All Episodes

August 7, 2025 102 mins
President Trump floats the idea of bringing the National Guard into DC over out-of-control crime. Trump directs the Department of Commerce to do a new census to exclude illegal aliens. Failed Georgia Candidate Stacey Abrams claims Trump is an aspiring dictator. Stressed adults are now relying on pacifiers to soothe themselves? H1D Angel Reese is once again DEMANDING the WNBA to pay her more money. Penske releases a statement condemning DHS using their brand of trucks for immigration enforcement raids. Apple CEO Tim Cook announces an end-to-end silicon supply chain that will be entirely in the United States investing over $600 Billion. South Park’s latest episode makes fun of Kristi Noem, ICE and J.D. Vance, which also makes references to “Fantasy Island”. The US Census reportedly over-counted Blue States in 2020. Young male college grads are now jobless at the same rate as non-grads. H3D Nova Scotia BANS their citizens from going into the woods over fears of arson and wildfires.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
That had anything to do with it. But we've had
very productive talks today.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Yes, ma'am, DC, are.

Speaker 3 (00:06):
You considerant taking over the DC police.

Speaker 1 (00:08):
Is at an optional We're considering it, yeah, because the
crime is ridiculous. I could show you a chart comparing
DC to other locations and you're not going to want
to see what it looks like.

Speaker 4 (00:21):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (00:21):
It was just up on television actually.

Speaker 5 (00:23):
That were showing it.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
Now.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
We want to have a great safe capital and we're
going to have it, and that includes cleanliness and includes
other things. We have a capital that's very unsafe.

Speaker 6 (00:34):
You know.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
We just almost lost a young man, beautiful handsome guy
that got the hell knocked out of him the night
before last.

Speaker 3 (00:43):
And.

Speaker 1 (00:45):
I'm going to call him now. We wanted to give
him a little recovery time. We just put a call
into him. They're calling back a little while. But he
went through a bad situation, to put it mildly, and
there's too much of it. We're going to we're going
to do something about it. So whether you call it
federalized or what. And that also includes the graffiti that

(01:07):
you see the papers all over the place, the roads
that are in bed shape, the medians that are falling
down the median in between roads that's falling down.

Speaker 7 (01:16):
We're going to beautify the city.

Speaker 1 (01:17):
We're going to make it beautiful, and what a shame
the rate of crime, the rate of muggings, killings, and
everything else.

Speaker 4 (01:26):
We're not going to let it.

Speaker 1 (01:28):
And that includes bringing in the National Guard, maybe very
quickly too.

Speaker 4 (01:32):
Do you want Congress to look at overturning the DC.

Speaker 8 (01:35):
They may have to. I mean, if you have Democrat
politicians who can't keep their cities safe and keep their
cities clean, that's a problem. I also, you know, I'm
curious as to why there isn't I mean, I'm sure
there's a lot of uproar and excuse me, criticism for

(01:56):
the people who live there, surely, so I'm just wondering,
you know, wouldn't it Where are those where a lot
of those people at I mean, where's the pressure on
the mayor? You know, we need I mean, this is
it's ridiculous. I remember going to d C and you
could walk around anywhere. And now you know, my friends

(02:18):
that live in DC are like, yeah that I wouldn't
walk here and I wouldn't go here. It used to
not be I mean, it was always there were parts
that were always sketchy, but it used to not be.
I guess the word I'm looking for is like ubiquitous.
It's like everywhere. Now it seems like there's just this
is kind of the problem with the breakdown of law
and order. And of course, you know, yeah, Steve was

(02:40):
even saying he doesn't even go anywhere near DuPont Circle anymore.
My gosh, can you remember the Union station there? The
train station. If I had stuff that I had to
do in New York that I would hop on the
train and go from New York to it because it
was a hell of a lot easier than taking the
plane and go to d C from New York. And
it was, you know, not and I could work the

(03:00):
whole time. It wasn't a bad train ride, and it was.
It was a beautiful train station, right, it was very pretty.
I mean you for craning outlined. You had a Macrome
place there you go get them little French cookies. It
was good and it was very pretty. They had like
a good food court and all of that stuff. And
this was not ten years ago. Now it's so now

(03:22):
nobody goes there, No one will go there, no one
wants have anything to do with DuPont's circle. No one
wants to have anything to do with the Union station.

Speaker 2 (03:29):
Nobody.

Speaker 8 (03:30):
It's just so incredibly sad. And it's all because there's
this refusal to enforce law, and because it's viewed as
being mean. Why is it never viewed as being mean
to the people who pay the taxes and live there.
This is what I don't get about the left, because
they're always like, well, it's like you're mean if you're

(03:53):
somehow making criminals actually endure the consequence of their actions.

Speaker 2 (04:01):
Well, why is it not.

Speaker 8 (04:02):
Mean to the people who live there, who have to
deal with us nonsense every single day? Why is it
not mean for them? I don't get that. I don't
like politicians that do that that make people feel bad
because they simply because they feel like they are entitled
due to the taxes they pay and the area in

(04:24):
which they live. You know that they that they it
should be safe, right, And so much of them are young.
So much of the criminals are younger criminals, and I think,
like a significant portion in these stories, they're all juveniles.
I mean, like, you know, under the age eighteen. I
think the dude, who who is they were beating up
big balls. I think what was it? He was like
they were two of them were fifteen years old. So

(04:45):
where are the parents? I think we have to have
serious conversation about the parents in these instances. And let's
be real. I don't know what it is, but you know,
just like how you have a disproportionate amount of white
people that do a disproportionate amount of the people. The
juveniles who are carrying out these crimes are black. That's

(05:06):
just the way it is. Are we gonna have a
talk about this or is it gonna be considered bad
because you have idiots out there that are like, oh,
I guess you're making a racist comment. No, I'm literally
talking about statistics. It would be the same conversation if
we were talking about well meth being in central Missouri.
We're talking about this issue though, gosh, quit. People need
to quit just getting all fetished off on the racial

(05:28):
aspect of it. As a dodge. I'm so tired of it.
So welcome to the program, Dana lash with you.

Speaker 2 (05:33):
We are at.

Speaker 8 (05:34):
The top of this first hour, and hopefully we'll get
some well, I mean law and order. That would be great,
to be great, to be able to because DC is
a nice I mean, it has beautiful architecture, it's a
beautiful town. I just I'm not I'm knowing, Hell, am
I ever going to walk around like certain areas at night.

Speaker 2 (05:53):
I just it just used to be so it used
to be a.

Speaker 8 (05:55):
Hell of a lot nicer, and now it's I mean,
can you remember like going a seapack like ten fifteen
years ago. It was just used to be so much nicer.
You could walk out. You could could walk you know,
back when they used to hold it downtown before they
moved it to the wharf. I mean, you could do gosh,
you could walk out to a restaurant, walk out gets
sushie at like ten o'clock, not have to worry about

(06:16):
you could walk all over the town not have to
worry about anything except you know, maybe some of the
bums in the park is about it.

Speaker 2 (06:22):
That's easy to handle. Now now it's a mess.

Speaker 8 (06:26):
So that's uh, it's kind of a weird slow news
day today. We've got Congress that's out. Everybody's back in
their districts. They are talking to their voters. Well they're
supposed to be in La Sera. Swallowell, you're at the
gym lifting lightweights into and god knows what else and
the uh have I mean, there's like a And Lorraine

(06:48):
was saying, by the way, real quick, she grew up
outside of DC. She was like, there's always been areas,
but now, oh yeah, there's always been those areas. Now
it's like the whole city's inn area.

Speaker 2 (06:56):
It's so sad. That just makes me depressed. Kane, I
believe I'm going.

Speaker 8 (07:00):
To say the phrase, but it the good old days,
you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (07:05):
There are good old days for a reason.

Speaker 9 (07:07):
Man.

Speaker 8 (07:07):
All right, so some of the other stuff, Potus, this
is a pretty significant thing.

Speaker 2 (07:11):
Everybody's gonna lose their redacted over this. I'm just waiting.

Speaker 8 (07:14):
Can are you waiting for the flood on this? So
earlier today Potus announced I think this is genius, not genius.

Speaker 2 (07:21):
It needs to happen. This needs to be done.

Speaker 8 (07:23):
He directed the Department of Commerce to conduct new census
that's going to exclude illegal aliens. I don't say the
phrase undocumented immigrants. I'm just not going to say it.
I know that AP style is like demanding, you know,
like associated press style demans that you capitalize being black,
but not anything else. No other racial distinction has to
be capitalized. But being black, that's ap style. And now

(07:47):
undocumented immigrants is apparently ap I hate that phrase because
it's that's that is the stupidest thing ever. I'm just
gonna I'll steal and just call it an undocumented purchase.
So illegal aliens they are looking to and this is
how it should be done. Congressional apportionment, apportionment on citizen
accounts of the citizenry, and this is something that they're

(08:08):
drawing a lot of the data from twenty twenty four,
et cetera. I think that this is absolutely huge. It
absolutely has to happen, and that's because you have a
lot of these states that are counting illegal aliens and
they're trying to pad out their numbers and that's a
pretty significant thing to do, and they've been doing it.
And this is you know, it's not made up, it's

(08:30):
not a lie. And I'm hoping they can do it.
I don't know how long it takes to do a census,
but I hope that they can get it done quickly.
I'm just looking ahead at twenty twenty eight, the twenty
twenty one, which was conducted under his first term. I
mean it was just blasted by the pandemic, and so
the results for that, I think we're delayed up until

(08:53):
like twenty twenty one. And then remember Biden, he was
the one who dashed potuses efforts to exclude people who
are illegal alien from the totals. So he did not
want to exclude illegal aliens from the totals. They wanted
to keep it in. And so the Census Bureau even

(09:13):
acknowledged in twenty twenty two they were absolutely undercounting some populations,
some of the different populations, and they said, well, you know,
it's the pandemic. That's okay, let's redo it again because
it caused so many problems. Let's do it again, and
then let's also exclude illegal aliens. So I don't some

(09:35):
people say that under Biden, minorities were undercounted. I think
I think there were whole districts that were undercounted to
suit Democrat purposes, to be honest, So I don't know.
I mean, it would be weird, it'd be in the
middle of a cycle. I don't know, because there were
states that when they did the twenty twenty adjustment that

(09:55):
they benefited from that. And I really we don't think
that they're gonna want to risk losing any seats that
they may have gained and that new assessment, so that
might be something there might be some pushback there. I
don't know if this would even if whether or not
the readjustment of these districts, if this would even be

(10:16):
done in time to affect twenty twenty eight, and then
you would only have twenty thirty, and then it would
be I mean, then you would have to do the
normal reapportionment.

Speaker 2 (10:27):
I don't know. It's just it's just a mess. So
that's and a lot.

Speaker 8 (10:30):
Of that is due to the way Democrats were running
it under Biden and then it was delayed, et cetera,
et cetera.

Speaker 2 (10:35):
But I mean they can.

Speaker 8 (10:36):
We can conduct as many as we want. It's not like,
you know, you are only allowed to conduct one census
every ten years or something like that.

Speaker 2 (10:43):
I mean we we I mean we can.

Speaker 8 (10:46):
I will say though, and I was looking at this,
this is I mean literally US Constitution dot net Article one,
Section two. The number of times that you can have
a reapportionment is supposed to be one time per decade.
I mean, that's at least how the language appears. And
they call it a enumeration. In this it says the

(11:07):
actual enumeration shall be made within three years after the
first meeting of Congress on of the United States, and
within every subsequent term of ten years, in such manner
as they shell by law direct I don't think that
Trump would win that if it went to court, but
still I do think that there's an excellent argument to
be made. Because the pandemic and then with Biden trying

(11:30):
to boost certain districts Democrats trying to boost certain districts,
there was absolute shenanigans happening. I think it has to
be done again. They undercounted states like Florida. I mean,
for kranel A loud, Florida got so undercounted. Texas honestly
was undercounted as well. And meanwhile they'll overcount states like California.
California actually should be losing some seats, absolutely, I don't.

(11:55):
They've had just a flood of people flee the state,
so they're going to lose their minds over this. It
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Speaker 10 (13:53):
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It's time for Dana's quick five.

Speaker 8 (13:59):
All right, So first up, a vast underwater city was
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I mean, that's pretty cool, isn't it.

Speaker 8 (14:15):
The former Superman actor Dean Kane also reveals that he's
becoming an ICE agent to support the mass deportation agenda.

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I kind of like that.

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Mass m DA mass deportation agenda. He's going to be
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unprecedented Mmm, stupid Guardian article.

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I am so important, I need to let you know
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your stupid bias. You're literally a cancer in journalism. These
people are a cancer to journalism. They absolutely are. It's true,

(15:10):
all right.

Speaker 2 (15:11):
So ooh, I don't know take this.

Speaker 8 (15:14):
What you will AP is trying well the ap story
is not coming up anymore because for some reason, but
they were trying to argue that somehow potus is the tariffs.
It's a record high What were they saying, it's record
high export, et cetera, et cetera. We'll come back to
that because I think that's in the light of the
penalties that they just applied to India, which, by the way,

(15:36):
they apply these penalties to India because India won't stop
buying Russian gas and oil.

Speaker 2 (15:41):
I mean, you can.

Speaker 8 (15:42):
Buy perfectly wonderful American gas and oil right comes in red, white,
and blue. Maybe not, but it could. China is tiding
killer robot wolves. Anyone who thinks that these things are
gonna work longer than five minutes clearly has never purchased
anything made in China.

Speaker 5 (15:57):
Are regular wolves not killer enough?

Speaker 8 (16:00):
No, apparently they're not. It's killer robot wolves. Wolves probably
don't like communists.

Speaker 2 (16:05):
I don't know.

Speaker 8 (16:07):
Yeah, I'm just saying it's so it's a There are
military wolf robots. They're designed to stealthily approach enemies. No
one believes this, fire precise shots on targets. Nobody believes that,
and work in rough terrain. Literally no one believes this,
says the state media, who Oh, the Communist Party, the
Communist broadcaster said that the robots, which weren't upgrade from

(16:29):
our earlier robotic dog iterations that no one ever saw,
can replace human soldiers in dangerous conditions to reduce combat casualties.
You know what else can be used as a replacement
for soldiers and reduce combat casualties of at least one side,
a giant bomb that can be used to So China

(16:49):
is really in an ai and a robotics race with us.
But you know they do have a disadvantage the hole
made in China.

Speaker 2 (16:55):
That's that's the thing. Anyway. So I would actually have
a robot wolf a pet. It's kind of what.

Speaker 8 (17:02):
Arbiters aren't dark tied anyway, You basically have a robot wolf.

Speaker 2 (17:05):
That's kind of what it is. Anyway. Ah, we'll come
back to that if we want to.

Speaker 8 (17:09):
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(17:30):
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Speaker 11 (18:44):
Among the many other vile things that Donald Trump has
been called, including tyrant, liar, scam artist, he is also
an aspiring dictator, supported and guided like a puppet by
a cabal of tech billionaires, Christian nationalist and xenophobes who
all have his ear and underscanned government a lot better
than he does.

Speaker 8 (19:05):
Good grief these that's a Stacey big vun Abrams, President
of Georgia. Yeah, she's uh, what is? Can I ask
what an aspiring dictator is? I mean, you either are
one or you're not. I am too.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
I'm going to just identify as that.

Speaker 8 (19:23):
I'm going to start putting in all my business cards
and demanding Fox identify I mean the lower third as such,
aspiring dictator. Vengeance is ours twenty twenty. Whatever the hell
that's it. Just welcome, Welcome to the world of the
real Tana lash with you. We're at the bottom of
this first hour. This is all they have. First off,

(19:43):
why she out there? She's a drag dude, She's a
drag man. She's just what does she bring to any Democrat?
Notice how they've I've and I've noticed this, they keep
notes of You know, some of these people like Beta Worlwart.
You never see that guy ask to a fundraiser. He's
never asked to any kind dem event. You never see
him getting photos with any.

Speaker 2 (20:03):
Of these people.

Speaker 8 (20:04):
It's like they just they just exiled that dude because
he's just cringe. He's one step Actually he's on the
same level. Is that Jack Schlossberg, Caroline Kennedy's weirdo kid.
I say kid, he's like in his mid twenties, mid
to late twenties. But then you have Stacy Abrams. I
don't ever see her doing anything with anybody either, do you.

(20:25):
She doesn't raise money. She's not a fundraiser, isn't she
in debt? I thought that she didn't pay all her
campaign debts off because she kept losing so many times.
You know, as president of Georgia, Stacy Abrams, he's an
aspiring dictator. Where are they getting this stuff from?

Speaker 2 (20:45):
Do we know? Yes, I'm having coffee on air because it's.

Speaker 5 (20:48):
Good Democrat communication central.

Speaker 8 (20:50):
Well, I mean they say things like he's in the spot.
What are they basing this on? What about anything that
he's done is dictatorial? Oh, it's got if in the
three he's got ice surrounding people up. Yes, yes, he
has I surrounding up people who enter the country illegally. Yes,
that's correct. And you think that somehow other, like any

(21:11):
other Western nation, doesn't have this? Do you think somehow
are you so just siloed into where you are, have
never ventured out of your own state, have never left
the country. You think that no other country on God's
green Earth does anything similarly? You think that none of
the European nations that these people all worship, that they

(21:32):
don't do things like this, because news flash, they do.

Speaker 2 (21:38):
Just asinine this whole thing.

Speaker 8 (21:42):
Well, he's the one to be dictator because why because
you lost an election. Everyone's a dictator when you lose.
That's all it is with these people.

Speaker 9 (21:51):
Everybody's hitler, everybody's a dictator.

Speaker 2 (21:54):
That's what it is. I lost, So everyone's Hitler.

Speaker 8 (21:58):
There's nothing dictatory. I mean, granted, there are things about
Trump's policies and some of his appointments that I'm like, dude, what,
but not to the point where I'm going to say
he is like Hitler, or that it is he is
an aspiring dictator supported by xenophobes. She's just throwing all
the buzzwords out there. She sounds like some like SEO

(22:20):
optimization tool, and so she talks like that's what they
all sound like. Hitler, dictator, dictatorial, Hitler, holocaust, genophobe. They
all say these things like they have to get so
many words in. It's that SEO optimization filter. They all

(22:41):
sound they're all robot. Okay, they're all robots.

Speaker 5 (22:47):
We know they don't have souls, so that makes sense.

Speaker 8 (22:50):
Yeah they don't. I mean, it's obvious their eyes are dead.

Speaker 2 (22:53):
Look at them. I'm just curious.

Speaker 8 (22:54):
That's just that's just this whole this is how you're
I mean, people aren't going to take you serously like
you got Jake Tapper here audio somebody twenty four for
the love, Like I just I'm expecting like strong arms
and the strong men in the streets and you know,
black vans, and you know, like burning down neighborhoods over
false narrative. Oh wait, we had all those things. Yeah, yeah,

(23:17):
this is Jake Tapper, same saying the same thing. Listen,
talk about.

Speaker 12 (23:20):
How radicalised they were by let's say the investigations and
again let's just for the benefit of the down say okay,
I get it. But now instead of saying that was
so horrible, you know, no one should ever go through that,
they're saying that was so horrible. Now we're going to
do it.

Speaker 13 (23:35):
Right after and after he insisted I will end the weaponization.
You know, it's it's really hard to see what is right,
and he is he is. He is systematically going after
people who either criticize him or oppose him, or have
disagreed with him or investigated him. And you know, we
will see how many more follow.

Speaker 1 (23:58):
It.

Speaker 2 (24:00):
I don't know.

Speaker 8 (24:01):
He's turbo charging the weaponization of government.

Speaker 2 (24:06):
Where were hi, Jake, Where were you at.

Speaker 8 (24:09):
When we all had to be forced to stay inside
otherwise you'd get ticketed. What happened to this concern when
people were getting fired because they didn't get an experimental
solution hastily loaded into a government produced syringe.

Speaker 2 (24:26):
Where was the concern then?

Speaker 8 (24:27):
You know, we're talking about the quote unquote weaponization of
government things like this. Where was all that concern back then?
I mean, I would tell these people to go do
something and flattering to themselves, but then I'd have to
use my get out a jail free card with the
chairman of the FCC. So we're gonna and I want
to use that for something real good Caine that's going
to be a good one.

Speaker 2 (24:46):
Can I share with you this story because you want to.

Speaker 8 (24:51):
You hear all these stories about aliens and no one
ever sees them, right, just like Bigfoot. We have all
these cameras, we have phone cameras. Everybody's got a device
striped to their head basically, and we don't get a
single We don't get any anything, no image is nothing,
and nothing about aliens. We hear all these stories of
flying saucers. We don't get really good pictures, you know.

(25:12):
I mean, I don't see any green little green dudes
waving out of windows. And do you know why that is?
Because when they get in our solar system and they
get near Earth and they check out what we send
out on our satellites, they look at each other and
they go, which translates to what the hell? What is
wrong with these people? Case in point, this New York

(25:35):
post piece stressed adults rely on pacifiers to soothe themselves.
I feel a sense of safety from childhood. This is
the story. Ready, Now it started in China, which totally
makes sense. Now I think it's a commie syop. But

(25:58):
they said that are using adult sized binkies. Once a
niche quirk, the silicone soothers are now supposedly big business
on Chinese e commerce giants. They're priced budget friendly. They're
sold as sleep aids, stress relievers, even smoking cessation tools,
and shoppers are gobbling them up.

Speaker 2 (26:21):
They said.

Speaker 8 (26:21):
Some online sellers are moving thousands each month. One Chinese
buyer said quote, when I'm under pressure at work, I
feel a sense of safety from my childhood. Now it's
starting in China, but it's moving outside. It makes me
think this is the next thing after woof lu cane
or your face right now?

Speaker 2 (26:38):
Are you frozen? You just got your major froze you?

Speaker 5 (26:41):
But what is the why are they doing it?

Speaker 2 (26:46):
I want to see what their dental bills are, like.

Speaker 5 (26:48):
What that's what I'm saying? Like the shape of your
mouth alone. You're you're gonna have braces, You're gonna have
in visil line.

Speaker 8 (26:57):
They're gonna have buck teeth sticking out. You can just
like it like a ski. It's gonna be like a
like a giant. You can to boggin down the sh
the angle of them tiefs using them adult binkies, that's
a if I think that, I don't know, I think
I would accidentally punch themat in the face if I
saw them with a binkie in their mouth. Yeah, my

(27:19):
body would go and wouldn't know what to do and
my first response but just you know, it's like it's
one of those things where you just don't know how
to react and your body tries to is trying so
hard to process it, and it's just are.

Speaker 5 (27:32):
They flavored or.

Speaker 2 (27:34):
Is it like do they make those?

Speaker 5 (27:37):
I don't know. I remember ring pops.

Speaker 2 (27:39):
Yeah, but that was a treat for children. Yeah, we
could choke on them babies, Yeah, but they're like still,
you're not supposed to be able.

Speaker 5 (27:46):
To We're talking about adults here.

Speaker 8 (27:48):
I can't even believe this. I mean, this is the
most Freudian thing also I think I've ever seen.

Speaker 2 (27:54):
But Why is this the thing you can I don't well.
I mean, if you're in.

Speaker 8 (27:59):
China, maybe you're you're sad with the CCP. But this
is one of the goofiest things ever.

Speaker 5 (28:04):
It's Chinese. Here's what it is. It's the Chinese government
trying to shut their people up.

Speaker 2 (28:11):
Probably literally now.

Speaker 8 (28:12):
Also with this gen Z they're signing up for adulting
one oh one classes because they can't handle basic life skills.
They said, a lot of stuff involves money.

Speaker 2 (28:24):
Hmm.

Speaker 8 (28:27):
One said, I don't know how to change a tire.
I don't have a car at all. I think, you
know what I do. Think parents need to be more involved.
I think if you're a parent, you're not teaching your
kid how to change a tire, Like do your damn job,
mom and dad teach them how to change a tire.
I mean, that's where it starts. It starts in the home,
you know what I mean. It's not like these kids
grow up in a vacuum. If they don't know how

(28:47):
to boil water or like make mac and cheese, the
hell's wrong what you do in your home? Did you
not raise kids to understand how to do this stuff?
This doesn't happen like all on its own, unrelated to
anything else. They said that they wanted to learn like
some of them, they don't know how to do laundry properly.
It's a New York Post piece. Someone had to google.
Someone told New York Posts they had to google what

(29:08):
a turn up was because they were making a recipe.

Speaker 2 (29:13):
I don't know.

Speaker 8 (29:14):
Uh, it's like budgeting, navigating grocery stores. Cheez, they're offering
there's like colleges that are offering adulting one oh one
classes because parents.

Speaker 2 (29:24):
You know what, I think some.

Speaker 8 (29:25):
Of the problem is is that we had progressives move
us away from a family unit that only required one income,
and now as a result, and because everybody's so busy
and so stressed and so detached, I think a lot
of these life skills people aren't just sharing them. And
some of it's just lazy parents, but they're just they're
not sharing them. I mean, they need to be proactive.

(29:48):
Your kids aren't just gonna suddenly wake up one day
and go, oh, I change a tired They're not gonna
yours a parent. You're gonna introduce that concept to them.
But they said that kids are growing up less dependent,
and I think it it's because we have literally shifted
the paradigm over to this weird area where no one
can hardly afford anything, and everyone they all lived to

(30:11):
work and and and really instead of you know, kind
of working to live and just kind of keeping keeping
things separate, you know, keeping things partitioned, compartmentalizing. There's no
break for people. And I think that we're also besieged
every second of that. We are awake with noise, advertising, television,

(30:35):
social media, everything.

Speaker 2 (30:38):
I don't know.

Speaker 8 (30:38):
I think there's something to all of it that contributes
to it. It's easy to make fun of them, you know,
it's really easy to be like, what.

Speaker 2 (30:44):
Do you mean you don't know how to do this stuff?

Speaker 8 (30:46):
What do you mean you don't how to But there
there Look, there are some gen xers that didn't know
how to do that, and gen xers didn't know how
to do it because their parents never show them. I
grew up with people like that whose parents never They
were running around and had both parents were working, and
they were stressed out, et cetera. This was the type
of modern life that you were promised was going to

(31:06):
make it easier for humanity, and instead, now people can't
even do basic things. They have to outsource every single service,
every single surface has to be outsourced. Nobody knows how
to fix the seam or him pants even, I mean
everybody goes to a tailor.

Speaker 2 (31:21):
Well if they go to tailor's to do it.

Speaker 8 (31:23):
There's just like little things that you know, people just
don't do anymore, and then when they need that skill,
it's a big issue.

Speaker 2 (31:34):
I don't know.

Speaker 8 (31:35):
Didn't ravers use pacifiers, Kane? They did, Jeez, pacifiers and
glow sticks. They never choked on them. Sadly, all right,
we got we are more on the way. Now it's
not called raver now now it's E EDM, isn't it.
It's the same thing. Did Wan just die over there?
Just killed him? Steve's probably customing, It's okay. It is

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Speaker 7 (33:31):
Get the load down on the latest news with a
side of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to the Data
Show podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 5 (33:42):
Like SAMs through the Hour Glance. So are the days
of the United States?

Speaker 2 (33:48):
We all did it.

Speaker 4 (33:50):
Yeah, the CBA is coming up here and I can't wait.

Speaker 8 (33:54):
Soro, y'all benevited from everything, y'all Youngian's benefited from nil?

Speaker 6 (33:58):
What does that mean?

Speaker 2 (33:59):
Were more of everybody I agree? Agree with that?

Speaker 8 (34:04):
Well, then they get the eyeballs in. It's not you know,
then then do something to bring more people in. Oh
wait a minute. When you got Caitlin Clark playing and
everybody wants to come play, y'all buller on the court.
And then they had been throwing these fallacies on the
basketball court, that was Angel Reeves saying, no, we got
to get paid more. That's then you don't get the

(34:27):
eyeballs that men's lead. And then and again when Clark
is getting eyeballs, you all complain. I don't think that
you want to get paid more. I really don't. I
don't think so you know what I was thinking of
because they had this story. Pull this up, it's uh
from the New York Times, and they said sex storys

(34:47):
being thrown during WNBA games are not just silly pranks. Humiliation,
often lude or sexual has long been used as an
attempt to make women feel uncomfortable in sports or diminish
their place in this space.

Speaker 2 (35:02):
Huh.

Speaker 8 (35:03):
It's interesting because they don't have that belief when it
comes to forcing women to share locker rooms with men,
and forcing girls to change in front of men in
locker rooms and share bathrooms in public spaces with men,
and having men take over women's sports. But suddenly, because
there's a silicon fallus that's being.

Speaker 2 (35:26):
Thrown under the court.

Speaker 8 (35:27):
Oh now you're worried about quote unquote making women feel
uncomfortable in sports or diminishing their place in the space.
You've all already been doing that, particularly in sports. So
don't act all offended now and go clutch your pearls
because it's a silicone fallus that they're throwing on the
WNBA court. That is the visual representation of the trans
attack on women. That's exactly what it is. You're throwing

(35:51):
a giant silicone fallus, actually a real one in women's
spaces and in women's sports and everything else, making them
feel uncomfortable and diminishing their place. So you don't get
to pick and choose when you want to apply that rule,
because y'all have already violated it, and you've smeared women
and you've impeged their character simply because they've raised the

(36:12):
exact same point that the New York Times now thinks
it's safe to raise, only specifically because it has to
do with the WNBA. You know what the W stands
for in the WNBA, correct New York Times. Since we're
women the thing that you people on the left can't define.
I mean, y'all are all over the place. You have
no idea what you support, and you have no idea
what you will post. But i'll tell you what You

(36:33):
don't get to say that people are uncomfortable with the
stunts that they're doing on the courts at WNBA, while
at the same time you have wholeheartedly enthusiastically backed making
women feel uncomfortable and diminishing them in spaces everywhere else,
starting with sports. We have more coming up. Second hour
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So this is the that was the DHS Penske truck.

(38:02):
So there's this huge story where Penske trucks arrived at
a home depot a MacArthur Park. This is in LA
and they were doing some immigration enforcement and Penske got
all mad and they issued a statement saying that that's.

Speaker 2 (38:14):
Not what our trucks are for.

Speaker 8 (38:16):
Nobody even like said the Penske even need to issue it, Steve,
Welcome to the show, Dana lash with you. Penske wanted
to make very clear that it did not authorize DHS use.
If it's trucks and an immigration raid does Penske put
out statements about all of their customers. We do not
condone the use of this truck for whatever purpose, they said.

Speaker 2 (38:40):
We do not.

Speaker 8 (38:41):
We prohibit the transportation of people in the cargo area.
Except you know how many times at Penske's trucks have
used been used to actually traffic people.

Speaker 6 (38:54):
Hm.

Speaker 2 (38:55):
I mean it's interesting that that's because there's a history
of it. It's all over social media.

Speaker 8 (39:03):
First off, why did they feel the need to issue
a statement. Why why did they feel the need to
issue a statement like it.

Speaker 2 (39:16):
Listen to this.

Speaker 8 (39:17):
This is from oh April twenty twenty three. Border agents
find fifty eight illegal aliens crammed in a Pinske truck
and alleged humans smuggling.

Speaker 2 (39:27):
Hm.

Speaker 8 (39:28):
And they didn't just use Penske trucks. Actually, the human
trafficking ring also used Penske tractor trailers. They used all
Pinsk everything. They're brand loyal.

Speaker 5 (39:40):
So did Penske even put a statement out? Then?

Speaker 2 (39:42):
No?

Speaker 8 (39:43):
No, no, Three people were sent to prison. Here's another one.
This is in October of twenty twenty three people were
sent to prison for smuggling twenty four people in a
Pinski truck. On September twenty sixth, twenty nineteen, authorities at
the Brunei immigration checkpoint on Texas Highway three fifty nine
stopped a Penske truck. Yeah, and they had tons of

(40:04):
people in the Penske truck. The inside measured ninety four degrees.

Speaker 5 (40:09):
And then Penske put a statement no.

Speaker 1 (40:11):
No.

Speaker 8 (40:12):
July eighth, twenty nineteen, human smuggler admits to transportation conspiracy
involving Chinese nationals. They used Penske trucks. I mean, I
got a lot of these. Do you want me to
keep going? Because I mean I could go for quite
a while.

Speaker 5 (40:25):
On that Chinese one. Did they put a statement.

Speaker 2 (40:27):
On a f No.

Speaker 8 (40:28):
No, there's no no statement at all whatsoever. No, they
just decided like Penske doesn't take issue with that. But
oh my gosh, because it was ice, Penske was all
the Penske Truck Rental. This is their statement that they
put out yesterday.

Speaker 2 (40:44):
Quote.

Speaker 8 (40:44):
Penske Truck Rental is aware of recent reports and videos
regarding a Department of Homeland Security.

Speaker 2 (40:49):
Operation in Los Angeles.

Speaker 8 (40:51):
Penske strictly prohibits the transportation of people in the cargo
area of its vehicles unless they're used by actual human
traffickers smuggling people in across the border illegally. The company
was nominated aware that its trucks would be used in
actual enforcement of law. Because we don't support that, Penske
will reach out to DHS and reinforce our policy of
lawlessness to avoid improper legal use of its vehicles for

(41:14):
law enforcement purposes in the future. Signed Penske.

Speaker 2 (41:20):
Imagine that, man, It's good of them to weigh in
on it. Yeah, I mean.

Speaker 8 (41:26):
In April of twenty twenty three, DHS in Texas found
fifty eight illegal aliens crammed in the back of a
Penske truck and l Passo, Hey cane, do you want
to see a picture of all these illegal aliens in
a Penske truck?

Speaker 2 (41:40):
Penske, Penske, Penske.

Speaker 5 (41:42):
I'm sure they put a statement up.

Speaker 8 (41:43):
No, that's that's a photo from it right there.

Speaker 2 (41:47):
That was just an April of twenty three.

Speaker 5 (41:49):
Wow.

Speaker 8 (41:49):
Yeah, I mean I thought that Pints doesn't support pusported
people in the truck part of our trucks. No, there
was no statement from Penske on that in April of
twenty three, all those people crossing illegally na Penske truck.

Speaker 2 (42:06):
Weird, so weird? How that?

Speaker 8 (42:08):
Why did they not? Why do they issue a statement?
Who's the moron that was like, you know what, I
don't like enforcement of law. I'm gonna issue a statement
because I just think this was wrong. And then it
just blows open their hypocrisy on having always refused to
issue statements in the past. There was nothing from Penske

(42:30):
in all of these years, with all of these like,
for instance, the April twenty third, one fifty eight people
illegally entering the country crammed in the back of a
Penske truck. The guy who was running it was an
illegal immigrant. From Mexico. He faces tons of human smuggling charges.
Penske was as silent as a church mouse. We ain't

(42:51):
saying nothing on that.

Speaker 2 (42:54):
So weird.

Speaker 8 (42:55):
They had no tweets or anything out there. How weird
is that now they they they're fine. If it's Penske,
that is fine. If it's illegal aliens, Penske.

Speaker 2 (43:07):
The choice, the truck of choice.

Speaker 8 (43:09):
For human trafficking illegal aliens. Daughter, d where are the
memurs on that? Like, that's one for you? I mean
also this uh in the government. No one ever said
the government was putting people in the truck. Where did
that come from? You know, Ice has equipment and stuff, right,

(43:31):
No one ever said Ice was going to put them
in a truck.

Speaker 2 (43:35):
Penske just made that up out of the ether.

Speaker 8 (43:37):
No one ever said, I guess Penske's like, well, everybody
else uses our trucks to put people in it, so
why wouldn't Ice. Ice never said that that was the
purpose of it.

Speaker 5 (43:46):
I think about the Ice agents coming out of the
truck in a surprise sort of raid type thing where
they're all in the back and they roll up and
Ice agents come out of the back of the truck.
I think that's what they're talking about.

Speaker 8 (43:58):
That was like for a five seconds. Yeah, I know,
that was like a staged thing, but they had.

Speaker 5 (44:05):
To make sure we knew well how they felt about it.

Speaker 8 (44:07):
I mean, guys, at Pinske, we should do fake Penske commercials.
I think here at Pinske, our trucks are only to
be used in human trafficking by illegal aliens. That's the
Pinski way. And then it shows like all these illegal
aliens sitting in the back of a truck, like we
just the one I just showed you April to twenty three.
Pinske approves of this, but if Ice is involved, no way. Men.

(44:32):
So this is Democrats move. They're gonna try to divide
on illegal immigration by making you hate Ice and by
portraying Trumps like some kind of dictator because he's.

Speaker 2 (44:44):
Enforcing the law.

Speaker 8 (44:45):
Oh my gosh, just like the mere enforcement of basic
law sets these people off. It's the craziest thing I've
ever seen. I just these are the same people that
defecate their If you send illegal aliens up to Martha's vineyard,
Oh my gosh, there's this. I was reading about this

(45:07):
little bougie store that they have. I'm not gonna go
back and read and find the article because it killed
brain cells. So it's been like several summers in a row.
I've never been to Martha's vineyard. I've never been up there,
never been up there. I've I'm sure it's lovely. I
just don't have a desire to go. And there's apparently
like some bougie it's they don't it's not like a supermarket.
It's like, I don't know how what else to call

(45:30):
it a wine and cheese store. Let me just put
it like that, Like they I don't even know if
they have wine, but they have. Like it's like one
of those bougie little type of boutique stores, right, And
everything is ridiculously overpriced, like you a jar of jelly
is maybe fifteen dollars something something ridiculous, I don't know.
And it's all supposed to be sourced from the area whatever.

(45:51):
And some of the people in the area were getting
mad because the tourists were coming in and buying stuff
and it was driving up their prices, and so they've
been mad about it and sassy about it. And there's
all these little articles written and it's just one of
the dumbest things in the world. I but and those
are the people I'm talking about. They got so mad
when they had all these illegal aliens that showed up,

(46:12):
and then they immediately.

Speaker 2 (46:13):
Called the National Guard.

Speaker 8 (46:16):
We've got to call the people with guns that we
hate to come and take care of the people.

Speaker 2 (46:19):
We claim to love.

Speaker 8 (46:22):
They had those people out within twenty four hours. But
here it's been here like this though. I mean, it's
the same thing. It's the same hypocrisy.

Speaker 2 (46:30):
Penske.

Speaker 8 (46:31):
They don't they hate ice, but they have no problem
with illegal immigrants.

Speaker 2 (46:35):
Hmmm.

Speaker 8 (46:36):
I feel like buying just like a random truck and
spray painting Penske on it and just going out and
doing just like all kinds of like Ozark stuff with it,
you know, going full on Ozark.

Speaker 2 (46:46):
Let's just see how far we can get. You know.
This is so stupid, these people.

Speaker 8 (46:50):
But no, they had no statements for any of that stuff,
none at all whatsoever.

Speaker 2 (46:54):
And that's fine. They can do what they want to.

Speaker 8 (46:57):
Yeah, the chat says Penske the truck of the cartels.
It's like, how Toyota is Isis's truck, right, right, So
Penske's the choice of truck for cartels. Do you need
to smuggle people across the border. Penske's got a truck
for you, And that's like some poor sales guy like,
and this is how many people you can fit in
the back of this pinske. Look, if you just have

(47:19):
them all in standing, standing up, shoulders to shoulder, you
can fit x amount in some almost sounds like diagram
of slave ships that I read about as a kid
in history class. Right, that's exactly what they're doing with
people in these trucks. And Democrats are like, yay, more
people to pick our cotton, They're all excited about it.

Speaker 2 (47:37):
More people to clean our toilets.

Speaker 12 (47:39):
Yay.

Speaker 2 (47:39):
That's how democrats look at it.

Speaker 8 (47:41):
Who's gonna do those jobs? They tell you this, so
they just look at the parallels. They bring people in
in Penske trucks, packed in like sardines. Where else did
that happen in history? Where people were packed in like
sardines on vessels transporting them across water and land and
order to get to a life of indentured servitude. It

(48:04):
sounds so familiar, Cane, if only we were an educated
populace and knew more about history than we did about
real housewives of But I don't know.

Speaker 2 (48:17):
I'm just saying.

Speaker 8 (48:18):
So, I'm just gonna throw that out there. It's fascinating stuff, Kane,
It's fascinating stuff.

Speaker 5 (48:22):
Sometimes some things never change.

Speaker 8 (48:26):
I mean, you know, yeah, good night. So the Penske people,
I don't know. I don't know if I've ever used
a Penske truck. We've used trucks like moving on stuff before,
but I've never used them. All Right, So ICE is
offering a fifty thousand signing bonus and student loan forgiveness
to new hires. Nobody wants to do that job because

(48:46):
they're so unappreciated. I mean, I'm fine with paying people
what they're owed and what the market demands, right. That's
it's a job that you actually need someone with a
specific skill set to fill. The folks to help make
the program possible. They are our friends over at Patriot Mobile,
the only Christian conservative cell phone service in the country.

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Speaker 10 (50:03):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's quick five.

Speaker 8 (50:09):
The White House order orders NASA to get rid of
the climate change nonsense satellites.

Speaker 2 (50:15):
But the way that the left says it, Trump is
killing and murdering our satellites. We're all gonna die. It's
not that at all.

Speaker 8 (50:23):
It's all the stuff that has to do with the
stupid nonsense of wealth redistribution that they call climate change.
So it's super easy. I thought this was interesting. So
now it comes from the Guardian, and you guys know
how much I just love the Guardian. They said that
jd Vance's team had the water level of an Ohio
river raised for their boating trip.

Speaker 2 (50:44):
Now I didn't even know that one.

Speaker 8 (50:46):
Could do that first off, like, as that's like some
Mickey Mouse magician stuff, if that's even possible. They said
that they had the Army Corps of Engineers change the
outflow of a lake in Ohio to accommodate the excursion.

Speaker 2 (50:59):
Is is this like a thing you can request what?
I don't care about anything.

Speaker 8 (51:05):
Else in the story except that I'm like, wait a minute,
can we actually ask for the Yes, I'm going kayaking.

Speaker 2 (51:11):
I would like to have the water level raise.

Speaker 8 (51:13):
They said that it was a secret service thing to
support safe navigation of the Little Miami River.

Speaker 2 (51:21):
I don't know. I don't know. I don't know. Is
that a thing that they do? I don't know.

Speaker 1 (51:27):
Was it?

Speaker 2 (51:28):
Are they in a drought period?

Speaker 8 (51:29):
I don't I am just as confused as you are.
It's not like their locks right where you go in
and you have to raise the you know, do one
of those things.

Speaker 2 (51:40):
It's not like that. So I don't know.

Speaker 8 (51:41):
Is that something you can request. I used to go
float all the time, like we used to float.

Speaker 2 (51:46):
Who's all river? Black river? You know all that's a current?

Speaker 4 (51:48):
River?

Speaker 5 (51:48):
Which current?

Speaker 8 (51:51):
Oh dude, that current was it would yeat you down
the river you got yet it straight past all the
stuff you wanted to see.

Speaker 2 (51:59):
It was pretty hard. Let's see here.

Speaker 8 (52:02):
We also have a Seattle team that sells his card
game to a toy giant. He sold it for more
than a million dollars at fifteen. That's pretty amazing, Kiro.
I don't even know what kind of car was it,
like Pokemon or something? No, just you know, he created
a card game Taco versus Burrito. Now he's a millionaire.
That's actually pretty amazing. Burrito.

Speaker 2 (52:23):
If I had a pick, no, no, I changed my mind, Taco,
it'd be Taco mine both. You can't pick both. You
get to pick one.

Speaker 5 (52:30):
I picked both.

Speaker 2 (52:30):
I'm just saying do something about it.

Speaker 8 (52:32):
Hospital parking garage mistakenly charged a woman eight thousand dollars
for a forty five minute visit.

Speaker 2 (52:37):
Oh, she's fighting it.

Speaker 8 (52:39):
It's in Los Angeles, but eight thousand dollars by an
automated machine that wrongfully showed her she was parked there
for three years. She was there for forty five minutes.
She could prove it on her phone and everything else.
Glendale Memorial Hospital. She went for a screening. So it
was unpleasant enough because she was dealing with a potential
health issue, and then she got hit with an eight
thousand dollars charge. She actually had to fight it. She

(52:59):
tried with a parking intendant and the intendant was like, eh,
so yeah, we got a lot more on the way.
Stick with us as we move. The folks who bring
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Speaker 7 (54:14):
The Danish show podcast You're Fast, funny and informative news
companion for those always on the move. Subscribe on YouTube,
Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.

Speaker 2 (54:25):
First.

Speaker 14 (54:25):
With today's announcements, I'm proud to say that Apple is
leading the creation of an end to end silicon supply
chain right here in America from design to equipment to
wafer production, to fabrication to packaging. In Texas, we're working
with manufacturers like Texas Instruments, Global Wafers America and Applied Materials.

(54:49):
We're working with Amcor in Arizona and broadcomon global founderies
in New York. Thanks to President Trump's vision and with
his help in his first term, we also led the
way to bring TSMC to Arizona by committing to be
their first and largest customer. Today they're producing tens of

(55:10):
millions of chips for Apple first with today's in now.

Speaker 8 (55:15):
Huge and they're going to be it's going to be
all made in the US. Cornying does Apple glass right
now at a Harrodsburg plant and they're bringing everything so
it's all going to be Kentucky made glass now and
that's going to be two and a half billion dollars
the investment to manufacture the iPhone and Apple Watch cover glass.
It's in Harrodsburg, Kentucky. That's where So that's where they're

(55:36):
going to. That's where they're going to have all of that,
all of it's going to be done there because they
have some glass.

Speaker 2 (55:42):
They were some glass.

Speaker 8 (55:42):
I thought overseas and they had a lot of different
inputs coming from overseas. Now everything is going to be
made here and the so you have Corning which runs
the plane in Kentucky, that's apparently expected to increase their
manufacture and engineering workforce by I think fifty percent of

(56:03):
not over fifty percent. And then they're going to have
the Apple Corning Innovation Center at the plant.

Speaker 14 (56:09):
Uh.

Speaker 8 (56:09):
They that's huge, huge that Corning also does. They also
source and provide all of the raw materials that are
used for this. And I think Corning was brought on
in like six or seven. Uh, and that's when the

(56:30):
original iPhone was. The original iPhone came out shortly before.
I remember Barack Obama was campaigning because I remember being
at I had to cover a debate that he was
at at WashU in Saint Louis, and there was a
reporter from New York there and he was the only
one there that had an Apple phone and iPhone and

(56:50):
everyone was staring at it because it was wild to look.
I had a Palm Pre and I loved my Palm Pre.
You know, it doesn't have I like cause it had
the physical gosh. And by the way, Apple stole Humphrey's os,
the iOS. Now that was what Pomprey did. So it
was neat to see an iPhone and I remember that.
So they've been Corny has been working with them the
whole time. So that's a huge, huge, huge, huge thing

(57:14):
because the iPhone, I think is I mean, I know
a lot of people have Android, but I really do
think that iPhones are like the I mean, it's like
the dominant phone. So this is all, this is all good.
Two and a half billion dollars, all the glass for
iPhones and all of that in Kentucky. Isn't that a
special glass too?

Speaker 2 (57:32):
Hang on? I'm gonna I remember reading about this, isn't it?
Hang on?

Speaker 8 (57:39):
Yeah, it's like, isn't it like some kind of special
diamond glass or something like that?

Speaker 6 (57:44):
It is.

Speaker 5 (57:46):
They call it a unique piece of glass. But it
was also something that Tim Cook had awarded Trump in
the beginning of that meeting, where it was made from
that Corning glass that award that he gave them.

Speaker 8 (57:57):
Okay, so they've looked at diamond like coatings, but they
do it is a special scratch resistant thing.

Speaker 2 (58:02):
That they have.

Speaker 8 (58:03):
Yeah, okay, interesting, So yeah, it's a very good The
I mean, that's a great that's huge, and for all
of the chips, all the chips to be manufactured, all
of that, that's incredibly significant, incredibly significant. So that's that
is I feel like that didn't get a lot of
attention yesterday. Nineteen billion chips in the US across twenty

(58:25):
four factories in twelve states.

Speaker 2 (58:27):
That's just this year.

Speaker 8 (58:28):
And then they're going to source all of the rare
earth magnets that they're going to use from MP Materials
and that's a US based company and all that's the
semiconductor argument. That's been a huge thing for quite some time,
especially since you know, we've been really competing with China

(58:49):
on all of this. So this is, you know, American
sourced everything rare earth magnets that MP Materials is going
to develop. Cook said that that will all be used
exclusively in Apple's devices. And MP, they were saying, is
the only fully integrated rare earth producer in the US
and they're based in Fort Worth, so that's all Fort Worth.
So that's going to be a big boon for Texas.

(59:10):
And they're gonna have cutting edge rare earth recycling lines
in Mountain Pass, California, and a third one in Kentucky.
So that's also awesome. This is going to be, this
is going to be.

Speaker 2 (59:25):
This is a.

Speaker 8 (59:25):
Significant move, very significant move. Now they also have the
amcor it's their advanced chip packaging and test facility. They're
investing in that. That's in Arizona. They're partnering with all
of these other semiconductor companies.

Speaker 2 (59:41):
They are.

Speaker 8 (59:43):
Kickstarting this advanced manufacturing facility in Chandler, Arizona that's going
to produce all the semiconductor equipment, components and parts. And
then also Potus threaten to launch a one hundred percent
terror for semiconductors. Companies would be exempt from those tariffs
if they invested and built and build manufacturing facilities in

(01:00:04):
the US.

Speaker 2 (01:00:05):
I don't know.

Speaker 8 (01:00:06):
The semiconductor industry is very delicate. I don't know that
I would put one hundred percent tariff on that that
is that feels like it's a dangerous idea because that
means all of that would jack those prices up to
the nth degree, and that means everybody is going to
I know it's leverage, but it's leverage. I mean, it's
not leverage after it starts hurting people to the point
where they don't support it anymore, then it stops being leveraged.

(01:00:27):
It's only leverage if it works. It's not leverage if
it's penalizing people to the point where they can't afford anything.
So this is one area. Because the semiconductor supply chain,
that's a very delicate thing. I mean, think about it.
Taiwan is the leader in it. We're just we're trying
to gain some supremacy in this market while also kind
of while also keeping China at bay. That seems like

(01:00:49):
a very delicate, dangerous thing to do. That's the only
thing I wouldn't I think that you can incentivize without
having tariff some all four incentivizing stuff. And there's a
number of things you could do to incentivize without having
terraff on the production here in the United States. I mean,
you could have all like an ease of any kind
of corporate business tax. Could There's all kinds of stuff

(01:01:09):
that you could do. And the incentivization, especially because this
is not an industry that's like the other industries. It's
too delicate to be treated like all the other industries
it's there. There are so few that are actually have
any kind of supremacy on this. So if they incentivize
it and we increase the on shoring, that works. I

(01:01:30):
think that works incredibly well, because corporate tax right now
on all that stuff is astronomical. Still sorry, but it
wasn't low enough in the Big Beautiful Bill. The Big
Beautiful Bill did not lower it enough at all whatsoever.
And remember all of that stuff is temporary. They're going
to have to do all of this again in twenty
twenty eight. I think it would be a really The
difficult thing is that he's limited. You could he could

(01:01:51):
go out and say, I'm going to do an executive
order and we're just going to immediately reduce or suspend.
He could say he could go full on and say
we're going to suspend you know, these tax rates for
these companies that are on shore and for these semiconductors
and you know all of this. That's great, but remember
he's his clock runs out politically in twenty eight and

(01:02:13):
that's such a short time business wise for companies to
invest that much into infrastructure and personnel here domestically. So
he can do an EO, but he would have to
have Congress do something to make that permanent. Otherwise, you know,
if you have a Democrat that gets in in twenty eight,
they could immediately undo it and then they could check

(01:02:35):
up taxes and then you have all of these companies,
then it would get exponentially more expensive. So I mean,
that's that's the that's the concern, that is the concern
with us. So these companies are looking at it like, well,
if we have one hundred percent tariff on this, we're
either going to pay and be very hurt and not
be able to compete later, or in twenty eight we're
either going to We're gonna pay and be hurt and

(01:02:56):
not really be able to compete later. I mean, it's
almost a no win. That's why I'm like incentivization and
getting Congress on board with it and make I think
it's a national security issue. I think being able to
produce semiconductors and being able to have supremacy in this
industry is an absolute national security issue.

Speaker 2 (01:03:14):
You can't rely.

Speaker 8 (01:03:15):
I mean, Taiwan is a good partner for this, but
holy hell, Taiwan's got China breathing down its neck. What
happens if there's some kind of you know that that
conflict goes hot.

Speaker 2 (01:03:25):
You know what happens there?

Speaker 8 (01:03:26):
And then you're not able to get what you need
from Taiwan into the United I mean, there's a lot
of concern over this, so all of it could change,
you know. I mean, I think Potus was just floating
the idea of one hundred percent tariff.

Speaker 2 (01:03:36):
You know, we'll see. But that is such a delicate.

Speaker 8 (01:03:42):
Industry and I mean, honestly, a lot of it was
made so by Democrat that's a true thing.

Speaker 2 (01:03:49):
So this is a.

Speaker 8 (01:03:50):
Huge announcement from Apple. That's a very very good thing.
And if we're able to do that and get the census.
We were talking about the census a little earlier. We'll
come back to that because Florida's owed some seats. Honestly,
Florida was so grotesquely undercounted it's insane.

Speaker 2 (01:04:05):
And they're owed some seats, that's for sure.

Speaker 8 (01:04:09):
So we'll dive into some of that because the left is,
you know, predictably, it's all and it's more dictatorship stuff,
especially when if he wants to redo the census and
exclude which seems like it's the smart thing to do
people who are in the country illegally. I'm not sure
why that's a big deal for them, but you know,
and all of that happened during the pandemic, so there's
a lot of questions as to how legitimate or how

(01:04:31):
accurate these census.

Speaker 2 (01:04:32):
The census was then.

Speaker 8 (01:04:33):
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Speaker 5 (01:05:35):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida.

Speaker 2 (01:05:43):
Man, all right.

Speaker 8 (01:05:46):
So first up, another guy. A man accused pointing a
laser at Florida Sheriff's helicopter says he was just being silly.
That's a city and a danger. He's accused of pointing
a laser at the helicopter because he's a moron. WFLA
said that happened over the weekend. Marion County Sheriff's Office

(01:06:06):
said that its aviation unit was conducting a security check
and the crew noticed a green laser beam repeatedly striking
the aircraft when the pilot's vision was obstructed. That's when
in Corporal Tim Martin used the helicopter's camera to locate
the suspect, who was identified as forty one year old
Adam Santiago Lugo. And they said he was standing in

(01:06:28):
his driveway with binoculars and a laser pointer.

Speaker 2 (01:06:30):
I mean they got him dead to rights in the.

Speaker 8 (01:06:35):
Survey, in the camera that they have on board, he
said that he was bored and he was just being silly.
The deputy said, well, silly sometimes is a felony. So
because you can't do that, you can make them crash.
It's crazy. I can't believe how many people do this
and they're just shocked when they were arrested. An elderly
Florida man was rescued because he got his car stuck

(01:06:56):
on train tracks with two trains approaching. I got to
tell you, there's things that I thought that we would
be dealing with a hell of a lot more as adults,
like quicksand and train tracks. I'll get back to the
quicksand one, Like, seriously, why do we think that that
we thought there was gonna be quicksand everywhere? But this
is like a nightmare come to life.

Speaker 2 (01:07:13):
This guy.

Speaker 8 (01:07:14):
First off, how the hell does he get his train
his car stuck in that way? Did you see the
way that the car was oriented?

Speaker 5 (01:07:21):
Like you have to try to do it like that,
Like this.

Speaker 2 (01:07:25):
Is stupid that you can do it.

Speaker 8 (01:07:28):
He was an elderly man. He didn't just like get it.
It wasn't like he was crossing the train tracks and
he got it stuck on the road going over the
train tracks. It's like he turned like right on the tracks, yes,
and then started like a train would go down the tracks,
started driving the car down the tracks, and he was
on not one but two different like there's one, there's

(01:07:52):
two train tracks that that are there. Here's you can
see the picture on the simulcast. We could see one
of the trains approaching. So he's got his wheels. I mean,
technically two trains could pass there, but the cars in
the middle and like basically also kind of on the
other rail well also simultaneously on that rail.

Speaker 2 (01:08:09):
This is crazy.

Speaker 8 (01:08:11):
So they had to issue citations because he did improper turns.
That's how he got stuck on the tracks. But they stopped.
Both trains had to stop. They had to call a
wrecker to remove the car, the guy's car from the tracks.
It took an hour, and then the trains resumed normal operations.
I just have no idea how that happens. That guy
probably shouldn't drive anymore if he didn't realize what he

(01:08:32):
was doing when he turned on train tracks.

Speaker 5 (01:08:33):
Thing is not all old people.

Speaker 2 (01:08:35):
I know that you hate old people. I get it.

Speaker 8 (01:08:38):
You don't think old people are innocent. You think he
was up to some nefarious no good shooting again.

Speaker 5 (01:08:42):
All old people like he probably was, probably threw back
a few. He's probably drinking.

Speaker 2 (01:08:48):
Do you think, I don't know if he.

Speaker 5 (01:08:51):
Seriously what are you going to? You see that where
he was on those tracks?

Speaker 2 (01:08:55):
It was bad.

Speaker 8 (01:08:56):
I really don't know how that happens. Yeah, I really don't, man,
I don't know. I don't know how that happens. But
this woman, a Florida woman, posed as a nurse and
treated over four four hundred patients. How does this even happen?
This is Flaker County and Palm Coast. The suspect, Autumn Beardiza,

(01:09:17):
was hired by a hospital, Advent Health and Palm Coast,
and she apparently forged documents, stole a nurse's identity, and
deceived the hospital for seven months. She claimed she was
an education first nurse, meaning that she had completed nursing
school and was awaiting getting her license, but that was
a lie, so she didn't have legitimate credentials. She used

(01:09:41):
the nursing license number of another woman who had the
same name.

Speaker 2 (01:09:45):
What's the probability of that? Good night?

Speaker 8 (01:09:48):
And apparently she worked at a separate Advent Health. The
nurse whose identity she stole and also to the nursing
school with this lady, so they were not known to
be acquaintances. But apparently Bartie's exploited that connection to steal
her professional identity, and she explained her different last name
by claiming she had recently married a man, claims she

(01:10:09):
never substantiated. I mean, she pretended to be a doctor
or a nurse. It was over four thousand and four
actually four four hundred and eighty six patients, according to
Florida Department of Health and US Department of Health. And
they're trying to look to see, if you know, obviously
patient safety confidency, all of this stuff. She worked in

(01:10:30):
a clinical setting for months, four months. That is terrifying.
We got more on the way, third hour coming up.
Stick with us, the folks who help bring you the programs.
I believe you know, I've told you a million times.
I yes, I carry, yes, I have no problem using
lye BEFO to protect myself. We're I mean, I don't
know how many times I gotta say this. It's all true.

(01:10:51):
I also think it's fine to diversify your weapons array
because not everybody wants to protect your life. I'm sorry now,
actually I'm not sorry. These people need to be called out.
If you have gone control, if you have gun free zones,
you have no concern for people's lives. People who in
act gun control. These these gun free zones, I mean,
they're culpable in the deaths of so many And it's

(01:11:11):
true because you're making people defenseless. This is literally like
the whole reason why Bernagun came into existence.

Speaker 2 (01:11:18):
Think about it.

Speaker 8 (01:11:18):
College students that are getting ready to leave here in
the next few weeks to go to school, living alone,
but they can't carry a firearm for self protection. And
you guys have seen what happens when you have criminals,
you know, just saying nothing to what's happened at the border.
Everything's running amok. They need to be able to protect themselves.
So the Burnagun is trying to fit in, trying to
fill that gap where there isn't anything currently. Yes, there's
stun guns. They got one to two rounds. The burner

(01:11:40):
gun shoots chemical irritant projectiles that can deter threats from
up to fifty feet away, and depending on what you get,
you have anywhere from five to seven rounds. It's a
heck of a lot more than you're gonna get with
one little stun gun that you're gonna get.

Speaker 2 (01:11:51):
Off Amazon right.

Speaker 8 (01:11:53):
The Burna has two guns specifically for this, the Burna
as D, which is the most popular selling model, and
the CL which is smaller than the SD. Here's the kicker.
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(01:12:13):
make your don't leave your self defenseless because of local
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out the new Burnout cl that's BYRNA dot com slash data.
Welcome again, back to the program. The chats at Rumble
Channel three forty seven is the stream of the program
South Park. They went after everybody. Remember the season has

(01:12:34):
just begun, folks, So just no, they're probably going to
continue going after literally everybody. They went after Christinoam as well.
We can't show you the video because YouTube is a
Nazi and actual one and absolutely will like delete accounts
and delete videos. They deleted another one of my videos.

(01:12:57):
I don't know every day at something, so we can't
actually show you the video. The only thing we can
do is play audio and then put like elements up.

Speaker 2 (01:13:04):
So that's it.

Speaker 8 (01:13:05):
But they spoofed this as an example. I mean, everything
is funny. I think it's all funny.

Speaker 2 (01:13:09):
Listen, Welcome to the team Recruits.

Speaker 5 (01:13:12):
I'm Christy Nolan, head of Homeland Security.

Speaker 4 (01:13:17):
RUDEN.

Speaker 6 (01:13:18):
A few years ago, I had to put my puppy
down by shooting it in the face because sometimes doing
what's important means doing what's hard.

Speaker 2 (01:13:28):
Oh my gosh, I don't believe.

Speaker 1 (01:13:30):
She Actually that's the same determination of you.

Speaker 5 (01:13:35):
Because detaining and questioning people is never easy.

Speaker 8 (01:13:38):
Look, it was easy to make fun of because it
was a ridiculous cell phone. And if you can't laugh
at that, then I don't know what I could laugh
at everybody, everybody, everybody.

Speaker 2 (01:13:47):
Even myself. You know. That's the thing.

Speaker 8 (01:13:50):
Whenever they would try to make fun of me on
Daily Show, it was always some like totally unfunny chick
and a leather jacket, and I'm like, I don't even
wear leather jackets all the time. I'm only in falling winter.
You absolute bembo good night. It's a spring for crying
out loud. But it's all funny. And then they I
just look, it's it's a statement on the zeitgeist. It's

(01:14:13):
it's the moment in time encapsulated in a you know,
infractal in a drawing.

Speaker 2 (01:14:18):
I don't know.

Speaker 8 (01:14:19):
Uh So, I don't know why people are getting don't
it upset about it? It's not a big I like
jd Vance's response. He was like, I finally made it.
Although of all of the meme photos they could have
used for him, there were some out there that were
funnier if I'm being honest, like the jd Vance memes,
so they had he he retweeted it and said, I
finally made it. Can I tell you I didn't know

(01:14:42):
what this was a reference to until I saw it
explained on X the little outfits that they were in
and the I didn't.

Speaker 2 (01:14:50):
I never watched that show. When did that error? What
hang on?

Speaker 5 (01:14:55):
You never knew about that? Herve Villachez was the small guy.

Speaker 8 (01:14:59):
You were saying, like, I know these people Fantasy Island.
Let's look and see when it aired. Okay, it was. Oh,
it started before I was even born and it finished
when I was like three, So that's probably why I
didn't watch it. In my defense, don't make fun of me,
because I was like, what is that in reference to
I mean I've seen the two of them before.

Speaker 5 (01:15:21):
The show was only on for like two or three years,
and that was it was on.

Speaker 2 (01:15:24):
From seventy seventy to eighty four. It's not a long time.

Speaker 5 (01:15:28):
But it went into reruns and is still available.

Speaker 2 (01:15:30):
Whatever is he the little guy who was like the
play in the plane?

Speaker 5 (01:15:33):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (01:15:34):
Ok, okay, see I know that what was his name?

Speaker 5 (01:15:38):
Tattoo was the name was his name on the show,
but his actor, I mean, his real name is Herve Village.

Speaker 8 (01:15:43):
Now the guy who was the guy that he stood with. Yeah,
I don't laugh at me, you guys, that's a real
that his name is real.

Speaker 2 (01:15:57):
I was okay, Ricardo Monthobon.

Speaker 8 (01:16:00):
Didn't they like parody him because he was supposed to
be like a very elegant man?

Speaker 5 (01:16:05):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (01:16:05):
Right? Is that? Okay?

Speaker 5 (01:16:07):
It's almost like I think, who did that, Steve? Who's
the parody? Ones? It was? Uh, the parody like beer
commercials where they had a guy it was like this.

Speaker 8 (01:16:17):
Oh yeah, that's up in the world, dois Yes, that's right.

Speaker 5 (01:16:22):
It's kind of like that. But yeah, right, Ricardo Montban.

Speaker 8 (01:16:25):
Ricardo montebon So, I just I'm gonna say, I really
think that they could have used like a number of
different JD.

Speaker 2 (01:16:32):
Van's faces.

Speaker 8 (01:16:34):
You guys, remember when that meme was going crazy and
people were making his face bigger and bigger, and they
gave him curls and and he actually thought it was funny.
He retweeted some of it. Those were some of the
funniest memes I've ever seen. So I'm like, that's the
one they went with.

Speaker 5 (01:16:49):
Let's look like, but what one put that up? That
is this fat face?

Speaker 2 (01:16:52):
I know, no, it was made bigger. His face isn't
that fat. It was made bigger. It's a meme.

Speaker 8 (01:16:57):
But I'm like, why didn't they use the one where
he had the curls or some of these other ones
where it looks like his eyes are sons.

Speaker 2 (01:17:02):
I mean, it's just hysterical. It's so funny anyway.

Speaker 8 (01:17:07):
I just I think it's great that they were having
a good time with it or that they thought and
that's really all you can do when things like that happen,
Like the worst thing that Republicans can do is to
get upset over it.

Speaker 5 (01:17:18):
Ye, I think when the White House made a comment.

Speaker 2 (01:17:21):
Was it a week or two of the game, they
shouldn't test they.

Speaker 5 (01:17:22):
Shouldn't have it all. Trump himself hasn't said anything about it.
Jd Vance has done this, so I do like this approach.

Speaker 8 (01:17:28):
Yeah, the worst thing that they can do is say
something and be offended. So jd Vance's response was just simple,
like he acknowledged it and that's it. But remember when
the White House was like, oh, it's irrelevant. I mean
they're really not. They just got like a billion dollar
deal with Paramount there and they have ratings that like
like the Simpsons before them, no one, I mean, it's
a magical thing because nobody else gets the ratings that

(01:17:50):
they do, so you can't really say that. And then
they turned around and they tweeted, oh not relevant, you
know whatever, So you just gave them another opportunity to respond.
The best way to said the energy out of the room,
it's just be like a haha, yeah, and then that's
it and leave it because then it loses its power.
The power that it has is only if you're offended.
That's why it's so easy to troll certain people. I
mean sometimes like if I'm bored, you know, or if

(01:18:13):
I just you know, feel like being mean. I don't
ever feel like that. I'm always nice, and happy. Okay, Well,
like I let me give you an example, like say
say like, well, like this weekend, i gotta go and
give a speech, and I'm gonna be on a plane
and it'll be you know, I'm not gonna be working.

Speaker 2 (01:18:31):
So what I'm gonna get? What am I gonna do?

Speaker 8 (01:18:33):
And probably gonna be on social media trolling Kine, That's
probably exactly what I'm gonna do. And the power comes
in people being offended. If they're offended, then you can
just keep bringing content out of them and they do.
It's like you're an energy vampire. You don't even know,
like what we do in the Shadows. Uh, Colin the
energy vampire that's on that show, he is what he does.

(01:18:53):
He trolls social media and then he just absorbs all
the energy from people being outraged.

Speaker 2 (01:18:57):
It's hysterical. It's actually like a per description.

Speaker 8 (01:19:01):
So as long as people realize they do make fun
of everyone, they've made fun of Democrats just because they
haven't specifically yet gone after Biden or Harris, I don't
think is the measure. And also it's the season's young.
They just this is their second episode. Chill right, chill, Anyway,
they've gone after some pretty big sacred cows on the left,

(01:19:22):
I will say. So that's why I just, you know,
I just don't think that, you know, we'll see how
it goes. The FBI has joined the case of the
missing Texas Democrats, and if you remember, Greg Abbott broke
this on our program yesterday and he retweeted him breaking
the news on our program yesterday. So they've have talked

(01:19:47):
to that. We don't have the specifics, but apparently the
FBI has joined in. I think that there's something to
be said for the solicitation of funds to cover their
travel and everything else, because that we the people pack,
and Lorraine noted this yesterday that we the people packed.

Speaker 2 (01:20:02):
They're broke.

Speaker 8 (01:20:03):
They only have like two hundred thousand dollars, and you
can't tell me that they're they're covering the airfare and
the lodging and all of this of all of these
lawmakers who fled the state. And they've got other states
that they're working with as well, so they've had it
can't all come from that pack. They've had to get
money from somewhere, and if they're soliciting any of this,
that absolutely can be considered the solicitation of a that's

(01:20:24):
a bribe and that's a felony in Texas, and I
hope that they get the book thrown at them for that.
So that'll be interesting to see. But they've they've they've
joined in, they've joined in on that, and like I said,
we don't have a lot of there's not really a
lot of details on it. Apparently one of them talked

(01:20:44):
to Cornyan or Cornyn talked to the FBI, and Cash
Bettel apparently approved their request for the bureau to get involved.
And that's from John Cornyn And we don't know about
that about what else after that, So they're in some way,
they're involved. So that's you know, that's going to be

(01:21:05):
that's going to be important. Also the story and we'll
talk more about this of the Fort Stewart shooting that
took place. The suspect this is going to be buried.
I think again, here we have another case of a
military base that's a gun free zone. People think that
there's just like you know, guns laying around everywhere at
military basis. It's not apparently only MP's in certain areas

(01:21:27):
we're even allowed to be armed, but it's a gun
free zone. And this continually happens at gun free zones,
so we're going to talk about that coming up as
we move. The folks who make the program possible. It's
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Speaker 10 (01:22:27):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
It's time for Dana's Quick five I.

Speaker 8 (01:22:32):
Missed out on this headline from last segment, but I
really wanted to do it because it's bizarre.

Speaker 2 (01:22:37):
This is in Boulder, Colorado.

Speaker 8 (01:22:39):
A fish fell out of the sky and caused up
like full on fire and power outage.

Speaker 2 (01:22:45):
Yeah, it's true.

Speaker 8 (01:22:47):
It sorry, it was in British Columbia, but it was
reported by Denver Press. A fish falling out of the
sky sparked a wildfire and knocked out power in a
rural area of British Columbia. It broke out near the
village of Ashcroft. Firefighters had to respond, found ranchers and
BC Hydro workers already battling the flames. They used four
eight hundred gallons of water to put out the fire.

(01:23:07):
And it wasn't human error and it wasn't lightning. It
literally was a fish, a fish, and the river is like,
you know, three kilometers away, they said. An osprey, which
is a large bird of prey, apparently dropped its cash,
its catch onto a power line and then the impact
of the fish on the power line sent sparks and

(01:23:28):
embers that flew into dry brush and triggered a fire.
Not even kidding all, Oh my gosh, and they and
it looks like it was a big fish and they
said that that's they They said there were no injuries
in the incident, and the osprey is still out there
flying around.

Speaker 2 (01:23:47):
Wouldn't it have burned up or maybe not? Like how
do you?

Speaker 8 (01:23:52):
I just don't under I mean, I'm fascinated by the
forensics investigation of things like this, Like there they can
just pinpoint, yes, it was this fish right here, and
you could tell the spree had a bite, And I mean,
like they like pinpoint this down to It's pretty impressive.
A man was hit with a broom and beaten because
he threatened a strip club janitor with a knife. Well, yeah,

(01:24:12):
why would you Why do you think that you were
going to threaten a janitor to strip club? It's basically
a waffle house employee. Okay, why do you think you
could get away with that? As in Oklahoma City he
tried to attack a mentally disabled strip club janitor with
a knife. Oh my gosh, this guy got his whole
face is swollen. His whole face looks like he went
in and got some pretty bad injectables. But it looks like,

(01:24:33):
oh man, Lawrence Kai Kendall, Well, I don't like your
last name. There's too many words in there, letters in there.
He was identified on camera. He called you know what
the name of the strip club is called Bare Assets
B A r E. Bear Assets. He called the janitor

(01:24:57):
a racial slur and then charged it in with a knife,
and the janitor beat him with a broom and then
jumped on him and beat him for almost to death.
He can't even open one of his eyes. I mean, wow, wow,
this guy, Oh my gosh, this is what you get

(01:25:18):
when you call a janitor a racial slur at Bear Assets.

Speaker 2 (01:25:22):
Here you go. Wow. Yeah, he's in trouble. Let's see.

Speaker 8 (01:25:27):
Gen Z is looking to profit from the resurgence of
Y two K Fashion Kill y two K Fashion to death.
It is horrible, Please, dear heavens, No, why are we
doing this? It was bad and stupid back then. We're
going to bring back them little butterfly clips. Aren't we
help us all? Yeah, gen Z's interested in it. Stop
at gen Z. Learn from our mistakes. We have more

(01:25:48):
on the way.

Speaker 2 (01:25:48):
Stick with us.

Speaker 7 (01:25:50):
Not Able to catch all three hours of the Dana Show,
subscribe to the full podcast and get news and laughs
delivered in short, easy to digest episodes. Ideal for your
is he Lifestyle on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get
your podcast.

Speaker 3 (01:26:06):
Good morning. I am state representative and Missouri Democratic floor
leader Ashley Annie. I'm from Kansas City, and I am
here because I stand firmly with the representatives in Texas
and the senators in Texas who had to flee their state.

Speaker 8 (01:26:27):
They had to flee their state, oh and their duties.
They're Wow, who knew that they were going to make it?
So they're going to be so honest by like accident.
How fascinating is that? That's you know, when Democrats tell
you who they are, believe then welcome back to the program,

(01:26:48):
Dana Lash with you. I don't know they're making this
such a big deal and and the left is going
to go even further out of their minds, especially if
the Census Bureau thing happens because they overcounted like significantly,
and blue states in Florida and Texas were so screwed.

Speaker 2 (01:27:02):
As a result of it.

Speaker 8 (01:27:04):
And that's like we've been talking about this for a
long time now. In fact, I think the conversation even
predated that that whole the last census that screwed everything
up counting a legal alien. So Trump saying that they're
going to actually exclude that. By the way, the Census Bureau,

(01:27:24):
and this was a story that was back in twenty
twenty two. This was after I had this saved. This
was even after the you know, after they they tabulated everything,
counted everything, and they realized the error. They actually admitted
that there was an error. They acknowledged that fourteen states

(01:27:44):
had significant miscounts on that twenty twenty census. And I'm
going to read what these states were. And this was
in a piece from the Hill back in twenty twenty two.
You just tell me if something sticks out to you. Okay,
So the overcounted, like significantly overcounted states were Hawaii, Delaware,

(01:28:05):
Rhode Island, Minnesota, New York, Massachusetts. Now the significantly undercounted states,
all right, we're Texas, Florida, Mississippi, Tennessee, Arkansas.

Speaker 5 (01:28:22):
Huh I do notice?

Speaker 2 (01:28:26):
Huh?

Speaker 5 (01:28:27):
Is there there's some contrasts there? Yeahs, Like the ones
that were undercounted were the Republican ones the red states,
and the ones that were overcounted meaning additional unearned seats
where Democrat runs states.

Speaker 2 (01:28:47):
You I think you would be correcting.

Speaker 5 (01:28:49):
That's weird.

Speaker 8 (01:28:50):
Yeah, I think you would be correct. Yes, so weird
how that happened. Isn't it so weird?

Speaker 1 (01:28:59):
There?

Speaker 5 (01:28:59):
It's quinces dent al right, Yeah, like all the errors entirely,
we're in the census blunder entirely. Yes, probably went evenly right.
The the blunder may have leaned left a little and
also leaned No, it.

Speaker 2 (01:29:15):
Didn't really No.

Speaker 8 (01:29:16):
I mean you have like these states that were over
kind of that have more seats that are disproportionate to
their actual population, and some of these others.

Speaker 5 (01:29:24):
Wait a minute, so the blunder, this mistake that was
made all the favor of that mistake leaned on the
left side of the aisle.

Speaker 2 (01:29:33):
It's so weird how that happens.

Speaker 5 (01:29:35):
It was just a mistake though, right, It's just.

Speaker 8 (01:29:37):
Very just a blunder. Yeah, just just just a blunder.
So you know, I'm just saying, there's I feel like,
I mean, because it was Biden's own census bureau that
admitted this, Biden's own census bureau that admitted there was

(01:29:58):
a mistake. So why wouldn't people want things to be
correct or accurate? I mean, I'm just curious. Why wouldn't
they wanted Why wouldn't they want these things to be accurate.

Speaker 2 (01:30:14):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:30:15):
I really think you're a fan of gerrymandering, and you
don't you know, you know what you're talking about.

Speaker 2 (01:30:21):
What it is, you know.

Speaker 8 (01:30:22):
I'm just saying it just so I you know, I
they're they're gonna get upset about it, and I don't care,
just like they're upset about the gerrymandering that happened when
they were running, when they were deciding things in Texas
and then that gets correct I got corrected in Florida
and Maryland kind of North Carolina kind of.

Speaker 2 (01:30:39):
So we'll see.

Speaker 8 (01:30:40):
But the blunder though that they wrote, this is what
they they wrote about. This is June first, twenty twenty
two census blunder May tip twenty twenty four to Democrats. Now,
if you don't get this fixed and this continues where
you're including illegal aliens in this count, what is the
effect that that's going to have in twenty twenty eight?

(01:31:02):
And like I said, we talked about this at the
start of the show. I just don't know if that's
something they're going to be able to correct in time,
because it's a big process. I just don't know if
that's going to be something that they they actually you know,
correct in enough time.

Speaker 2 (01:31:14):
This is a crazy headline.

Speaker 8 (01:31:15):
Young male college grads are now jobless at the same
rate as non grads. This is a story from Financial Times.
The unemployment rate amongst US men and women age twenty
two and twenty two through twenty seven by education level.
And there is a serious, a serious issue here.

Speaker 2 (01:31:34):
Wow. I mean and the men and women.

Speaker 8 (01:31:37):
I was looking to see about the gender gap, and
actually what I what I'm reading is that it's not
that different. It doesn't matter like it shows men and women.
I mean, women maybe have a slight, little bitty bit
advantage and that's it.

Speaker 2 (01:31:53):
But these I think that these degrees. I don't think
that you need.

Speaker 8 (01:31:58):
To go to college and get a degree for anything
except if you're going to be you're going into medicine, law,
maybe some engineering. Otherwise, I don't see the point of it.
It's so stupid. It's a racket. It is such a racket.
It is such a racket, and it's our problem as
a society for using it as like a social circuit,

(01:32:22):
like we used colleges like a social circuit. So many
and I see, especially if you're going into like if
you need a degree if you're going into medicine, you're
going into law, having connections and knowing these professors, and
I get where that can also be a benefit, But
we don't have to. Not every skill set requires that.

(01:32:43):
But we use it as oh, well, where's your kid going.
Oh they're going here X y Z. Oh they're in
this sorority or this fraternity. It's used in place of
like the social circuit that back in the days of
your we used to have right where you would have Oh,
that's in season, and everybody goes to the city and
they all go to this. It's just a whole I
don't know, I've got I could go on about this

(01:33:03):
for some time. But the Financial Times looked at this.
They said that the unemployment rate among recent college grads
is on the rise, and it's rising pretty steadily. It
still is lower than all young workers between twenty two
and twenty seven, but now men who have a college
degree have about the same unemployment rate as men who

(01:33:25):
didn't go to college.

Speaker 2 (01:33:27):
Now.

Speaker 8 (01:33:28):
In comparison, they note around twenty ten, non college educated
men experienced they had unemployment at over fifteen percent, whereas
the rate amongst college grads was closer to seven well,
now that discrepancy is, that difference is gone, and the
job market boost that always advertised for a job if

(01:33:51):
you had a degree, that's gone because I don't think
people care about credentials as much anymore. As I see
different jobs, Like if I'm out somewhere, maybe you'll see like, oh,
we're hiring you know, you have to have like assign somewhere,
and they're like, you have to have a bat. I'm
just like, you're asking for a degree for a job
that doesn't need one. You're a stupid employer, You're an idiot,

(01:34:12):
Like what is that? And because Democrats decided to consolidate
and control all student loans, they have made it so
expensive and unaccessible for people to actually even go to college.
You got to be rich almost to go to college anymore.
I mean, you can't even compete and get the scholarships
and grants if you tried to, especially if you're sorry,

(01:34:33):
if you're just like a white suburban kid, you're sol
It's true. So I don't know, I feel bad for
these generations because it doesn't look like it's improving. And
so now you have these diverging it's not even that
divergent men and women. I mean it's really hitting men
as well. A lot of gen Z guys are skipping

(01:34:55):
college and they're going into the skilled trade industry. That's
something that AI is not going to be able to
take over skilled trades. So there's some protection there. So
the and those trades that those jobs are male dominated.
They said enrollment at to your vocational schools is increase
twenty percent since twenty twenty. That's almost a million additional

(01:35:17):
students and vocational careers that people were really snotty and
look down on. Well guess what those are going to
be the ones that AI can't take over. You all
screwed yourselves, all those I just there's just this like
snotty attitude. I think that propelled the whole collegiate thing

(01:35:39):
and made everyone discount skilled trades and go into bureaucracy
for the lack of a better way to put it,
don't you agree? And now look who's having the last laugh?
Look who is having the last laugh? And you and
they should because they deserve it, They earned it those trades.
That's honestly like that, it's going to be the only

(01:36:00):
place where you're really protected. That's going to be the
only place where you're protected. So they said, carpenters, mechanics,
they're going to start pain even better than they are now.
They're paying really well. Now they're going to start even
pain better than that. I mean, all these skilled trades.
This is something that that's like the it seems like

(01:36:21):
that's the last refuge when AI really really gets its stride.
Those things you can't take over.

Speaker 2 (01:36:29):
Hmm. You know what you want to know?

Speaker 8 (01:36:31):
What the college aptitude or the aptitude test I took
in high school told me I should be a mechanic
or a lawyer. I took it three times and I
got the same thing every time, a car mechanic or
a lawyer. Yeah, And I'm like really, and I'm like
they're so different though, but there's like some kind of
common denominator I'm sure in that every single time I
got it.

Speaker 5 (01:36:51):
I think there's some details in mechanics that are you
need a brain for those details, just like you would
for law.

Speaker 2 (01:36:57):
Yeah, that makes sense, that makes sense. Yeah.

Speaker 8 (01:36:59):
I took it as a freshman, junior, and a senior.

Speaker 2 (01:37:00):
I didn't.

Speaker 8 (01:37:01):
I don't know why I didn't take my sophomore year.
You really only need to take it once, but I
kept thinking maybe there's something that will show me. I
didn't believe it the first time, but yeah, that's almost
like that is actually very interesting.

Speaker 2 (01:37:11):
There is something in there that's you.

Speaker 5 (01:37:13):
Know, we'll buy a five hundred dollars junker car for
the show and we're going to work on it. It'll
be good.

Speaker 8 (01:37:19):
Well I want to create make it into some mad
Max thing.

Speaker 5 (01:37:23):
Oh, you don't have to twist my arm.

Speaker 8 (01:37:25):
And you know, I would also like just like because
I do have a fifty cow and I would love
to be able to just put it on a sliding
rack where you kick the door open and it's just shoop.

Speaker 2 (01:37:34):
You're out.

Speaker 5 (01:37:35):
Ready to twisting needed pretty sure?

Speaker 2 (01:37:37):
It's street Lee right.

Speaker 7 (01:37:39):
Subscribe to the Dana Show podcast because who says you
can't make fun of people while staying informed on your
own personal time. Subscribe on YouTube, Apple or wherever you
get your podcast.

Speaker 15 (01:37:52):
All leisurely walk in the Woods is no longer allowed
in Nova Scotia, and it may not be for the
rest of the summer.

Speaker 4 (01:37:57):
Effective four pm today, coming Nova Scotians stay out of
the Woods.

Speaker 15 (01:38:02):
Nova Scotia's premier announced today a ban on activities in
the forest because of extreme dry conditions and the risk
of wildfires.

Speaker 4 (01:38:09):
Hiking, camping, fishing, and the use of vehicles in the
woods are not permitted. Trail systems through woods are off.

Speaker 15 (01:38:17):
Limits at these walking trails in the heart of Sydney.
Some agreed with the move, while others didn't.

Speaker 8 (01:38:22):
As long as you're not sittarting a fire or smoking,
you know that kind of thing, you should be able
to walk in there.

Speaker 9 (01:38:30):
It kind of sucks for the campers and anybody otenting,
but it's probably.

Speaker 2 (01:38:36):
Necessary oot camping. Golly, that's Canadian oot oot camping. So
they can't camp.

Speaker 8 (01:38:43):
They can't do anything because they don't trust their people
to not start fires.

Speaker 2 (01:38:48):
Is that what it is? That is the goofiest thing.
So the woods are banned. The woods are closed in
Nova Scotia.

Speaker 8 (01:38:54):
I feel like I'm watching a Shorsy episode.

Speaker 2 (01:38:58):
The woods are closed.

Speaker 8 (01:39:01):
Yeah, go give your a tug. I you know, that's
that's what he says. That's a famous line from the series.
Oh my gosh, so uh yeah, they said that. I
can't read any of this actually now without having the
Canadian accent in my head. We've had a boot one
hundred wildfires this season. They've all been small, and put

(01:39:23):
oot quickly. But that could change in a heartbeat. They said,
that's Tory rushed in the Minister of Natural Resources. It
almost sounds Irish Scottish, almost like something there's something in there.

Speaker 5 (01:39:34):
Everybody who is a Nova Scotian and that's what you say, right,
that's what you call them, people from.

Speaker 2 (01:39:40):
Nova Scotia, Nova Scotia.

Speaker 5 (01:39:41):
Nova Scotian. I would trust them out in the woods
more than I would any of these government officials putting
rules on those people.

Speaker 8 (01:39:48):
Look, I don't camp and I make fun of it
because I said, because I always say that, I don't
want to pretend to be homeless. We invented the house,
you know, as a people. But you don't mess with campers, Okay,
you don't. Those are the people that I'm like, if
they're gonna go into the woods, the campers though, they
get to go, because those are people who are like,
we love being out here with no toilet and not

(01:40:10):
having hot water unless we love it.

Speaker 2 (01:40:14):
Those people are for that. Okay. If there's anybody that
I trust out there, it's those people.

Speaker 8 (01:40:20):
Those people, they know what they're doing. I mean, all
of this stuff, it's always been firebugs that go out
and do this stuff. That's what we learned in the
Palisades thing. I mean, my gosh, they were literally catching
people red handed.

Speaker 5 (01:40:32):
It's not the law abiding people doing the problems in
the harm Yet, these laws they put out there restrict
the movements and the abilities and freedoms of.

Speaker 8 (01:40:42):
All the people who love to go camping. I have
family and I have some dear friends that God love them.
They're just like, yeah, we're just gonna go spend the
night outside. Randomly a Friday night, we'll be like, hey,
you guys want to go to down, We're gonna go
be outside. We're sleep outside like the homeless for tonight.
They have like they're camping places that they go. Right,
I'm like, okay, more power to you. And I've got
you know, we've got friends that do all that. And

(01:41:04):
I love those people because I trust them out there
and they care about it. They're like, they know how
to do their fires, they know how to clean up.
They literally have like their protocol that they follow and
they're hardcore.

Speaker 2 (01:41:16):
I love it.

Speaker 8 (01:41:17):
They're not hurt nobody. But because you got some people
that are stooges. Now the woods are closed in Nova Scotia.
You can't be out in a boot. They're closed. Oh
my gosh, they just don't allow anything there. It's summer,
because what are your temperatures up there? Maybe some warmth
for a month and then freezing. Everything else is freezing,

(01:41:40):
like the one time of the year where it's nice
to go out and you're gonna it's just there's just
so stupid. That's just not the way to die, how
much you want about. There's gonna be a wildfire still.
It's not gonna be buying from any of them people.

Speaker 2 (01:41:52):
Yeah, all right, by the.

Speaker 5 (01:41:55):
Way, maple syrup, that's where it's in the woods.

Speaker 8 (01:41:59):
It's right, No more maple syrup. All right, we got
today's stupidity king.

Speaker 5 (01:42:02):
All right, let's do this. Looks like cut twelve? Can
we do? Jasmine Crockett. She swears they should have They
should have controlled the house by now. The only detail
she leaves out is the fact that they didn't actually
win yeah, enough elections to do that.

Speaker 16 (01:42:14):
But here she is he think about it this way
right now, the Democrats should control the House, but we don't.
And the only reason we don't control the House isn't
because we didn't work hard, isn't because we didn't raise money.
Isn't because we didn't put up good candidates, but it
is because a North Carolina as soon as they ended
up with a Republican majority on that Supreme Court decided

(01:42:35):
to redraw the lines again and instead of that state
being seven to seven, listening.

Speaker 5 (01:42:40):
To her talking about a legal procedure, every state gets
to do.

Speaker 9 (01:42:43):
Oh, I mean, it's not because we didn't win elections,
because we didn't and there were any of this other stuff.
It is because of it, all those things exactly that
does it for us today, folks. Make sure you find
a over at substect chapter in verse, YouTube, Facebook, like
and subscribe.

Speaker 2 (01:42:56):
I'll be back with you tomorrow
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