Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in, thrilled to be with you. A bunch of
stuff out there to talk about. It is amazing that
one President Trump did not get the Nobel Peace Prize
and that it actually went to someone who's in hiding.
I'll tell you why. She's someone that's inspiring but maybe
not impacting the world as much as the leader of
(00:20):
the United States is, as he's ushering in peace steal
after peace deal. All of that is stuff that I'd
like to get to. But before I do any of that,
by the way, at d Lash at Dana Lash Radio,
on x on Twitter, great ways to stay connected to her.
Great job that she and her team does on social media.
You need to follow that stuff at Radio Craigsey if
you want an occasional Yankee tweet for me, which is
(00:42):
much less interesting. But anyway, before I get to anything
on all the stuff that I plan to talk about today,
Malania Trump, the first Lady, has ushered in a deal
with Vladimir Putin that will help reunite children that have
been displaced by the Ukrainian War with their families. This
is unique, a good thing. This is the kind of
thing that Democrat, Republican, all sides of the Aisle can
(01:05):
put down any version of fighting and say, yes, we're
supporters of this, this is great. Of course they won't
do it. Democrats hate Trump so much they can't at
all say anything that happens is good if a Trump
is involved. But let's hear from Milania, as she made
a big announcement today about something that actually is good
in the world, that matters and seems to in and
(01:26):
of itself maybe be capable of being nominated for a
Nobel Peace Prize if only it had happened a few days ago,
so they could give it to Milania and not President
Trump instead of someone again who's in hiding in Venezuela.
But I'll get to that. Here we go.
Speaker 2 (01:41):
With each other for the benefit of all people involve
in this war. My representative has been working directly with
President put In steam to ensure the save reunification of
children with their families between Russia and Ukraine. In fact,
(02:05):
eight children have been rejoined with their families during the
past twenty four hours. Each child has lived in turmoil
because of the war.
Speaker 3 (02:18):
In Ukraine, three.
Speaker 2 (02:20):
Were separated from their parents and displaced to the Russian
Federation because of frontline fighting. The other five were separated
from family members across borders because of the conflict, including
one young girl who has now been reunited from Ukraine
(02:43):
to Russia. I have learned a lot about this matter
during the past three months. Russia has demonstrated a willingness
to disclose objective and detail information reflective for the current situation.
(03:04):
The Ration Federation provided biographies and photographs of each child
involved in this week's seronification, along with an overview of
the social, medical, psychological services afforded to the Ukrainian children.
Speaker 1 (03:23):
Yeah, it's amazing, amazing story. And again, the craziest part
about this is that a whole lot of people, in
a whole lot of places will refuse to acknowledge the
importance of this, the value behind us something like this
and tell you that it's nothing, or you know, it's
a lot of pomp and circumstance for something that would
have happened anyway if Democrats weren't charged. Whatever the way
(03:44):
to take away from it might be. But Milania Trump
making a huge announcement doing something that Fox News at
least compared to another pretty important first lady out there
in the world. Let's hear some of that audio of
their reaction after Milania makes the announcement that she broker
to deal with Vladimir Putin that would return children to
their families.
Speaker 4 (04:04):
Milania Trump's announcement, this is huge for first Lady to
be speaking with Vladimir Putin, who, by the way, under
the Biden administration could not do a deal with our
president and somehow has managed to do this backdoor deal
with the first Lady.
Speaker 1 (04:18):
Of the United States.
Speaker 5 (04:19):
You'd have to go back to Eleanor Roosevelt to find
a first lady who dealt with diplomacy and security issues
like this.
Speaker 1 (04:24):
It's extraordinary.
Speaker 5 (04:25):
I think it goes there's a connection between what we
just heard with Lania Trump and what's happened in Gaza.
What this administration takes every conventional wisdom and breaks it
over its knee. The conventional wisdom in the Middle East
was you can't make peace unless you first make a
Palestinian state. So Donald Trump comes along into twenty and
gets the Abraham Accords. The conventional wisdom in Gaza was,
first you have to have a ceasefire for a little while,
(04:47):
and you get some of the hostages back.
Speaker 1 (04:49):
He turns it around.
Speaker 5 (04:49):
No, we're going to get all the hostages back first,
all at once, and then you're going to have a
long ceasefire. And so this is the secret of the
success of the administration and diplomacy is that they just
don't accept accepted the conventional wisdoms and they break them
over their knees.
Speaker 1 (05:03):
They do whatever they want, and they do whatever they
want in a good way, which is exactly what the
people on the other side of the eye will tell
you is horrible and terrible. This is amazing though, And
again I guess a weird way to couch this is
in talking about how Trump didn't win the Nobel Peace Prize.
And I think the reason that the person who has
chosen for the Nobel Peace Prize is who she is.
(05:25):
She's someone who again is in hiding in Venezuela as
a leader of the opposition party. Her name is Maria
Karina Karina. Yeah, sorry, Machado. She can't do much on
a world stage beyond what she symbolizes. You know, she's
a person who's alive. She's a person who's in hiding.
(05:45):
She's a person who's barred from any sort of political
position in the country she's in. And the reason for
all that is, you know, people in positions of authoritative power.
Now that's an inspiring story. Is it worthy of the
Nobel Peace Prize when you have another person who's in
charge of a very important country on a world stage,
ushering in peace deal after peace deal? I would say no.
(06:08):
Trump's ability to have influence on what happens throughout the
world is singular. No one else has the kind of
influence that the president would have, especially Trump in the
way in which he wields it, demonstrated by the first
Lady making a deal with Vladimir Putin. I think if
Malannia Trump is the first Lady of a country other
than the United States, it probably doesn't happen. This probably
(06:30):
doesn't get done the way it occurs. But nonetheless, the
fact that this becomes a byproduct of I think a
very political decision by the Nobel Peace Prize group to
choose not to supply something to Trump because they didn't
like the optics of it, which is a shame because
they should be above that. And to be totally honest,
I've seen a lot of takes out there. I think
(06:51):
Drudge Report is one of the places that has it,
or at least is using it as a headline what
will Trump do? Who will be you know, her or
harmed in his reaction and his fighting back in not
being given the Nobel Peace Prize. Watch Out Norway, I
think was one of the headlines I saw out there.
Here's what I actually believe he'll do. Here's what I
think will happen, do even more to deserve a Nobel
(07:15):
Peace Prize that you're not being given. The best way
to rub salt into the wound of those who are
uniquely trying to push you out is to actually continue
to succeed at the thing that they're upset you're doing
in the first place. They want him to throw a tantrum,
to be angry, to do something that they'll decide is
quote unquote bad, because that helps to say, we'll see,
(07:36):
this is why we didn't give you the prize in
the first place. It's actually something that's happened to me
in a workplace before, and I wonder if it's happened
to you in some part of your life. People who
dislike you for a reason that has nothing to do
with how you treat them or how you behave and
has everything to do with your political side of the aisle.
They dislike you because from jump they've decided, oh, this
(07:58):
person can't get along with them. I don't like what
they think politically, I don't like what they do. In
the case of the Nobel Group, it's Trump and just
anything and everything that they think he is so in
that they try to find a way to set you off,
to make you the bad guy, and then if you
react at all. And here's my own personal story, there
was a situation I was working on with a news
(08:20):
director at the time. The news director around up like
storming in to the studio that I was in and
yelling at me and a guest about the way we
were covering a topic which I thought was insane, not
just because we were covering it accurately. The topic we
were discussing, which doesn't matter, I was about Stephen Colbert's
staff going to the Capitol building and insurrecting it. And
(08:41):
we were joking when we use that word, because it
was funny to talk about it in the same context
of what happened in January sixth, But it made a
news guy very mad, and he stormed into the room
and he yelled at me, and he yelled at somebody
else and it was crazy and like it meant nothing,
and then he left, and later on I think a
producer came into the room and said, Hey, they just
want you to know this. And all I said in
reaction is oh, I don't care. That was my reaction.
(09:03):
I said it like that, so you and I know,
I said, Oh, I don't care about any of this
that's going on out there. I'm going to keep doing
my show my way with my guests and talk about
the topics with the opinions that we have. And then
it inevitably wound up in an argument between me and
this person after the show in front of other colleagues,
and I wound up hearing that like I was as
(09:24):
much at fault as anyone else, and I was like,
what are you talking about? There were like four or
five moments where I was absolutely the cooler head in
the room and the person who's like, all right, I'm
going to let this go. I'm going to let someone
storm into a room that I'm in with a guest,
a radio show guest, and yell at us, yell at
me and a guest like they have the authority to
do that when they don't and not blow up and
(09:46):
scream and yell. And I think that's the mistake if
I'm being honest, anytime in your own life, will you
allow someone to step across line after line after line
and you don't do anything about it. Notice that people
who react to those lines, like say I went in
and stormed into the boss's office and said, how dare
this occur? I think there's a chance that my position
(10:08):
would have been better hurt. So again, to go back
to Trump, to use this as a you know, a
catalyst to actually talk about the news of the day
and not just complain about my own things that happened
years ago in my own life. But what I think
is interesting about it is that if Trump reacts the
way that media wants him to, they get to write
off everything. They get to ignore every part of the
success he's had and the reason he's deserving of a
(10:30):
Nobel Peace Prize. And if he just continues to do
the thing that they're upset he's doing, ushering in peace
and doing a great job in the world, then they'll
have no argument for it. So what's amazing is how
you have to either react the way that Trump does
all the time, which is be med constantly in an
effective way, in a way that almost makes people afraid
of the level of anger you'll have if you wind
(10:51):
up in a position in which you know you can
share that anywhere else in the world. They're afraid of Trump.
They're afraid of Trump and how he would wield his
own influence in society against people for whatever it is
they say about him or do about him. That's why
they act this way. But then also taking the higher
road all the time. If you take the higher road occasionally,
you have to do it constantly, especially as a conservative,
(11:14):
because people are desiring to attack you and desiring to
find a way to make you seem like the bad guy.
At least that's what I've experienced in my own life.
I wonder if you have to, all right, well, take
a quick break. A lot coming up. Greg Goallin's filling
in on the data show.
Speaker 6 (11:27):
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Speaker 7 (12:28):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 1 (12:34):
Let's do a quick five on the Dana Show Dlash
Dana Lash Radio on x on Twitter. A great ways
to stay connected to her. My name is Craig Collins
Radio CRAIGZI. If you want to see me be sad
about the Yankees being terrible this year, although now I
won't tweet about them for several months. All right. Amazon's
MGM will release the Milania Trump documentary. This was before
(12:56):
the big news that she ushered in a deal with
Vladimir Putin that will reunite children that are displaced in
Ukraine because of the war there. This documentary had nothing
to do with that. It was a lead up to
Trump actually being inaugurated as the president of the United
States after he was almost assassinated and killed. And I
don't know why I said end killed. Assassinated means killed,
(13:16):
but turned his head and miraculously survived. A unique story
about a woman who is married to someone who miraculously
is alive today, and yet a lot of people will
hate the fact that it exists. MGM will be putting
that out in January, I think for a couple of
days in theaters at least. I will see how successful
it is. We'll see how much people talk about it.
(13:38):
But interesting, nonetheless, and of course crapped on by mainstream media. A.
Mel Gibson's Passion of the Christ has a sequel that's
coming out. I am a Catholic, I am a Christian,
of course, I think it's weird that the Passion of
the Christ as a sequel, even if it's called the
Resurrection of the Christ, and that story is interesting, that's
a good story to tell in a movie theater somewhere.
(13:59):
I just not This has been a long sitting ges
stating potential a movie that eventually will actually happen. It's
going to have an all new cast. They're re casting
all the roles. I guess Jim Caviezel didn't want to
play Jesus again, or I don't know what happened there.
But nonetheless, just odd. Hollywood makes a lot of sequels.
The Passion of the Christ is one of those movies
(14:20):
that you didn't necessarily think would have a sequel coming
out about it. I'm saying this as respectfully as I can,
again because I'm a Catholic. I'm not making fun of it.
I just think it's odd. As a news story, all right,
other things out there. Area fifty one crash mystery deepens
as the FBI has joined investigations into tampering into the site.
For anything you say that isn't happening, that you don't
(14:43):
want or that you don't like, in the world of
the FBI, like we didn't get enough information here or there.
More alien stuff I'm always fine with. I don't think
it's a distraction. People often say that area fifty one
and alien stuff comes out when they want to distract
you and push you away from some other story that
you might pay attention to that is more valuable or
(15:04):
more pressing in our society today. I can do both.
I think that you can do both. I think we
can all do both. I think when it comes to
aliens and aliens specifically, I can pay attention to what
the right hand is doing while also paying attention to
what the left hand is doing. That is my promise
to you, and that is my promise to anyone out there,
that we can all do this together. And then, finally,
(15:26):
one last quick story. Political bumper stickers are making people
angrier in traffic instances. I guess road rage is going
off the charts. If someone does something stupid in a
vehicle and they have a giant Harris Walls bumper sticker,
the odds of you getting mad go up. And the
same is true for any of those idiots who see
the Trump sticker on the back of your car. I
(15:48):
just find that funny. I don't think that's as bad
of a thing as people say it is. And if
your car is plastered with political bumper stickers, I think
you kind of understand that you might be making some
people mad every single day, all the time, and you
don't seem to care. So if someone gets into a
fit of additional road rage because you cut them off
like a moron and you have a ton of stickers
(16:10):
all over the back of your car, I think that's
kind of on you thing more so on them thing.
Freedom of speech and everything, but you're asking for trouble.
I believe in that situation, So I'm not surprised it happens.
All right, quick break a lot more. Craig Collin's filling
in on the.
Speaker 6 (16:23):
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Speaker 3 (17:24):
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Speaker 1 (17:34):
This is The Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you, d Lash, Dana
Lash Radio and x on Twitter. Great ways to stay
connected to her and everything's going on in the world
of Dana and she will be back on Monday. Let's
do this a few thanks. So First Speaker Mike Johnson
was furious that it's very likely that Democrats are trying
(17:55):
to hold out in any sort of government shutdown until
No King's Day, which is a ANTIFA protest day October eighteenth,
in which a rally is supposed to happen in New
York City or excuse me, in Washington, d C. As
well as New York City and other places where they
protest no Kings, which we don't have. By the way,
we successfully already have no kings. You can all just
(18:18):
go home. It's totally fine. But here's Mike Johnson saying
that the belief is that Democrats are just waiting to
keep the government shut down until that day because they
like the optics of the government being shut down during
No King's Day. Which is part of the reason that
so many people hate politicians and hate the political system
is this is easily believable as a thing that Democrats
(18:39):
could be doing just because they want to say out loud,
even though it's their fault that it's horrible that Trump
is doing whatever they blame Trump for doing.
Speaker 8 (18:47):
Here we go a very patient guy but I have
had it with these people. They're playing games with real
people's lives. The theory we have right now, they have
a Hate America rally that's scheduled for October eighteenth on
the National Mall. It's all the pro Hamas wing and
the you know, the the Antifa people. They're all coming out.
Some of the House Democrats are selling T shirts for
(19:07):
the event, and it's it's it's being told to us
that they won't be able to reopen the government until
after that rally because they can't face their rabid base.
I mean, this is this is serious business, hurting real people. Yeah,
and I just I'm beyond words. I can't believe they're
actually doing this.
Speaker 1 (19:23):
So two things I want to say in reaction to this. First,
and I'm owning this, and you don't care. I don't
know why I'm even holding my feet to the fire,
because no one who listens to shows like this where
I'm just a filling guy, even remembers probably what I say.
But when Republicans threatened to shut the government down, my
reaction is often go ahead. I don't care. It's not
going to impact my life all that much. It'll reopen
(19:45):
in a certain amount of weeks after it shuts down.
The only thing I ever care about is military men
and women women getting a paycheck still, which doesn't happen,
even if the Left will claim it does. You actually
have to pass a certain laws to make sure that
the military individuals keep getting paid. It's ridiculous that the
politicians get paid if they shut the government down, they
(20:06):
don't actually get their check stopped. But the military individuals
who are serving our country due that's insane. That's the
only thing I ever really care about, other than that
shut the government down. Who cares, in all honesty use
it as a catalyst to fire a bunch of people
we don't need and clean up the bureaucracy that is
our federal government, and I'd be thrilled. So when that
is the stance if it's Republicans in charge, I keep
(20:28):
the same stance when Democrats are in charge. Even as
Mike Johnson says that people are actually being hurt because
how much they care about those people seems to ebb
and flow with what side of the aisle they're on.
But as I say that, there are aspects to this
that I do think are interesting because of what you're
selling more so than what you're doing. And what I
mean by that is Democrats often sell that they're the
(20:51):
party that cares more. I'm probably going to be a
broken record about this today because so many stories feel
like they lean into this narrative. Democrats tell you they're
the good guys. They embolden their supporters to feel as
though that they're good people, and the people that they
disagree with vehemently and maybe violently on the right are
actually bad, horrible people. They're sexists and racists and you know,
(21:14):
everything else iss and they're they're the worst kind of
individuals that exist in the bucket of deplorables, a version
of a thing, and so they empower their side of
the aisle to feel this way. And then when they
play these political games and hurt the lives of people
that they claim they care about, that hypocrisy does matter.
Even if I don't say that to me, I'm as
worried about the government being turned on tomorrow when it's
(21:36):
turned off today. And that came out weird. I think
I probably should have phrased that differently. I've been one
the less like it doesn't really impact my life, it
probably won't impact your life. That much unless you work
for them directly. I've but none the least like I
think that that is interesting that what they're selling becomes
so obviously untrue. And then you have this also, Mark
Wayne Mullen putting up on social media that No King's
(21:58):
Protest Day is something he was definitively told by Democrats
is the plan all along, just because again the optics
are more important to them than doing the right thing,
than doing something for the people that they say they
care about. They never care about you unless optically it
benefits them, and then they'll tell you way too many
times why they're doing something and then get mad at
(22:19):
you when you question if it's actually for your benefit
or for their benefit, even though they celebrated it so
much because they were trying to get more people to
support them Democrats who tout DEI. It's my favorite example
to use in a conversation like this, because the DEI
people that are out there could absolutely get what they
want without causing all the different drama and confusion and
(22:43):
questions and debate if they just shut up about it.
And I don't want them to do this. I think
you should get a job based on your merit and skill,
not what you look like, not whether you're a man
or a woman, you're whether you're black or white, None
of that should matter. If you're the best for the job,
hire you. But the DEI people could just hire the
individuals that they think diversify their workplaces. They don't have
(23:03):
to tell us a reason why they did it. They
could just do it, and they could just say it
was the best person for the job. And even if
you doubted it, it would be harder to have that
discussion than if they're saying out loud, we're doing this
for DEI reasons because we don't care about you and
what you think matters. We only care about what you'll
do to vote for us, like what will motivate you
(23:23):
to punch our side of the aisle for their supporters,
So that's why they do all this. So the no
Kings thing is another example of that. It's another version
of we have an opportunity to do something that benefits
us from an optic standpoint, we believe, so we're doing
it in spite of anything we could do that might
help actual people because we don't care about them. It's
like the fool me one, shame on me thing. But
(23:45):
twenty five times deep forol me one hundred times shame
on you, or me or everybody, because it's just crazy
that this is the kind of thing we talk about.
But I believe this because of how likely it is
that Washington would do this. But here we go.
Speaker 9 (23:59):
Yeah, Junkie Schumer, make sure that the people you say
you're fighting for, which is a federal employee, goes without
a paycheck, so you will have talking points at this
rally to talk to on Junkie Schumer, good on. You
had a conversation with Democrat colleague who's wanting to open
the government back up. By the way, he said, do
you know what's happening on the eighteenth of October. I
don't have a clue. He said.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
It's called No King's Day.
Speaker 9 (24:21):
That's a big protest against President Trump, he said. And
our party isn't willing to open the government back up
until after that because they're afraid that this large crowd
is supposed to be here in Washington, d C. Protesting
President Trump will chastise them, they'll get thrown at the bus.
Speaker 1 (24:33):
Means that's an oversimplification. I too, I think it is
not just that they're afraid that they're the crazies on
their side of the aisle will be mad at them.
They actually want to lean in to those narratives. They're
putting the guy, the crazy dude in New York as
I keep calling Mundami Mumdani. They're putting him in a
position of power. They want him to get elected because
(24:54):
of all the things they think he represents that's good
about their party to them, which is actually horrible and
terrible and communism to the rest of us. All right,
let's play this. This is audio of Tiss James being
quite upset that, you know, selective prosecution is a thing
that's happening to her. No, that's not it. Actually, this
is in February of twenty twenty when Tis James is
(25:15):
very happy that she's selectively prosecuting a President Trump. That's
what this is. This is her being a wild and
ridiculous hypocrite, as they often are.
Speaker 10 (25:26):
You see, each and every day I wake up with
a fire in my belly, I walk into my office,
I sue the president, and I go the hell home.
Speaker 1 (25:35):
That's what I do. Yeah, look at me. I do
it every day. Find a new lawsuit, sue President Trump.
That's in February of twenty twenty, she is now quite
upset that she might be in trouble for some fraudulent
things that happened as far as her mortgage is concerned.
Here's the other part of this that I think is amazing.
(25:55):
CNN covered this story by saying that it's there that
every American is actually committing the same crime, that if
Tis James is doing it, then everybody's doing it, which,
by the way, is always their mo They want to
put you directly in the crosshairs of whatever the thing
is they're talking about, so that you actually care more
about it than if it's just them, because if it
(26:17):
is just them, they know a whole bunch of people
do not care. But so they have to tell you
that it's you, that you're in trouble, that you're the
one who's going to be next, and if you're not next,
then darn it, it's only because you voted them back
into power in the first place. But here I want
to play this. This is CNN saying that we're all
committing this crime. The reason I find this fascinating is
it sounds eerily similar, actually identical to what people in
(26:41):
business communities were saying about Trump being held to some
sort of weird standard in how he actually got better
deals from banks, because every business inflates their value, and
every bank's job it is to deflate your value when
coming to an agreement on how much interest you pay
on your loans. Every company does that. If every person
in America is committing mortgage fraud in the way in
(27:03):
which they go about talking about their net worth, then
every business was committing business fraud in the way they
talked about their net worth. You can't have it both ways.
You can't say that for some this is a good
argument and for others it isn't. But CNN doesn't care.
Speaker 11 (27:17):
Aside for a second what tiss James. And again we're
still getting the details. But if it's related to this
mortgage issue, I mean, this is something that everyone in America,
or many people at least, if you're lucky enough to
be able to buy a house in America, you deal
with this right. The federal government doesn't go after all
of these people for doing this.
Speaker 1 (27:39):
I love every part of that because you could just
play the part after she says, you know, home mortgages
and American people and turn it into business thing and
that's exactly what conservatives were saying about going after Trump
for any sort of fraudulent things they claimed his business
was doing in getting sweet, sweet delicious deals that they
pay back. They paid all of it back, so there
(28:01):
was no victim in the Trump crime either. But I
just think that's amazing. I think it's so incredible to say,
because to me, I guess this is the last thing
I'll say before I take a break. That's probably the
thing that makes me the most angry when talking to anybody,
and I try to, you know, bottle the anger as
much as I can, because it's not going to get
(28:22):
us further to any kind of agreement to just get
mad at someone. But when they say all the things
I would say about a different issue, but they say
it about something that's uniquely democratic. So they think, in
this one, you know case, this defense makes sense. But
then you repeat all of those ideas in another scenario
and they're like, well, no, and that one I don't
agree with it. And it's only because it's a Republican.
(28:44):
They don't actually have people who do this a version
of you know, morality and ethics that are across the board.
What they have is a very fluid version of if
it's a Republican no, if it's a Democrat yes, And
I feel great about this across the board. It is
insane to see that happen, though, and I kind of
think that's the point oftentimes when you call some people.
(29:07):
I have an uncle who's very convinced of this, by
the way, that Trump is like a genius who does
everything to out the terrible things that exist behind the scene,
behind closed doors, behind scenes which you might also believe
is true. This is one of those moments that feels
like it actually is a proof of that, because getting
Tiss James in this way and getting media to say
(29:28):
what they're saying about it feels like that was the
point all along, just to demonstrate how the case against
Trump was ridiculous, and calling him a felon even now
for Democrats is so stupid and so hypocritical that you
can't do anything other than laugh and get silently mad
about it, which is what I do, or I guess
(29:49):
vocally mad. On a nationally syndicated radio show, filling in
for the very talented Dana lash all Right, quick Break
a lot more, Craig Collin's filling in on the Dana show.
Speaker 6 (29:58):
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Speaker 3 (30:55):
For you, keep your finger on the pulse with a
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Speaker 1 (31:07):
This is the Danish Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in thrilled to be with you. The New York
Football Giants put a beat down on the Philadelphia Eagles
last night, which was shocking to a whole lot of people.
The Giants are not typically good at football and haven't
been good for a very long time thirty four to seventeen,
and the Eagles essentially playing like a football team that
didn't want to win a game, more so than the
(31:29):
Giants playing as great as it seemed like they might
have played. Although Jackson Dark did look good, there were
times where he kept plays alive that I was uniquely
impressed by. There was a scare where he might have
been hurt for a bit there. And also the Giants
have a very good young running back, so those things
are true. But anyway, that beatdown only hurt so much,
and then even more pain I think was thrown to
(31:51):
any Philly fan because of what happened between the Dodgers
and the Phillies. That was something and I have the
audio this actually, so there's two outs, bottom of the
eleventh bases loaded, force out at first base ends the inning.
You keep going for some reason. If you're the Phillies
and you get a comebacker to the pitcher, you decide
(32:12):
to er and throw home. That would have been late.
That was horribly Everything about the play was terrible. And
the fact that you even have several teammates pointing and
saying throw to first base and it doesn't go the
way you want it to go. That probably hurts more
than a middle of the NFL season loss for the
Eagles from the Giants, because I think, you know, fast
(32:33):
forward several weeks and the Giants eventually will probably be like,
I don't know, three or four and ten, and the
Eagles will be doing much better that late into the season,
and you'll totally forget about the fact that the Giants
put the beat down on the Eagles. But here's the
play that probably really hurt a lot of Philadelphia fans
even more. No balls in a strike has breaks his
(32:54):
Pat kirk Kring gotta find it goes to the play.
Oh my goodness, it turns it away. I'm the Dodgers
gwinn and they are moving on to the NLCS.
Speaker 3 (33:06):
Now in emotion improbable centish And your.
Speaker 1 (33:10):
Heart breaks for a Ryot kirk Raks. Now it doesn't.
Your heart doesn't break for a major. You know a
professional athlete who does a stupid thing in a stupid moment,
it doesn't break for them. You think that the guy's
a moron. If you're a Yankee fan, you're booing people
like Anthony Volpi every chance to get and Volpi's not
making much money. But man, oh man, was he terrible?
(33:32):
And I'm a Yankee fan, so I desire to talk
about that, and I won't. But man, the Dodgers getting
a gift like that to go ahead and go to
the NLCS, in which they'll probably wind up winning and
going to another World Series is something to behold. Although
the Cubs interesting story, I'll say this quickly about the
world of baseball. You may or may not be paying
attention at this point. I think the only reason anyone
(33:54):
winds up being a bandwagon Cubs fan is because they're
always the lovable loser. They're always the team that shouldn't
be winning and somehow is that makes you if they
were ever a dominant force in the world of baseball,
from you know, beginning to end of the season, felt
like the unfair advantage team. People wouldn't like them as much.
But people bandwagon all over Cubs because of how uniquely
(34:15):
terrible they are, and this seems to be the case. Again,
they don't do that for the Dodgers, So the Dodgers
are not a team that will have that kind of
support if that winds up being the matchup in the
National League. And we will see, because the Cubs get
to play again. They did win yesterday, so they did
force a game five. My New York Giants, my New
York Yankees, excuse me, cratered like a bag of crap
(34:36):
in their Game four and lost to a much better team.
And I know this isn't a sports show, but I'm
also tempted to say that I think Brian Cashman is
the problem. I think you got to fire the guy.
I think that even Derek Jeter said in a postgame
thing that you know, Aaron Boone is not actually calling
the shots. You got a lot of people in sports
that aren't actually the leaders of their team, even if
(34:56):
their role as manager or coach, you got somebody else
behind the scenes that's actually doing it. So maybe that's
the universal way to discuss this topic. Maybe we can
all get behind fire Brian Cashman, even if you don't
care about baseball and you aren't a Yankee fan, because
somewhere in your life you've experienced someone who knows nothing
telling you what to do all the time and screwing
(35:18):
it all up. And that's what essentially people are saying
is happening for the Yankees. Aaron Boone is the Joe
Biden of leaders of that organization. He is the manager
in name only, and people are telling him how to
make decisions, and he makes those decisions and they go
poorly for all involved. Terrible, terrible baseball, at least to
me and anybody that's a Phillies fan. Quick Break a
(35:39):
lot more Craig Collin's filling in on the Danish show Our.
Speaker 6 (35:41):
Partners that bring you the program The Folks at All
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Speaker 1 (37:15):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in, thrilled to be with you. A whole lot
of stuff out there to talk about. A Dlash Dana
Lash Radio on x on Twitter, a great ways to
stay connected. This is a democratic politician doing terrible in
a debate, which we've seen time and again, but this
is uniquely awesome, especially considering one of the people she's
(37:35):
trying to stand with seems to be a person who's
unapologetically totally fine with political violence. But let's play some
audio and then we'll break this down a little bit more.
But once again democratic politicians swinging a miss in the
world of back and forth debate, and even a moderator
who was being called like a far right individual who
definitely was not that going back and forth with these politicians,
(37:57):
just asking very basic, simple questions that the left leaning
politician had no ability to answer.
Speaker 12 (38:04):
Thank you, miss van Berger. I just I didn't hear
an answer there on the endorsement issue, so I wanted
to make sure will you continue to endorse Jay Jones
to be the next Attorney General of Virginia? And were
you aware of these text messages before they released? You
have thirty seconds.
Speaker 13 (38:21):
In fact, it appears that it was those who released
the text messages and held them for years, so the
public was unaware who had knowledge of these text messages.
These are the text messages the day that they came out, And.
Speaker 1 (38:38):
Oh look, I got to tell you something, and I
got to be as honest as possible as I can
in this and shoot the messenger if you want to.
I'm a white guy about to be forty at the
end of this month. Literally on Halloween, I turned forty
years old. This white female politician, spam Burger, is running
against a black female politician. The black female is the Republican,
(39:01):
the white females the Democrat. I might surprise some people
with how that goes, but I love the attitude that
comes out of the opponent as she's saying, when did
you know? And what did you do? I want to
play that part again because it's so good, and it's
the kind of thing that you might attribute to, you know,
(39:23):
a certain race, a certain attitude, a certain way of speaking,
any of that stuff. The left would also celebrate if
it was someone on their side of the aisle interjecting
like this in this way. Of course, they said that
this politician was rude. How dare she try to say
and do things the way that if it's a Democrat
who is of the same you know, racial or I
(39:44):
guess the same sex, they might celebrate the version of
I don't understand what's going on here. They used to
call Kamala Harris mam La, and they used to pretend
as though her confusion with Donald Trump and her willingness
to show it was a great expression of who she
is and something to be celebrated. Wonder why it doesn't
happen here.
Speaker 13 (40:04):
In fact, it appears that it was those who released
the text messages and held them for years, so the
public was unaware who had knowledge of these text messages.
For many of us, you do these text messages the
day that they came out and I denounced them as
soon as I learned of she Importantly at this point,
(40:27):
as we move forward, the voters now have this information,
information that was withheld for them. You're running, presumably for
affairs reasons, but the voters now have And.
Speaker 1 (40:39):
By the way, the moderator is also a black woman,
so she's pushing back on whin some earl stairs and
the things that she is saying. I don't know if
I guess the race card won't be played by anybody
because of the makeup of the individuals on the stage,
But I just I loved it, and I think this
is the kind of thing that if it were, you know,
reversed parties the way where expected, and it's a black
(41:02):
female Democrat objecting to a white Republican woman or man
in this way, I think that most media would be
so thrilled with how this went down. They are not
thrilled and how this went down because of how ridiculous
it is. But the answer, by the way, is a trophy.
Speaker 13 (41:18):
It is up to voters to make an individual choice
based on this information.
Speaker 12 (41:23):
Miss Memory. I understand what you're saying about the voters,
but for youself, do you still continue to endorse Jay Jones.
Speaker 1 (41:29):
Yeah, we asked you about you. We want you to
give us an opinion. We don't want you to explain
how the political system works in its most basic sense,
as if that's an answer to this question. Are you
still throwing your support behind someone who seems to be
very happy with and even celebrating political violence just weeks
after Charlie kirk Is murdered fifteen seconds.
Speaker 13 (41:50):
Yes, we are all running our individual races. I believe
my opponent has said that about her lieutenant governor nominee affairs,
and it's up there every person to make their own decision.
Speaker 1 (42:01):
What I am running my race to serve your decision.
What do you think?
Speaker 13 (42:06):
And that is what I intend to do.
Speaker 12 (42:09):
Thank you, missus svaan Berger. We just want to clarify
you know what you're saying is that, as of now,
you still endorse Jay Jones as attorney General.
Speaker 13 (42:18):
I'm saying, as of now, it's up to every voter
to make their own individual decision. I am running for governor.
I am accountable for the words that I say.
Speaker 1 (42:27):
I love it so much. We just want to we
want one moment. You know, it would be funny, it
would be funny to force these politicians to have to
behave like this with an obvious question. And I don't
mean one about politics. I mean like make a video
where politicians are standing in line at an ice cream
store and one after another being asked what flavor of
ice cream they want, and they have to answer that
(42:48):
question the same way they answer their political questions. So
Abigail Spanberger would be saying, look, it's up to everyone
else inside this ice cream shop what ice cream flavor
they want, what they're going to buy when it's there,
turned to purchase. And then someone would look at this
insane human and be like, yeah, but what do you want?
What flavor do you want? You know, it's it's not
(43:08):
my choice, it's everybody else's choice. It's just insane. And
the only way that they get away with this sort
of stuff is because in politics these rules have applied
for forever. But you should you should apply whatever the
version of back and forth question is to something that
doesn't matter, Like pretend it's your wife asking you if
you mowed the lawn, which is something that happens to
(43:30):
me on occasion, if the lawn has not been mowed,
and it is definitely one of my jobs, and I'll
never let her do it. As a man, I feel
uniquely horrible if I look outside and see the miss
is mowing the lawn. I think that Nate Bargetzi makes
a joke about that, and I don't know why that is,
but it's been my job since I was a little kid.
My mom made me lawnmow boy, and I've been lawnmow
boy ever since. That also felt weird to say in
(43:53):
those terms, but nonetheless, like if that happened and I
had the unfortunate situation of having to deal with it,
Abigail Spanberger, in that situation, the answer to is the
lawn mode would be like, well, other lawns in the
area have been mowed based on the decision making of
the people inside those homes, and if they did or
didn't mow the lawn, that was their decision. Yeah, but
(44:14):
it's your lawn mode, you know what. I'm going to
plead the fifth year. It's just it's uniquely terrible and
sort of amazing to watch. The left can't stand against
other members of the left. They can't do it. They're
terrified of doing it. The right does it all the time,
all right. Another piece of audio I want to play.
This is Christy Nome talking about how you know they're
(44:34):
doing everything they can at the Department of Homeland Security
to keep things, as you know, uniform as running as
smoothly as possible. I guess I should say whether it's
at the airport or anywhere even as the government is
shut down, This is part of a message that I
think is playing at airports throughout the country.
Speaker 14 (44:54):
Hi, I'm Christine Home, the United States Secretary of Homeland Security.
It is TSA's top p to make sure that you
have the most pleasant and efficient airport experience as possible
while we keep you safe. However, Democrats in Congress refuse
to fund the federal government, and because of this, many
of our operations are impacted and most of our TSA
employees are working without pay. We will continue to do
(45:18):
all that we can to avoid delays that will impact
your travel, and our hope is that Democrats will soon
recognize the importance of opening the government.
Speaker 1 (45:26):
I gotta be honest. If there's any way to make
me matter at something, it's to send a message to
me at the airport when the airport isn't doing well.
If I'm on a delay, if you know there's a
line that's aggressively long. If I go to the restroom
and I see this message, I'll be like, yeah, I
care about this more now. As someone who often says
that the government shutting down doesn't really impact my life,
(45:48):
I don't really notice it. And when it's all turned
back on, which eventually it will be at the end
of the day, most people who didn't work for the
government will never have noticed. And I said before a
military men and women should always be paid. The politician's
paycheck should stop. People in our military their paycheck should
never stop. It is broken that the system is the
reverse of that, and not that. But as they say this,
(46:10):
if there's ever a way to curry more favor, to
make me more likely to be on your team and
not whatever team I've been on before, even though I'm
on your team from jump anyway, I mean personally, it's
to do this is to put a message in an
airport where the airport is having a problem and say
it's democrats fault that you're not on your plane right
now and that things are delayed, because that makes me
very upset and very mad. And then you got Spaenburger
(46:32):
trying to answer the question by saying that each individual
deals with a delay in whatever way they deal with it. Ah,
it's amazing. That is uniquely terrible stuff. And I love
when Democrats do bad in debates now, which happens more
often than I know. I'm just talking about this again
before I take a break. I can't help it. I
love when they do bad in debates now because their
logic is so insanely flawed and so ridiculous that it
(46:56):
can't stand up to basic questioning that you're seeing this
again and again and again. I actually had a debate
recently with a young woman about why Harris lost, which
is a terrible thing you should not do with someone
on the left. And you know what they're going to say, Sexism, racism,
all that stuff played into it. But then you just
start playing audio of the terrible things that Kamala Harris
(47:18):
said and did in interviews where she seemed to fold
and do as poorly as this politician is doing, and
just giving basic stances on stuff or trying to demonstrate
how she's not as crazy far left as she is,
and the person that's arguing with you just shuts up
because there's nothing they can say to someone doing that
poorly in what is quote a friendly interview. And the
(47:40):
biggest reason that Harris didn't go on Joe Rogan and
Donald Trump did is that Harris was terrified of being
challenged by someone who wouldn't be friendly with her. Not
that Rogan's the arbiter of amazing journalism, but he absolutely
would have crushed Kamala Harris. And that's why she lost
the election. She was a terrible candidate. I know I'm
rehashing something very old now, but I can't help it.
(48:01):
Every time you see a new debate, you just think
about that same thing, and of course they'll say somehow
it's sexism or racism or something, even if in Virginia
the person that might beat her as a black woman,
that might take the job from a white woman who's
running for that office. So I don't know what you
say that if the person who gets voted into the
position of authority is a minority and a woman, is
(48:22):
there a way that you still call it sexism or
racism if they defeat someone who is not a minority
and a woman. I don't know that's a question you'll answer.
I can't answer it. The left will explode as they
try to figure it out. All right, quick break a
lot more. This is Craig Collins filling in on the
Danias Show.
Speaker 6 (48:38):
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Speaker 7 (49:39):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 1 (49:45):
That's right, it's time for Quick five on the Dana Show.
A d Lash Dana Lash Radio on x on Twitter
a great ways to stay connected to her. You should
stay connected to Robert F. Kennedy Junior too, because some
interesting stuff has been said recently. Robert F. Kennedy Junior
said that a cause of autism is Thailand. All that
is used after a circumcision, and the Internet blew up
(50:06):
about that. I have audio. We can go ahead and
play the audio real quick on this thing.
Speaker 15 (50:11):
Yeah.
Speaker 16 (50:12):
Also, just there's many many other confirmation studies on there
are two studies that show children who are circumcised early
have doubled the rate of puppetism. That's highly likely because
they're given tyler home. So you know, none of this
is this positive of all of it. We should be
paying attention.
Speaker 1 (50:33):
Yeah, we should. That sounds uniquely terrifying. By the way,
there are studies. You can look them up. You can
find them, actual published studies out there in the world.
Nih published one of them to talk about the negative
use of a seat of metaphine after a neonatal circumcision,
something you should not give a baby and may have
given a baby and may have caused harm, whatever that
(50:53):
harm might be. But Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Being accidentally
anti circumcision is not something I had on my bingo
card in twenty twenty five and not something that I
think that I'm as angry as so many other people
are about it, because you know, that's a unique thing
with the world of a man to talk about any
sort of pain points there and at what we can
do to remove them. I'm totally fine with that. Denmark
(51:17):
is going to ban social media use for people under
the age of fifteen. I don't like government bans, but
I do think that if you're a parent, you probably
shouldn't be letting your kid on social media before a
certain age, and maybe fifteen is appropriate for that. Denmark
is saying that social media is stealing your childhood. It's
causing you to care about a lot of things you shouldn't,
(51:38):
to be afraid of a lot of things you shouldn't,
to have so many issues in your life, and then
you know things that you need to just not care
about to be happier take a hold, and so I
agree with that, and I think that as a parent,
you probably should do what Denmark is doing. Nearly seventy
percent of Americans are pessimistic about the economy, according to
Freddie Mack, which and Fanny May, which said that, you know,
(52:00):
people don't want to buy a house right now. I
don't know if all these people felt as similarly as
they do right now, say a year or so ago,
when they were voting Trump into office around this time,
or a little bit after this month, Because yeah, it
does make sense for anyone to say they're pessimistic about
the cost of housing. But I don't know if people
(52:21):
feel as negatively about the economy as a whole as
Fanny Mack and Freddie May are saying. A Fanny May
and Freddie Mack are saying they do. I wonder if
maybe part of this is a political place story.
Speaker 17 (52:32):
Ex.
Speaker 1 (52:32):
Google CEO Eric Schmidt says something out loud that everybody
already knew. AI can be hacked. Of course it can.
Anything on the commuter can be hacked. He said, AI
can be trained to kill people, to do other things.
You can remove any of the guardrails that might have
been created by whoever first, you know, puts this AI
out into the world. And yeah, we all already thought that.
(52:55):
We all already knew that. That's why I don't want
AI driving all of our cars and doing so many
other things in our society, because it gives somebody who's
a hacker, or you know, say a government who's got
a whole bunch of hackers, an opportunity to cause a
unique amount of harm throughout our society. You can't hack me.
I feel like that should be what I say when
(53:15):
I walk around out there telling you that a human
is needed and a bunch of different places in our
society because you can't be hacked and that's great at
least not you know, by a computer. All right, quick
break a lot more. Greg Allin's filling in on the
Dana Show.
Speaker 6 (53:28):
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Speaker 1 (55:04):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you. A bunch of
stuff out there to talk about. President Trump broker in
a peace deal between Israel and Hamas, the terrorist organization
that runs Gaza. I continue to call it that because
that's what it is. But anyway, Trump brought this a
deal home along with several people within his administration. Benjamin
(55:26):
net Yahoo among the many saying that this doesn't happen
without the United States. Of course, it'll be discredited. People
won't care that Trump, yet again is successful in brokering
peace somewhere. The most interesting headline on this was what
I saw in Reuters, which said trusting Trump. Why Hamas
has gambled on giving up Gaza hostages again, the terrorist
(55:47):
organization that runs Gaza and it's gamble to give up hostages.
There are twenty people believed to still be alive, mostly
young men who are likely members of the Israeli military,
and there are twenty five or so people that are
sadly likely to be deceased, and their remains are supposed
to be returned in the very near future from Hamas
(56:07):
and you know, the Gaza area to Israel. In exchange,
Israel is going to release I think two thousand or
something people that are prisoners inside Israel that are Gaza
you know area Palestinian individuals. Whether or not these people
actually are criminals or not, I don't know. Some of them,
it sounds like are pretty bad, convicted of things like murder,
(56:30):
and yet they'll be released in exchange for the hostages.
Something that you feel like could have happened a long
time ago, but nonetheless finally happens because Trump is involved
in actually brokering the deal. And it's just sort of
amazing that Reuter's is like, I wonder if the terrorist
group can actually trust the president. That's a unique level
of hate to see, you know, the validity or the
(56:51):
the you know, honesty of terrorists is more likely to
be valuable than the honesty of our current commander in chief.
Speaking of Trump, actually and Milania Trump, the first Lady,
she made a big announcement about a deal she brokeered
with President of Vladimir Putin. That's right, a Milania Trump
negotiated a deal to help reunite children with their families
(57:15):
that have been displaced because of the war in Ukraine.
This feels like a universally important thing that like right
and left, all sides should support this and should praise
this and applaud a Malania Trump doing something as the
first Lady that they would love if they saw a
democrat too, But of course they won't do that. But
here's Milania's announcement that she made herself with each.
Speaker 2 (57:37):
Other for the benefit of all people involve in this war.
My representative has been working directly with President Putin's team
to ensure the save reunification of children with their families
between Rashta and Ukraine. In fact, eight children have been
(58:02):
rejoined with their families during the past twenty four hours.
Each child has lived in turmoil because of the war
in Ukraine. Three were separated from their parents and displaced
to the Russian Federation because of frontline fighting. The other
(58:26):
five were separated from family members across borders because of
the conflict, including one young girl who has now been
reunited from Ukraine to Russia. I have learned a lot
about this matter during the past three months. Russia has
(58:48):
demonstrated a willingness to disclose objective and detail information reflective
for the current situation.
Speaker 1 (58:58):
I'm gotta be honest. Reuniting with their families is something
that the left is usually a big, big fan of,
and in this case, since it's Milania, they'll find a
way to hate it or at least ignore it. But
it is crazy. Fox News had a unique reaction to it, though,
calling Milania the most significant First Lady since Eleanor Roosevelt,
which is high praise for sure, but praise to.
Speaker 4 (59:18):
Lannia Trumps announcement. This is huge for First Lady to
be speaking with Vladimir Putin, who, by the way, under
the Biden administration could not do a deal with our
president and somehow has managed to do this backdoor deal
with the First Lady of the United States.
Speaker 5 (59:33):
You'd have to go back to eleanor Roosevelt to find
a first lady who dealt with diplomacy and security issues
like this.
Speaker 1 (59:38):
It's extraordinary.
Speaker 5 (59:39):
I think it goes there's a connection between what we
just heard with Lania Trump and what's happened in Gaza.
What this administration takes every conventional wisdom and breaks it
over its knee. The conventional wisdom in the Middle.
Speaker 1 (59:50):
East was you can't.
Speaker 5 (59:50):
Make peace unless you first make a Palestinian state. So
Donald Trump comes along into twenty and gets the Abraham Accords.
The conventional wisdom in Gaza was, first you have to
have ceasefire for a little while, and you get some
of the hostages back.
Speaker 1 (01:00:03):
He turns it around.
Speaker 16 (01:00:03):
No, we're going to get all the hostages back first.
Speaker 1 (01:00:06):
We're giving them to you right now. Although it still
hasn't actually happened yet, it needs to happen soon. It's
supposed to be a product of the beginning of the ceasefire,
which has started to have the remaining hostages returned. But nonetheless,
I think this is interesting and the fact that Milania
is at the forefront of a deal with Vladimir Putin
that reunites children with families, something that's easy for all
of media to pray, you know what's funny about it?
(01:00:27):
And I'll finish that sentence, something that's easier for all
of media to praise. They fail at that the moment
where they could at least convince you that they're not
quite as biased as they obviously are. A lot of
the other times when they have that like softball version
of a thing where hey, why don't you just say
good job Malania Trump and then keep going bashing Donald
(01:00:48):
Trump all you want, keep bashing the President of the
United States, but just give a little at a boy
to the first lady for doing something that's universally good,
so you don't seem like you're so horribly one sided
and biased. And Mainstreamdia fumbles that ball every time they
kind of act like the Philadelphia Eagles playing the Giants.
That was mean, That was a shot I shouldn't take it.
But it just it just seems to be the kind
(01:01:08):
of thing where you could easily get the win and
you choose to once again failed. All Right, that did
seem overly mean. I am a Giants fan, so I
apologize to Eagles fad. No, I don't all right, another
thing out there. Scott Jennings is reacting to the ridiculous
narrative that Tiss James is just like you and me,
and that the you know, indictment that happened last night,
(01:01:30):
the federal charges she's going to face for fraud and
all kinds of things are a reflection of what every
American would do in getting their own mortgage, and that,
you know, this is selective prosecution, et cetera, et cetera.
And before I even play Jennings, let's remind you of
who Tiss James is. She's a human being that celebrated
her selective prosecution of President Trump. She said she woke
(01:01:53):
up in the morning, she sued Trump, she went back
to bed. That's how she got into her position of
power as an attorney general in the first So she
ran on selective prosecution and then seems to be upset
when it's not actually happening to her, but people are
claiming it's happening to her. Here we go, you.
Speaker 10 (01:02:09):
See, each and every day I wake up with a
fire in my belly, I walk into my office, I
sue the president.
Speaker 1 (01:02:17):
And I go the hell home. That's what I do.
HA look at me, I'm so great. I find some
way to sue Trump. And that's what I do every
single day, and that's why you put me in a
position of power. And wait, what's happening to me now?
Speaker 9 (01:02:30):
Ha?
Speaker 1 (01:02:31):
I love that. Here's Scott Jennings saying how ridiculous all
of this is and how you know she'll have her
day in court, approve the things that are accused of
her as being false, and maybe she'll actually get away
with them, and then, you know, obviously very much not
like Trump. I also potentially have someone say that this
is usually a misdemeanor, we're inflating it to a felony.
(01:02:52):
You don't need to tell us why you think it's
a felony, but just go ahead and tell u if
Trump is guilty of it, that may not actually happen
to Tis James, which is a shame because you feel like,
not only should you have selective prosecution, you should also
have the inflating of recharges to a ridiculous degree, which
most legal people thought was insane when Alvin Bragg and
others were doing it to Trump. How'll let's hear from
Tish on this.
Speaker 18 (01:03:13):
If democrats like Slockin are going to come out today
and whine about selective prosecutions over Tish James. Her entire
career is built on the selective prosecution of one man.
Speaker 1 (01:03:26):
Yes, Scotty, Now.
Speaker 18 (01:03:27):
I also believe what Elliott said. There's a process here.
Everybody gets their day in court. Obviously, a grand jury
saw enough evidence to bring charges. We don't know what
they are, but a grand jury looked at this and says, okay,
there's something here. She gets to go to court, just
like Comy, just like anyone else. But to me, it's
just not going to fly to boohoo over selective prosecutions
(01:03:50):
on this particular person he promised and her campaigns who
went after him on things as Jonah said that had
no business, no business ever happening if not before the
man's last name being Trump.
Speaker 1 (01:04:03):
So I'm not going to How is that not a
two wrongs make a right.
Speaker 18 (01:04:06):
I'm not saying I'm not saying it's right or wrong.
I'm saying she gets her day in court. I'm saying
a grand jury saw enough evidence to bring charges, and
I'm saying she gets to go to court and tell
her side of the story and then we'll see what happens.
Speaker 1 (01:04:18):
I love when the Democratic pushback to what Jennings is
saying is how does it not appear the two wrongs
make it right? Well, the reason that it doesn't matter
in that case is because you don't care, because you'd
rather have your wrong be the only wrong that occurred.
And if something actually happens that hurts your side, after
you've punished the side of the aisle that you're so
(01:04:38):
spitefully against, you want that part to go away. It's
the COVID thing all over again. And I think people
remember this during coronavirus and all the shutdowns, the amount
of shaming that happened for someone who didn't agree with
the left on any of that crap, who thought maybe
the vaccines were something you didn't need to take, etc. Etc.
You name the issue. Shut downs masks all of it.
(01:05:00):
All of the data that's come out since, tons and
tons of data has demonstrated how those conspiracy theorists, those
conservatives in your life were right about a bunch of
that stuff, and you guys were wrong about a bunch
of that stuff. And the democratic response at the time,
why go ahead and adjudicate this all over again? Why
run back through these issues just to find blame because
(01:05:22):
you were saying people could die and that's fine with you.
Kimmel made those jokes. Jimmy Kimmel, who said and did
horrible things after Charlie Kirk died, was murdered, assassinated, and
still has a job that he shouldn't have because he's
a piece of crap. That's my own opinion of it
of Jimmy Kimmel. But anyway, he said that constantly during
(01:05:42):
COVID that if you're on the right, you don't want
a vaccine, you don't get any medical treatment, you get
to die, which was just insane and constant. And these
are the same people who then say, well, we don't
want to argue now that our side no longer has
what we thought was a slam dunk argument, and now
that we've been proven wrong, let's go ahead and not
discuss this at all. Let's just let it go away.
(01:06:03):
That's the pushing the goalpost part. That's the part where
the Democrats do whatever they want, how often they want,
in any way that they want, and then they hope
when the time comes to wield the same power against them,
that you choose not to do it, and if you
choose to harm them the way they harm you, then
they blame you for it even though they started it,
which they never want to remember in the first place.
All right, quick break a lot coming up. Greg Collins
(01:06:25):
filling in on the Dana Show.
Speaker 6 (01:06:27):
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Speaker 8 (01:07:37):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions.
Speaker 1 (01:07:44):
It's time for Florida Man. That's Ryan. It's time for
Florida Man. On the Dana Show, d Dana Lash Radio
and x on Twitter. Great ways to stay connected to her.
My name is Craig Collins, filling in Thrilled to be
with you Radio, CRAIGZI. If you want to follow me
and what I occasionally say about the New York Gang,
that's totally fine. I get in on that too. Several
different Florida Man stories, some of them amazing, This one
(01:08:07):
horrific but also ridiculously Florida. A couple in Florida's facing
charges after they left their sixteen year old son on
the side of the road. They said they didn't want
him anymore. At sixteen years old. Some parents might start
to get frustrated with a young man, a son especially,
but I don't know, any teenager might be annoying. The
right approach is not to leave them on the side
(01:08:27):
of the road and try to drive away. That's not
going to work out. Uniquely Florida about this story. They
left him with a wad of cash and a bag
of handguns. They're like, here you go, son, you're sixteen.
You're an adult according to us in Florida. So here's
a lot of cash and here's just a bag of
an assortment of handguns. We don't know why you need
so many, and in such a random thing, like not
(01:08:48):
even in a box man, like at least put him
in a little safe or something. But now they just
have them all in a bag and they're handing them
to this guy. I have audio of Josh Taylor, who's
the chief of staff for the Northport Police Department, talking
about the ridiculousness of this story.
Speaker 17 (01:09:05):
The story was these people kicked them out of the
car and gave him two bags. And you know, once
through the course of that investigation talking with him, we
were able to figure out what it was in those bags.
There was the voted weapons, and I believe there was
a magazine as well. The report indicates that the child
was handed you know, these bags and said you're the
(01:09:26):
chosen one.
Speaker 1 (01:09:28):
Good luck. So that's all I gotta be honest. A
part of me would be a little bit motivated if
someone handed me a bag of handguns and said I
was the chosen one. But that's probably the wrong thing
to take from this. And I'm a gun guy. I'm
definitely very happy with the guns that I have right now.
Of Course, I don't think you could fill in on
the SHEW and not be a pro gun person, because
Dana is so prolifically awesome and her own discussion and
(01:09:50):
opinion of guns in her history and understanding of the
very important value of the Second Amendment. But now, teenager
side of the road, bag of handguns probably not a
good mo Uniquely Florida, though, a Florida man robbed seven
thousand dollars worth of lottery scratch off tickets from a
convenience store. So he goes in, he demands the scratchers.
He leaves. Now, two things he did were wrong. The
(01:10:11):
first one is he didn't know how to play scratcher.
Tickets the pro way, which you don't scratch any of them.
You just find your local, you know, grocery store or something.
You scan them. That way, you don't have to do
anything other than scan to see if you won. He
didn't do that part. He actually played all seven thousand
dollars of these tickets. Then he tried to bring the
winning tickets back to the same convenience store that he
(01:10:32):
stole them from. That's uniquely Florida. That's like, hey, bygones,
be bygones. Today is a new day. What I did
yesterday doesn't count anymore. I'm here to you know, take
my sweet winnings from the stuff I stole from you
the other day. That gets you arrested, That's usually not
a good move. Another Florida man that made the news
was naked and chasing Walmart workers inside a Walmart and
(01:10:56):
in the parking lot of a Walmart. He was then
found later in the wooded area near the Walmart, agitated
and paranoid. Every part of that story one hundred percent
checks out in the world of Florida. First thing, first,
you show up at a Walmart and there's a naked guy,
you probably think to yourself, man there's a lot of
other walmarts that I can go to. I don't know
why I'm staying here, But if you're the employees, you're
(01:11:18):
stuck dealing with it, calling the authorities the naked dude
is harassing people. I don't know if any of it
was sexual in nature, or if the naked thing is
just an accident. That's always a confusion of mine. I
always want to ask the criminal, and it's probably not
the right way to go about it, but I can't
help it when nudity got into the equation for them,
like the person who's arrested on the side of the
(01:11:40):
road traffic ticket and then all of a sudden they're naked,
Like when did they decide that they were taking their
clothes off? Was it an in the moment thing? I
was this a premeditated nakedness that came about from, like,
you know, planning. If I ever get pulled over, I
know it will make the situation go away. I'll just
get naked. But that feels like a byproduct and a
question because I don't think in my own life I
(01:12:02):
will ever be naked accidentally. I'm pretty sure I won't
ever be naked accidentally, and in a situation like this,
where like when you're arrested, you'd kind of want them
to ignore it, like, en, sir, you're naked, You're like,
why does that matter? Why can't I be naked all
the time. That's how these people seem to behave and
that is a problem. And then finally, one last Florida
(01:12:23):
man story. A Florida guy stole a woman's purse. He
found out that she had a one month old kitten
inside the purse instead of any valuable stuff, which is
just a weird thing to do. It's not a purse.
Puppy dogs are better than cats, by the way, even
if this kitten was probably adorable at one month, but
you open up the purse, you've stolen the thing, and
then you wind up you have a brand new pet.
(01:12:44):
That's a unique way for say, adoption centers to try
to get more of their pets adopted. Just put them
in purses and leave them out on the side of
the road and see if people say that doesn't sound right,
don't do that. Don't write your hate letters to me,
please pet don't say anything to us. I'm kidding. But anyway,
maybe it's a nice, nice adoption thing. Put the puppy
in the purse, hold the purse out and be like, look,
(01:13:04):
you get a dog in a purse, and maybe that
way we get more pets adopted. That's fine with me.
And apparently a thing in Florida. All right, Well, sort
of quick break a lot more Creig Collins filling in
on the Dana Show.
Speaker 6 (01:13:15):
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Speaker 13 (01:13:27):
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Speaker 1 (01:14:53):
This is the Dana show. My name is Craig Collins
filling in. Thrilled to be with you. Dlash, Dana Lash,
d X on Twitter are great ways to stay connected
to her and everything that she has going on in
the world. And honestly, her and her team do a
great job of anything on social media. You should stay involved.
Producer Steven and so many other people involved in helping
make that awesome. There is a big story out there
(01:15:17):
and I do think it's interesting and Dana has even
tweeted about it. So d Lash Dana Lash radio and
X on Twitter to find out what she thinks about
some of this before she gets back to the radio.
But Pete Hegseth made a big announcement today that's very
confusing to a whole lot of people involving allowing Qatar
to have a Air Force training base in the United
(01:15:41):
States on US soil in Idaho. Here is the announcement
of that thing, which again is confusing a whole lot
of people on both sides of the aisle.
Speaker 19 (01:15:53):
No one other than President Trump could have achieved the
piece that we believe will be a lasting piece in Gaza,
and Qatar played a substantial role from the beginning, working
with our folks to ensure that came about.
Speaker 15 (01:16:06):
So I want to thank you for that historic piece.
Look forward to joining the President as that gets it's
already been delivered, but as that's formally signed as well.
And I'm also proud that today we're announcing or signing
a letter of acceptance to build a Katari Emi Air
Force facility at the Mountain Home Air Base in Idaho.
(01:16:27):
Location will be host a contingent of Katari F fifteen's
and pilots to enhance our combined training, increase lethality, interoperability.
Is just another example of our partnership. And I hope,
hope you know.
Speaker 1 (01:16:41):
Yeah, I gotta be honest. That makes no sense to
me either. Dana did tweet out, I feel like if
you sponsor Hamas, you shouldn't get a base in the US.
What am I missing here? She is absolutely right about that,
hundred percent right about that. Qatar was instrumental. I will
say this, according to Israel and everyone else a law
with the United States and ushering in the peace deal
(01:17:02):
between Gaza and Israel, and Hamas essentially more so than Gaza.
So I think that there's something interesting about this being
a fallout component likely to that kind of agreement and
what Qatar got in the process of all it. But yeah,
this is the kind of thing that US should not
have at all allowed to happen. Would we have unique
(01:17:25):
capability to prevent it from being anything horrible? I think
we would. We would have the capability if it's on
US soil and surrounded by US military. The odds of
Qatar are doing something bad with a air force base
they have here are hopefully low. But it's just surreal
as a sentence, you know, in all honesty, it's a
strange thing to say and think is happening, and a
(01:17:46):
lot of people on both sides of the aisle are
very confused by it. I wonder if that's what it is, though,
If it's a level of arrogance and deserved arrogance, I'll
say this, We deserve to be arrogant about our capabilities
capabilities as a military force in the world, you know,
so much so that you might be able to say
out loud, all right, you can build a base in
(01:18:07):
our country and we'll still screw you up if you
ever try to hurt any of us, because of how
capable we are and how much we would have insight
into whatever it is you're saying and doing inside that
facility inside our country. But it still feels like a
thing you should never do. It feels like a bending
of the knee. That's just strange. And so I don't
get it, and I think a lot of people don't
get it. And I think that Dana specifically is quite
(01:18:29):
right in saying that if you wind up on the
wrong side of certain issues from the United States and
begrudgingly eventually a wind up somehow facilitating something that's supposed
to help us at the end of the day, the
reward for you can't be this gigantic, it can't be
this monumental, and you can't have the potential to use
it for negative reasons, which I think that people who
(01:18:51):
influence Katar might hope it's capable of doing the amount
of individuals or country leaders or you know, world leaders,
whatever you want to call it, terrorist leaders of groups
like a Moss that hope they have some avenue into
that facility in the United States is through the roof.
And so it's just interesting to open that Pandora's box
(01:19:12):
ever so slightly and to believe in our capability of
keeping it from being something that harms our country more.
But yet that is something that I think if you
were in charge of our military in this country, you
might think you're you're literally incapable of being defeated even
by a force that's on our soil, of our own doing,
because of our capabilities as a force beyond that. So
(01:19:34):
I don't know. I hate to say that this is
a will see moment because it's not. It shouldn't have happened.
I don't think it should happen. It feels like, you know,
the kind of thing that we shouldn't surrender on. And
yet I wonder if ten twenty, thirty, fifty years, one
hundred years, two hundred years from now it has any
impact whatsoever on our society, or if we're fully capable
of managing and controlling an organization that's not us having
(01:19:56):
a facility like that within our country, which I think
we probably we are. I'm still not happy about it,
all right, Another thing out there. Speaker Johnson has said
that he is furious that it's very likely that Democrats
are holding out the government shut down until no King's Day,
which is October eighteenth, and Antifa involved rally in DC
(01:20:17):
and New York and other places. Here's part of what
Mike Johnson said to I think this was Fox News
earlier today about the likelihood that this is why Democrats
are still refusing to open the government.
Speaker 8 (01:20:30):
A very patient guy, but I have had it with
these people. They're playing games with real people's lives. The
theory we have right now, they have a Hate America
rally that's scheduled for October eighteenth on the National Mall.
It's all the pro Hamas wing and the ANTIFA people.
They're all coming out. Some of the House Democrats are
selling T shirts for the event, and it's being told
(01:20:53):
to us that they won't be able to reopen the
government until after that rally because they can't face their
rabid base. I mean, this is serious business hurting real people,
and I just I'm beyond words. I can't believe they're
actually doing this.
Speaker 1 (01:21:06):
Yeah, I can believe they're doing that. That's not remotely
shocking to me at all, in all honesty, because Democrats
always care more about optics than anything else. They don't
care about who's helped or who's hurt. They only care
about convincing you that they're the good guys, and the
other sides of the bad guys at all costs, at
all times, even if it makes them very much the
bad guys and doing that. But nonetheless, I do think
(01:21:27):
it's interesting, and I know that Mike Johnson is saying that,
you know, you're toying with americans lives. This is something
very often that the left will say if the right
threatens to shut down the government. So it does fall
on deaf ears to me to consider one side of
the aisle suddenly more concerned than they appear to be
when they're not in power, and using this as a
way to wield any sort of control of the government,
(01:21:49):
even you know, ever so slightly. And yet a part
of me also knows that the Republican Party doesn't usually
run on a platform we're trying to fight the Nazis
and the other side is the Nazis and all this
other crap that they say all the time. By the way,
Trump ushered in peace in Israel. Apparently Hitler is in
charge of that because they call him Hitler. I love
the Babylon Bee and others who had headlines like that,
(01:22:12):
Hitler responsible for Peace in Israel is a unique headline.
The Democrats seem to basically be saying themselves all the
time if they are even paying attention to and not
fully ignoring that story. But nonetheless, I just can't get
over the fact that what really strikes me is important
here is that the people who vote on the left
believe their side to be the good guys, and the
(01:22:33):
good guys are behaving in bad faith and bad again
as they always do, because they are in fact the
bad guys, and now they're going to pretend as though
they're just doing it for some other reason. Another thing
out there. I thought this was interesting, and this is
something I actually hope becomes a byproduct of the government
shutting down. The funny thing about the right and fighting
to have the government reopened is we'd also like to
(01:22:55):
fire a whole lot of bureaucratic people that don't need
their jobs, so that can be an end result of
shutting down the government, working with skeleton crews and then
being like, you know, we don't need so many people.
I'm good with that. And Russ Voight seems to also
think that this is totally fine. Let's get some people fired.
Speaker 3 (01:23:12):
Baby.
Speaker 1 (01:23:13):
Here we go.
Speaker 20 (01:23:16):
Trackdown exactly which agencies here on this Friday afternoon are
now sending these notices of reduction and force effectively layoffs
firings to their employees. And just heard from a spokesperson
over at the Health and Human Services Department that they
are among those agencies, those departments that are going to
be moving forward with agency riffs. I am told that
(01:23:40):
here from the agency that it's going to be across
multiple divisions and that under the Biden administration that the
department had become bloated.
Speaker 1 (01:23:48):
This is the spokesperson.
Speaker 20 (01:23:49):
HHS continues to close wasteful and duplicated entities, including those
that are odds with Trump administrations Make America Healthy Again
agenda here, and so.
Speaker 1 (01:23:59):
Just heme's fine with me, to be totally honest, if
we lose some bureaucratic positions that are just taking our
money that don't need to exist, that part, I think
I'd consider a win. And I'd consider it a win
no matter what I'm told or what else you say
about it, because I would like to see us spend
way less money on the government in general anyway. And
I know I'm not alone in feeling that way. So
(01:24:20):
I just think that's kind of an interesting byproduct of
all this and part of the thing that makes you
think maybe this is why it's happening all long. Maybe
the trap was set, the Democrats stepped into the trap,
and now we get to fire some people. That doesn't
seem so bad. All right, we'll take a break. A
lot coming up. I am still fairly dumbfounded at the
idea that there will be an air force military base
of some kind a training facility for another country, a
(01:24:43):
country that has close ties to terrorist groups here in
the United States. And I know that the conspiracy theorists
are saying is because of a golf course. I imagine it's
really more because of our unique belief in ourselves that
can make you arrogant at times. Although I think that
arrogant is justified, that arrogance has justified, and I think
the odds of Qatar are actually harming us by having
(01:25:04):
a facility in our country are actually quite low because
of the capability of our military. Doesn't mean I have
to like it to think that it's something that may
never actually have the worst case scenario play itself out.
It just seems odd. It just seems like something that's
a step too far. A willingness that might have been
a condition of brokering peace between Israel and Hamas that
the United States never should have done. And I know
(01:25:27):
that I'm not alone, and a whole lot of people
on both sides of the aisle are saying something very
similar to that. Right now, I quick break a lot
more Craig Collin's filling in on the Danish.
Speaker 6 (01:25:35):
Show The Folks who will bring you the program? It
is our friends over at bernagun I Carrie. In fact,
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I have you know, regular nine millimeter.
Speaker 1 (01:26:00):
I've got compact.
Speaker 6 (01:26:01):
I've got rifles. I have all sorts of stuff because
you know, different occasions require different things, ladies, like different
occasions require different heel heights. It's the way it is.
You also have knives, et cetera. I think of you know,
college kids that are old enough to go and carry
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(01:26:21):
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Speaker 7 (01:27:26):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Dana's quick five.
Speaker 1 (01:27:31):
That's right, it's time for a quick five on the
Dana Show. D Lash, Dana Lash radio and X on
Twitter a great ways to stay connected to her. Even
when she has a day off. She is tweeting some
reaction to some things going on in the world. Us
to stay connected with her right there at radio craigze
if for some reason you want to follow me as well,
I love that people follow me. I'm nowhere near as
prolific as her, but thank you anyone that supports the show.
(01:27:53):
And here's me on it that jumps in. All right,
some quick stories. Bob Ross paintings are going to be
auctioned off in support of public like TV stations that
no longer have federal funding because they're ridiculously one side
and bias. I love the fact that these public stations
don't want to just sell advertising and make money the
right way and have a programming that enough people actually
(01:28:15):
pay attention to, so the advertising is value. Instead, you
want to sell Bob Ross painting. If anything would make
me rethink my advertising budget in twenty twenty five or
twenty six if I'm already planning on that one now,
which many are, it would be watching a station I'm
advertising on have to sell paintings by Bob Ross to
make enough money to keep operating. That might make me
(01:28:36):
think you don't have enough viewers for my you know,
ad to be valuable enough as is, so God forbid
they try to do it that way and have engaging
content that people pay attention to. Instead, they're going to
crack open the vault and see what they have in
storage that they can sell off for some amount of money.
Speaking of like a weird money related story, though there's
(01:28:57):
another one out there in Canada. A Marine Land is
a theme park in Canada that says it needs emergency
funding now and apparently it has no Bob Ross paintings
to sell, so it's very upset about that. It either
needs that funding or it's going to euthanize thirty beluga whales.
I'm not laughing because I think that's funny. I'm laughing
because of the prospect of that as an either or
(01:29:19):
scenario that this organization is putting out to the world.
It sounds like a mob. It sounds like we're killing
these thirty whales if you don't give us money. Now
a kind of a thing. It doesn't sound like the
kind of thing that usually a theme park would go
about saying or doing in a more measured way. It's
you either give us funds immediately, or we have to
(01:29:39):
off thirty beluga whales that don't deserve it, and we're
gonna like send parts of them down to the world
very mafia style, just so you know the bad thing
you did. That feels like what's going on here. But
Canada is actually saying that they're, you know, hard up
for cash, at least this one amusement park is. And
it's in either or scenario that you never thought you'd
see coming by people that claim to be scientists and
(01:30:02):
you know, theme park operators and not necessarily members of
the mob. Montana had a car crash or I could
actually call it a cow crash that was unique and
feels very Montana. One hundred and twenty cows tipped over.
They were inside a cattle hauler truck on Miles City
in Miles City on Sunday afternoon on I ninety four.
(01:30:24):
It caused backups, it caused problems. Cows got everywhere. Apparently
the cow survived, which is good. That's a good thing.
But a lot of them got into the community, into
the town. And here's my favorite part of when you
know you're living in a Montana and not say like
in New York City. A bunch of cowboys got on
their horses and carrouned all the cows because they were
called into action and capable of acting in a place
(01:30:47):
like Montana without actually being then you know, requested and
called from say some neighboring community that's not inside their
big city. They got it done, baby, and they got
it done fast. The cows were removed quickly. That doesn't
have happened in some places. A one final story and
I just found this funny. Ferrari's stock has tumbled after
(01:31:07):
a big debut of its electric vehicle because, surprise, surprise,
no one wants an electric Ferrari. You do want a sweet, delicious,
amazing sports car. You want it to sound and act
like a sweet, delicious, amazing sports car, and you need gasoline, baby,
for that to happen. You don't want fake sounds and
dumb electricity. But the electric sports car that was finally
(01:31:27):
unveiled by Ferrari that they said people have been long
clamoring for apparently was overshadowed by the fact that their
organization is doing terrible and their stock is tumbling. By
twenty thirty, it looks like the outlook for Ferrari would
be even worse, which makes me sad. There were so
many movies that focused on Ferrari recently, Forward Versus Ferrari
(01:31:47):
and whatnot. And Ferrari's are just cool vehicles. You want
the place to succeed, but you definitely don't need an
electric one. All right, we'll take a break. After the break,
I'll play you audio of a Democrat failing at a debate,
because it happens all the time. Next on the Data.
Speaker 6 (01:32:01):
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Speaker 1 (01:33:13):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you a bunch of
stuff to talk about. You would think that it's easy
for a politician, Democrat or Republican to distance themselves from
somebody within their party who seems to think that violence
politically is totally fine, is totally okay. That was not,
in fact the case during a debate yesterday in which
(01:33:34):
a Democratic politician was held even so smallly like, so
barely to the fire, her feet were they dabbled in
the fire, and she failed incredibly to give a positive
or valuable answer to this question, or any answer whatsoever
to a question about Jay Jones and text message controversies
that you may or may not know anything about. Long
(01:33:56):
and short of that is j Jones essentially showing that
he's totally fine with his political opposition being shot and killed,
or people on the other side of the aisle party
wise being killed for their political beliefs. That's totally fine
with him, a controversy that's caused some issues. Abigail A.
Span Burger really really struggled and just straight up refused
to answer this question asked of her, here we go,
(01:34:19):
thank you.
Speaker 12 (01:34:19):
Miss van Berger. I just I didn't hear an answer
there on the endorsement issue, so I want to just
make sure will you continue to endorse Jay Jones to
be the next Attorney General of Virginia. And were you
aware of these text messages before they released? You have
thirty seconds.
Speaker 13 (01:34:36):
In fact, it appears that it was those who released
the text messages and held them for years, so the
public was unaware who had knowledge of these text messages,
and many of us to the text messages the day
that they came out.
Speaker 1 (01:34:52):
Okay, already, I feel like I need to paint the
picture here for anyone who's unaware of this. I know
this is a national show. If you're in Virginia, you're
probably very aware of these politic If you're somewhere else,
you might not be. But the other lady who is
speaking the political opposition a Republican politician is a black woman.
The person who's being asked the question to begin with
(01:35:12):
is a white woman. If a black excuse me, minority
woman defeats a white woman in a position, you know,
in a race somewhere in the country, I don't know
how the left will handle that because they want to
call it sexism or racism. But the person who defeated
the individuals they want to win would be subject to
(01:35:34):
more of the things that they claim to be issues
in our society. So it's hard to fathom how someone
who is again a black woman beats a white woman
and somehow race indoor sex is a is a byproduct
of the reason for the loss for the Democrats, But
that's what they'll say somehow, someway they'll go there. But
I just love the attitude to by the way. I
know it's a hallmark or a stereotype or whatever you
(01:35:55):
want to call it of a black woman occasionally to
be able to execu cute these types of questions in
a way that maybe no one else can say them
tone wise or whatnot, but you hear it there, and
I think that if if it's the left and their
party that's acting this way, they'd praise this. They said
that the Republican was, you know, upsetting people and interrupting
(01:36:17):
a lot, and that Errol Earl Sayers, excuse me, is
someone who you know didn't behave professionally. But I feel
like if she were again a Democratic politician, they'd love
every part of this and they'd call her Mama at
two point zero. But let's continue out.
Speaker 13 (01:36:31):
And I denounced them as soon as I learned of
an importantly at this point as we move forward, the
voters now have this information, information that was withheld for them.
You're running for the zoom for aff reasons, but the
voters now have the information and it is up to
voters to make an individual choice based on this information.
Speaker 1 (01:36:55):
Can you hear the shaking in her voice? By the way,
it's not because of the the interruptions by the political
opposition that's on the stage with her. It's the fact
that she knows. She's absolutely terribly avoiding this question. She's
not doing it in a smart way, in a good way,
in a way where it feels like she answered the question,
but she didn't. She's absolutely struggling because she refuses to
say the words that are evidently true. She does still
(01:37:17):
endorse a political candidate who seems to be totally fine
with murders. That seems to be something that is absolutely
okay with Jay Jones, and it's something that she should
distance herself from. But can't. I want to play it
again because I want you to hear the shaking in
the voice. When the best thing you can come up
with is the voters get to vote now. And even
though you asked me a question about what I think
the voter should do. My answer is that they get
(01:37:39):
to vote and they choose what they want to do.
And other than that, I don't want to say any
of this I.
Speaker 13 (01:37:43):
Learned of importantly at this point as we move forward,
the voters now have this information, information that was withheld
for them. You're running for for affairs reasons, but the
voters now have information and it is up to voters
to make an individual choice based on this information.
Speaker 1 (01:38:06):
Miss Bamber.
Speaker 12 (01:38:06):
I understand what you're saying about the voters, But for
you yourself, do you still continue to endorse Jay Jones?
Speaker 1 (01:38:13):
I asked you a question. You basically describe the political
process to me. As a response to the question, can
you answer the question now fifteen seconds? Yes or no?
Speaker 13 (01:38:22):
We are all running our individual races. I believe my
opponent has said that about I'm her lieutenant governor nominee.
Speaker 12 (01:38:28):
Is are all fair and it's up to.
Speaker 13 (01:38:29):
Every person to make their own decision. I am running
my race to serve Virginia and that is what I
intend to do.
Speaker 12 (01:38:37):
Thank you, missus vam Berger. We just want to clarify
you know what you're saying is that as of now,
you still endorse Jay Jones as attorney general.
Speaker 13 (01:38:47):
I'm saying, as of now, it's up to every voter
to make their own individual decision. I am running for government.
Speaker 1 (01:38:53):
Just try to envision like, because I sometimes I have
this with my wife, not this not what you just heard,
but the version of hey, what do you want to
have for dinner tonight? And then missus is like, whatever
you want to have. But then there's definitely a right
and wrong answer. We all know this. We've seen the
jokes on social media about this. Just consider this with
Abigail spam Berger as a thing like, Hey, what do
you want to have tonight? Whatever you want? People everywhere
(01:39:15):
throughout this country are going to be eating food this evening,
all kinds of different food, of different options, and that's
food that they get to choose to eat based on
whatever location they want to go to. Yeah, but what
do you want? Yep? I definitely think that that's a
great question and the best way to answer it is
that people choose to eat food based on what they
You just go crazy if you had to deal with
(01:39:36):
this all the time. And it's just uniquely, uniquely horrible
for her part, Ale Sayers eel or Earl, I don't
know why I keep stumbling over that part. Earl says
absolutely crushed her in another moment where it's just ridiculous
to think that what's going on right now, in so
many different races, in so many different places, is anything
(01:39:58):
other than, you know, pretending as though the American people
are so incredibly stupid that you can say and do
whatever you want in any scenario, in any way, shape
or form, and they'll just keep voting for you regardless,
even after Trump actually wins the popular vote and shows
that substance of arguments does matter more than Democrats wanted to.
(01:40:19):
They continue to swing and miss on so many of
these things. Here's another moment where I absolutely think wins.
Earl Sears did an incredible job of just crushing her opponent.
Speaker 6 (01:40:29):
If your little girl comes home and said she was
forced to undress in a locker room with a biological.
Speaker 1 (01:40:35):
Boy, what would you say, she's crying?
Speaker 13 (01:40:38):
What would you say?
Speaker 1 (01:40:40):
Would you silence baby? I love that the other politician
doesn't even look her in the eye. She's like, I
can't even answer that question, because it does seem as
though Abigail Spanberger did side with a trans sex abuser
who wanted to change in you know women's rooms. That
(01:41:02):
was a biological man. It's just crazy that this is
the kind of stuff they do because apparently they're terrified
of their political side coming after them if they're not
far enough left and woke enough. And actually, you know,
I'll play that audio again, not the audio I just played,
but something I played earlier in the show today, because
one more time I will demonstrate that yet another issue
in which it seems as though the problem for many
(01:41:25):
people is the No King's protest and not at all
the fact that I think that, you know, many politicians
would like to see the government open or not open
or any of that crap. But No King's Day, which
is on October eighteenth, is a day that apparently Mark
Wayne Mullen and others have been told Democrats refused to
(01:41:47):
open the government before that day because if they do,
the problem for them will be that they're the left
will eat them alive, will be very upset about all
the decisions that they've made, et cetera, et cetera, which
is crazy. And I want to play this audio trying
to make sure to find it relatively quickly of Senator Mullens,
because it is the typical kind of thing that you'd
(01:42:11):
see from the left to you know, in any way,
shape or form, say that what's happening right now, what's
going on, what's occurring in this society. Whether you think
there's the good guys or bad guys, and whatever side
of the isle you think they're on, they're really just
doing it for whatever optical thing they want or they
think is best to achieve. I don't think I can
play the audio. I don't have it, so I'll try
(01:42:32):
to find it for later and we'll take a break
in just a second. But nonetheless he's saying that because
No King's Day is coming up, Democrats think of it
as a political win for the government to still be
closed on that day, a day when in DC and
New York and other places they will protest having no
king in this country and claiming that Trump is a
king when he's not one. It's the funniest protest because
(01:42:53):
I feel like they can all just go home when
they show up and they're like, yeah, no kings here,
and then you look at them and be like, there
are no kings. Our political system is still working. There
are still checks and balances. Trump still loses in courtrooms
throughout the country on some of the issues that he'd
like to do a certain way, it's still not going
the way you want that happens, and their deaf fears
(01:43:14):
to that. One last thing, I guess I'll throw this
out there again too. A guitar will be getting its
own air force facility, its own training facility within the
United States, which is a very odd thing. There's no
positive way to spin this, even if I desire to
do it, which I just desire to tell you the
truth of what I think. I don't care about spinning anything.
(01:43:35):
But I'll play this audio quickly of heg Seth earlier
today saying that Qatar will get its own air force
training facility in Idaho and how odd it is. And
Dana actually tweeted about this too. Delash Dana Lash Radio
and acts on Twitter that if you stand with terrorists,
that if you support terrorists, your reward if you do
(01:43:55):
help us eventually broker peace between terrorists and Israel, isn't
that you get your own military base inside the United States.
That's a disproportionate roared for whatever level of help you
actually gave us. I'm paraphrasing. She didn't say all that,
but She's absolutely right about that. That feels wrong. This
is insane. Let's play a little bit of this.
Speaker 21 (01:44:16):
We also value the close corporation between Doha and Washington
that led to the signing of the Gaza Peace Plan
on October eighth. This historic achievement underscore what can be
accomplished when our nations work together with courage and trust
amongst other partners such as Egypt and Turkey. We've further
(01:44:39):
welcome today's signing of the Letter of Acceptance establishing a
Katari a Mere Air Force Facility and Mountain Home Air
Base in Idaho. This tip strengthen in tarborabilities, enhance joining treadiness,
and advance our shared defense goals.
Speaker 1 (01:44:57):
Yeah, it's weird. There's a weird announcement. It's a weird thing.
HEGs that. Tod echo it and say that it was
something that was happening. And I don't say this in
a way where I'm judgmental. I don't know why I
need to clarify that for you, but I feel like
I do. I think the arrogance of the capabilities of
our military is a deserved feeling. The United States is
uniquely good in that world, and so our belief that
(01:45:20):
Katar could have its own facility here in the United
States and it would pose no actual risk to us.
Probably is born from that level of arrogance, and it
might actually be accurate. I do imagine that in the
years to come, the odds of anything actually bad happening
because of the amount of oversight we'll have over that
facility is probably non existent. This probably will not actually
(01:45:40):
a threat in the safety of the American people, which
seems like it deserves to be said. Nonetheless, it just
feels wrong. It just feels like the kind of thing
we shouldn't do, even if we have the capability to
make it abundantly safe to have because we are who
we are, it just still seems like the kind of
thing we shouldn't be doing. And a whole lot of
people are saying exactly that. They're very confused about the announcement,
(01:46:02):
the decision. I don't believe it's golf course connected, but
I do believe it's the kind of thing that we
just think, like, what's the risk. We're too powerful to
be harmed by something like this, and there's no reason
to even go about opening that Pandora's box. But all right,
quick break a little bit coming up in a lot, well,
a little bit and a little time left. Creig Collins
filling in on The Dana Show.
Speaker 3 (01:46:23):
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Speaker 1 (01:46:33):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in for just a few more minutes. Dana is
back on Monday, thrilled to be with you on a
Friday show. Lots of different things to talk about, with
very little time left, let's do this first. The top
trending Halloween costumes this year are mostly from a movie
I haven't seen, the K Pop Demon Hunter thing that
your kids probably love and you may or may not
(01:46:56):
know anything about, depending on how old your children are.
But several of the all of the top five, in fact,
actually are costumes from that list. There's other things in
this list that I did not recognize at all, most
of the things which makes me feel old. This is
the point where you're getting older that you realize you
know less and less about the stuff the young kids
are liking. I know what a laboo boo is, I
(01:47:17):
don't like Laboo Boo's. I think they're weird and dumb,
and I don't know why people like them. They're the
latest beanie baby and they're horribly unattractive. But the laboobo
made the list too. My favorite one on this list
was night Wing, which is the Robin character and Batman
and Robin. After he grows up and stops being Robin,
he becomes night Wing. Apparently that's an all time high.
(01:47:39):
I don't know why. I don't know what's going on
in the world of DC, you know, comics and or
superheroes and night Wing specifically that he's this high in
the list, but he's up there. My favorite, too, is
when you look at a breakdown of certain states and
the things that people are dressing up like there, or
even cities within those states, and you find Indianapolis in Indiana.
(01:48:01):
Ricky Bobby, the Talladaganites character is still in the top
five and has been on the top five every year
that you've been having a Halloween for quite some time,
which is great as long as we've been keeping the
track of this information. I guess if you dive into
parts of Texas, I also find some results uniquely interesting
or humorous as far as that goes to. Let's see
(01:48:25):
if we can find Houston, Texas, which is actually where
I'm broadcasting from. I'm broadcasting from the k se V
studios in Houston, Texas. All of them are K pop
demon hunters. Here, we have failed to do anything unique,
anything interesting. Let's check out Dallas, which is where actually
Dana typically broadcasts our show from. La Booboo is the
(01:48:46):
only thing that seemed to throw off the top five,
coming in at number two there. But you can go
on freightgeist dot com, which is sponsored by Google, and
look up your specific city and see what the top
Halloween trending costumes are there and see if you've even
heard of them. Most of them promptly not other things
out there, people are sharing the strange rules their parents
had growing up. No turning on the lights during a thunderstorm,
(01:49:09):
no wearing clothing with faces on them was a weird one.
We had to drink a huge glass of milk before
we had anything else. Was one that's out there that
I like because actually I had something similar to that
growing up. We had one drink cup on the kitchen
sink and the entire family shared it and it was
only washed twice a week. This was the water cup.
(01:49:30):
If you want water, you can't get your own water cup,
you have to share this one. That's gross, that's weird.
And then finally my favorite, one of the strange rules
people had no stepping on the bath mat with wet feet,
even if the bath mat is designed to be stepped
on with wet feet. Apparently someone was told no to
that whole situation. But what weird rules did you have?
What weared things did you grow up with? As a question,
(01:49:52):
you can probably answer for Dana on all of our
social media pages and not explain it. Greg Collins filled in,
told me to do this if you have to. All right,
that's it. That's all for me. Dana is back on Monday.
Greig Collins filling in on The Dana Show.