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December 31, 2025 100 mins
Gavin Newsom sits weirdly crosslegged while saying, “Democrats need to be more culturally normal”. An Irish teacher has been ARRESTED after objecting to using a transgender student's preferred name and pronouns. Fox Business’ Charles Payne joins us to react to President Trump’s comments on “affordability”, how to fix the crisis, the “Trump Accounts” for children, and much more.

Dana reveals how conservative media is being overtaken by grifters and opportunists like Candace Owens to provide sensationalism for clicks. Singer Tish Hyman CONFRONTS Pelosi’s predecessor, CA State Sen. Scott Weiner over his stance on trans following getting assaulted by a biological man in a women’s gym locker room.

Actors Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones are reportedly FURIOUS over their son getting humiliated on CNN. Conservative influencers pose for photos and accepted free trips from Qatar over Thanksgiving weekend Restaurants in NYC are hiring virtual cashiers from the Philippines via Zoom calls and only have to pay them $3.25 per hour. Has tipping culture gotten out of control? Hunter Biden ironically trashes Miranda Devine’s look and trashes MAGA.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Enough.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
Our Dignity for Detained Immigrants Act has a remarkable, unprecedented
one hundred and twenty three original co sponsors before we've
even introduced it. One hundred and twenty three co sponsors,
and it overhauls the detention system. It drastically scales back
the use of detention. It ensures that every single immigrant

(00:22):
who is in detention has their human and civil rights protected.
Our bill also phases out the use of private.

Speaker 3 (00:30):
For profit detention centers.

Speaker 4 (00:32):
It prohibits the detention of children and families, and makes
it harder to detain primary caregivers and vulnerable people like
pregnant women or seniors, or workers who are whistleblowing and unscrupulous.
It requires DHS to allow members of.

Speaker 5 (00:49):
Them stay in your country and be pregnant there. It's
not my responsibility to raise everybody else's family.

Speaker 3 (00:57):
And it's cool.

Speaker 5 (00:58):
What about the decency and respect for taxpayers here and
citizens here? What about that the Dignity Act? What about
the dignity of American citizens? That's Premia Jopaul who wants
taxpayer funded attorneys for everybody who crosses the border illegally.

Speaker 3 (01:12):
I don't think so. Welcome back to the program.

Speaker 5 (01:14):
Top of this third hour, Dana lash with you. I'm
so tired of this stuff, so tired of it. No,
just stay in your own country, Just stay and deal
with the right.

Speaker 6 (01:29):
Democrats are dead set on punishing American people. The punish.
The process is the punishment. This process is the punishment.
So what do they do implement more process?

Speaker 5 (01:38):
They hate Americans. I mean, there's just no other way
to put it. It's ridiculous.

Speaker 3 (01:43):
I want to take a quick detour. And I know
I didn't have this one.

Speaker 5 (01:49):
I'm sorry, but I just I feel like we've missed
an opportunity to make fun of the way Gavin Newsom
is sitting and cut seventeen and I don't really care
what he says here.

Speaker 3 (01:58):
I just is he a eunuch? Y'all watch those watchless videos?
Is seventeen?

Speaker 7 (02:06):
I mean, I look, you know, we can talk about
why Kamala lost, which is separate. I mean, it's it's
part derivative of the larger narrative, but issues around inflation scars.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
His beans are probably screaming, well, what beans is he? Now?

Speaker 5 (02:25):
I know some dudes cross their legs, but that tight
like you're trying to hold a like a per simmon.

Speaker 3 (02:32):
In your thighs. You know what I'm saying?

Speaker 6 (02:38):
Did you choose well?

Speaker 3 (02:40):
I mean, it just seemed too obvious to say, like
a walnut. You know.

Speaker 8 (02:43):
It looks like.

Speaker 6 (02:44):
He's trying to make his right foot as far as possible.

Speaker 3 (02:50):
Break his own ankle off.

Speaker 9 (02:51):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (02:53):
Can we just get like the zoom out of the
original shot? Yeah, let's just posit there?

Speaker 3 (02:58):
What is that with this? What is his leg? How
does your I can't even make my leg do that?

Speaker 5 (03:06):
Ow, and I'm in big, giant, clunky combat boots right now.
For her, I can't even make my leg I literally am,
I'm in giant combat boots right now.

Speaker 3 (03:15):
I can't even.

Speaker 5 (03:17):
Make my leg do that. And I'm I took eighteen
years of LA Who does that?

Speaker 6 (03:21):
I think some guys that like that to show off
their sock.

Speaker 3 (03:23):
Part of his thigh is an acrotic now off.

Speaker 6 (03:27):
Sometimes guys do that, I think.

Speaker 5 (03:31):
So okay, the feller on the left. I don't like
pant legs that right out that far. When a man
sits down, get some proper damn pants, because you know
them are those are theym's you know those are high
waters that you know, I don't know I just I
can't get over the way avenuees and was sitting here.
So the whole internet it's like, what is the matter
with you? Like he was talking about National Guard policies

(03:55):
basically the same thing for me Jaapaul was talking about
and somebody goes, quote, I've never seen a man crush
his testicles harder than this, dude?

Speaker 3 (04:04):
Do men?

Speaker 5 (04:05):
Let me ask you men, And this is for all
the guys, because guys notice things and have different thoughts
than women do. Like women see this and we're like, hmm,
that looks effeminate. You guys look at this and like,
how are you not dying to death from pain?

Speaker 1 (04:20):
Right?

Speaker 2 (04:20):
Like?

Speaker 3 (04:21):
What is your thought when you see a guy sitting
like that?

Speaker 6 (04:22):
No, that's what it is. It's like, well, I guess
you have you've done more yoga than me or something.
I don't know what it is, Steve.

Speaker 5 (04:30):
When you see a guy set that tightly cross legged legged,
what do you think I.

Speaker 10 (04:35):
Tend to like when I said I crossed my ankle,
since I think most guys do that just I cross
their feet and then rarely over the leg. But that
is his legs are going the opposite way.

Speaker 6 (04:43):
I don't know how he did that. Yeah, I mean
it's like intentional.

Speaker 5 (04:48):
It's like his legs are like that. I don't Wand
do you think it looks effeminate?

Speaker 6 (04:55):
Yeah, I'm sure he does.

Speaker 5 (04:57):
I mean, yeah, I don't know if I trust a
guy who sits. I like, I understand if you cross
your legs, but you know, you and I not having
male anatomy, and you know I have raised sons. But
I just think that would be painful. Right, It's like,

(05:20):
I don't know. I don't want to get too into it,
but I just don't know if I can trust the
guy that stuff like that. You know, like he's got
to unwrap his legs if an intruder were to break in,
he's not gonna help protect you. You got to uncross some
legs to get up. That's going to take some effort.
That's going to take a beat. You know, by that time,
you know you're already dead. I'm just saying I don't know.
I of course he did violate lockdown to go sip

(05:42):
some wine pinkies out at French laundry, so I don't know,
but I had to share that because it was too
all right, can we talk about the trans stuff so
few things. This is in Britain, speaking of trans a
female engineer took her employer to tribunal for having to
share women's twinlets with a transgender colleague. She felt discrimination

(06:06):
and lost her claim. The actual woman, Maria Kelly, objected
to a man pretending to be a woman being allowed
and did the female lou At Leonardo UK's office in Edinburgh,
she took action against the defense giant, alleging harassment related
to sex, direct sex discrimination and indirect sex discrimination. The

(06:28):
tribunal toto to go pounds, send you stupid women. No,
they didn't say that verbatim, but they pretty much did.
She told the tribunal she began using a secret loo
at her workplace because she didn't want to go in
with a dude in there, and apparently the dude was
always in there whenever she went in, so she felt
uncomfortable and they told her that you don't count.

Speaker 3 (06:47):
This is the.

Speaker 5 (06:50):
I mean, it doesn't matter if men's claims are prioritized
before women's in these issues. Now, this is a story
that's crazy and I want you to be really careful
with the media narrative on this one. So here, I'm
sure you've heard about this story. It is this Irish dude.
His name is Enoch Burke. I can't do an Irish

(07:12):
accent totally well. But he was arrested over pronoun use.
Now here's the prevailing story, and then I'm going to
explain to you how the media is trying to spin
it to give themselves an out. So this Enoch Burke,
he was arrested and jailed in just last month because
he refused to use a student who wanted to pretend

(07:34):
to be another gender. He refused to use the transgender
pupils preferred name and pronouns, contrary to misleading online posts.
He wouldn't use he wouldn't use the they them pronoun
because he correctly deduced that it was stupid. And so

(07:54):
he was arrested and imprisoned. And you know all this
stuff now the media, because the public pushback has been
so insane, rightfully so, so the media is like, no, no, no, oh, no,
he wasn't. He wasn't arrested for pronoun use. He was
arrested for contempt, not for pronoun use. It was because

(08:17):
a contempt of quote, well what was a contempt of court?
He got fired from his school, his job, at school
because he refused to say they them and use they
them pronouns. He shut up for work again and they
they detained him. Well, why was he fired over pronoun use?
Why was he detained related to the pronoun use? Therefore

(08:39):
he was jailed and arrested in all of this for
pronoun use? Can they can try to spin it six
ways to Sunday? But what caused the offense? He refused
to play make believe with pronouns, and so they're trying
to say, Oh, this is misleading, it's misleading.

Speaker 3 (08:57):
We've got to do a fact check on it. Oh,
this this sea isn't correct.

Speaker 5 (09:02):
No, it is, though, it absolutely is, because he would
not have been in any of this, None of this
would be happening if he had not refused to use
them pronouns. This guy, I mean, he faces quite a
long time in jail.

Speaker 3 (09:21):
I don't know what that. I've seen different reports as
to how long.

Speaker 5 (09:25):
He could be in jail. But this has to do
Let's be real. This has to completely do with the
pronoun usage.

Speaker 3 (09:32):
That's it.

Speaker 5 (09:33):
I don't even want to read this comment from the
chat about Gavin Newsom Kane. Yeah, I can't read that one.
We enjoyed immensely. Oh but I'm just I get confused
about this. So this happened, this story in Ireland where
this guy's getting jailed, and it's I don't know if

(09:53):
it's seen Northern Ireland or Republic Ireland, but iron you know,
they just Central Island, so Republic Ireland. How is this
allowed to happen?

Speaker 3 (10:05):
Here's the guy.

Speaker 5 (10:06):
Who's being purp walked into jail. One's getting this ready.
I'm shocked with this. He's on X and he's been
posting about this on X as well, and how he
was arrested at his house. Because all of this related

(10:26):
to the pronoun usage, because you don't have free speech,
but you can use wrong pronouns and someone can say
that this is that you're caused defense and now it's
a jailable offense. But then I see video like them.
So there's a story. We pulled this up BBC. A

(10:47):
criminal investigation is underway after threats were made to elective
representatives in Northern Ireland by three armed and masked men
in front of an Irish flag. One of the men
read a statement in which she said the areas assembly
members and councilors were considered targets because of they flooded
the country with illegal aliens and crime has increased, et cetera.

(11:08):
They call themselves the New Republican Movement, and they said
that they uh that it was deplorable that they've had that,
they've had their country flooded, and they said that you know,
there's gonna be there's gonna be repercussions for that. I
mean it was threatening, is what they said. On I Look,
if you if you don't want vigilanteism, then you don't

(11:30):
pass policies for vigilanteism. But how all of a sudden,
or people, whether it's Northern Ireland or Republic Ireland, how
do you get to the point where a guy can
get jailed for not using the proper pronouns?

Speaker 3 (11:42):
But like how?

Speaker 5 (11:43):
But I sometimes I'm like, is this performative? Like why
why is this inconsistent? Where are the people out in
the streets over the over the trans mafia I mean
not just for illegal immigration, I mean that's incredibly important
as well. They've been dealing with all kinds of you know,
foreign nations that have been increasing crime and targeting and
attacking women and girls in their countries. But like, how

(12:07):
do you let it get this far. I say this.
You know here in the United States we're dealing with it.
But I mean I like the pushback.

Speaker 3 (12:13):
Now.

Speaker 5 (12:14):
You know, you could sit here and say, well, they
shouldn't be masked and they shouldn't be Well what else
are they supposed to do? I'm not justifying it. I'm
asking you what else are they supposed to do? Because
the lawmakers that are supposed to be respecting the constitution
of their respective nations aren't doing their job. They're allowing
the country to be overtaken by foreign nationals who just
come in by the boatload. So what else are are

(12:38):
civilians supposed to do? If you don't want vigilanteism, then
don't put the ingredients into the vigilantism soup. Don't make it,
don't start it. Don't start it, and it won't be nothing. We
got a lot more on that way. We've got headlines
coming up as we move. Our partners, the folks that
help bring you the program. It's our friends over at
Relief Factor. They want me to tell you about this

(13:00):
dude named Travis Clark.

Speaker 3 (13:02):
I've never met him.

Speaker 5 (13:04):
Travis Clark told Relief Factor that it took him an
hour to walk a mile, No idea why, But it
took him an hour to walk a mile now today
and I'm assuming it's because he's taking Relief Factor that
he can walk four miles in that same hour. And
he told them he began running again for the first
time in a decade.

Speaker 3 (13:22):
Well, good for him. But here's the thing.

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Speaker 10 (14:20):
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Speaker 6 (14:39):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 5 (14:44):
All right, So a fighter jet crashed into a huge fireball.
This was in San Bernardino near the Tronta Airport. The pirate,
the pilot was able to safely a jet, but it
created a pretty nasty splosion. It was all splowedy Cain
pilots treated for non life threatening injuries adding nearby hospital.
So my goodness, that's yeah, that's not what you want

(15:08):
to see.

Speaker 3 (15:08):
Ever.

Speaker 5 (15:09):
Also, let's see here a doctor was charged in Friends.
Actor Matthew Perry's death sentenced to two and a half
years in prison as well. Let's see what is is?
So this is in KSBW. I don't know what town
this is. So what town is this? Carmel Carmel by

(15:32):
the Seat, California. The city council voted to permanently ban pickleball.
It's a very wealthy California town. They've had laws against
ice cream, cones and high heels, so now apparently they're
going to outlaw pickleball. And a group of seniors who
play pickleball every week are fighting back against the decision.

(15:53):
So they're leading the war effort against the decision. I'm
not into pickleball. I have family members who love it
and play it religiously, like like one of them is
now in tournaments which I didn't even know that they have.
I mean to be real, if I had a dodgeball league,
I would totally be in dodgeball.

Speaker 6 (16:12):
Actually we should start.

Speaker 3 (16:13):
I am so ridiculously.

Speaker 5 (16:16):
Look, I don't really brag about myself, but I'm going
to in this instance. You're probably not going to find
someone who's as good at dodgeball as me, Like you
know that you know of in your circle I can
dodge anything. Can dodge your wrench, you can dodge a ball.
I can.

Speaker 3 (16:32):
It's just fun. I'm not totally joking.

Speaker 5 (16:34):
I'm actually kind of serious that in ski ball Well
good anyway, the band is going to take effect in
thirty days and they're already getting mad, so they're gonna
have a big old fight on their hands. And Caramel Caramel,
Caramel by the Sea, Karmel by the Sea. Out of
all the things to ban, why that singing is good
for your health, just don't do it in front of
people unless your book. Good and YouTube releases its first
ever recap of videos that you watched, something that no

(16:56):
one asked for, no one needed, and no one.

Speaker 3 (16:59):
Even thought that they needed.

Speaker 5 (17:01):
So coming up is Lamism in France, they're stepping up
security because other Christmas markets are getting terror threats.

Speaker 3 (17:07):
We've got that more Stick with.

Speaker 5 (17:08):
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Speaker 3 (18:39):
Coast to coast across the nation.

Speaker 5 (18:43):
And we've been talking a lot about the whole issue
with the economy and the issue of affordability.

Speaker 3 (18:49):
And remember Potus was talking about.

Speaker 5 (18:51):
Affordability here and it was there was a lot of
argument in the press over this. I'm like looking at
one of the quotes that he had because we keep
hearing about economic anxiety and it's driving people to socialism,
and the Potus was talking about affordability and people were saying,
oh my gosh, you can't sit here and shoot down affordability.
And we have a debate on jobs numbers. What is

(19:12):
the real story of all of this? What is the
real story of all of this? Joining us right now,
our friend Charles Pain hosts to Making Money with Charles Pain,
really the only money show that you need to be watching.
It's weekdays two to three Eastern on Fox Business. He
joined us via video. Charles, my good friend, it's so
nice to see you. I hope you had a wonderful Thanksgiving.
Thank you for being with us. Talk to me about

(19:33):
this this, it's like the buzzword. It's like, this is
the new buzzword right now, is affordability. And when the
President was talking about affordability, he was saying, well, I
don't want to hear that word. You know, this is
dumb to talk about it in this manner. He started
taking a lot of heat for that. How do you
talk to the people who are criticizing him over this.

Speaker 9 (19:50):
Well, you know, there are two things here.

Speaker 1 (19:53):
First of all, nothing started this year, right, I mean,
a lot of this, to the President's point, is sort
of anti Trump spend that really he caught. He inherited
almost every single thing we're talking about, and not just
we're not just talking about something that just happens slightly.
This so called affordability crisis began five years ago during COVID.

(20:18):
Right after COVID, all the money that was put into
this economy, some of it was just so willy nilling.
The two trillion dollars from President Biden that spiked. Listen,
we never we stopped talking about inflation as an issue
in this country for forty years. You have to go
back to the early eighties when inflation was really a
real serious problem and the only thing people ever measured

(20:41):
was gasoline prices.

Speaker 9 (20:43):
So you dumped two trillion in and steamy checks.

Speaker 1 (20:45):
Then you say to people, you don't have to pay
your college loans, you don't have to pay rent, And
then you start giving money to folks who don't need it.
Well off people earned income to a credit affordability programs
one hundred billion dollars ostensibly for the poor, but eight
billion went to people with college degrees. And so this,
this so called affordability crisis began five years ago. It

(21:08):
is a juggernaut. And the thing about prices, if you
look at it, the CPI, the Consumer Price indext I,
invite anyone, just google it CPI and then put fred.
That's a federal reserves charting system. It's so easy to do.
Go back any timeframe you want. For the most part,
it goes up. Prices go up. Any popular song from
the nineteen thirties, forties, fifties, sixty seventy eighties, all of

(21:31):
them talk about prices being high. So prices have always
gone up. The question is how do we get wages
to keep up with it now? When Biden was an office,
there was no way wages can necessarily keep up with it.
You know, and and income income not wages, not what
you earn from the job, but just what they dump
into households mask that, but it also made it worse.

Speaker 9 (21:52):
So today I want to give you an example.

Speaker 1 (21:54):
Today we had what they call personal income and spending
numbers are out today and I want to tell you
what people spent money on today for this is for
our September utilities, healthcare, financial services, and insurance. These are
things that really the government got involved in all of
these things. Do you want to talk about what's the problem.

(22:15):
We have too much money chasing too few goods. And
then you have anything from insurance, anything from student loans,
anywhere where the government got involved and pushed out the
private sector, prices went crazy. Okay, so now this falls
on Trump's lamp. How do you deal with it? The
media part of it, the media campaign part of it
is going to be a struggle because you cannot necessarily

(22:37):
fix it overnight.

Speaker 9 (22:38):
But what are we going to see next year? People
will keep more of what they earn.

Speaker 1 (22:42):
Those those income tax rebates are going to set a record.
But this isn't the government giving you money. This is
people keeping more of what they earn with their hard work.
You're gonna see the one big beautiful bill kick in.
You're gonna see companies building things because they get to
write off the taxes right, you get to take appreciation
right up front. So we're going to see a sort

(23:03):
of win, a tail win. And then of course I'm
hoping starting next week that the Federal Reserve does their
part and starts the lower rates. Because credit card bills
went from fifteen percent to like twenty four percent. Some
people are paying as much as thirty percent. It's unsustainable. Yeah,
And so that's where we are right now. It's a
political situation, it's an economic situation, and it's a messaging situation.

Speaker 5 (23:26):
And of course, with a lot of the stuff in
the bill that that Potus passed, we're not going to
see a lot of that stuff hit until after the
first of the year, when it's when it's fully implemented,
and a lot of these trade deals still have you know,
we have this grace period before they're kicked into gear.
So I feel I feel like the media is really
counting on that and saying, look, you have in the
headlines that these things are done, but without knowing that

(23:47):
it's actually kicks in January first, are you feeling any
any different?

Speaker 3 (23:51):
Nos? So they failed, That's that's the narrative.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
But you know what, it's going to backfire on them.
To your point, they overplayed their hand. And this is
so today we also got another key number up. It's
called the Michigan's Consumer Sentiment Report. Expectations for where we
think will be for the next six months exploded higher.
People are already feeling better. People have an intuitive sense.
It's amazing how people understand what's going on, far more

(24:17):
than anyone gives them credit for. Also, inflation expectations now
with the Michigan Sentiment number is highly political. So what
I do is I take out what the Democrats fill
and what Republicans film, and I focus on independence independent
voters see inflation coming down dramatically next year. Why is
that important because that's what makes the Federal Reserve more

(24:38):
comfortable with lowering rates.

Speaker 9 (24:40):
So we've got all of this coming.

Speaker 1 (24:42):
By the way, last week, the funniest one and funniest
stories data was Bloomberg tried to dunk on Trump for
all of these deals that are being announced around the world.
Like I think Trump may have said twenty one trillion dollars, right,
and so they went and they did the math and
they say he's wrong. It's only seven trillion, seven trillions, all.

Speaker 3 (25:00):
Lot of money, still a lot. I can't even fathom
that amount of money.

Speaker 1 (25:04):
Seven It's never been done before. And listen, I really
think what they've done is and again they did this
at the beginning of the year with tariffs, right the
tariff trend tantrum. They sent the market railing, to have
people afraid to the level that we've never seen before,
never in all of these polls, how intimidated, How worried

(25:24):
are you about the government's policies. People were like, Oh,
it's going to destroy us. These tariffs are going to
rip us apart. So I but what's gonna happen? I
think those that they set themselves up, we start coming on.
I think we're going to start coming on next year.
And with the headlines should read X y Z did
far better than anyone thought, although not anyone. It's with

(25:45):
the media, pundits and the naysayers wanted us to believe exactly.

Speaker 3 (25:49):
I agree with you on that.

Speaker 5 (25:51):
The only the only hesitancy that I've had with Potus
when it comes to some of these policies is when
they announced these Trump accounts for the kids, and and
and I trust your insight into this because when I heard,
I love what the Dells did, and I think that
that's the way you do it. You know, you have
you have private philanthropy, you have these people who I
mean that. I think it's one of the if not

(26:11):
the one of the biggest private donations, made six and
a half billion dollars, putting two hundred and fifty dollars
into the accounts of you know, I think twenty five However,
many kids, and I know that there's a set of
restrictions for that.

Speaker 3 (26:23):
The Trump accounts.

Speaker 5 (26:24):
The way that I read it, and this was in
part of the One Big Beautiful Bill, is that it's
drawing one thousand dollars from the US Treasury to put
into the account of these children that are born between
January first, twenty twenty six and going into twenty twenty eight.
My initial thought is we should pay down our debt
with anything like that, like instead of putting one thousand

(26:46):
dollars into banket, we should be paying down our debt.
We should be There's a million things that we could do,
because it seems kind of Obama esque to me like
Obama light redistributing the wealth. Is that how you see
it or how do you see it?

Speaker 1 (27:00):
It's a it's a it's complicated in the sense that, Yeah,
from the purest point of view, I get what you're saying.

Speaker 9 (27:07):
From from a from a.

Speaker 1 (27:09):
Political and maybe more practical point of view, this is
something that, if it's done right, could really really help
a lot of people. You know, when we paid we
here's the thing. We could use it to pay down
the debt. But would we ever do that? You know,

(27:29):
the the real, honest, the goodness fact of life is
that not the party has any true interest in paying
down the debt in any meaningful manner.

Speaker 9 (27:38):
And that's why it keeps going. It keeps going.

Speaker 1 (27:41):
So on paper, if we were to do those responsible
things that you just described, that would be a good alternative.

Speaker 9 (27:48):
But it really is not ever going to go to that.

Speaker 1 (27:51):
And so the fiscal clip that we're going to go off,
we'll find it someday. I don't know where it is though,
all right, We've been talking about it for a decade.

Speaker 9 (27:58):
Yeah, so we don't know where it is.

Speaker 1 (28:01):
We know that Japan has gotten its high at over
two hundred percent of debt to GDP. And you know,
it was once considered that the number one economy was
going to surpass America in the early eighties. And no
one talks about Japan that way anymore. And there's some
other issues there, including their fertility crisis.

Speaker 9 (28:17):
But we do know one thing that we will hit
a wall.

Speaker 1 (28:21):
We won't self destruct, but we probably won't be the
pre eminent country in the world are anymore. And the
only reason we still have that status now is that
there's no true thing, no such thing as a responsible
nation out there. If you think we're bad, you should
see what China's done kind of uses what they call
economic bazookahs. They had four last year, and you can't
even the amount of money they're spending and the debt

(28:44):
that they've gone into. No one talks about these, all
these folks who are rooting for China because they hate
Trump so much.

Speaker 9 (28:49):
So from a realistic point of view.

Speaker 1 (28:53):
Knowing that we truly aren't going to pay down the debt,
but maybe, just maybe we can give young folks a
leg up in life at it down the road. I
think it's a smart move.

Speaker 5 (29:03):
And what you said about China, just to touch on
that real quick. That's incredibly important because they only allow
just enough capitalism for them to say, oh, but we're
a capitalist society, we practice capitalism, and then they use
that as an example, and well, capitalists fail, and this
is why the West is so bad, this is why
the United Site they're going to fail too, because of capitalism.

Speaker 3 (29:21):
But that's not what China's doing.

Speaker 5 (29:23):
I mean, they have like this Rube Goldberg machine of
I don't even know how.

Speaker 3 (29:28):
It's just a mess.

Speaker 5 (29:29):
I can't even hardly understand their economy, how it's still
existing and how the country is functioning.

Speaker 1 (29:35):
It's it's I think that's a great description, by the way,
just they just keep they keep creating phantom money, right,
they keep creating phantom money.

Speaker 5 (29:44):
We're not there yet, And huh, I said, we're not
there yet, thankfully in the United States.

Speaker 9 (29:49):
No.

Speaker 1 (29:49):
No, I mean, listen, you know, one thing you can
use to measure the attractiveness of a country is what
they call FDI far direct investment. There's been zero fargn
direct INVESTM been in China for a few years now,
so you know, and we still are the number one
destination in the world for foreign direct investment. And that's
the money I was just talking about make sure the

(30:09):
big money will come from Japan and South Korea. And
again we're talking seven trillion dollars in foreign direct investment
in America. In America, that is a major, major, major accomplishment,
and that speaks the leadership.

Speaker 5 (30:22):
Yeah, I really wish that they would get you in there.
I'd love to see you and Scott Besent working together
on this because I'm sure that you could come up
with some ways to like incentivize earnings and get people involved.
And you know, I don't incentivize a baby boom. I mean,
I just feel like you could, you know, I hope
they come knocking on your office door.

Speaker 2 (30:40):
You know.

Speaker 1 (30:40):
I mean I reached out over there from time to time.
I throw my eyes ideas out there from time to time.

Speaker 9 (30:46):
You know. That's that's what I do.

Speaker 1 (30:48):
I mean, that's they always invite me to offer ideas
and suggestions. So I do I just like to take
like to see them take me up.

Speaker 3 (30:55):
I would do so in all of America.

Speaker 5 (30:58):
We all would speaking for you know, million people, we
all would.

Speaker 3 (31:01):
Charles Pain used to Making money with Charles Pain.

Speaker 5 (31:04):
You can watch it weekdays two to three pm Eastern
on Fox Business and we always were on air for
the part of it, so I always have to pre
record it.

Speaker 3 (31:12):
But I love your show. Thank you so much, Charles.
We appreciate Happy Thanksgiving belatedly. Good to see you.

Speaker 5 (31:18):
We have more to com folks as we wrap up
this first hour, and of course we have days of
these United States as well, brought to you by the
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Speaker 6 (33:20):
Like SAMs through.

Speaker 3 (33:21):
The hour glass.

Speaker 6 (33:23):
So are the days of the United States true?

Speaker 11 (33:27):
This creates danger And I'll tell you what, in my
time on this, I'd never seen this before. People driving
my house by my house and using the R word
in front of people.

Speaker 9 (33:38):
This is shameful.

Speaker 11 (33:39):
And I have yet to see an elected official, a
Republican elected official, say you're right, that's shameful. He should
not say it. So look, I'm worried. We know how
these things go. They start with taunts, they turn to violence.
So deeply concerned.

Speaker 3 (33:52):
No one believes anything that he's saying here. This is
just so goofy. No one believes this.

Speaker 5 (33:57):
I mean nobody believes that people are just having passed
his house and saying that he's you know, the R
word or whatever.

Speaker 3 (34:05):
That's that's Mike, that's it's Tim Wallas.

Speaker 6 (34:08):
I keep calling him Republican. What what's the R word?

Speaker 3 (34:12):
Retarded? It's like a no no word.

Speaker 5 (34:14):
You can't say, Oh, I don't know, I don't know,
I I I don't know.

Speaker 6 (34:20):
Well, if he like so, if we're to take him
at his word. Then he's admitting all the rhetoric from
the left over the last eight years since Trump nine
years plus leads to violence. So is that what he
is admitting?

Speaker 5 (34:36):
Then it was his appointee who killed the UH one
of the lawmakers there, Yeah, in Minnesota was one of
his appointees. So I don't get what he's talking. I mean, no,
I don't. Nobody believes this. Nobody believes that he's doing this.
Nobody literally believes us from him. It's just so it's ridiculous.
So coming up, we got a lot of stuff to
get to. We got to we're going to talk about

(34:57):
this hostage video with the mini It's not real hostage video,
but it seems like it doesn not Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frye,
who was eating I was trying. I'm looking at the
video on my monitor, which is why I'm like gazing
into the screen because we don't have teleprompters here. So
the I don't know what he's eating.

Speaker 3 (35:16):
Is it Rice?

Speaker 5 (35:18):
It was a he's eating a Somali meal and they're
doing it as like this performative middle finger to Trump
or something.

Speaker 6 (35:26):
I don't know, maybe Rice in there. I don't see
a lot of it.

Speaker 5 (35:30):
Though, Yeah, I don't know, I don't know, and he's
it's just weird, and he looks uncomfortable. He looks deeply
uncomfortable and like it's very hostage e.

Speaker 3 (35:43):
So we're going to talk about that as well.

Speaker 5 (35:45):
We're also going to get into this phenomenon of women
who have dolls and they treat them like babies, because
it reminded me of Kindus Owen's with Charlie Kirk's conspiracy theories.
It did, So we're going to the video is weird.
We're going to talk about that. That's like a whole thing. Also,
if you get the newsletter, you saw Caine his author

(36:06):
to piece there today and this is coming up in
our third hour.

Speaker 3 (36:09):
This is an insane story.

Speaker 5 (36:11):
So the teacher that had the it was a quote
from Charlie Kirk in his classroom, just you know, with
other famous people's quotes, and it was a big thing
in the school and they were trying to tell him
to take it down. He ended up winning he could
keep it up, and he wrote a book about it,
and then Amazon targeted his book and now they got
a new principle at the school that's investigating him for
being conservative. We're going to get into all of that

(36:31):
and more.

Speaker 3 (36:32):
Stick with us, So welcome to the program.

Speaker 5 (36:35):
Top of the second hour, your lovable hostess Dana lash
with you. Follow La La La in deck the Hallsman,
so find us over at Substack, chapter and verse. And
I mean, there's a million other things that I want
to talk about right now. I'd like to talk about
the Kataris and all the money that they've been dumping

(36:57):
into influencers. And you know, why was cash Patel giving
them the ceremonial gun the other day. I find that
to be super weird. I mean, have we forgot Khalil
shehik Muhammad? We've forgotten all of that that quickly. Why
are we cozying up to people who literally sheltered Hamas
and other people who killed American soldiers.

Speaker 3 (37:14):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (37:16):
I don't get it, but you know, I don't want
to trade Iran for Cutter. I mean, they're kind of
one and the same pretty much. I'm just curious. But
it just weird. This is such a weird thing. I
just remember.

Speaker 3 (37:31):
Because it's these are people.

Speaker 5 (37:33):
That I know, or that I thought I knew, Although
to be fair, some of them I already I have
never Can I just say, you can ask my husband this.
If you're on X, you can literally ask him, and
I'll tell you. I have never in my life been
wrong about character judgment. There's one thing if they're better,

(37:59):
if they're there's one thing that I am good at,
better than literally memorizing gunfacts and geography and weird stuff,
weird trivia. If there's one thing I'm really good at,
it is a fast character assessment. I will know within
a couple of minutes of meeting somebody whether or not
this person's legit, whether it's somebody that I want to

(38:21):
hang around, whether I think that they are being fair
and transparent with others in conversation, And in my entire life,
I have never been wrong. I've been accused of being mean,
I've been accused of being a bully about it. I've
been accused of well, just you know, give people grace

(38:43):
or let them show you what the Every single time,
I've been right, every time, whether it's the workplace, whether
it is at events, every single time, without exception. And
I cannot tell you the number of times I have

(39:03):
had people come up to me and say, I know
now why you stayed away. I know now why you
were very hesitant about that person. I know why you
kind of gave us a sort of warning. I get
it now. I mean, I can't tell you how many
times does this happened. It is if I had, you know,
one hundred dollars for every time, i'd be a frillionaire.

Speaker 3 (39:26):
And I don't go out and gossip.

Speaker 5 (39:27):
I'm just you know, I'm just straight up like Ann,
I want un to do with that, but I'm it's
never failed me. And I felt like that about some
people in the movement in conservatism before. And I'm going
to tell you this. Don't think that because people are
in a political industry that wears God as a costume,

(39:49):
there's situational Christians when it suits them, even on the
Republican side of things. Don't think that because they're on
the Republican side of things that their wholy air, or
that they're purer. Some of the most nefarious, machiavellian people
flip to the right because it's easier to make money.
Because the right is so eager to make alliances. The

(40:11):
right is so eager to have friends. That's why they
fall all over themselves whenever anyone from Hollywood, even so
much as looks their way. You saw that with Kanye.
Oh my gosh, everyone's like, maybe Kanye should run for president.
And I'm thinking, can you just slow your you know,
cool your.

Speaker 3 (40:29):
Boobs for a second.

Speaker 5 (40:30):
Okay, let's just chill it all down, slow thy role,
you know, let's just wait and see.

Speaker 3 (40:40):
Let's let it play.

Speaker 5 (40:40):
Out, let him cook before you do anything, and then
look what happens. He's crazy, right, can you imagine? So
there have been a handful of people in this industry
that I felt that about, and some of them, you know,
I've seen it. I've seen some of it come to
pass this this go around. So if it seems like

(41:01):
I don't like someone, I usually I don't dislike people
for regular reasons that I don't dislike people for professional
competition either. My thought is that if someone ever is
better than me, then that's I would love to be
if I'm ever gonna be put in my place, but
I got a better be by somebody better than me.
I recognize that I don't recognize anything without merit. I

(41:24):
don't recognize victimhood. I don't recognize none of that grifterism.
So I was thinking about this because, you know, I've
done a lot of election coverage.

Speaker 3 (41:35):
I've been in TV news for a long time.

Speaker 5 (41:36):
You know that Gretchen Carlson's one of the meanest person
people I've met in this industry.

Speaker 3 (41:40):
She was really mean.

Speaker 5 (41:41):
Met her back at a green room one time and
she just kind of gave me a once over and
walked right past me, like to the point where one
of the makeup artists that came to get me to
go back, was like, oh, I have all I have
so many stories about people. Like I said, before I
kick the bucket, before I shuffle off this mortal coil,
there will be a tell all book.

Speaker 3 (41:59):
And then.

Speaker 5 (42:00):
And there's some people who've been incredibly kind, like Brett Hume.
Brett Hume was always super nice. Brett Behar was super nice,
always super nice. Greg Gottfaield incredibly kind. There's Kennedy incredibly
incredibly kind.

Speaker 3 (42:12):
Not everybody is.

Speaker 5 (42:15):
And I don't know what happened to Tucker. You know,
we texted quite a bit. We kind of had a
big go along back and forth, and I told him
because I felt like he was sort of clamming up
a little bit. I'm like, I'm not going to publish
texts which I'm not going to do. I'm not that person.
But I do think that I also don't owe my

(42:38):
loyalty to anyone that's ever made me question theirs. But
I'm still not going to publish text. I don't understand
what has happened to people in the worldview, and I
think some of this has has to do with the
shifting digital landscape, because in this industry, we are encouraged
to be as sensational as possible to get clicks and people.

(43:00):
People may say that's a horrible thing, but they watch it.

Speaker 3 (43:04):
Now.

Speaker 5 (43:04):
It just so happens that I'm very concerned about the
soul of the right, and it happens to coincide with
it being a crazy controversial topic, and I'm legitimately concerned.
So those two trajectories meet. But I don't chase this stuff.
I feel like you're debasing yourself when you do. It's
like you're prostituting yourself out for clicks, for the most

(43:27):
sensational stuff ever, this is what is being rewarded.

Speaker 3 (43:30):
This is why I think the right has.

Speaker 5 (43:32):
To be very careful to not slip and fall into
tabloid zones. And we're fast becoming that. I've noticed a
lot of the people that we're defending Candice Owens, for instance,
the ones that were out there really defending her have
gone silent. I hope they're ashamed of themselves because we

(43:54):
see them and we know who they are, and you know.

Speaker 3 (43:57):
Who they are too.

Speaker 5 (43:59):
I hope they feel really ashamed of themselves. You're seeing
right now in real time, who actually gives a rats
backside about this movement and who doesn't. Who is simply
out there to make money off of you, and who isn't.
I have taken hits in my career for consistency and
can can attest to this. I've lost opportunity in my

(44:20):
career for consistency. I have had politicians tell me, well,
we thought about asking if you would want to be
a part of this, but we know that you're pretty
much a straight shooter. And I'm like, well that, yeah,
thanks for not asking, because I would have said now
it's I don't know what it is. I think it's
an anti authority thing. But I also feel like I've

(44:40):
been on air since two thousand and eight and I
feel like I know you all, and I am a
horrible iar and I just can't sit behind the camera
and do that stuff off camera and then be like, oh,
with you guys every day, it's just impossible to do.
You can't be two people, but some can. Then they're
really good at it, which brings me. I don't want
to play any of it, but I so yesterday Owens

(45:01):
went completely right after Erica.

Speaker 3 (45:04):
She was waiting for an opening to go after Erica Kirk.

Speaker 5 (45:07):
The Jesse Somolier of the right, Candace Owens the original.
She was Daily Wire's first DEI hire. And then you
have this video from Tucker where he's going after israel Is,
you know, mass killing in Gaza and like blaming Israel
for it. You don't have to love Israel. I don't

(45:30):
care if you love Benjamin Netanyahoo. I think some people
need to get over themselves. It's not always about you princesses.
No one's meeking you do anything. No one's saying that.
I am not one of those individuals who thinks that
there's a you know, we have a prophecy about I
don't believe that. I just look at it like there
are two cultures, one of which is more is compatible

(45:52):
with Western culture, one of which shares a lot of
our values. One of which isn't imperialistic, one of which
doesn't want to subjecked women to Sharia and turn men
into Bacca bazi. One of them doesn't want to turn
children into sexual objects. One of them doesn't want to
commit terror atrocities you know every single day. And it's

(46:15):
not Hamas and Islamism. It's a very simple to me issue.
One of them belongs in Judea and has been there
for thousands of years. One of them came from Jordan
and invented a whole different ethnicity and a different state

(46:35):
in order to try to stake a claim. So it's
just simple fact. I don't care about your dispensationalism. I
don't care about any of your stupid arguments that some
of these people just google to sound smart on Twitter.

Speaker 3 (46:51):
I don't care. It's simple fact.

Speaker 5 (46:55):
There's a clear choice here, and a lot of the
people out there that want to pretend Martin Bailey that
it's not just about them hating Jews.

Speaker 3 (47:04):
They can even pronounce kannesse it.

Speaker 5 (47:06):
They don't even know the difference between the President and
the Prime Minister of Israel.

Speaker 3 (47:11):
These people have no idea.

Speaker 5 (47:12):
They're jumping on a bandwagon because they are fame whores,
simple as that. And there is no transparency. You want
to talk about the tabloidism of the right, There is
no transparency none with this. People get paid and they
don't even tell you. And that is true because it's

(47:36):
come out before. I mean, you can see it when
they have to file, especially Farah, which brings me to,
I don't know, do I really want to play this kan?
I'm setting it upsies? Which number is this now? Fourteen?
For the love is it fourteen? Which one is it? Okay,

(47:58):
go ahead, let's go ahead.

Speaker 3 (47:59):
And do fourteen. This is good grief. This is Tucker.

Speaker 12 (48:03):
And then the other day I had like a three
hour conversation with THEO Vaughn and it was not about
Charlie Kirker anything related to it, but that topic came
up and I said, in effect, you know, I don't
trust the FBI, and that gave some people the impression
that I was accusing them of being involved.

Speaker 5 (48:23):
In Well, he's kind of walking it back because that's
not exactly what he said. I mean, he was going
in and talking about I mean, he was, you know,
pretty much the way that I understand it because I
was watching this part of it. He was pretty much,
you know, intimating that that there was like some kind
of cover up. Right, that's that's just like what it

(48:45):
seems like. He's intimating some sort of cover up. So
it seems like he's doing a Mott Bailey here now
where he's trying to walk it back. He wants to
walk it back, and he's wanting the way that he
the way that he tries to include a legal out
in every statement is fascinating. Well, I mean, you want

(49:07):
some people they might have done it. I don't know,
but I mean they'd be pretty bad.

Speaker 3 (49:11):
That they did. Oh, it's kind of how every statement is.

Speaker 13 (49:14):
Right.

Speaker 5 (49:15):
But I was watching actually that was one of the
parts that I had specifically watched because I thought, oh boy,
here we go again. And it was clearly and can
you saw it too, very clearly intimating that there's like
a cover up or something there.

Speaker 3 (49:35):
And I get that.

Speaker 5 (49:36):
People distrust the FBI, but I think he's trying to
purposely conflate two things here.

Speaker 3 (49:41):
That's what it seems like.

Speaker 6 (49:44):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's quick five.

Speaker 5 (49:50):
All right, so first up here, oh is this freezing?
We've got a man who's jailed in Switzerland for ten
days for everyone who thinks Switzerland so great. He got
thrown in jail for ten days because he posted that
men and women's skeletons are different.

Speaker 3 (50:08):
Don't don't you say you're gonna go to jail. You're
gonna go to bad word jail.

Speaker 5 (50:13):
Yeah this, yeah there the guy, uh it was He
asked him, this archaeologist, if he could differentiate between two
sets of bones as male and female, and the self
described expert in the room said no, And then he
was corrected by Emmanuel brunus Holtz, who said, basically, you're stupid. Yes,

(50:34):
there absolutely is a difference. And so he went to
jail because he refused to pay a fine. And it
was he posted literally a Facebook comment noting the differences.
But and it was based on a scientific study that
literally was looking in calcium deposits. I mean, it was
super hyper scientific. I didn't even I actually was reading
part of the study because I looked at this last
night and I just your bonds are different. That's the conclusion.

(50:55):
So you can't even cite fact anymore. That's how far
gone Europe is. I mean, it's it's like you walk
into a mausoleum. When you go over there, you look
at the museums and the you know, crumbling society, and
that's it. Let's see, Eli Lilly is going to build
six a six billion dollar manufacturing plant in Alabama to
make uh the ooh, are they making a fat jab,

(51:16):
a fat pill and other stuff. They said that I
can't even pronounce.

Speaker 3 (51:22):
This or forgl a prong.

Speaker 5 (51:26):
That sounds like I made it up, but it's real.
They said that they're racing to file for approval and
maintain the dominance for the g GLIP ones GLP one.
So women running marathons without veils in Iran has been
compared to.

Speaker 3 (51:39):
Nudity by officials.

Speaker 5 (51:42):
Because they can't tell apparently a female copylatory organ from
a woman's face. They're so inexperienced with human females. Maybe
leave the goats alone for a little bit and go out.

Speaker 3 (51:50):
And touch grass. We have a lot more on the
way to stick with us.

Speaker 13 (51:56):
How are you going to protect lemon, not fans?

Speaker 2 (51:59):
Lemon?

Speaker 7 (52:00):
Men?

Speaker 9 (52:00):
Women, trans women are different women. Women.

Speaker 8 (52:03):
Listen.

Speaker 3 (52:03):
We need to protect women's safety.

Speaker 6 (52:05):
I was assault No, they.

Speaker 9 (52:07):
Are not, they are men.

Speaker 3 (52:09):
I was assaulted by men.

Speaker 6 (52:11):
He broke his wife's jaw, So Brad, you need a
reconstructing surgeon.

Speaker 3 (52:16):
I'm a lesbian. I'm not transphobiccause I'm black. So if
there's another black woman in here who wants to tell
me how they feel, please join in. But all of
you are not and I don't know who you are
what you are, but I'm a lesbian and I'm telling
you right now men are harassing women in the.

Speaker 6 (52:29):
Locker room question.

Speaker 3 (52:32):
I'm just telling you just now. I'm done, and by
the way, I respect what you have done. I just
want to let you know that.

Speaker 6 (52:43):
I'm so sorry that you were multiple times.

Speaker 9 (52:46):
I appreciate you talking. I think we need to play
the sad all women and.

Speaker 6 (52:54):
Obviously that's incredibly important. I also know that trans women
are also were the last.

Speaker 9 (53:02):
In this country, so we have And.

Speaker 3 (53:06):
What answer is that?

Speaker 5 (53:07):
That's I think they say his name Weiner, but we're
calling him Wiener, Scott Wiener.

Speaker 3 (53:12):
What'd you say? Yeah?

Speaker 5 (53:14):
Typically, uh, he's the guy who's challenging. He's going to
try to take over Nancy Pelosi's seat in California. And
this was at like a it was like a meet
and greet that he was having in California where he
was questioned by you remember the audio that we had played.

Speaker 3 (53:37):
I think it was last week. Uh Tish.

Speaker 5 (53:42):
Her last name starts with an A, and it slips
in my mind now tis him, No, doesn't start with
the name Tis Hyman. She's the like Grammy nominated singer songwriter.
She's you know, a GEM buff. She's you know, works out,
works on her fitness, and she's out in California and
she was the in the video who while she was

(54:02):
in the women's locker room and her gym, a man
walked in, like right as she was changing. So she's
in a state of undress and a man walks in
and she says something because she's shocked, as any normal
woman would, and the man was very aggressive in his
response to her, and then he called her a bitch.
And then that's when a homebroke loose. And then she

(54:26):
was on video subsequently saying that, you know, alerting the
women at the gym that there's a man in the
locker room. And so they really attacked her really with this,
and the GEM dismissed. I mean, they canceled her membership.
You guys remember the video for that. They canceled her

(54:46):
membership and so she was at this. Oh, by the way,
the guy that's at the gym, Alexis, he calls himself
alexis black.

Speaker 3 (55:00):
He has a history of assault.

Speaker 5 (55:02):
He apparently beat up his ex wife, so he has
a history of assault against women. And he's and he
was not just walking in the locker room and changing.
He was described as displaying his genitalia. Sounds like he
was doing a little bit more than changing in the.

Speaker 3 (55:21):
Locker room, you know what I mean. And so.

Speaker 5 (55:26):
He got, she got She ended up because she was
the one who criticized it and worried about her safety.
She's the one who ended up being having her gym
membership canceled. So she's and the guy is a history again,
a documented history of domestic violence, and she has every
right to feel, as she was saying, deeply concerned about

(55:47):
women's safety and female only spaces. So she's sitting right
in front of this Wiener what's his name, Scott Wiener
at this town hall style meeting.

Speaker 3 (55:56):
And you heard what Weiener said.

Speaker 5 (55:58):
He's it was a Kamala Harris word salad.

Speaker 3 (56:02):
I have the transcript. He says, we.

Speaker 5 (56:05):
Land everybody to be saved, and we also know that
we have tens people both men and women, who are
men and women?

Speaker 3 (56:12):
What what?

Speaker 5 (56:15):
And he was saying yes, and she was she was
explaining to him because she's apparently.

Speaker 3 (56:24):
An advocate.

Speaker 5 (56:24):
She's a lesbian an advocate for lgb I don't think
she has the T and the Q on there, but whatever,
And she's and he's apparently tries to be an LGBTQ advocate,
civil rights advocate. Wiener, he's by the way, he's fifty five.

(56:45):
That guy's fifty five. He's like one of those soap
thin people that you can't guess their age anyway. So
because he's a guy who's who I guess backs the
trans and she apparently doesn't. Even though she's a black lesbian,
he has more intersectional boxes than she does. Is that
how it works in the victim Olympics? So progressive rules

(57:06):
dictate that he outranks her in the grievance hierarchy. I
guess that's how that goes. But she has every right
to say that. She's like, look, I don't feel safe.
There's dudes in here. And he's like, yeah, well, you know,
we need to. I think we need to protect the
safety of all women. But then he kept trying to say,
and the crowd was booing her. They were booing her

(57:26):
when she was talking to Wiener, and he's always I mean,
he's like.

Speaker 3 (57:31):
Well, you know, trans women are no, they're not.

Speaker 5 (57:33):
There are men pretending to be women, and I mean
it is I cannot believe you have a man telling
a woman. And essentially what was happening is the is
Scott Wiener in the town hall that you just saw
in the video. I mean essentially he was telling her
that her concerns are unfounded.

Speaker 3 (57:54):
Was he not?

Speaker 5 (57:55):
Yeah, you know, in trans a history of abust on
trans women. There's not a history of a beast on
trans women. There's the guy who is at the gym
who's beaten up women before, and he's at the gym
apparently throwing his bits and pieces all around. Why is
it that they I'm so, you're a man is not
going to be victimized by other women like that?

Speaker 3 (58:16):
Stop it.

Speaker 5 (58:18):
I'm just this is actual. That's the progressive patriarchy, and
they've always been progressive and this is just a continuation
of it. This is why third and fourth wave feminist
y'all messed up because you open the door to this
and now your movement is done. Your movement is so
done you came full. So this is beyond even horseshoe theory.

(58:40):
Word solid defense. Now the Scott Wiener, he's trying to
go for Nancy Pelosi's seat. I mean he's got all
of the weird super far left. Oh wait, he's not
fifty five. He's born in seventy.

Speaker 3 (58:57):
Is he fifty five? Oh wow?

Speaker 5 (58:59):
Yeah, he doesn't look fifty five. But I think he
dies as beard. You know, he has like that just
for men, like beard eyed stuff, and it's like super dark.
But I I don't know if he's he's going. I mean,
he wants to, he wants her seat in Congress. He
may get it. I mean, he actually may get it.

(59:20):
I haven't really looked too much at his I've tried
to avoid him.

Speaker 3 (59:27):
He goes to all the I don't even know some
of this stuff that he goes to.

Speaker 5 (59:32):
He he wears leather and he goes out to those
festivals and all that stuff, you know, wears the straps
and everything.

Speaker 3 (59:39):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (59:39):
That's all I'm gonna say. But hey, I mean, you know,
they could pick him. I don't know what is who
his challengers are. He's trying to lay the groundwork for
this congressional run. Some out some of the local presence,
like why couldn't you have waited just a little bit?
The ag endorsed him Rob Bonta or endorsed him that

(01:00:00):
California ag. So he I mean, it looks like he's
starting to rack up those endorsements. But that's interesting because
now Tis Hyman could be a roadblock to that. So
you have Wiener, who's gay, who does the BDSM stuff
apparently and does the uh back to the trans issues,

(01:00:21):
and then you have Tish Hyman, who is a black
lesbian who's going to win in the minds of the
left in that area in San Francisco, in the Bay Area,
who wins well.

Speaker 6 (01:00:33):
Based on that video clip, it certainly isn't Tish.

Speaker 3 (01:00:36):
How insane is that?

Speaker 6 (01:00:39):
That's the logic of the left or the lack of it.

Speaker 5 (01:00:43):
They don't even like she's just a plain old lesbian,
so you don't count, can you. That's basically what they're
telling her. In fact, that's not basically what they're telling her.
There's been an argument about that in Britain where they
push backward the trans Tifa push back against women, especially
if they're like gay activists and they're like, you're just
a You're just like a someone that one of the

(01:01:05):
videos was a basic I can't even say some other words.

Speaker 3 (01:01:08):
Be lesbian was one of the videos that came us.

Speaker 5 (01:01:11):
So that in the Intersectional Olympics, she loses, she's got
to tear off hern arm or something. She needs to
be like a one armed black lesbian because.

Speaker 6 (01:01:21):
Sorry, trans women are men.

Speaker 5 (01:01:23):
Well, well, what does she have to do to get
one more intersectional box over the Wiener guy?

Speaker 3 (01:01:31):
Like does she have to be?

Speaker 5 (01:01:32):
She probably has to stop working out because can't you
be obese? And that counts remember like super fat mid fat?

Speaker 3 (01:01:38):
I don't remember the grading privilege?

Speaker 5 (01:01:40):
Yeah yeah yeah, So what if she just turned into
a fat she's a black lesbian who's fat?

Speaker 3 (01:01:45):
Is that enough? Because he's a gay.

Speaker 5 (01:01:48):
Dude who supports trans So there's three man, I don't know, like,
how do this is? This is what I'm talking about.
It's intersectional Olympics. This is exactly what we're talking about.
So I don't know, Like, I don't know what. And
then what if there's a candidate that decides to challenge
the Wiener dude and they have more intersectional boxes. What

(01:02:13):
if it's a dude who became a woman, who got fat,
now became a woman, he lobbed off his willy, decided
to really seriously costplay surgically as a woman, and then
got fat and then has one arm like the drummer
from Death Leopards.

Speaker 3 (01:02:29):
Think about it?

Speaker 5 (01:02:30):
Would that guy beat the wiener Guys, I'm being completely serious.
You think that it's absurd, and you're correct. That is
what they do. I am not kidding you. That is
how this works, the intersectional Olympics. That's exactly how this works.

Speaker 3 (01:02:48):
Yep, yep.

Speaker 5 (01:02:50):
So how does I know enjoy that, enjoy that Bay Area?
You know what I would be doing if I were
the right, I would be launching like these secretly conservative
like just cosplayers. I mean, if you can pretend, why
not hire actors to play super intersectional candidates and challenge
all of these candidates, right, why not just you know,

(01:03:12):
let's just be a chaos agent. Let's just bring up
you know, I don't know, like, I don't know how
far it's going to go, but I feel like that's
this is where we're at. That's how the left. They
don't look at merit. They don't look at whether you're smart.
Case in point that Jack Schlossberg brat. He's in his thirties.
He's like middle age. Now, right, when does middle age start?

(01:03:36):
I don't even know when. When else, that's the internet.

Speaker 3 (01:03:39):
Does middle age start?

Speaker 7 (01:03:43):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (01:03:43):
Yeah, he's about middle aged. So again, this is another
case of the left infantilizing. They're one of the sons
of the Democrat families. Jack Schlosberg is JFK's grandson. JFK's
daughter Caroline Kennedy she married and had this is one

(01:04:04):
of her kids. He's got a sister, I think too.
All he does is make these deranged videos where he
goes after women and talks about their physical attributes and
their appearances. I mean, his videos are in hinge. The
left doesn't even really want anything to do with him.
He's running for a Jerry Nadler's seat. Now he's announcing
a congressional run. He tried running before? Did he try

(01:04:25):
running before? Did another one of them Damn Kennedy kids
try doing it? What did one of them gingers try?

Speaker 3 (01:04:31):
Wait? Hang on, let's ask the internet.

Speaker 5 (01:04:35):
What was that other Kennedy brat who ran for office?

Speaker 3 (01:04:41):
I said, what not?

Speaker 11 (01:04:42):
Who?

Speaker 1 (01:04:44):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (01:04:44):
No, so one of the grand yeah, another one of them.
I think it was like one of Teddy's kids or something.

Speaker 3 (01:04:49):
I don't know.

Speaker 10 (01:04:50):
He was.

Speaker 5 (01:04:50):
He ran for office and he lost horrifically. Didn't he
didn't Jack try running before.

Speaker 3 (01:04:58):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:04:59):
He seems he's It seems nuts because he is. Long
story short. They this infantilization of the dudes on their side.
This is who they have. These are their young guns.
You got the Wiener on California and you got this
crazy Schlosberg dude. Oh so, I've never been happier to
not be on the left.

Speaker 6 (01:05:19):
It's his laugh mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida.

Speaker 3 (01:05:27):
Man, all right.

Speaker 5 (01:05:30):
So oh this is gross because the guy's nude, a
nude Florida man. He's totally naked. That's how you say
that in southern Missouri. Alt's naked. Any Kki Da nicked
a Florida man, gun stole some wheels at a university campus.
He uh stole a vehicle at Bucknell University. Callum Dwyer

(01:05:51):
twenty was charged with felling you on authoryi'sed use of
motor vehicle, receiving stolen property and also I would add
if it were me, the extra charge of being ross
because he sat naked in the seat of the car,
someone has to clean that and then get in.

Speaker 3 (01:06:09):
The car also to drive it.

Speaker 5 (01:06:10):
Would you sit in your vehicle if someone if anked
dude stole your car and he sat in that seat,
would you sit in your seat after a neckad dude
had set in your seat, cane, I would set my
car on fire, sinder, and I'd sit in that seat.
It's not going to happen. That's nasty with a capital nasty.

Speaker 1 (01:06:27):
Uh.

Speaker 5 (01:06:28):
He stole a white out e Q five and the
victim said she had parked there. When she went to
get her vehicle, it was gone, and they saw the
camera footage of a nude dude. Nude dude he got
He pulled on the vehicle's door handles. He was able
to break in. They were able to identify him, and
they took him into custody.

Speaker 3 (01:06:49):
He bales at five thousand. But I don't think he
made it.

Speaker 5 (01:06:52):
Oh, oh my gosh, it's so gross, like he was
nude and probably touched everything in there.

Speaker 3 (01:06:58):
That's nasty.

Speaker 5 (01:07:01):
I mean you, I don't like buffets and I don't
like naked people doing anything that's outside of the just no,
don't keep it in your house and don't get other
people's cars like that. That's nasty because you know he
probably wasn't clean either. Caan hates old people.

Speaker 3 (01:07:14):
Listen to this.

Speaker 5 (01:07:15):
Eighty five year old Florida man admits he knew he
hit something. He was in a public's parking lot and
he ran over a ninety one year old woman. Oh
my gosh, he didn't. He's eighty five years old. He
ran over a ninety one year old in the grocery
store parking lot at Saint Petersburg, and he said that
he just kept driving home.

Speaker 3 (01:07:35):
He didn't stop.

Speaker 5 (01:07:36):
He thought, He said, well, I knew I had hid something,
but he just chose to kept driving back home anyway.
It happened about five pm. And I can't this is
you wouldn't stop. That has to be pretty significant, you
know what I mean. Police tracked him down using surveillance
footage and witness reports, and he was driving alone. He

(01:07:57):
struck this lady after she was walking through the parking lot,
and he just kept on driving back to his apartment.

Speaker 3 (01:08:07):
Kilber So that's horrible. Her death.

Speaker 5 (01:08:11):
The Panela's County Medical Examiner's office, if they can have
If if this website can stop having the god forsaken
pop ups that pop up every five seconds, I'll finish
the sentence. The coroner's office, they said that she injuries
contributed to her death. That's why she was killed, because
her death was caused by her injuries from getting run over.

(01:08:32):
How do you just keep going though? I mean, man,
I know what you're saying, king you and them old people.

Speaker 3 (01:08:37):
You know, maybe there's something to it. We got more
on the way.

Speaker 5 (01:08:39):
Stick with this third hour, Welcome back to the program.
Top of this third hour chats at Rumble. Also, you
can stream the radio program channel three forty seven Direct
TV as well. And don't forget the sub chapter and
verse and our podcast Apple Go subscribe. I have to
share this story with you because it's Chef's Kiss satisfying.

(01:09:03):
Michael Douglas and Catherine Zetta Jones a very upset. They
are reportedly furious over their sons on air humiliation on CNN.
They are upset because their son Dylan, who does he
host another NEPO bebe with a podcast is at how

(01:09:25):
I understand it. I don't know what the hell this
kid does. He's a fetus and he hosts a.

Speaker 3 (01:09:32):
Podcast or radio whatever.

Speaker 5 (01:09:35):
Anyway, he was on CNN a roundtable discussion and he
got into it with a couple of people, including Scott Jennings,
and it did not go very well for him at all.
He started stuttering in the middle of one of his
answers and sorry, he's a clump of cells. Think you
can't And he started just stumbling and muttering through one
of his answers and it all fell apart and his

(01:09:56):
parents were livid.

Speaker 3 (01:09:57):
First, let me just share this is what happened. This
was cut. Sorry, I'm gonna pull up my audio. I
lost it.

Speaker 5 (01:10:05):
What Yes, this is this is the flashback of thirty yeah,
thirty one, thank you listen. Fact you cannot put on
the American people that Democrats were the one that were
hurting people making this plight.

Speaker 14 (01:10:16):
Who was casting the votes against opening the government? Democrats
are Republicans? Who was who want to well, who was
casting the votes?

Speaker 6 (01:10:23):
Scott who was wanting to cut SNAP benefits?

Speaker 14 (01:10:25):
Nobody and Republican and relics.

Speaker 3 (01:10:28):
Snap benefits After two courts ruled that it was.

Speaker 14 (01:10:30):
Unlawed, Republicans voted to fund Snap fifteen times. Democrats voted
to defund it fifteen times, and.

Speaker 6 (01:10:38):
We had talked about the affordable you talk about the
affordable health care marked legislation is not perfect.

Speaker 3 (01:10:44):
You understand that Democrats immediately had Americans.

Speaker 5 (01:10:48):
And then he and then even after this, so he
immediately had a pivot and then he still got owned
after that. So his parents, Michael Douglas Catherine Zeta Jones,
were very reportedly displeased over the manner in which their
son was humiliated. They said, apparently they it's being reported
that they intend to blacklist the entire network, and they

(01:11:09):
think CNN crossed the line by having him on in
the first place.

Speaker 3 (01:11:14):
I agree.

Speaker 5 (01:11:16):
They informed one of those gossip columnists insiders apparently about
the Douglas and Zada Jones' reaction. They were said to
be so furious that they want to blacklist the whole network,
and Xata Jones apparently was ranting to her friends about
how the interview was unfair and exploitative. What and Douglas
apparently said that the outlet crossed a line and they

(01:11:38):
are angry because they knew he was not prepared for such.

Speaker 3 (01:11:41):
A heated debate. One aid.

Speaker 5 (01:11:46):
Or one source said, quote, Dylan's never been spoken to
like that. In his entire life, he's always been the
golden boy adord protected. Sanna gave him a taste of
the real world, and his parents hated every second of it.
I'm just going to say that politics may not be
for you, Bebe. It may not be for you if
you're going to be that hurt by it. Oh my gosh.

(01:12:07):
And he just really it's not a lot of people
I think expect to be coddled, and and that's.

Speaker 3 (01:12:16):
Just not how it goes.

Speaker 5 (01:12:17):
It's like how I see Nepo babies, Neppa Bebe sometimes
being on Fox. There are a number of Look, some
of these people are my friends, but I don't want
to see your damn nineteen year old kids sitting in
here lecturing all of us about tax policy. My gosh,
they don't even pay taxes. No offense. But I think
you got to have a little skin. And actually, I
don't care if you're offended, just like eat my shorts.
I don't care. I don't care. It's not about being offended.

(01:12:40):
And if people are offended over descent, then you are
literally too.

Speaker 3 (01:12:43):
Weak for this biz. Get out.

Speaker 5 (01:12:45):
But I'm just I thought it was funny because I
saw this from New York Post Nikki Haley's son. They
said he has views to the far right of his mom.
So apparently he's like Groyper adjacent. And he says apparently
they he apparently thinks he's the voice of gen Z.
I've only met him briefly one time when she brought

(01:13:06):
him to a TPUSA event. Was having him taking him
around me, introducing him to everyone, which I viewed as, Oh,
she's trying to make that happen. I see there are
conservative parents all the time they do this with their kids,
and I don't get it.

Speaker 3 (01:13:19):
I don't get it. I don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:13:22):
So the and he's been on I've seen him go
on cable news before. There was one show that I watched.
They had a guest host and it was a string
of Republican NEPO babies, one right after the other. There
were like four NEPO baby guests. And I'm like, what
in the world. You're like, you know, live a little,

(01:13:43):
be humble enough to realize you need to live a
little before you start giving orders.

Speaker 3 (01:13:48):
That's all we're saying. Good night.

Speaker 5 (01:13:52):
And he had said quote one of his he told
the New York Post Democrats are listening to the younger people,
and it's time for Republicans to do the same. Do
you know every generation says this, like, you are not
the first person to ever say this, You're not the
first generation. I get it that people think politics began
the day that they grace the earth with their presence, Kine,

(01:14:16):
but every body says this, Every generation says this, and
I say no, sorry, I actually think it was the
one thing that Kamala Harris said that was somewhat right. Sorry,
I think the voting age is.

Speaker 3 (01:14:34):
Too damn low. It is, it's too damn low. And he.

Speaker 5 (01:14:42):
I think it's very easy to be to the right
in Iggy Hayley, so let's not get apoplectic with the
headline your post. It's very easy to be to the
right of her, and she seems like a nice enough person.
I just disagree with her on a number of policy issues.
But he was saying, my friends graduated with great degrees
from great school and then nobody has a job. Oh
my gosh, I'm so tired of the victim mentality. Also, look,

(01:15:06):
I'm not saying that it's not hard for this or
any generation, but every generation has hardness that they have
to deal with. Imagine that you're the greatest generation, right,
you have World War One and World War Two, some
were in both, and then you have the Korean War,

(01:15:26):
and then then your kids go off to Vietnam.

Speaker 3 (01:15:29):
I mean it's the Cold War and back to back
and tear.

Speaker 5 (01:15:32):
I mean some people had it a little bit harder,
the Great Depression.

Speaker 3 (01:15:37):
Gott Lee.

Speaker 5 (01:15:38):
I that's why they call them the greatest generation, by
the way they live through everything. All of this and more.
We have got to stop entertaining this victim mentality. It's
not to say that there aren't issues to deal with. Hell,
yes there are. I think that they're fixable. I don't
think that there's people in DC with the spine do it.

(01:16:01):
But I also think at the same time, the victim
mentality has got to stop. Let's I mean, I see people.
And the reason I point this out so much is
because all of the things that I'm seeing from some
of the NEPO babies is that they're all complaining about
the problems. Not a single one of them has a
solution or wants to be a part of a solution.

(01:16:24):
They just want to join the money train of bitching
about it. Okay, we've got a ton of that.

Speaker 3 (01:16:32):
What is your solution?

Speaker 5 (01:16:33):
And no pain women to have babies aka welfare? Ain't
it we do that?

Speaker 3 (01:16:38):
It fail?

Speaker 5 (01:16:39):
What's your solution? I mean, there's a lot of things
you can do, but the victim mentality.

Speaker 3 (01:16:45):
Come on, it's got to stop.

Speaker 5 (01:16:47):
It's just too Yes, we get it, things blow, but
also do you realize that some of the complaints of
the younger generations are that, Wow, why is it that
I can't live in the same house as this seven
year old, you know, marketing executive. I don't get I
talked to a friend, well, an associate client, a contemporary

(01:17:10):
whose daughter graduated two years ago and is a door dasher,
does DoorDash and a couple of other things, complaining and
apparently turned down a couple of jobs because she just
didn't think that it was just enough for her degree.

Speaker 3 (01:17:31):
Entry level means entry level. Your degree does not mean
lo And look, I've got a degree, which means I
can do whatever I want.

Speaker 5 (01:17:39):
I want this corner office with the windows. I want
to be able to have the top company parking spot.
I want all these things. I mean, everybody starts somewhere,
everybody starts somewhere. I started waiting tables. Everybody starts somewhere,
even after college. Do you know what I did after college?
I wrote, I edited people resumes, and then I started.

(01:18:02):
I got my foot in the door, free lancing, writing
about people's houses and I didn't know a damn thing
about I still don't anything about decoor or anything like that.
And then interviewing politicians and newsmakers. That's how I got started,
got paid garbage with a degree. But you start somewhere.
Everybody starts somewhere. That's part of the problem, is this

(01:18:24):
unmanaged expectation. Some of that's your parents' fault, and also
some of you people on the right and need to
stop pimping your damn kids out. I'm so tired of
seeing it. Nobody wants to see everybody pimping their kids
out on Fox News. I don't want to see an
endless string of NAPA babies. I don't want to see
people pimping their kids out. As soon as they graduate college,

(01:18:46):
they're going to become a politician. Good night. We have
enough welfare addicts. That's what it is. You're just adding
to the welfare class. But they think it's somehow more
glorious and more respectable. Because you're doing a job for
the people. Really come on, at least welfare recipients realize
and they call it what it is. This is the
political class likes to think that there's an art to it.

Speaker 3 (01:19:10):
It just cracks me up. Stop it, stop it. Have
your precious Napa babe.

Speaker 5 (01:19:16):
Go into the private and the private sector and work
in the real world, do some hard work, maybe get
their hands dirty.

Speaker 3 (01:19:24):
It's okay, Mom and dad, it's okay. Just good night.
I can't say it made me think of that, Okay.
I got a couple of other things.

Speaker 5 (01:19:32):
Why are Republican influencers taking money from Cutter going on
trips to Cutter for f one and being wined and
dined by Cutter over Thanksgiving Week? And a number of
lawmakers and some conservative or not conservative Republican influencers apparently
were I don't know, I guess they were winding being

(01:19:54):
wined and dined in uh Cutter at f one and
they all had pictures of it and all kinds of stuff.
And wow, Now, I just I find it interesting that
it was over a uniquely American holiday. So some of

(01:20:15):
them include Representative Marlon Stutsman, who follows me. That's so
at Indiana, Lance Gooden from Texas, abe Ahamada from Arizona's eighth,
Laurel Lee from Florida's fifteenth. Ryan Zinc follows me from
Montana Congressman. I'm curious, and then there's some other Republican.

Speaker 6 (01:20:42):
Influencers and now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 3 (01:20:50):
Okay, I thought free pet m I'm not.

Speaker 5 (01:20:54):
I'm allergic to cats. Legitimately, I actually am. A man
was mauled to death by a lioness at a zoo
because he was stupid and climbed into the enclosure in
front of horrified visitors.

Speaker 3 (01:21:05):
You'd better not be putting that cat down. Better not.

Speaker 5 (01:21:07):
It was in Brazil, nineteen year old Garson Machado slipped
into the cat's pin and because he wants to become
a trainer, and it mauled him to death. It ate
him to death. Oh my gosh, there's of course there's
horror footage. Of course there is apparently he also severe

(01:21:29):
mental problems and he was diagnosed with schizophrenia, et cetera. Uh,
and he there's a video of him literally climbing, he
skilled over the fence climbed the tree and then was
mouthed by the big cat. So there there's a reason
why they're kept in those giant pits. By the way,
you're not you're not supposed to go with them, like
that six point zero magnitude earthquake struck northwest Anchorage, Alaska,

(01:21:55):
also the boulder the size of a small car scraped,
scratched when the world crashed into an suv driving near Leavenworth.
Do you always I always get nervous when I'm driving
by anywhere that looks like rockslide, you know, especially like
southern Missouri and out west Texas, like southwest Texas. Yeah,
this was the size of a small car. Four people

(01:22:17):
were including a twelve year old. No one was There
was no fatalities. There were minor injuries, but mostly everybody
was unharmed. But they had just shut down part of
the road while they could make sure it was safe.
Francis far Right later was hit by an egg days
after a flower attack. This from the National Rally Party.

Speaker 3 (01:22:37):
I mean, why would you.

Speaker 5 (01:22:38):
Do that with like eggs and stuff that's like you know,
bread and dessert making material. The suspect was a seventy
four year old man. Interesting. Also, ooh, pistachio, there is
a pistachio.

Speaker 3 (01:22:51):
Recall. Well this is this. I almost said Canadia.

Speaker 5 (01:22:55):
This is Canada, but the Canadian Food Inspection Agency they
said those possible salmonella. And they have like a long
list of names like anything that was sold in Canada.
But then some of the stuff you can get like
on Amazon and things like that, so you might want
to just double check some of your some of your
labels for those things. And uh yeah, this was described

(01:23:17):
as check your nuts. Anthrax Pigs of Texas, which sounds
like an amazing metal band, sparked panic. Uh what you're
not you're not supposed to eat. You can eat feral hogs,
but they.

Speaker 3 (01:23:28):
Just taste different. Gamey, I don't like to taste.

Speaker 5 (01:23:31):
There's an outbreak of feral hogs in Texas though they
could be carrying anthrax infections, which I still think that
that is probably one of the most amazing band names
I've ever heard. Anthrax pigs of Texas. You know, you
could like gul incorporate the pig squeal in there as
like an agitator. I'm just saying, but these hogs, they
can cost over a billion in damages.

Speaker 3 (01:23:50):
Every year. That's where hog hunting is so important.

Speaker 5 (01:23:55):
So welcome back to the program. I'm looking at this
video where you know how we've always had these arguments
over a minimum wage, et cetera, et cetera. Right, well,
we're starting to see some of the consequences of these

(01:24:16):
decisions to do this. So a restaurant in New York
City has hired on virtual cashiers from the Philippines. They
do zoom calls, and they do it so they only
have to pay them three dollars and twenty five cents
an hour.

Speaker 3 (01:24:31):
Look at this watch.

Speaker 13 (01:24:35):
If they yeah, okay, over there? Yeah yeah, and where
are you? Where are you located?

Speaker 2 (01:24:47):
I agree?

Speaker 13 (01:24:48):
And there you're what do you recommend? Oh' as.

Speaker 6 (01:24:58):
The empl.

Speaker 2 (01:25:00):
The all time and for bumby.

Speaker 13 (01:25:06):
Okay?

Speaker 2 (01:25:07):
Do people usually kip you.

Speaker 13 (01:25:12):
Sometimes?

Speaker 3 (01:25:14):
Yeah?

Speaker 13 (01:25:14):
Oh not every time? Its cartage.

Speaker 5 (01:25:22):
That's weird that that's like, it's weird. So I don't
know if there, if there are gonna be other restaurants
that do this. But yeah, Cain, what are your thoughts
on this?

Speaker 3 (01:25:34):
Well?

Speaker 6 (01:25:35):
I know the story. It's started last year. It was
a little more than a year ago during the Biden administration,
and obviously they couldn't afford what essentially these expenses that
were rising due to regulations, so they had to do anything.
Think about this at sixteen dollars an hour or three
seventy five an hour, which are you gonna choose as

(01:25:56):
a business And this was kind of this is a
legal loophole.

Speaker 5 (01:26:01):
Yeah, essentially, it's actually kind of funny. Right, there's three places, Yeah,
so which you saw was one of them. Then they
have two other restaurants that are doing it anywhere from
three twenty five to three seventy five an hour. They
say that they're not explicitly looking for like a virtual cashier,
but more of a virtual hostess. And you were saying

(01:26:23):
that the minimum wage is what it's as a.

Speaker 6 (01:26:26):
Kind of sixteen, it might be going up with mom Donnie,
but we'll see about that. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:26:34):
Yeah, yeah, so they've it's spread. It started with one
and they use a company that does this, and now
I'm like, well, how many other I mean, there's literally
a company.

Speaker 3 (01:26:48):
That will do that provides remote cashiers for people.

Speaker 6 (01:26:55):
It's like customer service from a across the world.

Speaker 5 (01:27:01):
Do you feel like even though it's a person there, Well,
virtually they're in a little box and they're got a
little headset on. Does it feel like there is a
human element though?

Speaker 6 (01:27:22):
I mean, I think it's like whenever you call up
your internet place or wherever your credit card company and
they send you to some you know, phone bank in
India to get your stuff taken care of. It's kind
of like that, only it's in person at a restaurant.

Speaker 5 (01:27:39):
Yeah, so I I don't know what I think about that,
but more and more they're going to be that way.
Do you know What I don't like is when it's
like the self checkout and there's always someone that's like
walking around looking at you at the self checkout, like
watching you do and I'm just like, I'm doing this,
not you.

Speaker 3 (01:28:01):
It's weird, right. Do you prefer self checkout?

Speaker 6 (01:28:05):
I mean I use some checkout only because it seems
quicker to get out of the store.

Speaker 5 (01:28:10):
If I'm going to the grocery store, I need all
of my items lined up on a conveyor belt.

Speaker 6 (01:28:14):
Yeah, if I have a lot of stuff in the cart,
I'm going to go through and have a cashier. But
if I only have like a couple of things, I'm
going to go through the self check I.

Speaker 3 (01:28:23):
Hate the self checkout. Set up.

Speaker 5 (01:28:27):
Yah, they purposefully short you on the amount of space
you have to lay out your things. My husband makes
fun of me for talking with my hands, by the way,
so I just caught myself in the monitor. I guess
I was doing the bunny hop. I don't know, but
the I think better because even if you have like

(01:28:51):
four or five things, there's a tiny little shelf and
then sometimes it messes up. And I hate it when
it's like put the item in the basket that the
item and it's like.

Speaker 3 (01:29:02):
I did you moron? I did you stupid? More on.

Speaker 5 (01:29:05):
I don't do that, but in my head I think
it sometimes I just I don't know, or I don't know.
I just don't prefer.

Speaker 6 (01:29:14):
You have to press the skip bagging button when that happens.

Speaker 3 (01:29:18):
I don't want to do that bagging.

Speaker 5 (01:29:19):
I just I want There's I spend so much brain
power on so many things. There's certain things that I
just don't care about. I don't care about. That's why
I always wear black. If I could wear the same
thing every single day of my life, I would.

Speaker 3 (01:29:32):
It's so easy. And I don't want to do that
because I don't There's like buttons to think of and
I'm like, I just know, I don't want to press
all these things. Like I'm like after out of my
day and my brain is already like girl quit.

Speaker 6 (01:29:46):
The thing that amazes me about the Zoom cashiers at
that chicken restaurant is that people actually would tip them,
Like you're tipping them for one, what are you tipping
them for? How did did they help you?

Speaker 3 (01:29:59):
Like being there?

Speaker 6 (01:30:01):
For being remote, you're tipping them, okay.

Speaker 3 (01:30:05):
Like thanks for talking me through my purchase. I don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:30:08):
I'm yeah, I'm right, I'm with you. I don't I
don't get that. I'm not gonna I don't tip.

Speaker 3 (01:30:12):
Do you see this all? Okay? Can full stop?

Speaker 5 (01:30:15):
I didn't mean to go here, but can someone explain
to me what the hell is happening with the percentages
on tipping? So now you know, like if you're going
to check out and it's all like the iPads or whatever,
there's always something even if you go and just like
order it a counter and take it away and no
one does anything extra, Like you're just like I want

(01:30:36):
a black coffee, nothing in it and they just put
it in there. Okay, that's great, that's just your job.
There would be the screen when you pay, and it's
never it's either like eighteen percent, twenty two percent, or
twenty five percent.

Speaker 3 (01:30:50):
I'm like, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, And.

Speaker 6 (01:30:54):
It's not calculated right. Sometimes on the receipt sometimes it
says eighteen percent, but the actual number that's next, so
that eighteen percent represents like twenty two to twenty six percent,
And it's like, wait a minute, somebody who didn't look
closely at this is giving a twenty.

Speaker 3 (01:31:07):
Six percent and I'm not.

Speaker 5 (01:31:08):
If I'm just like, if no one's walking to my
table and doing anything, if I'm just like exchanging money
for an item at a counter, I'm not tipping you
fifteen percent of the price, Like not gonna happen. And
I don't feel bad about it either. I'm like, nope, nope,
no thank you, because it's dumb like tipping that's gotten insane.

Speaker 3 (01:31:24):
And I say, this is someone.

Speaker 5 (01:31:25):
Who worked for years as a server throughout college. So
I did the I did restaurants. I mean, I worked
my backside off. I would have never expected a tip
from just somebody coming up like here, I'm handing you
a cup of coffee.

Speaker 3 (01:31:40):
Here, would you like to tip me? Twenty percent, Like
what's the what.

Speaker 5 (01:31:43):
No, that's so insane, or like if you do like
door to or not uber eats, I don't do. I
don't use door dash. I'm like, I'm sorry. One of
the things and it changes all the time, like twenty two,
twenty five, twenty I'm not tipping twenty eight percent.

Speaker 3 (01:31:57):
That's insane.

Speaker 5 (01:31:59):
Now, if the guy like is delivering and there's a
kitten stuck in a tree and he's able to get
the food to the door hot and he gets the
kitten out of the tree, yeah, I may bump it
up because that's pretty damn extraordinary. But like, you know,
just be nice and appreciate service, but don't beg. There's
a difference that people are turning tipping into begging. It's
it's it's it's that's what it is. It's busking, right stop.

(01:32:25):
I don't know a form of busking. So anyway, a
few other things here because that really I had to
I had to just dive into that.

Speaker 3 (01:32:33):
I was gonna some more audio too. Oh can we
do the.

Speaker 5 (01:32:37):
I'm trying to figure out. So Hunter Biden went off
on the New York Post and he was talking about
the Charlie kirk assass and nation and all kinds of stuff.
He went off on, uh, who is at Miranda Divine
that did a lot of a lot of reporting on
the laptop.

Speaker 3 (01:32:56):
He's he is.

Speaker 5 (01:32:57):
Super salty about all of that to an insane degree.
He said there was no ethics. That he says, someone
is horrendously ugly as Miranda Divine physically and in terms
of her ethics. So he called her. He Hunter Biden
called her ugly. He attacked her looks because she wrote

(01:33:20):
about the laptop. All she did was her job. So
I feel like came when these sorts of offenses happen.
There's like a bat signal that goes up in the sky.
For me, it's like come and respond specifically to this
desiccated sixty year old attacking Miranda Divine's appearance, Hunter Biden,

(01:33:43):
whose teeth looked like just pooh until he got veneers
put on them because he drugged it all, drugged them
out to the point where they were riding out of
his head.

Speaker 3 (01:33:52):
That guy, that guy, uh, he looks like if cocaine
was a person.

Speaker 5 (01:33:59):
That's Hunter by right, good night, going after her, going
after what he is like, so vengeful and so looking
to settle scores. You can tell that he has no
favors left coming into him either, because he's just going
out and knifing everybody. He is exactly the kind of

(01:34:20):
Nepo baby that you know that nobody likes.

Speaker 3 (01:34:23):
But he he that.

Speaker 5 (01:34:26):
You get the idea that she was over the target.
The New Work Post was over the target with that
story because they were the ones who broke that story.
That's when they originally got They got suspended. Everybody who
shared the story got suspended. The Biden administration was like
pushing on those tech companies for all the discussion about
fascism from the left, and he went off on her.

(01:34:48):
Oh my heavens, it was just a really nasty attack,
and no one in the Democrat says, No one on
the Democrat side says anything. He yeah, he's that she
was her horrendously ugly called her a whoreor I mean
that's literally what she and then he, oh, man, it's

(01:35:08):
so bad, it's so bad.

Speaker 3 (01:35:11):
It's so bad.

Speaker 5 (01:35:13):
He uses everyone though I don't think that he noticed
how they don't. There's no one in that family that's
going out and really defending them against all these books
that are coming out all of these articles, all of
these interviews from people who are criticizing you know, Biden,
no one is doing it.

Speaker 3 (01:35:35):
That is telling. They have no allies. They have been
so nasty to everybody.

Speaker 11 (01:35:40):
Came.

Speaker 6 (01:35:41):
Well, if you remember that bong smoking lawyer friend.

Speaker 3 (01:35:44):
Of his, he bought his artwork.

Speaker 6 (01:35:47):
Yeah, I have it on good authority that he screwed
over that guy too, and he is not happy.

Speaker 3 (01:35:54):
Wait how wait?

Speaker 5 (01:35:56):
Why do you screw over the guy that bankrolled the
last five years of your life?

Speaker 6 (01:36:01):
Thank you?

Speaker 3 (01:36:02):
So why would you make that guy your enemy? Holy cow? Yep,
it didn't he I might be, but I know he
bought all the artwork, but didn't he also, wasn't that
the way that hunter Biden was able to pay well
to pay the lease on that Malibu house?

Speaker 5 (01:36:23):
And then remember there was and I met one of
the Secret Service detail and he was very professional.

Speaker 3 (01:36:29):
He did not do anything wrong.

Speaker 5 (01:36:30):
But I you know, I was asking questions and I'm
observant and he's out in Malibu and Secret Service had
to lease the house next door to his.

Speaker 3 (01:36:39):
That house, what was it? We I can it was
like over a month.

Speaker 5 (01:36:43):
It was like fifteen thousand, sixteen thousand dollars a month
for that house, because I think the market value of
that house was like nine million dollars, and I can't
remember what Hunter Biden's was, but uh, the crazy thing
is the house that that Secret Service had to lose
was bigger than the Hunter Biden house because they needed

(01:37:04):
to put more secret service in it. And also that
was the only thing available next door, and we had
to pay for that for however many years he took.
But he was able to afford that house from what
I understand, because of that guy and his legal fees
and everything else that do you think that guy got
paid back? Do you think that that guy got I mean,
Hunter Biden's in possession of a blood diamond that he
got from a CCP olive arch, So I don't know.
Maybe he could sell that diamond and pay back his buddy,

(01:37:25):
because you know he still has that. Remember that was
one of the perks that he got when he set
up Rosemont Seneca with the CCP and they went and
he helped them acquire that cobalt mine in DRC.

Speaker 6 (01:37:39):
And remember all the art that people were just fawning
of art back then. Nobody's wanting his art now for
some reason.

Speaker 5 (01:37:47):
It is so crazy that when your disgraced political family
is no longer in power, that nobody wants to cozy
up to you and buy your horribly crappy spit art anymore.

Speaker 3 (01:37:58):
So shocking. I know you guys join me in the
level of shock.

Speaker 8 (01:38:04):
And I can't tell you that I've worked with Senator Cornyn,
who is up for re election, a number of times
on a number of pieces of legislation. He's actually not
been the worst Republican that you can find in the Senate,
to be perfectly honest.

Speaker 5 (01:38:18):
Man, you know, Ken Paxon ought to cut an ad
out of that, like for the love, like how you
never want that is not an endorsement that you want
to hear from anybody.

Speaker 3 (01:38:30):
You do not want to hear that from the left.
Oh my gosh, Yeah, is this not been the worst?
He's actually been really great to work with, Kane. It's
been so great.

Speaker 6 (01:38:39):
I wonder why, yeah feel that way?

Speaker 9 (01:38:42):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:38:42):
Why that is?

Speaker 5 (01:38:43):
By the way, Lorraine reminded me that, you know, the
art that Kevin Morris bought from Hunter Biden burned apparently
in the Palisades fire.

Speaker 6 (01:38:54):
Oh they probably had it ensured too, do you think
he did? I mean, that'd be a great scam.

Speaker 5 (01:39:02):
Oh man, I'm just saying, uh, yeah, that would be
actually really I lost it in a fire, that's what
it was. He uh he even paid his back taxes. Dang, dang.
So I don't know, just saying mmmmmm, he's uh. He
says he's tapped out. He's not paying anymore. And do

(01:39:25):
you blame him? Now you can get why Hunter's mad.
He's mad because he's broke. I wonder if he gets
paid for these interviews there he goes. Sometimes that happens.
It's not something that but a lot of these like weirdos,
they will make you pay for an interview, like sixty
minutes would do it, NBC Katie Kirk would do it
all the time. Yeah, you get paid for an interview.

Speaker 3 (01:39:44):
M h so uh yeah. In the meantime, today's stupidity came.

Speaker 6 (01:39:50):
Oh it is the governor of Minnesota, Tim Walls. Tampon Tim,
his friends call him.

Speaker 9 (01:39:56):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (01:39:56):
He says that Minnesota's flag, the flag that was that
flew when he was in his first term, is racist.
Listen to this.

Speaker 11 (01:40:06):
When we do better, we all do better. And the
idea is of working together, lifting all boats. It works,
and so one boat majority continued to pass those things
all the way down. The last one on the thing
was is we had a racist flag, so we got
a new flag in Minnesota and got rid of it.

Speaker 6 (01:40:24):
Clearly the priorities of that administry.

Speaker 5 (01:40:27):
Everything is racist to them, though, is the problem. Yeah,
everything that they do, everything is racist. Folks that does
it for us? This week find us in Substech, chapter
and verse. Also YouTube and Facebook, like and subscribe. I
will be back with you on Monday.
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