic cudgel because he

(24:18):
thinks that that's going to be able to get him
out of all this, It's going to be able to
deflect from criticisms and investigations into how much money he's raised.
But this is a critical race theory, right. I mean,
he's a guy from Uganda who is literally a socialist.
He's a member of the really weirdly named Democratic Socialists

(24:40):
of America, which is they're just socialists. They just didn't
want to put nationalists in front of it because you know,
the whole Nazi thing. No, he says that, Ma'm Donnie
says that Muslims were the real victims of nine to
eleven Muslims like his aunt. Screw you people, what. I
don't believe that. One of my friends said, if only

(25:01):
he were transgender, he would have hit the powerball of oppression.
He would have had all intersectional boxes checked because he's
he and he really focused, like how we did last week.
You know the picture where he was eating rice with
his hands in a restaurant. I mean, this guy was
born into splendor. He's a rich kid. He's everything that

(25:23):
Marxists claimed to hate but all aspire to be. He
only did that to virtue signal about culture. That's all
he did. I mean, there's no reason to eat with
your damn hands sitting in a five star restaurant with
a white tablecloth. That's just you trying to virtue signal
with your food obnoxiously. But he he's he checks all

(25:43):
those Internet all those intersectional boxes. But nobody believes this.
Nobody believes. I don't believe that he had an aunt.
I don't know why he's no The idea that he's
going to go to victimhood on this is insane to me.
This is a guy who supports Sharia law. He supports
eliminating Western juris prudence and adopting Shariah. And it's weird.

(26:04):
The people who were standing behind him in his press
conference when he was in the Bronx, they weren't even
here when nine to eleven happened. None of these people
or their families even lived in this country when he
did his little press conference and he got all teary eyed,
Come on, what about the people who had to jump
from the buildings to save their lives. I feel bad
for those people. I feel bad for the people that

(26:26):
were at Cantor Fitzgerald. You know they also stopped taking
the subway after nine to eleven because they had all
their coworkers murdered by his lomists. Wow, for the same reasons. Hmm,
just asinine. He's tone deaf. I can't believe New I
mean I can, but at the same time, I can't.
The New Yorkers are going to vote for this because

(26:49):
they're so desperate to position themselves prostrate in front of
the altar of critical race theory. I mean, it's just wild.
His dad had said that America was the root of
all evil and the inspiration from Nazis. This is his dad.
Do we have this? Can we play this audio? But yeah, yeah, yeah,
this is Zora and Mandani's father. Listen to this.

Speaker 9 (27:13):
America is the genesis of what we call settler colonialism,
and the American model was exported all around the world.
Abraham Lincoln generalized the solution of reservations. They herded American
Indians into separate territories for the Nazis. For the Nazis,

(27:42):
this was the inspiration. Hitler realized two things. One that
genocide was doable. It is possible to do genocide. That's
what Hitler realized. Second thing realized is that you don't

(28:02):
have to have a common citizenship. You can differentiate between people.
The Nuremberg laws were patterned after American laws. Anyway, the
US put Indians in reservations. The US invented the model.

Speaker 2 (28:21):
Yes, because there was no genocide before the nineteen hundreds.
I mean, heaven forbid this guy. I feel like Zora
Mandani's father is exactly the sort of immigrant that we
don't want here because he's hateful, he's divisive, he's not
interested in being a part of the American family. He
has no animating spirit of liberty. He's against epluribus unum,

(28:42):
and he's against Western jurisprudence. So what is the point
of him being here if not to colonize. He's a colonizer,
Zori and Mandani's father is a colonizer, an elitist colonizer.
Zora Mandani is a colonizer. He's trying to colonize New York.
The Left doesn't hate colonization, especially since they're the ones

(29:04):
behind most of it, just like they were colonizing land
in Georgia when Democrats under their Democrat god Andrew Jackson
decided to defy Supreme Court order and send Indigenous Americans
on the trail of genocide and then afterwards for generations. Thereafter,
they put them on this land that they can't even purchase,
that the government owns, and that they have to have
these weird little leases out with the people who live

(29:26):
on the land, to say nothing of the internment camps
in the forties. That's when Democrats put more people in camps.
They had their own little soft version. If anything, Democrats
patterned a lot of what they do after the Nazis,
gun control lists, camps. I think he's got it a

(29:46):
little backwards. I just think if you hate America that much,
that should be used against you during your evaluation period
whether to determine whether or not you should become a
citizen of this nation. No one owes it to en
anybody coming from anywhere else to let you in. You're
not special, you're not unique. This guy doesn't bring any skills,

(30:08):
trade or intelligence. All he brings is this barbaric hate
from a healthscape that has since faded into the ether.
And it's just a war of attrition for his ideology.
Now there's no there's nothing big from it. He has
no culture. Everything that they have they stole from the
Persians and everything else. Come on. That is who Mandanni's

(30:29):
father is. He is a hateful, bigoted colonizer that hates
our American way of life and he wants to eradicate
Western jurisprudence. And that's the truth of it. And Mandani's
just like him. This is what New York is getting.
I've never seen so many people vote to colonize themselves before,
and that's what's happening in Manhattan with this guy as mayor.

(30:51):
And they think that they're gonna get what's some sort
of utopia, which actually is Latin literally for nothing. You
think you're gonna get some kind of government run, well
you will, but who thinks it's going to be a
good thing? That's the measure it. It's this kind of
stuff that is hateful, that is hateful to stay that well,

(31:14):
it came from it didn't come from that, actually, I mean,
let's not also forget Margaret's singer and Democrats own little
genocide that there's still perpetuating today, even with abortion on demand,
going after the undesirables. Everyone knows that. That's how that
got started. In the early nineteen hundreds, right, you had
the population control movement that decided to put the veneer

(31:37):
on on itself and call it family planning, so it
sounded a little bit better, but the whole purpose was
to go into neighborhoods where these individuals thought undesirables lived
and to curb the undesirable population. That is the whole
point of it. The euthanasia movement, the abortion on demand movement,
it was just population control of demographics that they disliked.

(32:01):
And that's the far left.

Speaker 10 (32:04):
Hm.

Speaker 2 (32:05):
The Nazis did take inspiration from that, that's for sure,
just ridiculous. We don't owe anybody any kind of You
don't owe anyone fellow citizenship with something like that. It's
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Speaker 8 (33:30):
Get the loadown on the latest news with a side
of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to the Data Show
podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 4 (33:41):
Like SAMs through the Hour Glans So are the days
of the United States.

Speaker 11 (33:47):
It's like the house is getting a new life and
people are able to experience it in really cool and
interesting and unique ways. Buying this house was not quite
what I had planned in life. I actually had a
gout instinct about a month before it went on the market.
Forward a month later, I'm in my backyard of my
sister's house. She's like, Hey, the Poltergeist House is on
the market. Next thing I know, I am calling my

(34:08):
realtor getting preapproved, and I'm in the kitchen in the
Poultergeist House.

Speaker 12 (34:14):
The house looks just like the one next to it
and the one next to that.

Speaker 11 (34:22):
I grew up watching the Poultergeist movie. I've probably seen
it about fifty times before I bought the house, and
now since I've bought the house, now probably another fifty.
I wanted to bring the feeling of the eerie charm,
but also have it warm and inviting. I wanted to
have a balance between modern amenities. Especially there's a lot
of families that come here, and so kids may not

(34:43):
want to play on the atari. They might want to
play on the Xbox, on the app on the smart
TV instead. And again, it's bringing people together and families together,
and what do you love to do.

Speaker 4 (34:52):
Around a fire?

Speaker 11 (34:53):
Signature poultergeis some moores at the Poltergeist House. What's interesting
is that every.

Speaker 2 (34:59):
Time somebody would you go there, would you live there, Kane,
Would I live there? Would you stay the night there?
I mean, I know it's just where the movie was filmed,
but it's still weird.

Speaker 4 (35:09):
I might stay the night there. I would not want
to live there, though.

Speaker 2 (35:13):
You wouldn't want to live there, even it's just where
they filmed it. It's not on an actual Indian burial ground.
I know, No, that didn't happen.

Speaker 4 (35:22):
But it still would draw attention from the developers.

Speaker 2 (35:25):
Aren't as long.

Speaker 4 (35:25):
More public than I care to interact with?

Speaker 2 (35:28):
Yeah, I wouldn't want people coming to mind, like driving
by my house right, like just saying it's funny because
one of the houses that we when we first moved here,
our first house, was across the street from the first
a murder since Bonnie and Clyde in our town, and
it was a dude who was a cross dresser and
he ended up chopping up his wife it was his
second wife, and keeping her in the back of the

(35:50):
closet and then ultimately they found it and it was
like a you know how they have the phrase assassination
vacation where you go to these like you go to
the Ford Theater and you go to all these morbid
you know, macap places in history, and there were people
who kind of treated the house like that, and after
it happened, and apparently it was like in the late
Apparently it was like in the late nineties when it happened,

(36:10):
and one of the older neighbors there were saying that
the original neighbors were saying that people would there would
be traffic and people would be driving down the street
to look at the house. That was really weird after
hearing that, because I'm like.

Speaker 4 (36:23):
Oh, did every Halloween have really decorate the hell out
of that house?

Speaker 2 (36:28):
No? No, no, no, never, never. They didn't do it. The
people who moved in after were I would never.

Speaker 4 (36:32):
Saw the poulture Geist house.

Speaker 2 (36:33):
If I, oh, the poultry Geist House, Oh my gosh,
I'd be charging for admission. I'd airbnb that thing. What
I'd pay off my neighbors to just live with it,
and then I would have it very controlled. But oh
my gosh, right just for Halloween. I mean, they only
filmed the thing there. It is creepy. It is creepy,
though it is. We have a lot more on the way.
The latest with Ma'm Donnie. It's like the Tea Party

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(38:00):
danis send you.

Speaker 12 (38:01):
But also, you know, it was also about paying the bills, man,
And it was just like hustling and and so I
was out there kind of raising myself, turning on the TV.
Started you know, just getting obsessed, you know, sitting there
with the you know, the wonderbread and five stacks of
you know, like.

Speaker 4 (38:20):
The white come.

Speaker 12 (38:32):
Every day every day in the backyard, just bouncing the basketball,
throwing the ball against the wall, until the ball is
just like fraying, man, and you're your that's it whole thing.
So just and and then you know, then the student
that were students in the back with his head down,
all of a sudden started throwing the baseball a little
fashion than everyone else and started, you know, make a

(38:52):
few free throws because I was sitting there practicing five
hundred of them every damn night. And in high schools,
I look up in the stands. My dad's back up there, okay,
and it's like, man, and then he's bringing his friends
and you're captain of the team and you're like geez,
you know, and it just saved me and it got
me in.

Speaker 2 (39:09):
The cop Okay, I'm trying to understand Gavin Newsom is
trying to sell us on the idea that he was
raised poor. He goes on this podcast and because this
is important to the left, the host starred black Americans,
and so I guess he figures that he's going to

(39:30):
be less of an accessible or relatable character if he
talks about his real past, and so he has to
sit here and talk about how he ate Kraft mac
and cheese and did all these look First off, welcome
back to the program, Dana Lash. We're at the top
of the second hour. The chats at Rumple. You can
watch us do radio channel three forty seven. Who does

(39:55):
he think he's fooling with us? Who is for real?
Who does he think he's fooling with us? Because this
is this guy grew up one of literally like the
richest people in one of the richest families ever. He
grew up in one of the like one of the

(40:15):
five major families there in San Francisco. He was born
to a guy who was an attorney for the Getty family.
His dad was the attorney for Getty Oil. He was
a judge. The dad was a judge. His mom was

(40:36):
like a debutante. His grandfather on his mom's side was
at Stanford. And he's also like they have the Pelosi
Like his aunt married into the Pelosi family. Yes, that
Pelosi family, and they he grew up with the Gettys.

(40:58):
And his dad was this very very wealthy attorney who
sits who believes that he's on this NBA podcast and
he's talking about paying his bills. I mean, we've there's
a photo of him, and we can throw these photos
up where he's I don't know, like maybe in his
twenties and he's like visiting a Ventnor and they're looking

(41:20):
at like bougie wine out in Napa, And I mean
he grew up with the Getty family. His first house
was a multimillion dollar home, his first home. This is
him in his suit. You know, he's so poor. Look
at him being all poor here on the left. He's
so poor with his peroxided hair.

Speaker 4 (41:39):
The mac and cheese is probably d off camera.

Speaker 2 (41:42):
You're right, Kane. You just can't see the mac and
cheese there. You just can't see it. You can't see it.
His first wedding to Gilfoyle. He seems opportunistic because his
first wedding was like half a million dollars or something
like that. A quarter of a million dollars, and that
was back in like the eighties, because they're kind of

(42:04):
up there eighties are early nineties. I think this he
was the most He's in a berbary scarf. That scarf
is probably like a couple of hundred dollars for a scarf.
He was, he his name, most stylish. He looks like that, dude,
he looks like blame from a pretty in pink. That's
a barbary scarf. You know, he was so poor. He

(42:25):
just wanted some mac and cheese. Guys, he's so poor.
Can you believe it? Oh my goodness. He had a
wine business while he was in college. He went on
vacation internationally when he was in college. You know, that's
what people who are poor and can only eat mac
and cheese. You know, he was hustling wonderbread and mac

(42:48):
and cheese. That's how I grew up. Bro was literally
i'm reading the transcript, we'll say it again. Wonderbread and
mac and cheese. That's how I grew up. Bro. Did
it have like gold in it? Did it have gold
dust in the mac and cheese? Because that's the only
way that he was probably eating it. Look again, he

(43:10):
grew up with the Gutties and the Pelosies, and he
was immediately he had not He did not have to
worry about anything. His education was taken care of everything.
I don't know where he and then he grew up
running around with Gordon Getty and that he with the

(43:33):
with the investors and the Gutties. They started plump Jack wine.
You know, he kind of reminds me of Sidebar from Borderlands,
handsome Jack. But he's not handsome from Borderlands, doesn't he? Yeah,
he totally does so. I don't know where he gets this.
I love how the progressive Hillary Clinton does this too.

(43:54):
In order to be relatable, they have to they have
to refashion they're they're growing or coming of age. Oh
I was so poor. None of you people were poor.
None of these people were poor. Oh my gosh. I
would love to be the kind of poor Gavin Newsome.
It was right, Kane. I'd take that kind of poor
Gavin Newso poor. Yeah, yeah, I mean absolutely, we'd take

(44:19):
that kind of poor. So that's a good poor man. No,
he's never he's really never had to work super hard
at anything. He's been a part of those families. Look,
I don't This is America, and Americans can work hard
and they can pass off whatever they want to their kids.
You know, I don't mind anything like I don't care.

(44:40):
That's why you work hard. But don't sit here and
blow smoke up everybody's backside and act like you know
you're basically on food stamps and you're living off government
cheese when you ain't. Okay, let's not. This guy would
not know poor. He has no idea what poverty is.
He has no idea what being poor is. And I
can't believe these hosts didn't even haul him out. That's

(45:00):
really lame. You have this guy in your show, and
you're allowing yourself to get played like this because you
want access to him. That's the only thing I can
think of. The only reason that people don't call out
other people is because they want access, right, That's the
only reason. Or they fear. They have fear one of
the it's usually one of the two. No, I would

(45:21):
love to be poor like him. Good night, Gavin Newsome,
you know, just saying he just hed all those vacations
and you know your first house was multimillion dollars. Cane, right,
that's how all that's how all of us are, all
of us poor people. Our first homes were multimillion dollar
homes in the Pacific Heights with ocean views. You know
what I'm saying. We all know, we all know that

(45:47):
goodness goodness. So that is uh, I mean, he's really
trying to invent himself, reinvent himself. Is that his hip hop?
Is that hip hop Gavin? I think so.

Speaker 3 (46:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (46:03):
I've got a lot of different Gavin nuisoms here. That's so,
that's hip hop Gavin. It's about paying the bills, it's
about hustling. He's even doing the I'm watching the video
on my monitor. He's even doing the whole Yeah, I'm hustling.
I mean mac and cheese, I got white breadlet He's
doing that whole thing with his arms. I've never it

(46:24):
looks so awkward. It looks like he tore something as
he's doing it. It just looks weird. There's another article
Susan Krabtree found it where it's a picture of him,
and it's Bill Getty and Andrew Getty. He's there with
the Getty brothers. He's in the middle and they were
getting ready to launch an upscale liquor shop. And do
you know what the do you know what the headline

(46:45):
on this article is. The headline on the article is
old money backs new liquor shop. Hmm, old money came.
It talks about how he's partnered with the Getties to
open up Well, this is the first sentence. If you're
the sign of a wealthy, privileged old money family, what

(47:06):
do you do for a living? Well, you might try
opening a high style liquor store. That's what several of
the next generation of Getty's, Newsom and Pelosis are doing.
This is from nineteen ninety one, and it mentions it's
Gavin Newsom involved, It's it's uh also Bill Getty, who's

(47:26):
the Bill Getty? And then who's Andrew Getty? So his
partners h oh, And it gets into some of his
other partners too. You got a Pelosi in there. Who else? Oh,
we got uh oh, some more Getty cousins. There's some
silent partners plump jack. Yeah, isn't that interesting? Old money?

(47:48):
But you know white bread and craft.

Speaker 4 (47:50):
Mac didn't mention Mac and Cheese, and you know I'm.

Speaker 2 (47:53):
Looking at it right now. No, they're talking about Valet's
and I'm looking at them, let me scan it. Do
do do we see anything about what bread and macajeese?

Speaker 12 (48:05):
No?

Speaker 2 (48:05):
No, no, no, I don't no I do. They did
say that they're going to have valet parking with purchase.
It's actually not bad, you know, for a liquor store.
But still, how funny is that they're old money back
in nineteen ninety one. So how is he going on
the show, this NBA podcast and he's saying this, and
these guys aren't going Wait a minute, hold up, you

(48:27):
literally grew up with the Gutties. You're like a member,
not like you are a member of one of the
most wealthiest families, not just in the United States, but
specifically one of the wealthy families that run San Francisco.
How did you grow up you have? I mean he
grew up with a cook. How do you How do
you have white bread and craft mac and cheese when
you literally have people in your kitchen cooking for you

(48:49):
every day? I mean, you live in a mansion in
San Francisco. What are you doing? This is so crazy.
I can't stand it when the people do this stuff.
Just be who you are, but which just shows you.
He first off, how stereotypical is that that he goes
on an NBA podcast hosted by black host with probably

(49:09):
not an audience that is very San Francisco white bread,
and he says this stuff. Isn't that aren't you? Isn't
you playing into a trope by doing this?

Speaker 5 (49:21):
So?

Speaker 2 (49:21):
How is that not inadvertently racist? Like when Hillary Clinton
said that she had a hot sauce in her bag
when she was talking to a predominantly black audience. I mean, sure,
white people like hot sauce. Who doesn't live some crystals? Hey,
but you know what I'm saying, like, how why do that?
Because they have no other way? What is he gonna do? Well, Hey, guys,

(49:42):
don't you want to pay more taxes? Yeah? No, no,
So he's he's gonna do this. It's so lame. It's
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Human and now all of the news you would probably miss,
It's time for Data's quick.

Speaker 2 (50:54):
Five, all right, So first up, what we have is
the Nimets aircraft carrier. Oh boy, the Navy lost two
aircraft from the Ussnimets within thirty minutes. Yeah, a fighter
jet and a helicopter based off the aircraft both crashed
the South Sea within thirty minutes of each other. Per

(51:15):
Navy specific fleet. The three crew members of the MH
sixty are Seahawk helicopter were rescued yesterday afternoon, and the
two aviators in the super Hornet they ejected and were
recovered safely. Everybody's all five. They said, we're safe and
in stable condition. They causes that the two crashes are
under investigation. They said they rolled out foul play, and

(51:36):
they said there wasn't anything to hide, at least per
the President. He was on Air Force one en route
to Tokyo. And so the USS NIMTS is returning to
its homeport and naval based KITSAPP in Washington State. You remember,
it was over in the Middle East for pretty much
all summer, over in the Mediterranean and beyond because you

(51:58):
had the ongoing situation with a Ron and then Yemen,
the Hoothy rebels, et cetera. So it's on. It was
on its final deployment before decommissioning. So very interesting. How
do you lose. I'm not gonna make a joke about
run of drivers and just not came, no matter how
much you want me to. I'm not. British parents are
taking self defense classes to protect themselves from their children
because apparently they didn't beat them enough growing up. BBC

(52:20):
reports that parenting self defense classes are growing in popularity.
I think this is so sad that people would need
to do this. They said that the organization Parental Education
Growth Support they are they're people who provide support for
parents facing violence from their kids. They were contacted by
like twelve hundred families just last year looking for support.
That's crazy. That's crazy. That is a truly crazy thing.

(52:43):
And it's not we're not talking about like somebody got
shoved or anything either, like very serious stuff, but that's
they've been getting an uptick in more and more every
year they set people reaching out. Also, let's see here
this AI slot AI slop is affecting real estate.

Speaker 12 (53:03):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (53:03):
The piece from MSN buried the lead about five graphs in,
but basically what it is is that landlords are using
AI to stage up photo to stage photos of the
house for sale, like on Zillo or wherever. And then
the AI is also cleaning up all of the stuff,

(53:24):
whether it's problems with windows or walls or anything, so
that when you go to see the house in person
there might be cracks, there might be I mean, it
looks like a mess, but the AI version makes it
look so nice and neat. You gotta be really careful
of that. Some of the examples that they've given were
pretty egregious to Let's see, a student was handcuffed after
a Dorito's bag was mistaken by a gun as a

(53:45):
gun by the school's AI security system, So how can
you trust AI to keep out real guns if it's
doing this and just saying so. The student actually got detained,
he was arrested. Baltimore County officials are calling for a
review of how Kenwood High School uses the AI gun
detection system and why the teenager was in handcuffs despite

(54:09):
school safety officials quickly determining that there was no weapon.
They made him get done on his hands and knees,
on his knees, put his hands behind his back, and
they cuffed him. And he was arriving. He was waiting
with friends for a ride home after football practice, and
he was eating a back of doritos, and the a
the AI surveillance thought that that was a gun that

(54:29):
he had. Can you believe that that's insane? He said,
I literally was just holding a Dorito's bag and they
said it looked like a gun. This is crazy. Do
you trust AI, especially if they start using it for
legal stuff? Do you trust it? I mean, I sure don't.
We got a lot happening coming up. We're going to
talk about the fight for the soul of the right,

(54:49):
and then later on Steven Yates is with the admin
in Asia in Japan. Stick with us as we move
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Speaker 2 (56:28):
Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash with you. You
can listen across the country terrestrially. We are in hundreds
of markets all over the nation. Plus you can watch
the simulcast of the radio program channel through forty seven
Direct TV, also on x rumble et cetera. So I
had a conversation a couple of months ago with Brent Bozel,
who was the head of Media Research Center, and now

(56:49):
he's going to South Africa to serve as our diplomat
down there, and he made an interesting point where he
said that some of the things that he's noticed on
the right are it's this absence of any kind of
and people are going to immediately react to this in
a very shallow fashion, but it's a lack of mouring

(57:12):
in any kind of intellectual base in terms of right
wing thinkers and people who have been very, very loud
on the right, especially some new folks who have been
coming in. And he was telling me how he had gone.
He has this process by which he meets some individuals
and he tries to get inside their heads. And he
was saying, he didn't name people except for one. He said,

(57:34):
some of them have been kind of disappointing. He said,
you know, one that I was actually impressed with was
Charlie Kirk. And this was before Charlie was assassinated. And
he was saying that some of the things that he hears,
some of these narratives that have cropped up on the
right are without that intellectual mooring, and that's the thing,
that's how you get results, that's how you affect real
lasting change. And that came back full circle when I

(57:57):
was reading this piece. It was like kind of a
two part piece over at town Hall by Michael Howt,
and the first was a warning against the unmooring of
the American right, and then the second was calling out
the cancer within the right. There is a big fight
on the right right now, and it's only going to
get bigger and better. The left has their own problems.
The left is dealing with an issue that is probably

(58:21):
about five to ten years to the future of what
the right will be dealing with if we do not
get remored to an actual intellectual base. And that's the
problem that we're looking at. And this you can see
bubble over in not just fights about Turning Point USA,
where you have conspiracy theorists who didn't even really talk
to the people at the center of all of the

(58:43):
conspiracies for the last couple of years, who go out
there and accuse everybody of Donald Trump to his widow
Erica Kirk, of actually killing Charlie Kirk or a masad
or any other thing there's just a lot of conspiracy theory,
and then there's also a lot of excuses of using
big government to achieve a quasi republican goal, like the

(59:04):
ends justify the means somehow. So there's a lot that
wraps up into this, but it really is kind of
a battle, not kind of a battle for the soul
of the right. Joining me on this from town Hall
Michael Howt, who has these are his pieces there are
really great reads as well. He's a columnist for town
Hall and editor of Liberty Affair, and he joins us. Now, Michael,

(59:24):
it's good to have you, and I appreciate you being
very candid, although I'm sure that your feedback was quite interesting.
This has been a very revealing year. I think everything
has been expedited this past year. What do you see
as the main, I guess central focus of battle here
within the right as you discussed.

Speaker 10 (59:44):
It well, First of all, thank you so much for
having me on, Dana. Well, as I tried to articulate
in my columns, there seems to be a problem where
we have hangers on cleaning to the mind label or
to the conservative label, but aren't actually expressing any conservative beliefs. Whatsoever,

(01:00:06):
People who describe themselves as maga communists like Jackson Hinkel,
people who seem to incessantly speak on inane conspiracy theories
like Candice Owans, and identitarians who are obsessed with you know,
race and similar things, such as Nick Fuentes and so

(01:00:27):
I think, you know, most of the time, when the
left accuses us of being Nazis or fascists, it's absolutely preposterous.
You know, they're accusing ordinary Americans who just happened to
support President Trump. But that doesn't mean there's nothing we
need to be vigilant against. On the right, there are
some really dangerous voices that are on the rise.

Speaker 2 (01:00:48):
Do you think it's fair to say that because the
left is they're dealing with their radicals, and the radicals
not control the Democrat Party. I mean, case in point,
you have you know, Zeron Man Donnie, who's i mean
admitted socialist who refuses to condemn you know, Hamas says
who's going to win the mayor oral bid in Manhattan,
which is something that's unheard of ten years ago. Do

(01:01:10):
you feel like the left is dealing with what the
right is going to be dealing with in ten years
If we don't get a hold on it.

Speaker 10 (01:01:17):
Yeah, I mean, one of the biggest criticisms I received
about my piece is that I'm an outspoken former Democrat.
I became a conservative close to nine years ago when
I left the Democratic Party. I was, in fact a
national chartering director for College Democrats, and so a lot
of people have accused me of being not a real
conservative or being a rhino, And it's sort of this

(01:01:38):
ridiculous moving of the goalpost that you know, if you're
not the furthest to the right, you're a rhino. We're
going to keep redefining what that means. But to me,
the rhinos are the people professing communism on behalf of Malga,
or the people you know, who only want to talk
about crazy conspiracy theories accusing our president, you know, or

(01:02:00):
who only want to talk about race. And so, yeah,
I think we need to absolutely be vigilant because I
left the Democratic Party after noticing the extreme elements take over.

Speaker 2 (01:02:11):
Yeah, and this we just mentioned. It's interesting because you're
talking about conservatism too, and I've noticed this big thing
crop up wherein conservatives are being blamed as do nothing
and it's failed. Conservatism has failed. Therefore, conservatism must be discarded.
And my pushback has always been there aren't enough conservatives
to actually implement anything. I mean, it's one of the

(01:02:32):
reasons why I personally do not identify as a Republican.
I'm a conservative, but they're too far left from me
fiscally and on certain domestic policies as well. It seems
like it's an establishment trick. We saw this during the
Tea Party era, where the establishment and you know, I
was part of that whole wave fighting against the establishment

(01:02:53):
because we wanted grassroot principles, we wanted lower taxes, we
wanted to be left alone by our government, et cetera,
et cetera. But now we're we're hearing will conservatism fail?
But can it fail? If it's never there's never been
enough conservatives to ever implement anything. When's the last time
a truly conservative piece of legislation was introduced by the
Republican Party.

Speaker 10 (01:03:13):
I'm not sure, but I think, you know, we we
just really need to be careful about the direction we
had in the coming years, not only you know, in
terms of legislation, like morally and certainly electorally. And you
know what people don't realize is, you know, until past

(01:03:33):
election we won all seven swing states. That wasn't because
of Greiber's. That wasn't because of you know, the furthest
right people. That was because thirty percent of Americans are
now identifying as independently registered. And I think we need
to make sure that you know, we remain a truly
conservative movement. We become more conservative in some senses, but

(01:03:58):
that we also make are not to lose grasp of
the saying side of the independence, because that's how we
continue to win elections and implement conservative agendas.

Speaker 2 (01:04:11):
You talked also about the founders in Madison and allowing
you know, who gets to basically steer the movement. And
I understand building coalitions and I think it's important to
do so. But one of the things that and you
touched on this in both of your pieces that seems
to be evident is that there are certain ideological tendencies
that are not being checked at the entry to the coalition,

(01:04:32):
and people are bringing it into the movement and applying
it large to everything. And as a result, you know,
now we're seeing things like you know, the proposals to
pay women to have children, which is essentially it's not
essentially it's welfare and some other big government proposals. Tell
me a little bit about your thoughts on this, because
coalitions are good, but also they have to be moored
in something.

Speaker 10 (01:04:54):
Well, that's precisely right. And you know, you can have
a coalition with a group that I with MAGA but
calls itself communists and has associations with something called the
American Communist Party. Now with regard to paying women to
have children, I'm a bad person, asked because the government
I live in Poland for the past five years they

(01:05:14):
implemented this, and they recently implemented no taxes for people
too kids. So I'm lucky in that regard, although I
still have to pay my US taxes. But you're absolutely right, Like,
conservatism has to be more than something like if you
don't like John McCain or Mitt Romney, my former governor, fine,
Like you know, we can have a wide range of

(01:05:35):
ideas within our party, but they need to be more
than something fundamental certainly not you know, communism, certainly not
far far right identitarianism. And we should welcome the big
tent but not want to become a circus tent.

Speaker 2 (01:05:51):
Oh that's a good point. Yeah, And big tents are great,
but I like what you just said about circus tints
as well. And this is one of the things you mentioned,
identity politics, and this is the big thing that's been
popping up with a lot of this new movement within
the right, within the GOP, I guess, you know, for
the lack of a better way to put it, making
idols of race or ethnicity. Now, that's something we've always

(01:06:12):
seen the left do, like the very far left with
critical race theory, and you know, Derek Bell on college
campuses back in the sixties and seventies and going into
the eighties. We all saw this. Now we're watching it
being replicated in smaller batches by certain members of the
New Coalition that are on the right. And we see it,

(01:06:33):
you know, Fester whether people are discussing Israel or whatever.
But this is really dangerous and it gets into exactly
what you're talking about, Michael, with Marxism, because that's a
Marxist principle to practice.

Speaker 10 (01:06:44):
That right, and I mean it goes well beyond anti Zionism.
I mean included in that big tent. If you want
to make criticism of Israel. I'm more supportive of Israel generally,
but if you want to make criticisms of Israel, I'm
not saying you can, but when that descends into virlin

(01:07:04):
anti Semitism, praise of Adolf Hitler, you know, Holocaust denihilism
masked and humor or analogies. You know, I'm sitting here
in my home in Warsaw, Poland, a city that was
ninety five percent destroyed by the Nazis. You know, I
have no patience for it, whether it's coming from the

(01:07:26):
left or the right. And I think, you know, there
was this horrific dovetailing of Charlie Kirk's assassination and the
final stages of the war in Gaza that really led
to a lot of this being exacerbated and brought to
the forefront. And I think the void that Charlie left behind,
which is quite a big void. You know, I'd never

(01:07:50):
met him, but I was a fan of his and
his work. We need to be extra vigilant that that
void is not filled by those voices that are anti Smid, identitarian, conspiratorial,
or certainly communist.

Speaker 2 (01:08:05):
That's one of the things I think. And for those
joining us, we're talking to Michael Hout, who's has his
piece over at Town Hall the unmooring of the American right.
And that's one of the things I think that Charlie
was very good because he always brought it back to
classical thinking, like tokevil To, you know, Burke to you know,
Locke always brought it back to classical thinking, which seems
to be absent, like especially in his absence.

Speaker 8 (01:08:24):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:08:25):
So my final question to you is how is this corrected?
What does it take to correct this this alignment here
on the right.

Speaker 10 (01:08:34):
So I've never been an advocate of cancelation. Nick Flent
has responded to me on Twitter on the X the
other day and he said I should lighten up, and
you know, this is kind of his typical thing, like
I'm just joking lighting up followed by something horrific, he says.
And I think you know, the answer is not cancelation.

(01:08:57):
The answer is to recognize which is which is.

Speaker 2 (01:09:01):
Different from discernment. I don't mean to interrupt you, but
cancel it very different from discernment.

Speaker 10 (01:09:07):
Right. Yeah, So I'm not advocating anyone's cancelation, but we
need to recognize that this is noise and not signal,
and we need to make sure that these dangerous voices
never become the public face of our party like they
have on the left with Mom, Donnie and Omar and
so forth, the ones that drove me out of the
Democratic Party. And I'm very happy to be a conservative now.

(01:09:29):
I am a conservative, right believer in capitalism, but I
also believe that conservatism is not something for white people,
it's not something for men's it's it's it's something that
works for everyone. And you know, I think Charlie Kirk
understood that, and I think we need to be good
stewards of his legacy and not open the movement up

(01:09:51):
to people on the extreme to who want to warp
MAGA into something much more extreme.

Speaker 2 (01:09:56):
I think that's a very good point, especially as we're
already gearing up for which starts earlier and earlier apparently
every cycle. Michael Howt, you can find him over at
town Hall as well as on X. I really appreciate
you being very candid and your pieces about that. I
know it probably didn't win you a lot of accolades,
but let us let us count for one, because I
think it's a very good read, and very insightful and

(01:10:18):
very honest, which we need more of. So thank you
so much for your time today too, Thank you, Dana.
Of course, take care. We have more to come folks
as we wrap up this second hour, and of course
we'll be rolling into our third with updates about Potus's
travel over sees, a big visit forthcoming as we move.
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Speaker 4 (01:11:40):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida man.

Speaker 2 (01:11:50):
All right. So, a Florida man through a rock through
an ice agent's car window as his father was being arrested.
Guess who also got arrested Like fatherlake son look dated
a daddy son outing oh so great. Nineteen year old
Pascual Martin is the son of the man Federal agents
who are arresting at the time. He's charged with one

(01:12:11):
count of throwing a deadly missile missile into an occupied vehicle,
which is the second degree felony. So he shattered apparently
the agent's car. It was a rock large enough to
do it. Apparently it busted out the whole thing. So
he's the son of the neighbor of the guy that
the guys. The agents were arresting Velaska's Martin took off

(01:12:32):
after but he was arrested nearby, so he wasn't able
to run away. Don't play stupid games because you will
absolutely win stupid prizes. A Florida skeleton strip show is
rattling neighbors and sparking debate over Halloween decorps, according to
CBS twelve, So in one Florida neighborhood, the front porch,
it's a skeletal strip show that features thick ear smoking

(01:12:55):
and beer drinking, a skeleton on a pole, and some
of the neighbors are upset, and I'm like, is this just?
Is this footloose? Part two? Because it's literally a skeleton
just sitting on a pole, and too that what is kine?
This is not bad?

Speaker 4 (01:13:13):
No, actually, it's just hilarious to see. See. This is
the thing about decorations for Christmas, there's a ceiling on
how creative you can be for Christmas. With Halloween, there's
no ceiling. Yeah, and I love that because you can
just do anything and it offends someone. It'll always offend someone.

Speaker 2 (01:13:29):
Oh completely, they said that. Someone said, I don't see
stripping as an art. I don't want to make kids
exposed to that. You don't even know. The skeleton doesn't
have a ding or dong. You can't tell what's what.
It's a skeleton that you get a Costco. There's nothing.
Oh my god, I'm not your kids.

Speaker 4 (01:13:49):
Watch the halftime show.

Speaker 2 (01:13:51):
Yeah right, I don't have that. I mean, if you're
worried about a skeleton on a pole on somebody's porch
where it's clearly doesn't show anything, I mean, victory secrets,
window fronts show way more than this guy's porch does,
then I don't know. I just feel like it's it
seems like it's full looose Part two.

Speaker 4 (01:14:09):
People are getting him where people go to learn to
be gentlemen.

Speaker 2 (01:14:13):
Okay, we'll go that far. But yeah, a Florida man
exposed himself to a child in the park and then
urinated and at the police station. Oh my gosh, he's
He's lucky he's alive because some kids parents don't mess
around with that kind of stuff. Just saying this guy,
I'm not going to log into continue reading the story.
There's the headline. We have a lot more on the way.

(01:14:33):
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Speaker 3 (01:15:32):
Well.

Speaker 6 (01:15:32):
Make our city one where every person who calls it
home can live a dignified life. No New Yorker should
ever be priced out of anything they need to survive,

(01:15:53):
and we believe then, we believe today, we will believe
tomorrow that it is government's job to deliver that dignity.

Speaker 2 (01:16:01):
Oh my gosh, he actually said the words.

Speaker 6 (01:16:04):
Dignity, my friends, is another way of saying freedom.

Speaker 9 (01:16:11):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (01:16:11):
What a Marxist. That is one of the most Marxist
things I've ever heard in my life. That's Zori Mandani,
who thinks that the government's job is to make you
feel dignified about your choice, dignified about your choices in life.
It's the government's job to hand you dignity. It's the
government's job to do these things for you. No, it's not.

(01:16:36):
It's not the government's job to do any of these
things at all, whatsoever. That's pretty horrific. He's going to win,
you know, he was out there campaigning. Who was it?
Hassan Piker was at his rally over the weekend, the
guy who electrocutes his dog. New Yorkers are not bothered
by any of this. New Yorkers who are pulling for him.

(01:16:58):
They want this. He's going to win in mayor in
New York. He's going to become the mayor of New York. City,
the NEPO baby who's never had a job ever, He's
never worked a job. Well, he tried to be a
rapper king. Let's not forget he's never had a job.

(01:17:18):
He has no interest in working. And he thinks that
the government's job is to provide dignity. To assure your dignity,
this is the problem. Welcome back to the program. Being
a lash with you. We're at the top of this
third hour. That's the problem. How interesting, but it's not

(01:17:40):
you know this, I don't know where he thinks that
that's somehow guaranteed that the government's supposed to underwrite it
isn't And him saying normally, when you have these audio
sound bites like this, it's like, oh, well, you know,
government's job to deliver dignity. Usually it's not that these

(01:18:03):
sound bites, aren't that. Sometimes some of the things that
you read online are kind of exaggerated. This is not
this is not Wow, nobody should ever be priced out.
Well okay, well, then what are you doing as a
lawmaker or activist in your community to stop prices from increasing?

(01:18:24):
I mean, you guys vote for the stuff. They vote
for all of the things that drive up all the
prices across the board. They vote for high taxation in
New York. I mean, New York City has some of
the highest tax rates. It's punitive. It's like California punitive.
You have the freedom to pursue happiness, but it is

(01:18:47):
not guaranteed to you by your government. This is something
you know, we talked about this last segment, well not
last segment, but last hour with our guest Michael Howt,
because that's such a big For whatever reason, there is
this push on the right and I recognize it. It's

(01:19:08):
like a resuscitated narrative from two thousand and eight. I
remember when we got started with the Tea Party in grassroots,
we were out there pushing for limited government. And I'm
going to tell you not a lot of people really
want limited government. I've said this before over the years
that when it push comes to shove, you really realize

(01:19:29):
how many people truly are constitutionalists and how many are
not in the strictest sense of the word and its
application to policy and its application to daily life. And
back in two thousand and eight, the establishment went on
the attack against grassroots. The establishment like bush league establishment.
They wanted you know, you had no child up behind you.

(01:19:49):
The government involved in a lot of different things. You
had too big to fail, et cetera, et cetera. There
were a lot of things that the government was doing
that they shouldn't be involved in, and they were doing
them anyway, and the establishment was defending it as being
for the good of the republic, and we pushed back
against that pretty hard. Well, it's happening again. One of
the things that I've seen play out over the weekend,

(01:20:09):
particularly on social media, where you have all of these
bought accounts. I unveiled a handful of bought accounts that
were in my mentions because they ended up slipping and
giving themselves away. They always do because they're intellectually inconsistent
and their range of knowledge about the United States and
our policies is very limited. Most of the online engagement,

(01:20:30):
particularly on x anymore, is just somebody's it's a phone
in a rack somewhere in India. Let's be real, it is.
And so the big narrative that I see being pushed
right now is that conservatism has failed. That's the narrative
that's being pushed. Conservatism has failed, conservatism which has never

(01:20:53):
actually been done. Now, one of the things that these
people like to do is They like to say, well,
isn't there will communists say that communism has never been done. No, No,
they've actually implemented communism and it's failed horrifically everywhere it's
ever been implemented. Nobody says that. Nobody says that it's
never been implied it has been the problem with applying
that stupidly to conservatism is that there aren't a lot

(01:21:19):
of conservatives. There really aren't. There aren't a lot of conservatives.
There are a lot of people who say they're conservatives,
but they're not. Now you see why I don't like
to identify as strictly a Republican because they're too far
to the left for me. There are a lot of

(01:21:39):
people who think that Republicans and conservatives are the same things,
and they're not. There are a lot of people who
some of these people saying that conservatism has failed, well,
there aren't enough people to even implement it. If you
think it's failed, Please give me the one, truly, just one.
I just want one, one truly conservative piece of legislation
that's been that has been proposed and pas go ahead.

(01:22:02):
No one can think of one because there isn't any
There have never been enough conservatives in the House. In fact,
the closest we got was the House Freedom Caucus in
the wake of the Tea Party. There aren't even enough
conservatives in the House. There's not even there's no There
aren't enough conservatives at all in the Senate. In fact,
I think the people who are truly conservative, and by
conservative I mean limiting government power to conserve individual liberty

(01:22:27):
I may be a handful if that maybe a handful,
But this is the neat new narrative from the establishment.
They see limited government constitutionalism as the weed in their garden.
That's how they view it. And they accused conservatives of
doing nothing while they themselves have been too terrified to

(01:22:52):
introduce a single piece of actual conservative legislation ever. Ever,
because the establishment entirely lacks the spine to do what's required,
they blame the very few in numbered conservatives whom they

(01:23:13):
have blocked and pilloried for decades. That's the truth of it.
There are very few conservative leaning lawmakers in office because
conservatism is hard. It requires consistency, It requires an abhorrence
of big government that frankly, too many Republicans have no

(01:23:34):
issue with. If they think that the means justify the ends.
Case in point, I'll go back to the pain the
women to have babies thing. That's welfare. That's a proposal that,
where it has been implemented, has not succeeded in raising
the birth rate. I've looked at the numbers. Hungary is

(01:23:55):
often touted as the example. Hungary's numbers actually dipped right
back below what they were, so in fact it had
a net negative impact. It didn't change a thing in Hungary. Now,
I think that some of these people, their hearts are
in the right places, but they're not looking at this
and following it to the full conclusion. It's not the

(01:24:16):
government's job. In fact, it's the government's fault that it's
like that. This is where the schism is. See people
who are limited government. They view the government's involvement in
everyday aspect of life as the reason why we are
in the position that we are in. It is their fault.
You don't go back to the entity that created the

(01:24:38):
disaster and then ask for it to get you out
of it. That is not how this works. You don't
go to a government that has made it to where
you can't even have a single income family anymore. That
can afford a house. You don't go to a government
that has raised the cost of living with bad monetary

(01:24:59):
power policy to the extent to which it has and
ask for them to help you financially. Further, that's not
how any of this works. You're only going to get
more government when you ask for government to get involved.
Guess what you get more government. That is absolutely antithetical
to conservatism. But there are a lot of Republicans who

(01:25:24):
think that the means justifies the ends. Even though they
cannot point to a single track record of success for
that policy as the example, it hasn't stopped them from
continuing to promote it. Well, if you love families, then
you'll do this. If you love family, then you're going
to pay people to have babies so that we have
more families. I mean, to hell with actually reducing taxes

(01:25:46):
and having a balanced budget and cutting regulation to make
it easier for energy and everything else. No, no, no, no, no,
we're not going to go to the problem. We're just
going to use this as a drug to help you,
to help make you easier in the problem. That's going
to actually create more of a problem later on. It's asinine,

(01:26:10):
but it's hard to be conservative because consistency is not popular.
This industry is very transactional, very transactional when push comes
to shove. A lot of people want to be made easy.
They want to guarantee to happiness. They don't want just
the opportunity to pursue it of their own volition, they
want a guarantee of it. A lot of people think

(01:26:31):
that's what freedom means. They think freedom means the government's
going to underwrite your happiness. And that's not how it works.
That's the schism right now on the right. So I
see some of these people go to war on social
media in a way that they never would in real life.
I see people who go off on conservatives and constitutionalists

(01:26:53):
in a way that they have never done against the establishment.
I watch people who pretend that they put in a
hard day's work on x by living online exclusively for
like six hours at a time, but they do nothing
when it comes to canvassing in their own neighborhoods. They
do nothing when it comes to phone banking in their
own neighborhoods. They do nothing when it comes to donations

(01:27:16):
for advis or whatever else is needed in their own neighborhoods.
They can't even be prevailed upon to get out and
vote in their off season local and municipal elections. Half
of these people can't even tell you who's running for
their school board races. If it sounds like an indictment,

(01:27:37):
it is. Things are too important to be namby pamby
about it and to backpack and treat everybody as children
over it. Conservatism is hard because it requires a lot
for nothing, and people don't want to do that. There
are a lot of good lawmakers out there who don't
want to do it. They would rather make the deal.

(01:28:01):
They would rather cut the drama. They would rather do
it the easy way as opposed to the hard way.
And then all of these people, at the end of it,
have the audacity to point the finger at the conscience
of the party, the inner voice of the party that
has kept the party from going free willing, free wheeling

(01:28:23):
into leftism, that conscience of the party that has kept
it from teetering into the abyss of statism. They have
the audacity to say that it has failed when not
only has it never been tried, there aren't enough people
with spines to make it happen. Don't let the establishment

(01:28:47):
rewrite history. Don't let them gaslight you and to accepting
more big government, because that is the absolute goal with
this narrative. We have more on the way as we
roll and the bottom of this hour and headlines. So
our skin changes in subtle ways over the years, especially
after having kids. Maybe your hair and your nails and

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Speaker 4 (01:30:14):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (01:30:20):
Okay, so this is weird and I it's a study
that says a night light in your bedroom could actually
increase your heart attack risk. Now there's a difference. Then
they get into sleeping with the lights on. Okay, there's
a difference between the nightlight and sleeping with the lights on.
So they said the way that they have it phrased
is sleeping with the lights on is linked to a
forty two percent higher risk of heart attack compared to

(01:30:40):
sleeping in darkness. Okay, but what if you have like
weird little corners into your house and you have a little, tiny,
little nightlight that's on the floor that's in a plug
and it comes on when you walk past it. So
you don't die to death because you stub your toe
on the door that closes automatically when the ac comes
on by itself. If you're not gonna have a heart attack,

(01:31:00):
then I would more have a heart attack by stubbing
my toe in the middle of the night, which I
have done, by the way. So that's why King, I
feel like this study is nonsense your thoughts, dear sir.

Speaker 4 (01:31:12):
I think that they have They haven't expanded that study properly,
that's all.

Speaker 2 (01:31:19):
That's right, they haven't. I mean there's a big def
I mean, I have blackout curtains in my room. You know,
I keep it like toomb cold, and it's totally you know,
keep it. But I have to be able to see
when if I'm getting up to get a drink or
use the right or something in the middle of the night,
you know what I mean, Like, come on, there's a
big difference here. Uh. Also, let's see this. Oh oh,
here we go. In Michigan, a man is accused of

(01:31:42):
threatening a driver with a chainsaw in a road rage attack.
It's in pap Paul, Michigan what if you're a pop
off from Pappaum, Michigan. What anyway, a Southwest Michigan man's
facing felony charge is he threatened a driver who cut
him off with the chainsaw. What he was driving a
truck and a trailer. He passed the woman cut her

(01:32:04):
off right er off the road. Van Buren Sheriff said
that the two were arguing and then he grabbed a
chains off from his truck. He was not successful in
starting the equipment. That's my favorite little notation that's in
the affidavit. But then he did stomp on her cell
phone and then punched her in the stomach, grab her throat. Yeah,
this guy's not going to have a good time, so
he went to the pokey mm hm h. Also, let's

(01:32:25):
see this. Uh, there's a lot of road rage incidents,
like I have three road rage headlines just today alone.
Can people chill out when they're driving, please, for the
love of all things holy, just everybody get to where
they need to go safely. Don't be a doucher if
you're driving, and don't be a doucher to somebody else
if they accidentally seem like they're being a doucher, because
they may not be like, we had a guy who

(01:32:46):
had a health incident and ran into the Duff's Wings
place here in our town, so you know, maybe it
is a health emergency. Stick with us.

Speaker 8 (01:32:53):
Brighten up your timely news consumption with a Dana Show
podcast where every update comes with a little dash of
not so sire on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get
your podcasts.

Speaker 12 (01:33:04):
Sixties World, you got the Supreme Court talking about getting
rid of the Voting Rights Act, and that's very real. Yeah,
that may likely happen in just a matter of months.
I mean, they're rewriting history, censoring historical facts. It's a
unuck and believable moment. All this anti woke stuff is
just anti black.

Speaker 2 (01:33:25):
Oh my gosh. You know what, that's actually racist because
Gavin Newsom is thinking that all wokery is all race,
so it's actually inherently racist. He's trying so hard to
engender himself to these hosts of this like NBA podcast.
Imagine like debasing yourself to the point where you're just
He's like contorting himself verbal into a putzel. It's weird

(01:33:47):
to watch. Welcome back to the program, Dana, Lash with you.
At the bottom of this third hour the it's it's
it's no, it's not. In fact, that's what he's to say,
that it's just anti black. What is he hitting on Florida?
Seems like he's trying to touch on Florida. Remember Florida
past standards for their education where they rejected the New

(01:34:11):
York Times writer who had basically made up a whole
bunch of stuff about black history in America and a
lot of it had no academic bearing whatsoever. And the
Florida their Board of Education, which was where white and
black educators were like, that's actually not even academically honest.
So we can't why we wouldn't allow it on the right,

(01:34:31):
why we allowed on the left. It's just propagandizing at
that point, that's not education. So that made sense, and
you can disagree with it. But to say that it's
due to racism, or that they were specifically trying to
deny the teaching, which is actually mandated under Florida state law,
that they were trying to somehow stop the teaching of

(01:34:52):
or history of Black America or slavery or anything else,
is just a demonstrable lie. And the people who want
to deny that, I mean, shame on them just it's
and it's more than just race the wokery aspect of it.
I'm trying to understand the slam Frank thing. I actually

(01:35:17):
saw this over the weekend and Steve's got the video
to this or are we going to get hit on
YouTube if we play this? By the way, I hope not.
So if you don't know what Sam slam Frank is.
First off, it's a musical and I don't like I'm
immediately predisposed to dislike it no matter where it comes
from because it's a musical. I'm just not into musicals.

(01:35:39):
I just don't have that suspension of disbelief to think
that everybody, except maybe with the with the exception of
the original West Side Story and the sound of music,
I just I have a hard time with it. This
is supposed to be a musical satire in which Anne
Frank is rewritten as the Netflix vendork in Latin X

(01:36:02):
pan sexual girl named Anita. Here's a glimpse of slam
Frank as Cane dies.

Speaker 11 (01:36:10):
Elijah Limited Lida Reverambitions won't be Cooking.

Speaker 4 (01:36:14):
Top Profits and non Fiction A.

Speaker 10 (01:36:18):
Organize, every thought and done.

Speaker 6 (01:36:20):
All these ads to left in a shifter I've.

Speaker 4 (01:36:22):
Read until it's better.

Speaker 10 (01:36:25):
This story needs your revision.

Speaker 4 (01:36:27):
And baby, I'm my own editor.

Speaker 6 (01:36:30):
I'm finel reredma diary until the publishers are hiring me,
she said, Penny, I'm let on this firing me.

Speaker 2 (01:36:40):
I'm fine, reremh this sounds horrible. So it's called slam Frank,
and I don't even know the way that it's There's
a lot of controversy about it. It centers on the
rewritten and Frank called Anita through the lens of interesting actional,
multi ethnic gender queer, Afro Latin hip hopkin slam Frank,

(01:37:09):
what do you think of slam Frank? Would you go
see it?

Speaker 4 (01:37:11):
I immediately, I've already seen too much.

Speaker 2 (01:37:16):
I mean, and people are like, it's satire, okay, then
what is it satirizing? If it's satire, what is it?
Where is the satire? Like? What is the satirical aspect is?
What is the thing that it's.

Speaker 4 (01:37:32):
Is it satirizing rap?

Speaker 2 (01:37:35):
That's the thing. No one can answer that question. What
is it satirizing? Then? Anybody? Here's Daily Mail's headline, Holocaust victim,
and Frank reimagined his pan sexual latina with non binary
lover and neuro diverse family. What is this even? And

(01:37:56):
she's got one leg and she's gluten intolerant and color
blind and deaf in one ear? What wins? I just
want I should do it? There's what is this? What
is it Saturday? I mean it's it's almost to the
point where it's satirizing itself. It's so cringe. Oh, I've

(01:38:22):
seen enough clips. I don't need to go see it
in the theaters because there's not enough in the world.

Speaker 4 (01:38:29):
This is how bad it is. Somebody first had the idea,
then they wrote it down, convinced others that it was
a good idea, those others agreed to it. Then they
executed it as written, and here we are.

Speaker 2 (01:38:47):
It bypassed a lot of a lot of stops there
in order to get on stage. It began as an
Instagram parody and the guy who created it was joking
about making this production to make quote Latin X girlies
feel included in the Holocaust. Now like wait a minute,

(01:39:10):
is it serious or because you can't tell anymore? And
then they did like a full it like inspired, like
a full production built around it, and that's how it.
They said it was a fictional theater troupe trying to
decolonize Anne Frank's story, and then it went to this
absurdity of characters, et cetera. Is it satirizing wokery or

(01:39:34):
is it satirizing non wokery to the point where it
is a joke? Okay, I can't break Steve. What is
your thought?

Speaker 11 (01:39:42):
My head?

Speaker 2 (01:39:43):
You wouldn't go see.

Speaker 5 (01:39:44):
This as we know on the show. I am not
a I'm not a hater of music rules like you are,
but I appreciate that about you. Yeah, no problem. But
it's just and Frank was a tough person and tough life,
and I don't know if we should be making light
of that.

Speaker 2 (01:39:58):
I know, see that's what I'm I'm like, hasn't Kelly,
hasn't the girl been thrown off? I'm like, come on,
I just I think that this is where people try
to get too smart and over their skis and they
create something that does not hit the mark and someone.
I think what they were trying to do was like

(01:40:18):
a Hamilton, a Hamilton style thing, and they wanted to
incorporate characters that were I like discovery marginalized identities, which
is a phrase I don't believe in because I think
if in this day and age, if you, if any
you can marginalize yourself. But I don't think that people

(01:40:39):
have the power anymore to marginalize you, unless you're talking
about critical race theory marginalizing its non adherents. It's the
only thing I can think of. But they sold out
thirty four performances, and either people think it's daring satire
or just deeply offensive like redd it is full of

(01:41:01):
they hate it, or they hate the people who hate it.
That's it. There's no one between. There's no one between here.

Speaker 4 (01:41:07):
How big were these rooms they were selling out? Do
we know?

Speaker 2 (01:41:11):
Now? We don't know, Like the Book of Mormon they
were saying was set. When I think of satire, I
think of space Balls. I think of mel Brooks, who
was the genius. I think of Christopher Guest and like
Best in Show, Right, that's that movie is one of
the funniest things I've ever seen, Spinal Tap. That's what
I think. When I think of satire, I don't think
of rewriting Anne Frank as like a gender queer whatever

(01:41:34):
Latin X doesn't know what she is type of thing.
How does that? That doesn't make it modern? What the
hell does that even mean, someone say they're trying to modernize,
how do you modernize Anne, Frank, that's so stupid. Shut up.
She's a historical figure. She was a real person, and
you are deuthering her, you're or othering her by stripping

(01:41:59):
her of her identity. That's that's actually the irony in
this whole thing. I mean, were they trying to do
unintentional irony? That's a lot. That's a long journey to
get to that end with this. Of course, this is
it's like they netflixed her like kind of you know
Netflix changes and ruins everything. Oh my gosh, like they're

(01:42:22):
I think they're doing another Pride and Prejudice. Can you
stop it. We don't need another damn Pride and prejudice.
We don't need another damn Jane Austen story. Stop. Oh,
we don't need any of it. It's all annoying Outheringer though,
that's what this is. So I just let's not let's
say we did. Let's just and they called it slam Frank.

(01:42:46):
That was cringey that clip that we played. That's why
I hate musicals. I can't sit there in a theater
and hear that kind of performance and go wow, that's
really good. I can't. I can't. It's just the cheesy,
over the top delivery. I'm sorry, theater kids, it's just
not my jam. Sorry, just not just not so. I

(01:43:06):
don't know. They said it sparked controversy. I think the
guide did it. Maybe it might be a leftist Otherwise
these they would have burnt the theater down already just
saying they would have. Can we talk about aliens? Real quick?
Hold hold up up? Okay, so I got a whole
here we go. So two things. First off, there's a

(01:43:27):
story out that discusses alien activity near US nuclear sites.
It's well, they're saying it's non human intelligence, there's evidence
of it, and it's gaining scientific validation. That's a big headline.
What does that mean, Like it's been confirmed, gaining scientific validation?
What does that mean thousands of objects that they say

(01:43:48):
sent by non human intelligence may have been spying on
the world's nuclear tests all the way back to the
nineteen forties. It's a groundbreaking new study just published providing
verified evidence that's something or someone was observing our nuclear
sites from space long before our first human satellites were
ever launched into orbit. Caine. It is a Nordic, some

(01:44:11):
Swedish scientist in Norway. It's a Nordic Institute for Theoretical Physics.
And they say there's a clear connection between the tests
from forty ninety fifty seven and the increase in the
number of transients appearing in the sky. Now keep that
on the table, because I have another one. Hold up,
We pull this other one up. So now this is
a New York post. UFO tracker shows thousands of eerie

(01:44:35):
underwater objects lurking along US coasts Caine, and there's video
and it's creepy. It is the largest queriable historic what's
it it's queer. No, it's the largest queriable historical citing
database for global UFO sightings. It's called Enigma. They said

(01:44:58):
they've got reports on over thirty thousand unidentified flying objects
and anomalous phenomena since they launched in twenty twenty two.
And it's not just the skies. They said that their
strange objects came rising from the depths of the sea
or plunging into the depths without so much as a

(01:45:21):
splash aliens.

Speaker 4 (01:45:29):
I think it could be.

Speaker 2 (01:45:30):
Now there's more. What, Yes, you know that Manhattan sized
space object called three I Atlas. It's grown a tail.
According to Harvard scientists. They're from Harvard, so it's post legit, right.
New images revealed the Manhattan sized interstellar object known as
three IYE Atlas has begun to sport a tail, indicating

(01:45:54):
that it could be possibly a maneuvering alien craft. They
said after hibitting signs of an incredibly strange anti tale.
Since first cropping up in the Solar System last July,
now three I Atlas is showing evidence of a true
cometary tale, according to Spain's Nordic Optical Telescope in the
Canary Island. This finding was released in September. Interesting, do

(01:46:18):
you think it's an alien spaceship? Well, it looks like
a giant.

Speaker 4 (01:46:23):
Yeah, third sickles attributes don't appear just randomly natural, right,
So yeah, I'm willing to believe it. But I also
think it's something they want us to believe too.

Speaker 2 (01:46:35):
I think it's pretty cool if aliens are like, let's
disguise our ship as a giant space rock. No one
will know because most of everyone's like, oh, just a
space rock. I'm just saying if I were an alien,
that's what I would do. Then they'd be like, oh,
it's a comet. Oh, that's what it is. It's probably
some a rock from some ass for ooh wait a minute,
hold up, I have enough time to time Dana there,

(01:46:57):
do I have no? Because you know, we got a
potential small potential SMOD alert. I'll try to find it
over break. I was going to put it in this segment,
but I think I think I moved it. But it's
a potential SMOT just saying so beware of the water
because there's more than just sharks living in there. The
turdsickle in space could be an alien spacecraft and also
aliens have been watching our nuke sites since the forties. There,

(01:47:20):
you go.

Speaker 8 (01:47:22):
Subscribe to the Dana Show podcast because who says you
can't make fun of people while staying informed on your
own personal time. Subscribe on YouTube, Apple or wherever you
get your podcast.

Speaker 2 (01:47:33):
So two quick things. First off, here's the headline I
told you about SMOD Signists spot a spotted a skyscraper
sized sized asteroid racing through the Solar System. You look excited,
very excited. It was discovered by Carnegie Science astronomer Scott Shepherd.
So they're just saying it's skyscraper sized. It's known as

(01:47:58):
twenty twenty five SC seventy nine, so it circles the
once every one hundred and twenty eight days. I don't
know if it's going to like get next to us,
like to hit us, but it's out there. Maybe we'll
get lucky. I don't know a chance, there's a chance.
So that's number one.

Speaker 5 (01:48:11):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:48:11):
The second thing is that hier Malai scored a major
win on the election Sunday, So it looks like remember
we had Carol Roth on last week to talk about
the game, but the trump Edmond was making to kind
of box out China. Well that worked. We'll have more
on that tomorrow. In the meantime, today's stupidity game one.

Speaker 11 (01:48:30):
Please, but we must remember in a time such as this,
we are not the crazy ones.

Speaker 4 (01:48:38):
New York City. The news too, we are not the
outlandish ones new York City. Yeah you are, you are.

Speaker 1 (01:48:48):
They want us to think we are crazy.

Speaker 4 (01:48:50):
We are safe. Man. When you have to explain it.

Speaker 2 (01:48:54):
Like that, when you're explaining you're losing, Yeah, that's the rule.
You guys know that, that's the rule. All right, moves
out front told you folks find us at subseach chapter
and Verse and YouTube and Facebook like and subscribe. I
will be back with you tomorrow
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