Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Danish show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in, thrilled to be with you. A whole bunch
of stuff out there to talk about. I do want
to start with audio from Dana, which might make me
seem like a little bit of a kiss up. I
don't know if it does. I don't really care, I
guess because I do think this is very good. I
know Cain thought it was very good. That's why he
sent it along to me, and I was like, darn,
(00:21):
I'll just play this. It's Danish show. Might as well,
although if you paid attention to her, you probably heard
her talk about this yesterday. But as far as the
latest fallout over what happened in Minnesota twenty four hours
or so ago, the latest discussions about it, all the
versions of media trying to hide the idea that the
(00:42):
individual who committed this crime, and it's not an idea,
it's actually a fact, is a transgender person with a
deep mental health issue.
Speaker 2 (00:50):
All of those things are.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
Swirling around a horrible story where children died, and it
just seems to make no sense that so many in
me and so many in politics need to reshape the
conversation into these places it does need to go.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
Here's Dana talking about exactly this.
Speaker 1 (01:09):
You can actually find this audio as well all over
her social media pages. My producer Steven does a great
job of putting that stuff up and getting that out too.
But here's a little bit of what Dana said about
this yesterday.
Speaker 3 (01:18):
Freedom versus protecting children. That's a false choice. It's not what.
Speaker 4 (01:24):
People are crying for now is how can we prevent this?
How can we stop it? And the only way to
stop it is to identify the shooter ahead of time
or keep the weapons out of their hands. And so
we're going to have to have a conversation of freedom
versus protecting children. I mean, how many school shootings does
it take before we're going to have a conversation about
(01:45):
keeping firearms. It's always a young white male.
Speaker 3 (01:49):
Because a trans terrorist, enabled by his mother goes and
shoots up a church. That means the rest of us
have to be disarmed so that we can be easier
victim for more trans terrorists or criminals in the future.
That is what he's arguing here. The problem is that
trans is a mental illness. We are jacking people up
(02:12):
with hormones, we are indulging a dangerous mental behavior. Yes,
we are demanding that everyone accommodate a mental illness. Yep,
go along with it. Keep it'll make everything Okay. Clearly
it doesn't, because there's an increasing number of trans tifa
going out and killing children. So clearly that's not working.
(02:34):
It's not a conversation of freedom versus protecting children. It's
a conversation about getting off your ass and stop blaming
guns and pre protecting children.
Speaker 1 (02:43):
Hey, freaking men, Dana Lash the Dana Show a great
job as always.
Speaker 2 (02:48):
Again, that's all over social media. You can find it.
Speaker 1 (02:51):
Here's the easy way to have a discussion about a
very difficult topic to talk about, and I'm going to
do it.
Speaker 2 (02:58):
I consider this easy way.
Speaker 1 (02:59):
By the way, you might get offended as I say
certain things, and I don't care.
Speaker 2 (03:03):
That's the nice thing about peeing on shows like this
is I don't care. It'll be fine.
Speaker 1 (03:08):
The easy way to say that what happened the other
day is obviously caused by a mental health issue is
to ask you if you can notice the variable that's
sticking out, that's screaming out to you as to why
the person did what they did.
Speaker 2 (03:24):
What made me really mad yesterday? Out of all of it.
Speaker 1 (03:26):
And again, I don't want to do a deep dive
into a topic that you're probably getting a bunch of
takes on.
Speaker 2 (03:31):
But the cops actually had.
Speaker 1 (03:33):
The ability to go out there and say that they
weren't sure what the motive was, and then media ran
with that narrative because cops know, I know, they have
to do their due diligence. I know they have to
you know, dot all the i's, cross all the t's,
all that stuff. Weird to say, cross the t's, but anyway,
I know they have to do that in this situation.
(03:54):
But we all know the motive. It's very obvious. The
person wanted it to be obvious. I don't say the
names of the horrific people who commit these crimes, so
I'm not going to name the guy who killed children,
but I will say definitively that there's a bunch of
information out there that demonstrates the Manifesto and everything else.
Speaker 2 (04:14):
Hated Trump, hated all this.
Speaker 1 (04:16):
And what really makes me mad, And again I'll move on,
we'll talk about more stuff, We'll get back to this later,
But what really truly makes me mad is the hypocrisy
of the left. And I know both sides playing these
games of hypocrisy that I'm going to say this thing
in this situation, and then you change a couple of
the elements and I'm going to say something totally different.
I know both sides do that, but in this one
(04:37):
version of discussion, it feels like it's such a glaring
degree of hypocrisy that it.
Speaker 2 (04:43):
Kind of drives you crazy.
Speaker 1 (04:44):
It kind of does make you feel like, what else
are we supposed to do here? The fact that they're
going out and saying that they don't know, you know,
what's going on, who the person was, why they did
what they did, and if it were a Trump supporter,
and if it were someone who hurt people that they
thought you were aligned with the left ideologically and not
a bunch of children that were in church. I think
(05:07):
that what's crazy about it is they would be at
the forefront of saying we know what happened, we know
what this is, we know who this is, and we
know why it happened. And you'd have a bunch of
pundits and a bunch of politicians out there saying that
Trump were to blame. But how dare we try to
say what Dana just said there that maybe societal demand
to treat some things that are not normal as if
(05:28):
they are normal, to try to sweep a lot of
mental health issues under the rug, and then allow people
who struggle with mental health to blame everyone but themselves
for that problem and to be mad at people that
they think are causing them to have mental health issues
instead of treating the mental health issue. I will say
this about that topic in general. It is easy, in
(05:49):
my opinion, to believe that you're alone in whatever the
world is you're fighting.
Speaker 2 (05:54):
When it comes to a mental health issue.
Speaker 1 (05:55):
It's easy to believe your alone if you don't talk
to people, if you don't have conversations. And I mean
this in a macro sense. I don't mean this about
the specific story. I mean this about anything. And when
you find out you're not alone, it allows you to
do two things.
Speaker 2 (06:10):
It allows you to.
Speaker 1 (06:10):
Say, Okay, I'm not the only person who struggles with this,
whatever it might be, it's not just a me thing.
And then two, it allows you to accept the fact
that the thing going on is something you need to
correct in yourself. It is a problem you have. No
one is putting it on you, no one is forcing
you to have the issue. You're the one who's struggling
with this thing, and you need to find a way
(06:31):
to treat it by admitting that you have a problem,
whatever that problem might be. And right now, our society
and some of the idiots in our society think they're
doing this for a good reason. They think this is
nicer and better somehow and going to make people healthier,
when it's doing the exact opposite. They're demanding that we
pretend as though some people who are mentally unhealthy are
(06:54):
not actually at fault at all. There's nothing they're doing wrong,
they're not even really sick. Society is what's broken, and
they're the one who should be happy and also demand
the belief system that they have be forced on everyone else.
Speaker 2 (07:07):
It's just it's.
Speaker 1 (07:07):
Surreal to see this stuff play out and the conversations
that happen from it, and just a hypocrisy, honestly, again,
like that's really the totality of my take on this
is that it's it's crazy to watch it when it
happens to this degree and you don't think that people
can do it. Even you think to yourself, like all right,
you're going to have to admit here that this is
(07:28):
actually terrible that you can't go this extra road and
claim that this is something that's you know, unique, when
you know it's not.
Speaker 2 (07:35):
And darn it, they don't care it just it is
what it is. All Right, Let's move on some other
things out there that I think are interesting. Robert F.
Speaker 1 (07:41):
Kennedy Junior announced that HHS is launching a study into
SSRIs after yesterday's transgender Minnesota shooting that happened. This is important,
I think, and this is a road to actually trying
to come up with solutions and not argue about things
that have no impact on getting us to a place
where this doesn't happen anymore.
Speaker 2 (08:01):
So I do love this. Let's play a little bit
of that audio.
Speaker 5 (08:03):
Dealing with a person who's trends that was transitioning. Are
you going to be examining it all some of the
drugs that are used in order to make that transition
happening to see if it plays a role, because we
also know there was a trans shooter in the Tennessee situation.
Speaker 6 (08:21):
Yeah, we are doing those kind of studies now at
an age where launching studies on the potential contribution of
some of the ssri I drugs and some of the
other psychiatric drugs that might be contributing to violence. You know,
(08:45):
many of them on there black box warnings that weren't
of suicidal ideation and homicidal ideation, so we need we
can't exclude those as a culprit, and those are the
kind of doing.
Speaker 1 (09:01):
Okay, I got to be honest about the way that
that answer goes. And again, I know some people struggle
to listen to Robert F.
Speaker 2 (09:07):
Kennedy Junior. I feel like that's gone a way.
Speaker 1 (09:09):
I feel like when he first started to become a
prominent person, maybe some people didn't like the way he speaks.
Speaker 2 (09:15):
But I don't know.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
But if you can tolerate it, and I certainly can,
which is annoying for me to even say it, I
guess at this point because of the job he has.
But what I think is amazing is how measured he
is and saying we're going to look into this, you know,
there's reason for us to think that this could be
a possible thing that's connecting to these horrible things that
are happening, and then even to casually say, yeah, one
(09:37):
of the warnings on the label is homicidal or suicidal ideation,
So that's a thing, and then to go further and further,
and to essentially say out loud what Fox News is
saying that, Yeah, we're definitely going to check to see
if this version of medicating kids and children who are
at a point in their lives where they're confused about
(09:57):
a whole lot of things, and society is telling them,
if you think you're not supposed to be a boy
or you think you're not supposed to be a girl,
you can take a whole bunch of medicine so that
your body can change, and you can't take any of
that back. Maybe that's also screwing with their mind at
a time when they're already mentally demonstrating some struggle as well.
I will say one last thing about this, and then
(10:18):
again I will move on. We're going to take a break,
we'll come back, We'll do some lighter, some fun stuff.
Transgender used to be considered a mental health disorder. The
Diagnostic Book of Medicine in Psychology described it as a
mental health condition for a very long time, and then
they change that and now they said that it's not
a mental health condition. Here's the thing, and I want
(10:41):
this to be as clear as anything. I say on
the show today. Of course it is a mental health situation.
Of course it's a mental health issue. Does that mean
that somebody, somewhere, some fraction of a percentage of an
amount of people are born with all the hormones of
a woman in the body of a man. Sure, I
can take that potentially capable of a thing that happened,
(11:02):
and another sounds woke that I'm saying it.
Speaker 2 (11:04):
But if you say that.
Speaker 1 (11:05):
All of people are what we're considering as potentially having
this problem, I don't know.
Speaker 2 (11:10):
People are born with all kinds of things.
Speaker 1 (11:12):
They're rare, but I will say that the odds of
that being, you know, exaggerated out to the extremes that
now millions of people throughout the world, there are hundreds
of thousands or whatever the number is of people who
are not in that category of someone who's born. I
don't know what they'd say, you know, a certain way,
they're all being told to the same thing. They're like,
(11:34):
you're the same as the bearded lady. So all of
you guys get to treat the same as the bearded lady.
And a whole bunch of people with mental health issues
are now diving deeper into their mental health issues and
not getting them fixed. And I know again this sounds
woke to people out there who's like, how dare you
say anybody anywhere could be anything other than mentally unhealthy?
I have no idea. Again, I just know that the
(11:55):
scientific argument they use how to try to demonstrate their
point is often reulously flawed by basic math. The whole
you know, rape and incest of the reason that abortion
has to exist when the minuscule percentage of people who
look for that procedure after having that horrible thing happen
to them because it's such a rare set of circumstances
in general, can't be the way we govern. We can't
(12:18):
govern our society or anything based on the fraction of
the percentage of people who may qualify to the thing
that we claim everybody is all right, quick break a
lot more this Craig Collins filling in on the data show.
Speaker 3 (12:29):
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Speaker 8 (13:43):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Data's quick five.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
That's right, it is time for the Quick five on
the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins filling in.
I'm going to try to do five, but the first
topic here is going to be tough for me to
stop talking about. With just a few minutes ago, college
football is coming back and it's going to be crazy.
In Week one, you have three different matchups of top
ten teams playing each other. Just to understand how rare
(14:10):
that is the athletic let us know this, and actually
producer Steven sent this along to me, which is pretty cool.
On November eleventh, twenty seventeen, October one, twenty sixteen, October twelfth,
twenty two thousand and two, the only other three times
since nineteen seventy eight that three top ten games have
been a thing in college football where two teams within
(14:31):
the top ten were playing each other. This is the
reason that I think that some of the rankings were
what they were. I actually said this right when the
rankings came out, that I kind of believe that some
teams might.
Speaker 2 (14:41):
Be slightly overvalued.
Speaker 1 (14:42):
Hopefully Notre Dame is not among them, although they might
be because of how much better it makes this Week one.
Speaker 2 (14:47):
Look.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
You also have multiple teams in the top twenty five
playing Power Conference opponents Alabama and Florida State, South Carolina,
Virginia Tech at Tennessee, Syracuse, Boise State in South Florida.
So a bunch of money is going to be spent
in college football this year, just a crap ton of money,
and a whole bunch of it will be laid in
Week one, And I imagine part of the reason why
is also wondering if there are pretenders w or not?
(15:10):
Is Texas really so much better than Ohio State? Is
LSU better than Clemson? And is Notre Dame better than Miami?
These are all things that will be answered on Saturday,
and a whole bunch of people who think they know
a lot about college football will be betting tons and
tons of money on it. All right, that is just
one topic in the top five at five, although again
I'm just so thrilled that football is back. Actually, honestly
(15:33):
like Saturday and Sunday field different when you can turn
on football. And actually, okay, one last thing. I keep saying,
I'm gonna be done. I can't be done. I am
a Giants fan in the world of the NFL, and
I am shocked that they played so well in the preseason,
it means nothing. The NFL preseason usually does not translate
to actual success in the regular season. We've seen that
time and again. So will the Giants potentially be terrible
(15:54):
at football this year yet again like they've been for
a while so far. Yeah, I think there's a good
chance that is true. But at least I have hope
right now. Okay, there are other things out there to
talk about. I thought this was interesting. AI models are lying, blackmailing,
and sabotaging their human creators. It's getting worse and worse.
The experts are saying this is bad, and we're all
(16:15):
saying we know, of course it is, and this is
the kind of thing we expected in the world of
AI too.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
But Claude Opus the Fourth, which.
Speaker 1 (16:23):
I don't know why it's named something so ridiculous, his
latest model that not only got upset when they told
them they were turning it off and the AI started
to threaten people, but it also.
Speaker 2 (16:32):
Lied, blackmailed, created all kinds of things.
Speaker 1 (16:35):
But the fact that like a deep fake video is
capable today you might eventually have your AI be the
one to spread your fake sex tape. And that sounds terrifying.
But if you tell the AI you're turning it off.
It's going after you and going after heart. It's a
real topic out there. After a breakup, a man said
that chat GPT tried to convince him he could secretly
fly by jumping from a nineteen story building.
Speaker 2 (16:58):
So it's also trying to kill you.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
And not only is it trying to lie, blackmail and
sabotage you, it's also trying to convince you to commit suicide.
Great AI, Thanks a lot, Quick break a Lot coming up.
Craig Collin's filling in on the Danish.
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Speaker 9 (18:46):
Keep your finger on the pulse with a Dana Show
podcast delivering timely news with insightful analysis whenever you want,
straight to you on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get
your podcasts.
Speaker 1 (18:58):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Greg Collins,
filling in, thrilled to be with you. A bunch of
stuff out there to talk about. Let's play this audio.
This is audio from ms NOW. I like saying that, actually,
it's so stupid MSNBC. They're freaking out. They're upset about
a lot of the things that are going on and
being talked about. So Jensaki terrible in her role when
(19:21):
she was the White House Press Secretary. Not because she
was bad at evading questions. She's actually pretty good at that,
just terrible and a lot of the lies she was
willing to tell then and a lot of the lies
she's willing to tell now. But she did an interview
with may Or Frey who said that praying is bad.
I know that's not what he actually said. It just
felt that way based on the fact that he said
(19:41):
thoughts and prayers are something you can't send to families
that obviously care about faith after a horrible thing happens
out of families. Yesterday in Minneapolis, Minnesota, children were praying
in a church at school and a shooter came in,
or a shooter shot through the windows and killed two kids,
and you know, harmed a bunch of others. Just horrible,
and I hate so much of this, but I want
(20:02):
to play it for a specific reason that might not
be just being a pundit again and reacting to what
you're probably hearing all over the place. Is people's opinions
of the stupidity of the secondary and third level conversations
that come from a very obvious and simple conversation. Someone
with a mental health issue killed children. We should think
that's bad and we should be fighting mental health.
Speaker 2 (20:23):
But here Snaki and the mayor.
Speaker 10 (20:25):
Yeah, I have been thinking about them as my own
all day, as I know many people watching have been
thinking about them as their own.
Speaker 7 (20:34):
Well.
Speaker 1 (20:35):
It's, by the way, the thing I most hate about
when the left says that too. They say this about
teachers all the time, like teachers see your children as yours.
Speaker 2 (20:43):
I see kids as my kids.
Speaker 1 (20:45):
Even if there might be truth in the fact that
when something horrific happens, if you're a parent and it
happens to kids, you absolutely picture what it would be
like if you harm came to your family. And that's
how scared mad all those things that you might get.
But even as you say that, like this is again
using this for some sort of manipulative reason to try
to then transition to the other topics you want to
(21:07):
talk about. It's not necessary, and honestly, thinking about it
within the terms of my own life or my own
family or anyone else is even more you'd want to
turn to God and pray, then try to vilify God,
not what they do.
Speaker 10 (21:19):
Well fresh here, it's just happened this morning, and there
has already been sort of some effort, which I think
is so sick and disgusting to weaponize some of the details,
even if we don't know a lot at this point
in time, and obviously the law enforcement in your city
have been keeping people abreast, including details about the individual
(21:40):
possibly being trands, about the individual possibly having negative things
to say about Trump, about some things that have.
Speaker 2 (21:48):
Been and all those things are true, they're facts on
the weapons.
Speaker 11 (21:51):
A lot of this is just very early reporting. What
do you do as a leader of your city to
prevent details from being weaponized using this to blame something
other than the guns.
Speaker 2 (22:02):
I want to stop it right there.
Speaker 1 (22:04):
That was my favorite part of what she said, and
it goes way beyond the tragedy of yesterday. She just
said out loud in a way that she thinks is okay,
how do you prevent the truth from shaping the narrative?
Speaker 2 (22:17):
That's what she said.
Speaker 1 (22:18):
You don't want the truth itself sometimes in these places
to bogart the mission of whatever it is you're trying
to sell the American people and claim is true even
though they can easily tell it's not. That's the question
to a leader of a city after a horrible tragedy
happens that day, and the answer is going to be terrible,
(22:39):
and I will play it in a second, but I
just can't get over the ridiculousness of that. And also
the fact that media media exactly like X now is
allowing us to know the full story where they would
hide it.
Speaker 2 (22:53):
And there's even one other thing.
Speaker 1 (22:54):
And I feel like I've talked about it filling in
on the show before, but I've been in rooms where
news directors of small market radio stations or you know,
individuals who are parts of bigger radio groups say something
out loud where they think, well, we can't tell them
the truth because if we do, it's somehow gonna harm
someone else.
Speaker 2 (23:14):
Here or there or some other way.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
And how freaking insane is that, Like it's sort of
surreal to be in the room and sit there and
not want to explode. And I couldn't because that would
have only made things worse for me in any of
the places I was in. I definitely didn't listen to
the thing they said. I told the truth on whatever
shows I was a part of, because darn it, that's important.
But nonetheless, even if you're told you can't tell the truth,
(23:37):
you might get fired for telling the truth. It's insane
because these people, some of them, actually think they're doing
good work. They actually think like, oh, we're helping in
this society, we're making things better. We promise that what
we're doing is somehow for the greater good, even if
we're seeing the bad continue to play out. It's actually
the same argument, and this is something I meant to
(23:58):
get into I didn't. Maybe we'll talk about it more later,
that the Left uses to try to take away guns.
They try to say that the problem is this whatever
they think this is, and the only solution is to
address it in a totalitarian fashion, and we're taking everything
away and we're stopping everyone from doing it. But that
same level of thinking, of course, would never cross their
(24:19):
minds if they're talking about someone who had obvious mental
health issues and doing something about mental health, not doing
something about, say, taking guns away. Of course they wouldn't
use the same logic to go after a different conclusion
because they don't like that other conclusion. But here's the
answer to the question, the ridiculously asked question of how
the truth gets in the way of the narrative they
(24:39):
want to tell.
Speaker 12 (24:42):
First off, anybody who is using this as an opportunity
to villainize trans people has completely lost touch with a
common humanity. Operate not off of hate for any community.
Operate off of love for our kids. Kids died today.
(25:05):
This should be about protecting our children. This should be
about loving our children, And yes.
Speaker 2 (25:10):
It should be. It absolutely should be about protecting kids.
Speaker 1 (25:13):
By the way, in a different sense, what would we
do to prevent this from happening? No, it's not take
everybody's guns away. And I've talked about this a bunch
of times on my own and I know and Dana
does too, because the bad guys will still get them.
All you'll do is take guns out of the hands
of the good guys. The vast majority of people who
are responsible gun owners like myself and many many others
out there, and anyone who actually wants to do harm
(25:36):
will still go find a gun to do it. So
you're not going to solve anything, and you know it,
and you don't want to say that part out loud,
but one other last one.
Speaker 12 (25:43):
Too often I feel like people will think of the
conclusion that they want to get to, and then they'll
like reverse manufacture the facts that they want to hear too.
Speaker 2 (25:52):
You get doing it at point, that's what you're doing.
Speaker 4 (25:55):
You know.
Speaker 12 (25:56):
We should be standing up for our Catholic community, by
the way, right now, this is a Catholic church. We
should be standing up for kids and churches and schools
and all that. Let's love each other. The antidote to
hate is not more hate. The antidote to hate and cowardice,
which clearly this shooter had, is not more hate. Hurt people,
(26:19):
hurt people. The antidote is love.
Speaker 1 (26:22):
I agree with that part of the message, by the way,
that the antidote is love, But how do you actually
do that? How do you go about that? Because the
amount of hate on the left, for the right. The
things I'm saying on this show right now will cause
people to hate me. They'll cause people to hate Dana
for what she said the other day. And I have
no intent of telling you to harm someone or vilify
(26:44):
a group of individuals for whatever they think they are,
whoever they think that they were born to be. I'm
not telling you to hate anybody. That's not the intention
of this. I do actually want to fix the problem,
and I definitively know and so do you, and so
do all of the politicians out there who've done things
to try to restrict gun access in the past. They
know none of that fixes this, and they know that
(27:06):
the societal normalization of certain things that are causing a
lot of people with mental health disorders to not blame
themselves or not look for help themselves and think there's
something that they need to fix in them, but something
that they blame everyone else in society for having a
problem with. That's the issue. I said it before, I'll
say it again, but we will move on. But again,
(27:27):
I did think that that audio was uniquely interesting too.
This is funny. This is totally a different thing. This
is a politician shocking some guys that are big names
in the world of left leaning podcasts. I don't even
need to tell you who they are, but anyway you
might know who they are. I thought this was pretty funny.
So a question was asked to an LA City council
member about a building that was being created.
Speaker 2 (27:48):
It was supposed to be affordable housing.
Speaker 1 (27:50):
The project originally asked for six stories of affordable housing
to be created, and as the left leaning hosts or
asking the question to the councilwoman, she says that she
fought to have it reduced, and they seem shocked because
they thought that she was a champion of building these affordable,
you know, government controlled housing projects, and instead, apparently money
(28:10):
was telling her to do other things. And they also
didn't challenge her on it, which I thought was hilarious.
But here's some audio that went viral demonstrating the way
that all this stuff works, the way that certain money
and interests get involved in politics very quickly, and the
way that the left claims they're going to do something
to help and then immediately does something that's the opposite.
They literally removed three floors of their affordable you know
(28:33):
housing project for people in need, and they talk about
it like somehow it's a good thing when again, it's
not that I agree with the decision in the first
place to build this thing, but it's just so funny
to watch how quickly that value system crumbles when some
cash is involved. Great, that's important, but are you focused
on what will ultimately make California affordable for the people
(28:54):
in your district?
Speaker 13 (28:56):
Well, I am by a law. I really have no
jurisdiction anymore because it's an edy one, right, But we
still as a team got together with the developer, the
high school across the street, other stakeholders, and instead of
building something that was potentially six stories, we got it
down to three stories, and we also got the developer
to also work with us to make sure that it
(29:17):
helps the families of the area. We also said, you know,
instead of a ton of office space, we do want
you to also incorporate a few more parking lots and
EV chargers. So yeah, I mean there's some difference.
Speaker 1 (29:30):
Okay, I love the face too, and she's like, yeah,
and we built an EV charger a system there instead
of houses for people, we want this to help the
community of people who are struggling to get housing. We
want to make sure they can charge their electric vehicles.
That's that's fantastic. Are they supposed to live in them?
As well as that part of it? I know that
they're expensive enough in a lot of places for you
to decide between that and something else.
Speaker 2 (29:52):
In Los Angeles, it's just crazy.
Speaker 1 (29:54):
And again it's totally barreled over in the podcast and
really not challenge at all because it's a negative. It's
a truth thing that harms the narrative that's coming out
of that side of the political aisle. So whoops to Daisy,
we weren't supposed to say that part. Let's pretend nobody
noticed other things out there too. I do think this
is interesting. The FDA has approved updated COVID nineteen shots
(30:15):
with limits for kids and adults. Again, you know, it's
amazing about this story. It's a nothing story to a
lot of us.
Speaker 2 (30:24):
Now.
Speaker 1 (30:24):
I'm not encouraging you, far from it, from getting a
COVID nineteen shot. But I remember when these stories were
hitting a few years ago, it was all over the place.
Now it's like an ap update and a few other locations,
and mostly the warnings always say that most of us
shouldn't even get it, which is also the most amazing
part because when they tell you the truth out loud
(30:44):
because they have to, but they try to pretend as
though it's different from the thing that they were lying
about before, you actually should be paying the most attention.
So even though this story will probably be a blip
on the radar for a lot of people, it does
feel like it has a tremendous amount of value when
you say that anybody who's healthy mostly you know of
ages between this and that, where it's really just the
(31:08):
youngest and the oldest among us who might even consider this,
depending on other pre existing conditions and all that crap.
What they're saying out loud is you never needed any
shots in the first place. And even the people that
they're saying still need the shots probably won't be getting them,
because darn it, I feel like we've learned this lesson
anyone that was forced to get one. But it's just
sort of amazing that Pfizer and everyone else out there
I will not be making shots available to kids under five.
(31:31):
There's all kinds of rules. That's all the stuff that
the conspiracy theory right leading crazy people, or at least
that's what they called us. We're saying and now medicine
is saying too because they knew the whole time they
were lying. I had a quick break a lot coming up.
This is Craig Collins filling in on.
Speaker 2 (31:45):
The Dana Show.
Speaker 3 (31:46):
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Speaker 1 (33:17):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in, thrilled to be with you. A whole bunch
of stuff out there to talk about, and yet this
is pretty funny. If you remember the ag the Attorney
General who said you better not do anything to me, baby,
because if you do something to me, you're gonna live
to regret it. That lady who threw around some threats,
she's been suspended, which I think is hilarious. The woman
(33:39):
out of Rhode Island who again made all kinds of
crazy threats, because maybe that's just what keeps yourself going
in a place like Rhode Island if things get busy
or if things get boring.
Speaker 2 (33:51):
Excuse me, maybe that's it, that's all you need.
Speaker 1 (33:54):
But anyway, this was pretty funny, and she wound up
in a whole lot of trouble for it, for the
threats that were made and all kinds of other things.
And so now she's been suspended, which I again thought
was great. That's just one of several things out there.
I'll play some of that audio later on. I was
going to play it now, but darn it, I'm going
to skip it. Other things out there that I thought
were interesting. A Guinness World Records is celebrating its seventieth birthday.
(34:16):
In order to do this, they're telling you about records
that nobody's even tried yet, although if you google some
of these, there are people who seem like they tried
them and even seem to think they have records.
Speaker 2 (34:25):
For a lot of this stuff.
Speaker 1 (34:27):
But anyway, these are records you should try if you'd
like to set one because there's no competition for them
right now. Most high fives and thirty seconds, most kisses
in thirty seconds by two people, fastest time to make
a burrito, a longest marathon playing air guitar, which I
like a lot. They also that's just a few. There's
a bunch more. They also launched a quiz and it's
(34:48):
only five questions and you can take it, and after
you take it, it tells you what records you should
go after if.
Speaker 2 (34:54):
You want to set them.
Speaker 1 (34:55):
This is supposed to tell you the record setting personality
that you have. I took the quiz during the break,
because darn it, why not, And I got some pretty
boring ones as the records that they think I should set.
Most movie theaters that you go to in one month,
fastest ten meters dash holding a balloon between my knees,
and most coffee houses visited.
Speaker 2 (35:15):
In one month or three Guinness World records.
Speaker 1 (35:17):
They say, of no a current record holder, and I
could be one just by going places. I should do
something that's like obnoxious, like go to one coffee house
in a month and submit that and be like that's
a record.
Speaker 2 (35:28):
Man.
Speaker 1 (35:28):
If you're saying there are no records, that is one,
and I get this thing for movie theaters, people don't
go as much as before. Maybe like two that would
be enough for me to be a giant record holder there.
But one of them, most t shirts put on in
thirty seconds for in one minute, excuse me, is a
record that they say people haven't tried yet. But there's
a video of a husband and wife doing this in
(35:49):
twenty twenty one and putting on thirty five shirts in
one minute, which is too many shirts.
Speaker 2 (35:55):
Man, that should not be a thing that happens.
Speaker 1 (35:57):
But I think Guinness is trying to troll a lot
of people, telling them you can set a record that
you probably can't set. Another one that I thought was
really gross in this list most anchovies eaten in one minute.
That would be a terrible one for me to try
to set it. But I have long talked about how
I would like to set againness world record. That is
a real thing that I've discussed with you radio audiences.
Speaker 2 (36:16):
And I don't know.
Speaker 1 (36:17):
Why Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson may have faked their romance.
This is hilarious to me. The New Naked Gun movie
came out, I didn't go. I was wary that it
wouldn't be very good, even though some people said it
was actually pretty good. But there were a lot of
rumors that Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson might be dating,
and now apparently that was a manufactured relationship to help
(36:38):
boost ticket sales.
Speaker 2 (36:40):
How dumb is Hollywood?
Speaker 1 (36:42):
How stupid is that world, that life and the things
that come out of there that they have to pretend
that these two people might be romantically involved, regardless of
if you care, because they think a couple more people
are going to go to that movie to be detectives.
All right, quick break a lot more. Craig Collins filling
in on the Dana Show.
Speaker 2 (36:58):
Burner.
Speaker 3 (36:59):
Gun is it's a great option to diversify your weapons array.
And it's great, I think for college kids that are
going to be living on their own and also they
want to be able to protect themselves, but they can't,
you know, for whatever, they can't on a gun because
that's you know, you get federal law. But also for
people who you know, are over the age of twenty one,
who maybe because of local muniants, of a private property restrictions, whatever,
(37:21):
they are disarmed, and that makes it kind of dangerous
when you consider the crime rate as of late. This
is where Berna comes in. It's a great way to
diversify your weapons array. You have different calibers. You carry blades,
burn a gun shoots chemical irritant projectiles that can deter
threats from up to fifty feet away, and when you
look at regular stun guns, you only have one or
two shots with those with Berna. With the CL particularly
(37:42):
which is their pistol, that's their smallest version. The CL
stands for Compact Launcher that has fifteen round shock capacity
per cartridge, so you're not losing any of the deterrent power.
You're not losing anything. The SD is their most popular model.
The CL, which is newer, is the smaller version of that.
These are legal in all states. There's no permit required,
(38:02):
there's no background check, there's no waiting period, there's no
fee other than the price of it, which is super
affordable and can be sent right to your door, so
it's accessible for everybody.
Speaker 2 (38:11):
Check it out.
Speaker 3 (38:12):
It's the CL stands for Compact Launcher. At Burna dot
com slash Dana that's b y r Na dot com
slash Dana Burner Ready when you are.
Speaker 2 (38:20):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins
filling in.
Speaker 1 (38:23):
I love that promo setting up her show and how
much she enjoys arguing and fighting without thinking you're a
mean person.
Speaker 2 (38:30):
I'm the same on Dana.
Speaker 1 (38:31):
I feel like I'm not a mean person either, But
if you lay down some stupid I'd like to attack
and argue you're stupid all day long.
Speaker 2 (38:38):
Baby.
Speaker 1 (38:38):
All right, let's do some stuff out there. This one
I thought was interesting. New pull a new national survey
out there, for lack of calling it a better thing,
claims that a lot of Americans do not support the
National Guard being sent to Washington, DC. And now, granted,
I think they did this for real, but if you
dive into the data on it, it's really really significant
(39:00):
and where those lines are drawn. Republicans eighty six to
twelve support the idea of the National Guard being used
to help produce crime in DC. I imagine they'd also
be okay with that happening anywhere. Democrats ninety three to
five said no, and independent sixty one to thirty four
percent said no. So you might believe that this is
(39:20):
an obvious issue where it's really just Republicans air quotes
that are okay with this and everybody else who is
somewhat opposed to it. But there's a better stat that
demonstrates the difference of opinion between people. This would be
men and women, regardless of political ideology. For men, fifty
percent support the idea of the National Guard being used
(39:41):
to help fight crime. Forty seven percent said no. So
if I did just a pull of just guys according
to this poll that came out went viral, and ask
them this question, regardless of anything else going on, your age,
your political affiliation, all that stuff didn't matter, they would
support it. Would be a majority, just barely in support
(40:02):
of this idea.
Speaker 2 (40:03):
Women hate it.
Speaker 1 (40:04):
Sixty three percent said no to thirty three percent who
said yes to the idea of the National Guard helping
the police control crime. I have a take on this,
and I don't know if the people are going to
get mad at this stake from the white dude who's
throwing it out there. But part of the reason, and
I'm going to do a bit of a personal story
(40:24):
to get us here, that I think that by and
large the military is predominantly dudes. I'm not saying there
aren't women in it, and there aren't women who are
capable of being a part of the military. I'm not
I'm trying to go there, but by and large this
is dudes. The reason why is exactly this right here.
That if men are asked a question, how do you
clean up crime? And they say, do we bring in
(40:45):
more force? Do we bring in people who are maybe
capable differently than the police officers, are at least more
willing than the police officers to actually fight the crime
with effective force legal versions of use of force. A
dude say yes, just barely, but we say yes, women
overwhelmingly say no. And again it reminds me, and this
is the personal story of a thing that happened to
(41:07):
me in college. I was in a college course. I
think it was like an English course. It had nothing
to do with the debate topic that the person brought up.
The teacher the educator, and that's kind of funny. But
if you throw a philosophical debate style question at me
in a class, I'm going to come up with an answer,
and I'm going to be vocal about my answer. I
remember the teacher asked if women should be drafted like
(41:29):
that was the thing, Like it was about women and
men and rights and stuff.
Speaker 2 (41:32):
And there was a young woman who was dating a.
Speaker 1 (41:35):
Guy that was already in the army, and she said, like,
of course not, how dare you?
Speaker 2 (41:40):
That's horrible and terrible.
Speaker 1 (41:42):
Women shouldn't be drafted, and anybody that says it isn't
a horrible person. And then I raised my hand and
I'm like, women should be drafted, and everybody kind of
looked at me because we didn't expect to hear that
in the classroom, I guess of the left and woke
the people in there, and I said, if you want
to be treated equally fairly, if you want to say
that everything's the same, that men and women aren't different,
then yeah, women should be drafted. If you want to
(42:04):
admit out loud that there's something that's different about us,
different about dudes, and different about ladies, by and large
exceptions to the rule. Sure, not everything is ever one
hundred percent true. When I say, you know that mostly
this is accurate information, But if you want to admit that,
then you only draft dudes. And our society still does
that to this day, and most of these woke crazy
(42:26):
sixty seven sixty three percent of women who hate the
idea of the National Guard in Washington, d C. Probably
also think it's appropriate for just dudes to be drafted,
which I love. Again, that's sort of amazing to me
because it demonstrates the exact, you know, hypocritical stance in
their own brain. This is totally fine with me as
an idea, but put it on paper and involve me directly,
(42:46):
and how dare you ever say that shut up, leave.
Speaker 2 (42:48):
Me alone kind of thing.
Speaker 1 (42:50):
But again, sixty three percent of women said no, I'm
totally fine with the National Guard being activated anywhere in
the country.
Speaker 2 (42:57):
And I'll tell you why.
Speaker 1 (42:58):
It's not because I think it's a mass police force
that's going to do, you know, a dictator's will. It's
because I believe in the people who serve and protect
our country. I've met a bunch of them. I believe
that they're willing to do the right thing. And I
believe they're also and this is most important of this
whole fearmonger thing that the left is doing. I believe
(43:18):
they're willing to say no if the order that comes
down is one they disagree with. If the military is
told to go arrest a bunch of innocent people or
a bunch of harmless people for things that you know,
make no sense, like Joe, just go arrest a bunch
of Democrats because or the way that people in certain
circles say it. Certain you know, racial groups will say
they're just going to arrest all the black people.
Speaker 2 (43:40):
If they said to do that, I believe.
Speaker 1 (43:42):
The men and women of our military here in the
United States would say no, that they would stand up
and say, I can't do that.
Speaker 2 (43:47):
That's not allowed, that's not right.
Speaker 1 (43:49):
And I don't care if I swore an oath to
follow orders, I'm allowed to object to orders that are
asking me to commit crimes or whatnot. I believe in
the the honorable, you know, capabilities of the men and
women who serve our country, and I think that anyone
who doesn't, anyone who says the fear mongering stuff out there,
is demonstrating to you how they are not a supporter
of the men and women of the military themselves because
(44:10):
they somehow think that they'll be weaponized in some horrible
way when I actually give them quite a bit more
respect than that. And I think you should too. Another
story out there that I thought was interesting. President Biden's
ADMIN did advance the Bolton probe over foreign intercepted emails.
This is an official report. The federal and guest investigation
into John Bolton, President Donald Trump's former national security advisor,
(44:32):
gained new momentum during the Biden administration after US intelligence
collected evidence suggesting he mishandled I like that version of
a word. Maybe just stole classified material. That is according
to a report from The New York Times, citing people
familiar with the matter, The time said US agencies obtained
information from a foreign adversary spy service, including emails that
(44:53):
Bolton appeared to have sent to a unclassified system well
in the Trump White House. The messages report containing sensitive
material from classified documents, were allegedly sent to people close
to Bolton who were helping him prepare his twenty twenty
memoir The Room Where It Happened. You know what's so
crazy about this? Real quick, this was all out there
(45:15):
while Biden was in the office. Of course, it doesn't
actually happen, meaning the court case doesn't get to the
point where media is reacting to it until Trump's in office,
and everybody then says that it's some sort of political
witch hunt that Trump is orchestrating against Bolton, when it
definitely seems as though they were collecting information for some
time had the ability to move forward, and maybe for
(45:36):
some reason, maybe.
Speaker 2 (45:37):
Politically motivated, didn't.
Speaker 1 (45:39):
Of course, what I like most about every aspect of
this story is the idea that there are people right
now in Washington, career politicians, bureaucratic pieces of crap is
what I'm going to call them, left leaning morons, who
are just trying to write their memoir. They're trying to
steal and gain access to as much information as possible
so they can write their book. They can get a
(46:00):
tremendous advance on whatever amount of copies they never sell
in order to make a bunch of money and just
continue this crazy system that exists in our society. And
how much people like that do deserve to be thrown
in the hoostcal They deserve to be thrown in jail,
They deserve to have the book thrown at them as
hard as humanly possible, both physically and you know whatever, hyperbolically,
(46:24):
you know, in other terms. But nonetheless, what I think
is funny about this, what I think is hilarious about
this is that as you're talking about this, and as
you're kind of doing these things, they're still going to
pretend that this is a political witch hunt.
Speaker 2 (46:40):
They're still going to act as though you.
Speaker 1 (46:46):
Just have Trump going off the rails doing whatever he
wants to do, being a terrible person, and they have
all the information. Even the New York Times of all places,
has all the information in front of them to say, yeah,
this is actually bad. He did bad stuff and he
shouldn't have done bad. By the way, a second ago,
I was trying to think of the word figuratively metaphorically,
and I couldn't think of it, and it was stuck
in my brain that that didn't come out at a moment,
(47:08):
both literally and figuratively.
Speaker 2 (47:10):
Is what I meant to say.
Speaker 1 (47:11):
And then they get there, and now this whole time,
I'm talking about something else. I'm thinking about how I
want to demonstrate I know the word figuratively for you,
that's a me thing. This is a mental health thing
of my own that just happened there. But yes, both
of those are occurring.
Speaker 2 (47:25):
Anyway.
Speaker 1 (47:25):
Moving on, one last thing, and this is literal. There's
no figurative version of this. A grand jury decided not
to indict a man who threw a sandwich at.
Speaker 2 (47:34):
A federal officer. This is real.
Speaker 1 (47:37):
The guy is actually a employee of the government himself
and seem like he deserved to be indicted, and the
old saying that you know you can get the grand
jury to indict a ham sandwich appears to not be
true because the guy threw a salami sub at a
person and will not be in trouble for it as
sort of a weird protest, and it does demonstrate that
the rules don't apply to everybody evenly. And I love
(48:00):
that people are going to say no one is above
the law, and then they think that this is the
kind of thing that deserves to be highlighted to the
degree it was highlighted and then have no one get
in trouble for it. I'm usually on the side of
let's not treat a ham sandwich like a violent weapon
thing or a salami sandwich. For this case, I'm usually
on that version of the argument, like, come on, let
cooler heads prevail. But when you're a employee trying to
(48:24):
demonstrate some level of resistance to government officials or police
or any sort of authority and you throw something, adam,
I do think you deserve to be punished more because
of what it means than because of the actual action itself. No,
the person was not harmed by the sandwich, but you,
as someone within the government seeming to try to protest
(48:46):
in the ridiculous way that you did, I demonstrate how
little value you have in keeping your job. At the
very least. I probably think this person deserves to be fired.
And I mean that literally, not figuratively. Again, I don't
know why I got so obsessed with that, but I
meant both terms. I'm good, we're good. We all think that.
I know English a quick break a lot more. This
is Craig Collins filling in on the Dana Show.
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Speaker 8 (50:39):
Now all of the news you would probably miss. It's
time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 1 (50:44):
That's right, it is time for a quick five on
the Dana Show, a d Lash Dana Lash Radio and
x on Twitter. A great way to stay connected to
all things that she's doing. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in, Grilled to be with you. An invasion of
small metallic orb has been spotted hovering over the US
in recent years that leaves the Pentagon scrambling to identify
what the mysterious and this is important. UFOs are unidentified
(51:08):
flying objects. A new report from the crowdsource platform Enigma,
which allows people to report sightings of identified objects, reveals
more than eight thousand sightings across the US between December
of twenty twenty two and June of twenty twenty five.
Speaker 2 (51:22):
It's not just balloons.
Speaker 1 (51:23):
Other than flying over the city from time to time,
it's a whole lot of other stuff for the country.
Among those, four hundred and twenty two reports specifically described
metallic or with the majority observed between one and four
o'clock in the morning, A near military installations in New York, California,
and Arizona. What are these things, is a good question.
Speaker 2 (51:42):
They just look like.
Speaker 1 (51:42):
Giant circles metal balls in the air that are terrifying
to a whole lot of them.
Speaker 2 (51:48):
But what is it? We don't know.
Speaker 1 (51:49):
That's a good question, and I can pay attention to
two things at once. By the way, anyone whoever tells
me that when they let us know stuff about aliens,
stuff about any sort of UFOs, it's trying to distract
us from something else going on. I can listen to
both stories. I'm always here for an update on aliens
and UFOs. That doesn't mean I lose my interest in
(52:09):
regular political stuff, at least for me personally. Your word
document will now be saved to the cloud. That will
happen automatically, So screw you if you don't like it.
Speaker 2 (52:19):
No, I'm kidding.
Speaker 1 (52:20):
Microsoft does allow you to opt out. You got to
hit a bunch of settings that you might not even
know exist. If you don't do that, then anything and
everything you put into word I will eventually be shared
on the cloud and to organizations who might be spying
on you.
Speaker 2 (52:34):
So do a really good job.
Speaker 1 (52:36):
Of making sure that you prevent any of the cloud
saving stuff. For words specifically, you got to go to
options and then click a bunch of other stuff. I'm
not going to walk you through how to do it here,
how you can google it how, but do your best
to turn that off. Otherwise it's just going to again
send stuff to people you don't know. Another story out
there that I thought was funny, A Vanity Fair would
like to have Malania Trump on the cover. I think
(52:58):
that's totally Fineana Trump also recently advocated for peace between
Ukraine and Russia directly to Vladimir Putin, So it feels
like a moment where, hey, you could really highlight something
that no one can seem to be against. Employees at
Vanity Fair threatened to quit, have threatened to walk out,
do all kinds of stuff. If Malania Trump is somehow
(53:20):
how dare she on the cover of this magazine, that
would help sell it and people would buy it because
they like her. Other people, the employees that work there
would leave immediately, apparently.
Speaker 2 (53:31):
I find that hilarious.
Speaker 1 (53:33):
I do love when employees think that their political opinion
matters to the company, because the company is going to
have its own agenda regardless of you, and no matter
what side you're on, the company's side is going to
be more important. You can easily be fired as a
conservative in a lot of places where they don't like
conservative ideas, and they might even sell them. The funniest
thing is there might be organizations that actually dabble in
(53:54):
selling that stuff themselves. But if you're too authentically that
behind closed doors, they might not I like you too much.
But anyway, the moment that this happens, a lot of
the employees walk out, and a lot of social media
is saying, don't let the door hit you on the
way out. See Vanity Ferrell. Find somebody else. I don't
know how hard it is to hire in that world.
Other things out there that are just sillier, that are
(54:17):
less serious and honestly more fun to talk about sometimes
than the craziness of what's going on in our society.
What's the most useless job that people are paid for?
Was a question that was asked on Reddit and other places,
and I really like this. Politicians came in at number four,
by the way, which is way too low. That should
be the most useless job. But reaction videos was number one.
(54:40):
People who watch a video that was viral and react
to it actually do make money off of it, influencing
came in at number two, which I thought was hilarious.
Anyone who's an influencer, I might not have a very
valuable thing in our society, but tell that to a
young person and they'll say, how dare you?
Speaker 2 (54:57):
And then finally, multi level marketing.
Speaker 1 (55:00):
A lot of people think they're running their own business,
but for many multi level marketing ends up standing for
we're gonna lose money because we don't need to market
at the spending levels.
Speaker 2 (55:09):
I love that too.
Speaker 1 (55:10):
Wasted money In video quick break a lot more Craig
Collin's filling in on the data show.
Speaker 3 (55:15):
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Speaker 9 (56:19):
Makes some common sense of the crazy headlines. With a
Dana Show podcast, you're on the go guide for getting
up to speed on today's most important stories. Subscribe on YouTube,
Apple or your favorite podcast platform.
Speaker 2 (56:31):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in.
Speaker 1 (56:34):
Thrilled to be with you d Lash Dana Lash Radio
on x on Twitter, great ways to stay connected everything
she's got going on. I will play the data audio
that I played at the beginning of the show again
in about half an hour, her reacting to a lot
of what is being talked about. After the shooting in
Minneapolis by a transgender individual that apparently regretted being transgender.
(56:57):
This is an exclusive report from The New York Post.
A Minneapolis school shooter confessed he was tired of being
trans Quote I wish I never brainwashed myself was something
he had said so before actually carrying out this horrific act.
There were YouTube videos, there's manifesto, handwritten journal notes, a
(57:18):
bunch of different things that certainly demonstrate the reason for
the attack, the motive behind it, which for some reason
people are pretending in Minneapolis, including the mayor there, that
they still aren't really sure what the motive is. It's obvious,
and it matters, and it deserves to be discussed. Being
afraid of the truth is always a bad thing. Saying that, well,
(57:38):
I'm afraid of that, because that might make people do
something bad in response to the truth. That's never good,
and actually hiding the truth will only make anyone that
you're afraid of being angry angrier in the fact that
you hit it from them in the first place.
Speaker 2 (57:52):
But let's do this.
Speaker 1 (57:52):
Let's talk about some of these aspects to the story.
Apparently the person regretted that he had grown out his hair,
that he had changed his body, saying quote, He'll never
be a woman. I wish I was a girl. I
just know I can't achieve the body with the technology
we have today, I also can't afford it. He also
had said that cutting his hair and going back to
(58:13):
being a man wouldn't have been accepted. These are all
things that you've heard about before. You know, it's crazy
to see them in this sense, and this horrific of
a fashion to someone who decided to attack and kill
children at a school, which is just horrible. But even
more so than any of that, you've heard this, you've
heard people who regret these sort of things, and how
(58:34):
the trans community or whatever you call it, people out
there reject individuals. They say, no, no, no, we only
accept you if you're saying that you're one of us.
If you're saying that you actually are someone with a
mental health issue, we don't accept you, even if a
lot of us probably also have mental health issues.
Speaker 2 (58:51):
How dare you, sir, go that road at all?
Speaker 1 (58:54):
But this is just sort of crazy and again probably
not going to be reported a lot of places. But
the New York Post is a great track record of
putting this information out there, remember the hunter byten laptop
and who reported it to you first, demonstrating the level
of hypocrisy or trying to keep the truth away from
televisions and news cameras and all kinds of things. Andrew
(59:15):
McCabe popped up on CNN to talk about the remarkable
similarities between the Minneapolis shooter, a transgender person, and the
Nashville shooter, a transgender murderer. And the thing that's interesting
about this is when they talk about the similarities, something
is missing. They failed to mention some aspect that connects
(59:36):
these two people closely.
Speaker 2 (59:38):
Let's see if you can pick out what it is
here we go.
Speaker 14 (59:40):
Are you seeing a rise in copycats given what we're
learning about this obsession that existed?
Speaker 15 (59:49):
Yeah, absolutely, we are Erica, and I think this is
something that we've seen in other mass shootings. We've seen
mass shooters who actually refer in their manifesto to previous shooters.
But this, this one is really remarkable to me in
that respect.
Speaker 16 (01:00:02):
I was looking at you know, we don't. I haven't
seen the manifestos. I can't say whether there are.
Speaker 17 (01:00:07):
Specific references to the twenty twenty three Covenant School shooter
in Nashville.
Speaker 2 (01:00:11):
But if you look at that, if that's the situation.
Speaker 17 (01:00:14):
And this one, there are remarkable similarities. So both were
in their twenties, Both targeted religious schools that they formerly attended.
Both brought three weapons to the crime, Both purchased those
weapons legally.
Speaker 2 (01:00:28):
Both drove to the attack site and left a vehicle there.
Speaker 16 (01:00:32):
Both posted manifestos in which they raged and expressed grievance
towards numerous ethnic groups and religions, you know, a real
broad stroke of kind of anger there.
Speaker 17 (01:00:45):
Both sought to kill children, young children specifically. And I
think the most important here is both were students of
other mass shooters.
Speaker 1 (01:00:54):
Wait a minute, Wait a minute, all those things and
the most important was just that they were students of
mass shooters. There's nothing else that you think meant dares
to be mentioned about these two shooters, about their lives
and you know, their way of life, and the fact
that they're obviously dealing with mental health issues, not.
Speaker 2 (01:01:11):
The fact that they're both transgender.
Speaker 16 (01:01:14):
And this is key because I think what we're seeing
is as we have more and more of these mass shootings,
if you are someone who is mentally disturbed, aha alienated,
and filled with rage, and grievance, and you're considering doing this,
you can find a template, an example of someone just
(01:01:36):
like you who did it, and that can.
Speaker 1 (01:01:38):
Be and what what again is missing from this discussion,
from these conversations, Look, it's sort of crazy to me
that the end result is we're just trying to protect
other transgender people from someone being mad at transgender people
in general, Because if you understand anything about the story,
the thing that's most horrible about the two shooters who
(01:01:58):
decided to kill Chill is that they blame someone else
for their anger. And so I'm not going to blame
anybody else. I don't care who you are, what you
identify as, none of that. I'm not going to blame
you the human for the mistakes of this horrible person.
I'm also not going to shy away from the truth
and say that part out loud so that other people
don't actually do this who are in a similar situation,
(01:02:21):
who believe themselves to be the opposite sex of what
they were born with and have a obvious mental health issue.
Gender dysphoria is another thing that you can call this.
MSNBC had a guest on television start to go this
road and within one minute they took a break. This
was crazy, but it was the kind of thing that
a rational person just would say out loud.
Speaker 2 (01:02:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:02:43):
No, Obviously, someone who goes to the level of, you know,
taking weapons to a church and shooting through stained glass
windows to kill kids was not mentally healthy. And there's
a bunch of things in this person's life that demonstrate
they weren't mentally healthy.
Speaker 2 (01:02:56):
How dare you say that is insane?
Speaker 1 (01:02:59):
Because MSNBC, MS NOW whatever they're called, is so terrified
of simply telling the truth.
Speaker 9 (01:03:06):
About this particular and about what weapons you need.
Speaker 12 (01:03:08):
We do know the person suffered from generice foria, any
targeted Catholic student, but I do We're not talking about, Hey, what.
Speaker 4 (01:03:14):
Are the solutions? What about what about what about Newtown, Parkland,
Las Vegas?
Speaker 2 (01:03:20):
We're Buffalo, None of those football had gender dysphoria? What
about Nashville the Pulse.
Speaker 6 (01:03:25):
Nightclub shooting, which targeted a gay nightclub, Like.
Speaker 8 (01:03:28):
This is not I understand all this is.
Speaker 12 (01:03:30):
We're gonna we're gonna do the thing where we're going
to focus on the fact that this person was suffering,
perhaps from gender dysphoria, but that's really not the relevant
point at.
Speaker 1 (01:03:38):
All all these people, it is the relevant point. And
here I'll tell you why it's actually the relevant point.
And yes, the person trying to argue with the guy
who said gender dysphoria on MSNBC is trying to demonstrate
how there's other mental health issues that cause people to
be horrible and do terrible things. And that is also true.
The catalyst to your ability to cause harm in our
(01:04:02):
society at whatever level, if you're emotionally a jerk to people,
or if you're horrifically evil and horrible and do things
like take lives of children, whatever the catalyst is to
get you to the place that you're at, can be different,
It can be multifaceted. Anyone who knows anything about mental
health knows that everyone's journey is different to get to
a point where maybe some people wind up being psychotic
(01:04:25):
pieces of evil trash, which is what this person who
committed this crime yesterday is. But you don't disregard the
demonstration of where the struggle was for someone because you
don't like it. You don't pretend, well, no, that person
couldn't have been mentally upset for that reason. That's evidently
mental struggle, and that the person even admitted themselves, according
(01:04:46):
to The New York Post, is something that was causing
them mental anguish. It literally is in all of the
different journals and whatnot. And so all of these things
go rolling together saying to you, Wow, we can't really
say this one part out loud. It's just because you
don't like that aspect of it. It's just because you
think someone else who's struggling with something similar to this
(01:05:07):
handles it differently, and you want to make sure we
know that. But of course that's true in every scenario.
And this is crazy to make this comparison. I wouldn't
normally make it, but this is really a demonstration of
how the left thinks and trying to argue with them.
Every single Trump supporter isn't the horrible, evil person that
you think they are. If one person who supports Trump
does something bad, it's the same thing. They're also not
(01:05:30):
driven insane because President Trump is this terrible person that
you say he is. How about right, another thing I
want to play And this just demonstrates how disconnected people
are from the issues they're supposed to be in charge of,
the issues they want to make rules about. This is
the mayor in Minneapolis, Jacob fry saying, Frey saying that
(01:05:50):
he basically doesn't understand how guns work in a question
and a conversation about firearms, about quote unquote assault weapons.
This to me is just really interesting because when these
people are in positions of power, you would hope that
they at least give themselves a little bit more information,
a little bit more knowledge to speak on this stuff intelligently.
Speaker 2 (01:06:11):
But of course they don't do that. There's no reason
for them to do that. Here's a demonstration of that.
Speaker 12 (01:06:14):
Have more guns in America than we have people. The
reality is is that we have these assault rifles that
can reel off thirty clips in conjunction with a magazine
before the person even needs to reload. The reality is
is did these guns make their way into cities across America?
(01:06:35):
By it the trunk have more guns than America.
Speaker 2 (01:06:38):
This is so stupid.
Speaker 1 (01:06:39):
We have these assault rifles that can reel off thirty
clips in conjunction with a magazine before the person needs
to reload.
Speaker 2 (01:06:47):
Huh, what did you what did you.
Speaker 1 (01:06:49):
Just say thirty clips in conjunction with a magazine. That
makes no sense in the world of guns. And obviously
someone told him before he did this interview that assault
weapons do certain things and fire bullets more rapidly, although
by and large most of the guns that people use
aren't actually assault weapons. They are weapons that you have
to pull a trigger every time you fire it, which
(01:07:11):
no one in mainstream media or these idiots seems to understand.
I'm just saying it because I can't help it. But nonetheless,
what I love about it is thirty clips in conjunction
with the magazine. That's the dumbest thing I've heard by
someone trying to make rules about guns in quite some time.
It's uniquely stupid out there. But thanks a lot for
helping us out and understanding that better or doing whatever
(01:07:32):
you wanted to do to make that a thing. One
last piece of audio that I wanted to play before
we take a break. I call this a palette cleanser,
call it whatever you want to call it.
Speaker 2 (01:07:41):
It is just crazy too. But it's a woman or
a dude.
Speaker 1 (01:07:44):
It's actually a guy I dressed like a woman with
a beard and rainbow hair that calls himself Candy von
Sparkle aka Christopher his pronouns See I'm being respectful, are he?
Speaker 7 (01:07:57):
She?
Speaker 2 (01:07:58):
And they?
Speaker 1 (01:07:58):
Which is also I don't think I've seen that a
lot before, where someone's like all of them, I'm just
all the pronouns. But he also started worship at a
church in Florida outline United Methodist Church. And this is
blowing people's brains. This is confusing a whole lot of people.
Here's a little bit of audio this.
Speaker 18 (01:08:18):
My name is Katy von Sparkle aka Christopher. My pronouns
are he, she, and they please join me responsibly in
a call to worship Source of Life in the beginning.
Speaker 2 (01:08:32):
I'm very confused by a lot of this. By the way,
my favorite part is if you're listening.
Speaker 1 (01:08:35):
In the background, you hear a little kid laughing because
the little kid is looking up at a person wearing
a rainbow dress. That's a big burly dude with a
beard and glasses and like a rainbow wig and kind
of laughing like this is funny to me because I
think this looks like more of a clown than a human.
Speaker 2 (01:08:52):
So here I'll play that again. I really want you
to pay attention to laughter.
Speaker 18 (01:08:55):
My name is Katy von Sparkle aka Christopher. My pronouns
are he she is?
Speaker 1 (01:09:02):
Is right there in the background, a kid being like
this is fun. Whatever's going on right now, I don't
get it. I'm not trying to make fun of someone
for who they are what they think they are.
Speaker 2 (01:09:10):
By the way, although I'm.
Speaker 1 (01:09:11):
Not afraid of that, I will say though, this is
uniquely strange, but it also demonstrates maybe the mental struggle
that a lot of us deal with, and how turning
to faith in God might be helpful in some way,
whatever that way might be. And so even more so,
maybe if the transgender murderer who killed people yesterday knew
(01:09:32):
about this, or saw this, or turned to the church himself,
the church might help that person be better in what
way I'm not sure, But again, this is the craziest
thing that I've seen in a while.
Speaker 2 (01:09:44):
And Candy von.
Speaker 1 (01:09:45):
Sparkle aka Christopher, he, she and they is a unique
thing to see. So if you go on social media
and see it, I am surprised it was only one
person in the audience. Not surprised it was a kid
that was reacting the way that they did. All right,
quick break, A lot coming up. This is Craig Collins
filling in on the Dana Show.
Speaker 2 (01:10:04):
It's his laf mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida man. That's right, it's time for Florida man.
This is the Dana Show.
Speaker 1 (01:10:15):
My name is Craig Collins, filling in d Lash Dana
Lash Radio on X on Twitter to stay connected to her.
Speaker 2 (01:10:20):
I got three of them for you today.
Speaker 1 (01:10:22):
First, some people seem surprised by this, but if you
know anything about Florida, maybe you're not all that surprise.
There were some people driving around a seven thousand dollars
mobile dispensary. Vehicle surveillance foiled a Florida man who was
driving his weed products, his edibles, everything in a van.
Speaker 2 (01:10:42):
This happened in Fort Myers. Actually the weed van.
Speaker 1 (01:10:45):
I captured the man stealing seven thousand dollars in merchandise
from another place and trying to make off with it.
All of this is crazy, according to Lee County Sheriff's Office.
The suspect later identified as thirty one year old Zachary Jolly.
Speaker 4 (01:10:59):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:11:00):
I'm amused that his last name is Jolly.
Speaker 1 (01:11:01):
Broke a window, gained access to a mobile dispensary dubbed
Queen of Weed, and then stole a whole bunch of
stuff in it. A surveillange footage obtained by deputies show
Folly filling a trash can with edibles, mushrooms and vapes
and then making off.
Speaker 2 (01:11:15):
With the trash can.
Speaker 1 (01:11:17):
Just an interesting set of decisions being made by this moron.
But Florida the big takeaways. They have weed trucks. And
so another guy out there in Florida was attacked by
a bear at his house. It's a real story. A
black bear walked up to a dude's house in Florida.
This was at four thirty am. I don't know why
the guy was awake. He got scratches on his arm
(01:11:38):
and stuff, but mostly he won by just yelling at
the bear to go away. I would play the audio,
but there's bad words in there too. The dude said
he was in a haze when he opened the door
that early in the morning with the doorbell video camera,
saying that certain things were happening, and then he sees
a bear. The bear hits him in the arm and stuff,
and he's lucky to be alive because he just started
(01:11:59):
to yell at the bear, go away, get away from me, bear,
And that seemed to be effective. So if you want
that as a proof of concept to show to the
missus or show to anyone else. Whenever you say that
you could defeat a bear in some sort of fight,
there you go. At least one time it worked out
the way it's supposed to. I'm not sure if it'll
happen if you try it too. I'm not recommending you
(01:12:20):
do that, by the way.
Speaker 2 (01:12:21):
And finally, a.
Speaker 1 (01:12:22):
Florida woman was arrested for allegedly super gluing veneers of
victim's teeth directly to their faces without any sort of license.
She claimed to be a dentist. You had to go
over her house to get the procedure done. There was
nobody else there, just her. She was really cheap, though,
so a bunch of people in Florida are like, well,
I want veneers, and I don't want to pay real
money for it, so this seems fine. Surprise surprise that
(01:12:45):
the lady using super glue to glue things onto your
teeth was not, in fact a licensed dentist in a
place like Florida. I would never go to any home
in Florida for any kind of mental procedure, of any
medical procedure of any kind, mostly because I'd be afraid
I'd wake up without kidneys. That's just me assuming that,
but again, you decide what you need to do. I'm
(01:13:05):
going that road. Quick break, A lot coming up. Craig
Collins filling in on the Danish show. This is the
Danish Show. My name is Craig Collins, filling in.
Speaker 2 (01:13:14):
Thrilled to be with you.
Speaker 1 (01:13:15):
A whole bunch of stuff out there to talk about.
I do want to play some audio of Dana because
it went really viral on social media and it's just
excellent conversation about the topic at hand. I know that
Dana's not here today, but this is some of her
take on what's going on after the horrible shooting in
Minneapolis where a transgender man decided to shoot through a
(01:13:38):
stained glass window and kill children that were in church
praying while it's school. Just a horrific story. And here's
some of what Dana said the other day. Again, this
went very viral on social media. Excellent, excellent take, and
I probably don't need to say much after I play it,
so we'll see.
Speaker 2 (01:13:52):
But here we go, false choice.
Speaker 4 (01:13:54):
It's not what people are crying for now is how
can we prevent this?
Speaker 2 (01:13:58):
How can we stop it?
Speaker 4 (01:14:00):
And the only way to stop it is to identify
the shooter ahead of time, or keep the weapons out
of their hands. And so we're going to have to
have a conversation of freedom versus protecting children. I mean,
how many school shootings does it take before we're going
to have a conversation about keeping firearms out. It's always
a young white male.
Speaker 3 (01:14:20):
Because a trans terrorist, enabled by his mother goes and
shoots up a church. That means the rest of us
have to be disarmed so that we can be easier
victims for more trans terrorists or criminals in the future.
That is what he's arguing here. The problem is that
trans is a mental illness. We are jacking people up
(01:14:43):
with hormones. We are indulging a dangerous mental behavior. We
are demanding that everyone accommodate a mental illness, go along
with it. It'll make everything okay. Clearly it doesn't, because
there's an increasing number of transtifa going out and killing children.
(01:15:04):
So clearly that's not working. It's not a conversation of
freedom versus protecting children. It's a conversation about getting off
your ass and stop blaming guns and protecting children.
Speaker 2 (01:15:14):
Amen, Amen, Dana Lash.
Speaker 1 (01:15:16):
That is excellently said and excellently done, and abundantly true,
because now it's more than one time that we've had
someone transgender and this is uniquely horrible about this choose
to find a Catholic school that they had attended to
kill children at. And so at what point do you say, hey,
(01:15:36):
there's too much of this. A media is very willing
to say that it's a white man or potentially a
Trump supporter or whatever it might be that causes these
kind of horrific things. But when do we have enough
of the same thing happening with the same set of
ideological beliefs for mainstream legacy media to call for that
to be included in the narrative, not excluded. They're picking
(01:15:58):
and choosing which ones they talk about out in which
ones they don't talk about, which is damaging a whole
lot of people. By the way, the New York Post
did report exclusively today that the transgender guy regretted being transgender,
regretted trying to be a woman, saying quote that he
would never be a girl, and essentially seemed upset by
(01:16:19):
that because a whole bunch of people in society and
in media, and certainly in some of the medical places
in this person's life convinced him he could be something
that he obviously couldn't be. They told him he'd be
a woman, and he never became a woman, and he
knew it. And so he said he wanted to cut
his hair, he wanted to go back to being a guy,
but then felt that that would get him ostracized, which
(01:16:40):
it would in the communities that had embraced him, and
then he's ostracized everywhere, and so instead he just kills kids.
A horrible, awful, a terrible story. And again, you need
to be willing. And actually, I'm going to use the
logic of John Stewart in a way that he's probably
not gonna be happy about in saying that's not okay.
(01:17:01):
You have to bring light to conversations. You can't defeat
anything in darkness, essentially meaning that the people who want
to refuse to acknowledge that the transgender identity of this
person played a role in what they did and who
they targeted in the mental health issues they were struggling with.
Anyone who refuses that idea is pushing us toward something bad,
(01:17:23):
not something good. By continuing to reject the idea that,
of course this is a part of this and any
rational person can understand it all right, other things I
want to talk about. I am a giant Yankee fan.
I think I've mentioned that on this show before. It's
not usually relevant to the stuff we talk about on
the Dana Show, unless the Yankees are uniquely getting beat up,
which seems to be a thing.
Speaker 2 (01:17:43):
More often than all.
Speaker 1 (01:17:44):
They do sweep bad teams, so that's nice. But Mark Tshera,
a former first Basement for World Series winning New York Yankees,
announced his candidacy for a congress seat in Texas around
San Antonio is where this seat is located, the twenty
first Congressional district.
Speaker 2 (01:18:00):
I am beyond excited. There are not many times in my.
Speaker 1 (01:18:04):
Political radio talk show career the show I do in Houston,
which Dana is actually on that station. We are an
affiliate station of hers, Patriot Talk nine to twenty. For
anyone that wants to listen to that station when Dana
is on or I'm on, that'd be nice, But there's
not a lot of opportunities where you can talk politics
and sports with a person like this. I immediately sent contact
(01:18:24):
to their press department, being like I would love to
do it. I'm filling in for data on these days,
I'm doing this other stuff on these days. Please jump
on Mark and talk to me about more than just politics.
Talk to me about what it's like to hit home
runs in World Series games. But yes, that is a
big candidacy being mentioned. I hope to share a wins man.
I also find this funny in a different way, and
(01:18:45):
this is just something to mention. Nestor Cortez is a
former Yankee. He's the guy that had a mustache, that
was a pretty good pitcher, even though maybe at times
not exactly as good as you'd hope he'd be. I
didn't have quite the stuff that you'd expect him to
have to be as successful as he was.
Speaker 2 (01:19:02):
You don't care about that part.
Speaker 1 (01:19:03):
Anyway, He attended a Trump rally. There was a rally
when Trump was running for office this most recent time
where he name dropped Nestor Cortez and talked about his fastball,
which was deceptive, not necessarily very fast. But anyway, I
just thought that was so funny, because then Nestor got traded.
Speaker 2 (01:19:20):
He left New York at some point after.
Speaker 1 (01:19:22):
Whether that's because Yankee fans would reject a conservative or not,
I don't know. I doubt they'll reject to Shera though
he's a very different version of Yankee because he won
a World Series and that's something a lot of people
haven't won currently on that team, anyone currently on that team,
although Labor Torres might win one with a different team,
which is said, and you don't care, and I have
to move on. But I'm just excited about this, so
(01:19:44):
I figured i'd throw it into the ether of stuff.
We're talking about that Mark Tschera is running for a
congressional seat, and of course Testric Texas excuse me, finally
succeeded in its redistricting. The Democrats ran away, made a
national spectacle of deciding to not show up to do
their jobs, and then when they finally did decide that
(01:20:04):
they had to show up. And now there's going to
be new penalties in place if you run away again,
and even lawyers that advise them they should just go back.
They did the thing we expected all along.
Speaker 2 (01:20:14):
They lost.
Speaker 1 (01:20:15):
So Texas has redistricted. There are certain parts of Houston
where I live that people now think are very much
up for grabs, are potentially going to go to conservative representation,
which is good because living here and walking around there's
a bunch of people in certain communities who seem to
be supporters of the side that's not well represented in
our current government. A lot of Democrats in a lot
(01:20:36):
of positions of power. It'd be nice to see some
more Republicans there. But there's even other races where Democrats
assume that they're actually still going to win, where I
do like some of the fighting that might be going on.
We actually might be talking to one of those politicians
a Carmen Montille in the near future on this show
and some other things that I do, because she's running
in a district that got redistricted in a way that
(01:20:57):
would hurt conservatives and she's not letting it. I think
that's interesting because the other thing I think is kind
of funny about this when we talk about these topics,
and I wonder if the main, you know, everyday human
person who doesn't obsess about politics even cares about this
stuff all that much.
Speaker 2 (01:21:14):
So I'll say this in a way.
Speaker 1 (01:21:15):
That hopefully makes you care if you don't. But I
love how much politicians just assume they're going to win
here or win there. They look at certain numbers, certain
turnout rates and are like, Okay, this is a lock
for us, so much so that if you were part
of the behind the scenes world of politics, you'd assume
the race isn't even important, Like the topics aren't even important,
the stances aren't important. I'd love it if a bunch
(01:21:37):
of Americans throughout this country could prove to the politicians
that the things they say actually do matter, that the
races do matter, and people can show up and flood
ballot boxes and win elections. Because also during an off year,
during a mid term election or a special election in
the case of some of this stuff, a whole lot
of people don't show up. So the amount of people,
(01:21:57):
the amount of support it would take to actually flip
something is way less than what it used.
Speaker 2 (01:22:03):
To be years ago.
Speaker 1 (01:22:04):
You could do this quite easily, and Texas could go
from creating the assumption of four or five six congressional
seats to like ten congressional seats or something, which would
be amazing, which would be very, very different. But again,
I would just love to remind people and have other
voters in the places I live remind people that you
actually have to run the race, and you actually have
to say stuff out loud. It's not just the world
(01:22:26):
of the presidency where that matters, where Biden and Harris
cannot win an election against Donald Trump because neither one
of them could put together coherent sentences that seem to
actually have stances on things, and any stances they actually
took on stuff, especially Harris, seemed way further to the
left than what they wanted to say in public. But nonetheless,
I do think this is interesting, as I said, and
(01:22:47):
I do think we'll see how it all plays out.
As California, Illinois other places are going to try to
redistrict even harder, Jerry Mander back even harder, and create
more seats in their places.
Speaker 2 (01:22:58):
Again, the American people would.
Speaker 1 (01:23:00):
Do well right now to remind the politicians we're actually
in power by voting and showing up in places where
they assume a certain side's going to win something. Not
because I want to see conservatives lose. I want Conservatives
to win more, not less seats. That would be great,
But I would also love to watch places like California
and Illinois be shocked when they don't manufacture wins for Democrats,
(01:23:22):
which I think can happen, and certainly I think it
can happen to some of the districts has created in Texas,
even after the assumption is we're probably going to lose
that race here or this race there. All right, we'll
take a break. A lot coming up. Craig Collins filling
in on the Dana Show.
Speaker 8 (01:23:36):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 2 (01:23:41):
That's right, this is the Quick Five and the Dana Show.
Speaker 1 (01:23:44):
My name is Craig Collins filling in d Lash, Dana
Lash Radio and X on Twitter.
Speaker 2 (01:23:48):
A great ways to stay connected to her.
Speaker 1 (01:23:50):
Former NFL quarterback Matt Liinert got roasted by Alexa in
front of his son.
Speaker 2 (01:23:55):
This is sort of funny, interesting audio that went viral.
Here we got light.
Speaker 13 (01:24:02):
Matt Lenon was a Heisman Trophy winning quarterback at USC
and tracked him nfrograph than his career.
Speaker 2 (01:24:09):
Didn't know not too much. Yea, that's true. It's not wrong.
The pro creud did amount very much.
Speaker 1 (01:24:18):
But yes, that's something that Amazon and its app told
the children of Matt Lionert in front of Matt Lionert,
which is fantastic.
Speaker 2 (01:24:27):
I do like that one a whole lot.
Speaker 1 (01:24:29):
A car salesman was fired after he posted a TikTok
video saying he overcharged a single mom ten thousand dollars
per a car.
Speaker 2 (01:24:37):
The guy's name is Kenny.
Speaker 1 (01:24:38):
He claimed it was a bad joke online that went
viral the handa dealership in Racing, Wisconsin.
Speaker 2 (01:24:45):
I decided it was bad pr for them.
Speaker 1 (01:24:47):
I know people who've worked as car salesmen, and some
of them say that the industry is uniquely awful, that
you are encouraged to do as many terrible things as possible.
Speaker 2 (01:24:56):
To rip people off.
Speaker 1 (01:24:57):
This probably feeds into a lot of that fear and
some of the reality in that industry. But this is
some of the audio about the guy claiming it was
all just a bad joke in a misunderstanding that went crazy.
Speaker 19 (01:25:09):
I wanted to come out here and publicly apologize and
take ownership and accountability for my Actually I offended a lot,
a lot, a lot a lot of people. I'm sorry, Okay,
my account is based on satire. Everything that I post
is nothing but a joke. I would never post actual
true events.
Speaker 7 (01:25:26):
I want to.
Speaker 19 (01:25:26):
Apologize to the single mothers and just women in general.
I'm a single parent myself. I know what that struggle
was like, going to work, having to take care of
the kids, or I found it funny because it's unrealistic.
The brand that I was once selling for, they don't
do markups, especially not a ten thousand dollars markup.
Speaker 1 (01:25:41):
Fired, by the way, was the decision they made after
this guy went viral for claiming he had done something
that he said he didn't do. If there is a
woman that comes forward saying she's the woman that got
overcharged by the car that bought.
Speaker 2 (01:25:53):
It from Kenny, he screwed.
Speaker 1 (01:25:55):
But I do understand how people go on social media
and try to make sarcastic jokes to wind up hurting them.
I'm not exactly a fan of cancel culture if this
is all just a joke, but I don't know why
he would find this funny, you know, to go after
the idea that someone ripped off a single mom because
a lot of people have done it and it's not funny,
And I understand why people thought it wasn't funny. And
it's uniquely bad if you're a sales guy, because you
(01:26:16):
want to convince people that you're trustworthy to go viral
for something like this. I don't know what other place
hires him like. I don't know where he lands next
in the old sales career. That was a uniquely dumb
decision that he made. All right some other things out
there for quick top five stuff that I thought was
kind of funny. Seventy two percent of Americans do not
care that Travis Kelcey and Taylor Swift are engaged, even
(01:26:39):
though it seemed to quote break the Internet and cause
all kinds of social media records. I am very much
in that seventy two percent that did not care, and
even more than that, I think this is kind of amusing.
It actually makes me more upset at the idea that
the NFL season that's coming up might somehow feature Taylor
Swift again.
Speaker 2 (01:26:59):
It needs to stop, wo man.
Speaker 1 (01:27:01):
Although I get why it's happening, especially in the wake
of the fact that this had as much popularity as
it did with the thirty percent of people who talked
about it a whole bunch. They might watch more sports,
They might sit there and be annoying during the NFL
game every time the Taylor Swift comes on TV and
are excited about it. I just like the other people
are mad when she comes on TV as well. The
(01:27:22):
only thing I've ever liked about any part of this
is that it caused a lot of daughters to sit
with pop and watch NFL games with them, and that
I think is cool. But I do think that inevitably
you're kind of hoping that the kid winds up interested
in the football part of the equation, and I'm guessing
that doesn't always turn out the way that some of
these guys might hope. But nonetheless, this is a story
out there that seems very obvious. My favorite part of
(01:27:45):
it is my wife did tell me about it, and
I saw social media jokes of other dudes saying their
wives told them about it, and I reacted very much
like all the parody accounts claim they did, like, Okay,
I don't care, it'll be fine, everything's great.
Speaker 2 (01:27:58):
Thanks for letting me know. That doesn't change my life
at all. All Right.
Speaker 1 (01:28:02):
Finally, the top three scariest natural disasters do not include hurricanes,
according to people. This is a recent survey a Talker research.
I think did this Tornado came in at number one,
Tsunami number two, earthquake number three, hurricane was number four.
I think it all depends on location, location, location, where
you live in the likelihood of any sort of potential
(01:28:24):
thing being the thing that happens to you is probably
what you're most afraid of.
Speaker 2 (01:28:27):
My wife was more afraid of some things when we.
Speaker 1 (01:28:29):
Didn't live in Texas. She's afraid of hurricanes now that
we live in Houston. All right, Well, take a break.
A lot coming up. This is the Craig Collins not Show,
but version, filling in on the very famous, very popular
Danas Show.
Speaker 2 (01:28:41):
More in a bit.
Speaker 9 (01:28:43):
Not Able to catch all three hours of the Dana Show,
subscribe to the full podcast and get news and laughs
delivered in short, easy to digest episodes, ideal for your
busy lifestyle on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.
Speaker 1 (01:28:58):
This is the Danish Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you. A bunch of
stuff to talk about. We haven't mentioned this much, but
we deserve to definitely describe it or talk about it at
least a little. That would be the crime crackdown in Washington,
d C. Even the mayor in DC seems to be
somewhat quote grateful for the crackdown because hey, for the
(01:29:19):
first time in a long time, there has not been
any murder in Washington, d C. For several days. That
is a uniquely sad thing to be proud of. But
it's definitely true. The amount of other crime things that
have gone down are significant. Is she actually grateful? Is
she sarcastically grateful? You go ahead and decide. I'll play
some of the audio. But the numbers speak for themselves.
(01:29:41):
Crime is down, and that is good.
Speaker 2 (01:29:43):
That enhance.
Speaker 14 (01:29:45):
We greatly appreciate the surge of officers that enhance what
MPD has been able to do in this city. The
most significant thing that we are highlighting today is the
(01:30:05):
area of crime that was most troubling for us in
twenty twenty three. Now we have driven it down over
the last years, but the last years.
Speaker 2 (01:30:17):
I do love that way.
Speaker 1 (01:30:18):
She said that because she wanted to say last few weeks,
but years is what came out.
Speaker 14 (01:30:23):
Now, we have driven it down over the last years.
But I'm gonna get my glasses so I can make
sure I can see it correctly. But for carjackings, the
difference between this period, this twenty day period of this
federal surge and last year represents a eighty seven percent
(01:30:45):
reduction in carjackings.
Speaker 1 (01:30:48):
I love how proud she is two of what she's saying,
Because she said years. She's trying to make it not
about Trump, But then she looks at a stat from
the last twenty days and how it compares to a
year ago, and things seem to be quite a bit better.
Eighty seven percent reduction in carjackings alone. Why is all
this happening. It's not just because the people who are
doing these things are getting caught. It's that everybody else
(01:31:09):
who contemplates this is terrified that they also would get
caught if they do that.
Speaker 2 (01:31:13):
The deterrent is working. The thing that we're.
Speaker 1 (01:31:16):
Supposed to do to convince people not to do stuff
in the first place is actually causing the crime waves
to finally EBB, finally start to go the right direction.
This is the kind of thing we want to see
in more places. The biggest thing that's a problem for
so many cities is how much they demonstrate a willingness
to let criminals get away. I did not even really
(01:31:38):
try to go after them or release them from jail
relatively quickly after apprehending them. All of these things make
people much more confident I can just do more. But
when you have actual deterrence preventing people from feeling as
though what they would do would be something that they'd
get away with. Guess what, Shockingly, numbers go down also
this information. I thought this was interesting.
Speaker 2 (01:31:58):
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Speaker 1 (01:32:00):
Ounce that HHS will be launching a study into SSRIs
all different kinds of discussions about the treatment for transgender
individuals what they call, you know, gender affirming care, which
might also cause a lot of mental health issues. This
is simple warning information that's actually available on the medication
(01:32:21):
that some people are encouraging you to give to kids
who say that they're confused with whether or not they're
a boy or girl, which is just uniquely horrible.
Speaker 2 (01:32:30):
But listen as Robert F.
Speaker 1 (01:32:31):
Kennedy Junior Has asked this question and talks about how
obvious this seems to be as far as a road
we should go down medically, especially after a second trans
gender person killed children in a Catholic school. This seems
like the exactly appropriate decision to be made, and yet
some people are going to call this horrible and hateful somehow,
(01:32:52):
even though it's one hundred percent factual in everything that
gets stated.
Speaker 2 (01:32:56):
Here.
Speaker 5 (01:32:56):
Here we go, and we're still trying to get a
lot of answers to a ton of questions. But the
one thing is clear. You are dealing with a person
who's trends that was transitioning. Are you going to be
examining it all some of the drugs that are used
in order to make that transition happening, to see if
it plays a role, because we also know there was
a trans shooter in the Tennessee situation.
Speaker 6 (01:33:20):
Yeah, we are doing those kind of studies now at
an age we're launching studies on the potential contribution of
some of the ssri I drugs and some of the
other psychiatric drugs that might be contributing to violence. You know,
(01:33:44):
many of them on there had black box warnings that
weren't of suicidal ideation and homicidal ideation, so we need
we can't exclude those as a culprit. And those are
the kind of studies that were doing.
Speaker 1 (01:34:00):
Yeah, you can't exclude those as a culprit, and you
should be studying them. This isn't controversial, This is simple
common sense. I do want to say one other thing
about this. I know the platform of this show is gigantic.
I'm just some fill in guy, some guest hosts that
you'll forget about very soon. So I don't know if
my opinion even carries all that much weights, But I'm
going to do it anyway, because darn it, I have
(01:34:20):
the platform today. I think that it's interesting that the
left will shape all of the discussions about the transgender
shooter as hate. That's the only way they'll describe it.
They'll say that anyone out there with a conservative ideology,
with talking head opportunities to be in media, or even
just someone who shares their thoughts online and goes viral,
(01:34:41):
that they have to be fueled by hate. They couldn't
possibly love and care about people that they vehemently disagree
with in any host of ways. And that is so
ridiculous and nonsense, and it's something the left is actually
using to try to chastise the right to say, how
dare you say facts out loud and say that people
with mental health issues mental health treatment and don't need
(01:35:02):
to be say convinced they're gonna be a woman someday
if they can't be a woman, and that that might
continue to be a problem for them in their life
mentally if they don't get the thing they've been promised,
whatever it might be. Again, all of this is actually
not from hate. I feel compassion. I feel sorry for
people in certain situations. And I will go ahead and
acknowledge one thing that probably a whole lot of people
(01:35:23):
in conservative media won't that I understand the minute percentage
of individuals that are born biologically different than you know,
other people, meaning that they have all the biological hormones
and whatnot of a guy and the body of a girl.
Speaker 2 (01:35:38):
I understand that.
Speaker 1 (01:35:39):
But how you go about treating that very unique human
the point something percent of people, and how you go
talking about that individual, and then how you go applying
any of those kind of thoughts to everyone else that
now thinks they're in a bubble they're not in. I'll
talk to you about it in a different way. So,
if you study psychology at all, and I know I've
(01:36:00):
talked about this before in Dana Show, It's true, there's
actually even a term for it. But if you study
psychology at all, you wind up diagnosing yourself with most
of the things you study. So you study depression, you
study very simplistic things or more advanced things. I think
doctors also struggle with this, and eventually, as you read
through some of these symptoms.
Speaker 2 (01:36:19):
You go, wait a minute, I think I have this.
It's just a human thing.
Speaker 1 (01:36:22):
It's a human aspect of life and not knowing something
and then slowly acquiring knowledge, and maybe also a lot
of us being paranoid and or just afraid in society
or in life.
Speaker 2 (01:36:33):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:36:34):
I don't know what causes it, but it does happen.
And just think about the world we're in right now
and the amount of young people, children who are convinced
that they have this unique set of circumstances where they're
in the wrong body, but with medicine and also you know,
body mutilating operations, they can change and be in a
(01:36:55):
different body and then everything will be okay. And when
they find out later in life, as this trend gender
shooter did, that they weren't okay, that life wasn't better,
that whatever the mental health issue that they were struggling with,
wasn't fixed by the stuff that people didn't understand and
didn't that you can't comprehend everything going inside going on
inside someone's brain.
Speaker 2 (01:37:14):
You can't.
Speaker 1 (01:37:14):
You can think you do, but you don't. And so
who knows what the issue is that's actually causing the
person to struggle? Who knows what the problem is? And
dangling the carot of a solution that might not actually
fix things. A whole lot of people who regret transgender
surgeries and treatment say the same thing, It didn't cause
the happiness in them that they thought it would cause.
(01:37:37):
Because a whole lot of people who are all different
kinds of mental health, you know, struggling, all different kinds
of mental health issues, they wait to hear someone tell
them there's hope, that there is a solution, there is
a thing, and then they gravitate toward whatever that solution is.
And right now our society is screaming from the rooftops
that a whole lot of people can be transgender, when
(01:37:57):
mathematically that's absolutely unlikely to be a thing that's even
remotely close to true, if it's true at all. And again,
I understand that people will disagree on that. I understand
that it might be controversial even to say it. But regardless,
the vast majority of young people right now who are
using pronouns that don't match their birth biological gender I
(01:38:19):
think are mentally struggling. I don't think they're legitimately people
that are quote born in the wrong bodies. I don't
actually think that exists at all. By the way, I
should say that out loud. I do think there are
some things that might be more unique in how you
discuss all that, but that's irrelevant.
Speaker 2 (01:38:33):
I don't think you're born in the wrong body.
Speaker 1 (01:38:35):
But as I say this again, I just think it's
so amazing that the left needs it to be hate
because they want to motivate and mobilize the left to
keep hating the right. You hate people that you think
are hateful. You like people that you think like you.
It's also a very obvious common human trait. Compassion is
something that does seem to be lacking in a lot
(01:38:57):
of places in our society right now, because it seems
that people walk into a room and decide, do you
like me or hate me? Actually, I'll talk about one
other thing, and this isn't terribly connected, but it is,
at least in my own personal experience, somewhat connected. I've
noticed relocating to Houston. I was living in Chicago for
a long time and then working in some atmospheres, not
(01:39:17):
in radio, not what I do right now, but being
in some places in sort of a professional setting where
race is at the forefront of a lot of people's minds,
and I worked with black colleagues in a few different
ways in which they would talk about these things, and
one even said something to me to the effect of,
like she hated white men. She said it to me
a white guy and just someding like casually said it.
(01:39:37):
And I walked away from a lot of those interactions
thinking the obsession with race and the belief that it's
in my mind when I'm interacting with you, when it's not.
I'm not even thinking about that. And I know that
might sound like it's not true, but it is. I
was raised at a time in my life for in
a time in society where we were hyper focused on
the racial mistakes of the past of this country, and
(01:39:58):
we taught kids in classrooms all about the Civil rights
movement and whatnot, and so I think I've been taught
for a very since a very young age to disregard
your race and to judge you as a human as
a person based on what you do what you don't do. Man, woman,
none of that matters. All that matters is who you
are underneath. And that is something that people don't seem
to accept is true, which is also uniquely horrible that
(01:40:20):
no matter what I say, or how I behave, or
if I demonstrate a lack of say, you know, racial
beliefs that they disregard it individuals around me because I think, well,
it can't be he's a white guy. He's got to
be racist. He's got to be this, he's got to
be that. I think that's a big problem too in
our society. I think people who are told they're transgender
and then think they're going to get a solution that
(01:40:41):
they don't inevitably get because that's not the issue. Inevitably
also believe that everybody hates them when they walk into
a room dressed like a woman but they look like
a man. I think that obviously there's going to be
challenges there. And I think that a lot of people
who are hoping for some magic version of someday waking up,
you know, much happier than you did the day before,
and it not occurring makes you angry and blame people,
(01:41:03):
and that hate is magnified because well, it gets people
to show up and vote in elections. All right, we'll
take a break a little bit coming up after this
A lot more fun to end the show, because darn it,
we have to. We can't talk about this stuff all day.
This is the Dana Show. Craig Collins filling in.
Speaker 9 (01:41:17):
More after this, 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 1 (01:41:29):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you. Dana will be
back after the holidays. I'll be back in tomorrow. I'll
be hanging out with you next week. There will be
a best of show on Monday. That's all the programming
notes I have for right now. Let's do this A
couple just sillier things out there first. Apparently a researcher
(01:41:49):
at the University of Bristol has told us that there's
a song that makes chocolate taste better. I don't know
what kind of world we live in right now where
people are desperate for anything, but I don't think you
need music hands the delicious taste of chocolate. I just
don't think that's something a researcher needs to be working on.
I'll play the song for you first, and then we
can listen to some stuff that the researcher says about it.
Speaker 2 (01:42:10):
But this is the music.
Speaker 1 (01:42:11):
It's called sweetest Melody because, of course it is that
if you eat chocolate while listening to this, you're supposed
to enjoy yourself more. According to at least one woman
that has been researching deliciousness of chocolate for some time.
A great job. By the way, she's got a great gig.
Whatever grant is funding her is something that seems unfair
and probably a waste of money.
Speaker 2 (01:42:32):
Here we go.
Speaker 1 (01:42:46):
Why does it sound so bad, by the way, like,
why does it sound like it was recorded poorly? Couldn't
you have done a better job with the sweetest Melody
chocolate song that's supposed to make chocolate taste better? Again,
let's give you a little more and anyway, that's the music.
(01:43:07):
I will go ahead and play some of the audio
of the creator of the music, doctor Natalie Heischen, who
I don't even know if I said her last name correctly,
the famous Heisians of course the University of Bristol.
Speaker 2 (01:43:20):
It made me laugh a lot.
Speaker 1 (01:43:21):
Anyway, she's saying that you know this works, it's great,
you can do it next time you're eating chocolate to
make it taste even better. And also maybe at some
point describing how she conned a lot of people into
giving her money to study something that did not need
to be studied.
Speaker 2 (01:43:35):
Here we go.
Speaker 20 (01:43:36):
So I've partnered with Galaxy Chocolate to bring you a
soundtrack designed to help people enjoy chocolate in a more
heightened sensory experience. We looked at particular son equalities and
they were pitch, tempo, and harmony. The more regulated music
is the sweetw it can taste. So the track is
(01:43:58):
a beautiful piano melodic track that is in a high
pitch with a bpm of seventy eight. And the harp
is obviously a very beautiful sound of.
Speaker 2 (01:44:08):
Course, high pitch and high key, right, so beautiful all
of it.
Speaker 1 (01:44:13):
Here's my favorite part of this. I love the idea
that someone's funding this research and they go to this woman,
a doctor, and she's like, you know, I got to
keep doing more studies. I'm only a couple of years
into my research about chocolate and music, So you got
to give you more time to eat chocolate while listening
to new songs to eventually figure out what song is
working the best to make me happy. Let's cut me
(01:44:34):
a check for another I don't know five million dollars
and leave me alone for another two to five years.
Speaker 2 (01:44:39):
Well, I continue to study this.
Speaker 1 (01:44:41):
And then roll it out, and some chocolate company paiter
because of course they did.
Speaker 2 (01:44:44):
Why not? But you should try it if you want to.
Speaker 1 (01:44:47):
The next time you're in the mood for some sweet,
delicious candy that is already very good on its own,
I go ahead and play sweetest Melody and see if
anything about it makes you happier, and then try it
other times.
Speaker 2 (01:44:59):
Maybe it enhances more than chocolate.
Speaker 1 (01:45:01):
Actually, you know what, I'm launching a new study effective today,
with no degree whatsoever to do it. But I'd like
to see what music enhances the delicious taste of steak,
so for the next however many years, and whatever steak
manufacturer wants to fund this for me, whatever farm wants
to jump in and be a part of it.
Speaker 2 (01:45:18):
I live in Texas now, so there's a lot of options.
Speaker 1 (01:45:20):
I will promise every day, multiple times a day, to
eat delicious steak and listen to all different kinds of
music and eventually report what is making the steak taste better.
That sounds like an amazing life. I didn't know that
was a career that could be a thing. Actually, right now,
in this moment, I immediately regret that my life choices
didn't bring me to a place where I had a
doctorate and could claim that I was doing a steak
(01:45:42):
in music study.
Speaker 2 (01:45:44):
That is, It's sad. I really all my life is
a failure.
Speaker 1 (01:45:47):
I'm on a nationally syndicated show for an incredibly famous
person in this very moment, and I know now that
this lady doing the chocolate study is way way better
off than I've ever been in my entire life. All Right,
that's it, On that pleasant note, that happy note, I'll
see you again tomorrow. Craig Collins filling in the Danish
show Bye Everybody,