Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I want to start with this. This is this going
back to we mentioned it yesterday and now a lot
more information is coming out about it. The whole Minnesota
taxpayer thing where you have so much money going towards financing,
(00:20):
I mean basically, it's it's tax fraud to a staggering degree,
a staggering degree, and Data Republican had a whole deep
dive on it. More and more information is coming out
about it. This was yesterday evening after we were off air.
(00:41):
The largest funder of al Shabab, and you guys know
al Shabab. Al Shabab is a terror group that is
I mean the words Shabab is withether or known. It's
in Somali. It's a Sunni militant, Sunni Islamic grip. They're terrorists.
Al Shabab, they're all terrorists and so this and they've
(01:06):
been active for a number of years, and you guys
have heard of them before because they were like some
of the ones behind the kidnapping of those girls back
under the Obama administration. So Minnesota welfare fraud is funding
al Shabab to a staggering degree, like one of the
examples is, and it gets into fabricating diagnoses for medical
(01:30):
ailments and making you know, unqualified fake claims. It's pretty
I mean, it's pretty shocking. So there's like one instance
just to get this is one of many examples. There's
tons of them where you have like a twenty eight
year old business owner. The business was called Smart Therapy,
and they were recruited parents from the Somali community in
(01:52):
and around Minneapolis. This is how this all ties together,
by the way, And they were fabricating medical diagnon noses
were they were just making up things and they would
submit fake claims and through Minnesota's Medicaid program. And this
was just for last year, fourteen million taxpayer dollars were siphoned.
(02:18):
Now it gets even crazier. So they I mean, that's
it was a surge. I mean they've it's that was
in twenty twenty four. That was a by the way,
that was just one business. So I'm not talking about
the total. Oh yeah, this is just one business. Do
you know that in total for the previous year, you're
(02:42):
looking at three hundred and ninety nine million dollars widespread
taxpayer fraud in all of these programs, and it's all
of these and it gets into these businesses and they're all,
I mean, it's Somali like owned businesses, and this is
their defrauding people. I don't know why a lot of
(03:05):
the local media up there is afraid to talk about
it because usually what's done is you're called racist, et cetera.
You know, I guess ethnicity or skin color enables some
people to break laws more than others. I don't know
a lot. And here's what's crazy. So all of this money,
a lot of it being defrauded from the taxpayer, and
(03:26):
you have all, I mean billions, and so much of
it is going to Al Shabab. So literally one of
the local papers there, one of the only local entities
to be writing about this, noted that the largest funder
of Al Chabab is literally the Minnesota taxpayer, because they
are getting an inordinate amount of state welfare funds. This
(03:50):
is crazy, It is absolutely crazy. City Journal broke the
story and they looked at the way that the program
was desig It's almost like it's designed to facilitate fraud.
And so it's the medic it's the Minnesota Medicated sorry,
Minnesota Medicaid Housing Stabilization Services program. That's one. It's they
(04:15):
launched it to This is one another example. These are
all these examples of these entities that are just siphoning
off taxpair dollars. They launched it to help supposedly seniors
and the disabled and addicts and the mentally ill and
all this stuff get housing. And they designed it with
all these low barriers to entry, meaning there's like a heart,
there's like no requirements for consideration. They said that it
(04:39):
was supposed to only be two point six million, that's
what they launched it in twenty twenty and they said
it's only going to be two point six million. Do
you think it's stayed a two point six million, because
it didn't. The first six months alone, it like ballooned
over sixty million dollars, and then it kept going and
kept going and kept going and kept going. They paid
(05:01):
out twenty one million in claims just in twenty twenty
one alone. Then that shot then everything shot up to
forty two seventy and sixty one seventy four and then
one hundred and four million dollars, and so they were
going to scrap it in Minnesota. They said that all
of this money you have payment going to seventy seven
(05:24):
different providers in this so called housing stabilization thing, whatever
that is. They said seventy seven providers they were terminated
because there were actual, literal allegations of fraud, and yet
it kept growing. They were trying to get rid of
(05:44):
this fraudulent program. And it's like as soon as one
scheme was stopped, another one cropped up, and they were
billing other medicaid programs, the autism program the other crazy thing.
Oh my gosh, they were trying to say all these
kids had autism and that's they needed money. It is
(06:09):
one of the craziest things I've ever seen in my
entire life. And this is all in Minnesota under Tim Walls,
by the way, all happening right on his watch, and
they were diagnosing. They were doing it over they were
over diagnosing decades in Minneapolis and Minnesota ADHD and fraudulently
(06:30):
claiming autism diagnoses so that they could get more taxpayer funding.
So they had kids in Minnesota. These parents would have
their kids falsely diagnosed with autism. The parents got paid
monthly so that they were accomplices in this scheme to
(06:51):
defraud the taxpayer from hundreds of millions of dollars. So
smart Therapy. They were one of those programs, and what
I mentioned in the beginning to they were one of
those who had parents enrolled their kids to get autism services,
and they paid the parents at like fifteen hundred dollars
a month per child per child. All of this went
(07:15):
through DHS too, by the way, and if they didn't
get paid, or if they didn't get more money, parents
would threaten to leave and take their kids to other
of these another of these scheming autism centers. So there
were people wondering why is their insanely high rate of
autism in Minnesota. It is the most bonkers thing I've
(07:40):
ever heard in my life. And it's all true. Free
healthcare from American taxpayers funneling it back to literal terrorist
cells in Somalia. Billions at this point, billions and taxpayer funds.
I've told you only one year it was over. One
(08:02):
year was over one hundred million. This is billions. Now
we're in the billions in total using these fraudulent autism
medicare claims. So we're paying for al Shabab's or Minnesota
taxpayers or paying for al Shabab's operations. I'm sure Tim
Watts is very pleased. I can't believe. I mean, they're
(08:25):
and the funds, by the way, remember what those COVID
funds were for. It was supposed to and I don't
even agree with it, but that's what they were for.
We're supposed to help people down on their lecture in COVID,
help feeding hungry kids, things like that, not fabricating claims
of autism so you could get money and then send
it back. Here's the other crazy thing. In twenty twenty three,
(08:50):
and it's exceeded this every year, the Somali diasporas sent
back almost two billion dollars to the Somali government, more
than the Somali government's budget for that entire year. So
we're talking about billions upon billings upon billions upon billions
(09:12):
of taxpayer dollars all going back to Al Shabab in Minnesota.
I don't think that there's a welfare case. I don't
think there's a bigger one, a case of fraud text.
I mean, this is crazy. So who's where's the accountability?
Million dollar question? We got headlines on the way as
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Speaker 2 (10:40):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Dana's quick five.
Speaker 1 (10:45):
All right, So apparently global housing bubble we have these
headlines every day, is about to burst. It's the same
thing as it was yesterday. Blah blah blah. US bank
shelved twenty billion dollars. I'm so tired of these headlines
because it's all like fear mongering. I'm not even going
to it's a bunch of fear mongering nonsense, you know
it is. It's all They want you to think that everybody,
(11:06):
everybody's miserable and the world is going to end, so
they force you into making a decision out of necessity
and limit your choices, and I'm just not going to
go along with it. I'm so tired of it, you know.
I woke up this morning. That's all I saw was
I get it. Times are tough, inflation's bad, we needed
to work better, and Republicans need to kind of kick
(11:27):
more ass. I get it. But at the same time,
you are being played into thinking that you have no
other choices except the ones that they give you. So
that's why I get very hostile towards this stuff like
this one. Banks are shelving twenty billion dollars bailout plan
for Argentina. Now, Cain, we had a whole segment on
this with Carol. It is not a bailout I understand it.
(11:48):
Carol Roth, who is very libertarian when it comes to
money and investing, also disagrees with us. They're discussing a smaller,
short term way to help Argentina make this four billion
dollar debt payment in January. Well, they lower taxes and
they stop spending, and they're pulling in, you know, they're
ragining everything in. I get it. A main mom is
(12:08):
challenging a court order forbidding her to take her daughter
to church because the girl's father, who is a piece
of meat slop who never married her mother, says it's
causing her psychological harm. The father sounds like the male
version of Carrie's mother from the movie Carrie. This guy
got a court order so that he could stop his
twelve year old girl from going to church with her mother.
(12:31):
And it's not like, you know, it's like some kind
of crazy cult church. It was just a regular church.
And the dad, the dad's this, he sounds pretty abusive.
I would say that all of the psychological problems. I mean,
if the dads refuse to marry the mommy he sleeps with,
the mother, gets her pregnant, refuses to do the honorable
thing to step up and marry her, and now he's
trying to abusively control her, you know, after no no thanks,
(12:55):
no thanks. That's how feminists are born. By the way,
progressive mails like that a police chopper was forced to
take emergency evasive action because it was targeted by a
UFO over a US air base. Now there's more and
more stories of people coming out saying that they see
these things near like nuclear facilities or military installations. This
one in particular was a US military base in England
(13:18):
around Lakenheath, and they said that it came close. This thing,
this craft came close to colliding with the chopper mid air.
The way that they described at their National Police Air
Service over there was that it was targeted, like the
chopper was targeted by this thing. So this they had
all these reports about drones and all this stuff, reaching
(13:39):
this is you know, we we're talking about this with
US military air bases. And was it a drone? They
didn't seem to identified as a drone. It could be, though,
I mean, if it's still technically an unidentified flying object,
it doesn't necessarily make it, you know, extraterrestrial. But I
don't know, Well, they're going to find out, you know,
speaking of aliens and ex mental airship was seen floating
(14:01):
over San Francisco, but a lot of people said it
was an alien ship. I don't think aliens are you
know why it's not an alien ship. First off, it
looks like a blimp. Number One's that's what it looks like.
Number two. No alien's going to go to San Francisco.
There's no alien that's going to look at San Francisco
and say I think I need to go there, unless
their entire planet is powered on feces and needles. There's
(14:25):
the blimp wan showing you the blump right now. That's
not an alien spacecraft for these people never looked up.
I mean, it's the tech capital of the world, so
maybe they haven't. Maybe they just they just need to
go out and touch grass. Who knows, but that's pretty unbelievable.
I don't know. I still I wish it was aliens,
although maybe they're going to do us a favor and
target oh. Eric Swawell's also announced he's running for governor.
(14:47):
He entered the governor's race along with twenty million other Democrats,
all of whom are more equally ridiculous than the other
He's been in Congress seven terms. Now he represents the
Bay Area. He announced it on Jimmy kim Nne math night.
He went on Jimmy Kimmel to announce it. You know,
so nobody saw it. That's why it's news to you today.
We have a lot more in store. Stick with us
(15:09):
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Speaker 3 (16:03):
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Speaker 4 (16:18):
I have many disagreements with the President, and I believe
that we should be relentless and pursue all avenues and
all meetings that could make our city affordable for every
single New Yorker. I intend to make it clear to
President Trump, but I will work with him on any
agenda that benefits New Yorkers.
Speaker 1 (16:38):
So Trump is meeting with Man Donnie Man Donnie today.
I'm tired of I don't care about how I pronounce
his name. If you send an email about it, I'm
gonna print it out and roll over it with my car.
It's we're gonna say how we say it, You say it,
how you say it? Kine Man Mom, Danny, Ma'm Danny. Anyway.
But he is heading to the White House because he's
(17:00):
meeting with Potus today. Sure that's going to go real? Well,
don't you think so? Okay? And I think they're going
to get along wonderful. Yeah, well, should I mean to
sell you too?
Speaker 5 (17:11):
Trump is, you know, all the verboseness that he is
accused of being. I mean, he's pretty common sense guy.
It doesn't look like the platform that mom Donnie ran
on has got a lot of common sense in it.
So I think that's where there will be a little friction.
Speaker 1 (17:23):
I'm just curious as to what they think they're going
to what he thinks they're going to agree on, because
if he thinks that he's going to be persuasive enough
to get to convince Potus of anything, it's not. But
I also think it's hysterical that they always talk so
you know, they always go after the administration, but they
cannot wait to get invited to the White House. I've
never seen people so eager to please lick their master's hand. Honestly.
(17:45):
It's just it's he's insufferable. So he's heading to the
White House. He's going to meet with him today sometime
this afternoon. He said, I'll work with him on any
agenda that benefits new workers. I want to hear ma'am
Donnie explain to Trump how the free bus thing works,
and I please it's almost Christmas for all of us.
(18:07):
Can we just ask that there be a camera on
Trump's face when this happens. I would love to see that,
or have Scott Besant sit there beside him and like
put a camera on Scott Besson's face so he can see,
you know what?
Speaker 6 (18:20):
That?
Speaker 1 (18:20):
I just I need that. I need that. So because
Mandonnie's accused Trump of acting like an authoritarian, he's gone
after him on federal overreach. Okay, so how if you
want to talk about authoritarian let's talk about making people
work for free, so you can say that you're providing
free things. That's let's be real. That's that's what I mean.
That's authoritarianism. He's he wants to demand that these people
(18:43):
work for free so he can offer free bus rides
and things, free bus rides and things of that nature.
I don't know. I uh, it's yeah, it is insufferably stupid.
I I had this. I read this peace today? Was
it real? Clear politics?
Speaker 7 (19:03):
Ok?
Speaker 1 (19:03):
I have it up here where says we have to
save New York. We have to save New York. No,
we don't. Cana and I are like Dewey though, I
mean do we I don't. I mean, I don't. I
feel like that people need to live with the reality
(19:24):
of their vote. I mean, if they voted for Mount Donnie,
then he won. He ended up winning, So that's the
reality of it. And if you cause I know people
who live there and they're like, well, I didn't vote
for him, I get that. Did you go out and
campaign for anybody else? Did you go out in canvas
for anybody else. I'm not trying to like go at you,
but I'm telling you, this is what it takes to
(19:44):
do this kind of stuff, especially in a city like
New York. So if you can't do that, why the
hell should we? And we don't even live there, Like,
we got our own stuff to deal with in Texas.
You'all got stuff to deal with wherever. You're listening at California, Florida.
You know, you all got places where, Louisiana, where everywhere,
(20:04):
every state. You all have issues that you have to
deal with. It's not our responsibility to go and bail
out in New York City. I did. I had a
conversation with a friend who every day sends me stuff
about him donning the stuff that he says, and I'm like,
that's great. I get that you're upset and that you
didn't vote for him, But what did you do?
Speaker 7 (20:20):
Though?
Speaker 1 (20:21):
To counter the people who did, my friend's like what,
I go, Well, my friend lives in Brooklyn with their family,
and I'm like, well, what did y'all do? Because I
know they're very politically active on social media. But social media, guys,
it's not the same thing. I know a lot of
times it looks like it translates to meat space, and
(20:46):
in certain respects it does, but not in the sense
of voter turnout. It's not the same thing to complain
on Twitter as it is to be in your own
neighborhood going door to door talking with your neighbors, explaining
you know, this stuff to them, advocating for your vote.
It's not the same thing. So I was telling my friend, well,
(21:08):
how many times did you did you go out of
canvas or phone bank or held a fundraiser or helped,
you know, plan a fundraiser or register people to vote? Well,
you know, I shared this stuff on X. It's not
the same, not the same, It's not the same at all.
So if you can't do it, why should we. I'm
(21:31):
not trying to be mean, but do you understand that
we all are in the same situation. Why should we
have to go do what the people who live there won't.
I mean, we can't care more about the area that
you live in than you do. Maybe I'm not trying
to have an overabundance of of you know.
Speaker 8 (21:56):
Being.
Speaker 1 (21:58):
Lack of concern or or compassion, but good heavens, I
just it is, you know, something to consider. So I
don't know they're going to meet today. I hope. I
don't think that he's I don't think they're going to
have like a joint press conference or anything like that.
He's just the mayor elect of New York City. He's
(22:19):
not you know, some kind of uh, you know, sovereign
nation leader. But we'll see. But they're expected to meet
today and they said that the White House, the White
House referred to it as a meeting of uh clarity
and cooperation. And we'll see what that what where we're
(22:40):
going to have some cooperation on what clarity? There's a
communist that will go into the White House. That's what
you need to know. A communist is going to the
White House to meet with the president. I don't know,
uh so far, I think that's more than Kathy Hochel
has been able to do. There's something else I find
(23:01):
this interesting. I'm reading the CBS news piece where it's
talking right now about Kathy Hockle trying to forge a
working relationship with the President despite major policy disagreements because
they don't get along at all. And I don't think
Trump has said a whole heck of a lot about Maddonnie.
I don't think he's sett a whole lot about him.
(23:21):
I know he's really gone after Hockle, But do you
think it's interesting how Mamdonnie is going to the White
House in Hokeel has never been invited to the White House.
And she's governor, he's Mayor elect of New York City,
she's governor of New York. That to me is an
indication of a balance of power, because Kathy Hockel's considered
(23:45):
more Democrat establishment, and in Democrat circles, the grassroots are
the Communists. They're not grassroots in the sense that the
Tea Party was grassroots. The Tea Party, for all of
the accusations that were against us back in the mid
you know, the late at the end, the late odds,
(24:07):
for all of the accusations that were against the Tea party.
We didn't get checks from the Koch brothers. We didn't
get anything like that. There was not a dark This
is where the right screws up, by the way so bad.
There wasn't a dark money op. I mean parts of
the right. There is a dark money op on one
side of the right. Wink wink. I'm sure you know
what that is. That's a fact. But we didn't have
like dark money groups funneling cash towards our activities, right,
(24:33):
we didn't. That didn't exist on the left. That's like
all they do. They have these entire entities and that's
all they do is they pay for this stuff. They
funnel money to this stuff. It's it's it's pretty wild,
but that's that's what they do. And so that this
is the difference. He's the grassroot I mean communist or
(24:55):
grassroot and in a sense that they're funded by dark
money ops like the Soros, Tides Foundation, et cetera. Way
Antifa was. But he's the grassroots guy. She's the establishment guy.
She became New Yorks. She didn't get invited. He's mayor elect.
He gets invited. So when people talk about AOC being
the Ora mon Donnie being the head of the party.
(25:17):
They're not talking about them specifically, not talking about her specifically.
They're talking about that ideology that is the driving force
within the Democrat parties, that communist ideology, in the same
way all of the gropers on the right are. They're
trying to do the same thing and replicate that on
the right. They want to be like the communists on
(25:39):
the left. In fact, many of them are. They want
to be like the communists on the left horseshoe theory
and have that same kind of influence within the GOP.
That's what all of this has been about lately, the
inviting on the right. Very interesting stuff. So we'll see
how that goes. In addition, m speaking of Democrats Republicans,
(26:01):
Democrats opened up a polling. This is from Newsweek, and
it's a legitimate Newsweek is done. I will say Newsweek
has done a lot to bring in a lot of
conservative editorialists and a lot of conservative writers.
Speaker 8 (26:12):
They have.
Speaker 1 (26:13):
It's not like Newsweek was fifteen years ago. I mean,
I have a friend who works at Newsweek and is
a hardcore conservative and is an editor over at Newsweek,
hardcore conservative. More so, I give them credit for that.
I'll give them credit for it. Like the Washington Times
full disclosure with him, I have a column same thing.
(26:33):
So the whole poll for this, it's a Marist survey
conducted between the tenth and the thirteenth, and it looked
at voters how many of them would consider choosing a
Democrat for Congress if they held mid terms today, and
(26:57):
Democrats had a plus fourteen in this. It was not oversampled.
There were a lot of independence, There were a lot
of people who described themselves as independents and moderates in
the cross tabs of this Democrats. So considering that Democrats
have a huge advantage in this twenty eight percent so
(27:19):
that they would vote for a Republican sixty one percent,
so they would vote for Democrats. And this is from
amongst independents. So this is what this comes in. So
it's basically a plus fourteen overall lead, but with independence
it's a plus thirty three. And Trump's approval, which is
(27:42):
what's interesting, is still higher than that of the perception
of some other congressional Republicans, but it has dropped and
I do think that that's going to be something too
as he gets towards the end of his second term
that you start seeing that, and I think you're also
going to see increase in efforts to expedite it as well.
(28:03):
A lot of interesting stuff here is this also dovetails
with what we saw in Virginia and New Jersey, and
so all of the GOP's power needs to be in independence.
Now here's where I put This is where I'm going
to tell you actually might want to grab the tinfoil
right now. Don't you think it's interesting that this is
coincided with a major effort out of not really out
(28:27):
of nowhere. It's been bubbling up, but it was only
just recently very well organized within the right to push
identity politics and a Republican version of DEI don't you
think that's very interesting the timing on that. Let me say,
if you never listen to me on anything else, listen
(28:49):
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Speaker 3 (30:11):
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Speaker 5 (30:23):
Like SAMs through.
Speaker 8 (30:24):
The hour Glass.
Speaker 5 (30:25):
So are the days of the United.
Speaker 9 (30:27):
States, the making words diversity and inclusion toxic when there
was just a civil rights survey that said eighty eight
percent of people in America believe in diversity. The attempt
to balkanize, to undermine.
Speaker 6 (30:43):
Pluralism, and the attempt to stop teachers from in schools
all across America, not just pre K through twelve, but
in higher education, from teaching critical thinking and problem solving.
To me, all of that is gets you on the
road to fascism.
Speaker 1 (31:02):
Oh my gosh, she needs a dictionary. I can't. She's
a she. First off, what do you think the DEI
does it actually balkanized? That balkanizes people. You're talking about
breaking everybody up into these you know, mutually hateful subgroups
and they go at each other's throats, right, that's what
(31:24):
d That's why you have the trans fighting, the gays,
and and uh, the everybody else, the feminists all fighting
and oh my gosh, it's just a nightmare. It's like
the just horrible dysfunction. But that's the Balkanization. It's weird
to hear her talk about literally what the left has
done and accuse the right of doing it. Oh well,
(31:45):
if you don't hire people based on their skin color,
then that is fascism, that's what she's saying, because that's
what DEI. And again, this is all the Frankfurt school
of Marxism. That's all it does. She's that's I mean,
it's it's literally incorporated bigotry and race politics into making
determinations because you you have to guarantee outcome, not opportunity.
(32:11):
That's not I know they're not that, but that's what
that's what equity over equality is. It's CRTDI. She's the
one who has helped break everybody up into these mutually
hostile groups. She just seems very far. I can't even
I mean, honestly, I just want to. I wish that
we had someone in the Republican Party, that a number
(32:34):
of people that were brave enough to reform education the
way that we need it, because then we wouldn't have
to have all this this h one B visa discussion
if we actually provided a proper education. The fact that
the fact that we even have to have this conversation
about H one B Visas because of the argument that
we may not have enough talented people here. What an
(32:54):
indictment of public education? What an indictment of public education.
It is shameful that our students don't even come out
mostly prepared, and then when they finish college, they're not
prepared enough, so we have to import in a ton
of foreign labor. Wow, that's a horrible indictment of public education.
(33:19):
And you would think that lawmakers would have the spine
to say, we really have to change things, We really
need to overhaul some of this stuff, you would think.
But they're not that smart, and they're not that brave,
and they don't have your interest in mind. So I
was kind of happy to hear the governor talk about
some of the things what yesterday the day before about
(33:40):
Texas governor about property taxes and public education, because it's
I mean, when you look at what you're getting, you're
not getting the return on the investment of those stolen dollars.
We got a lot more on the way. Second hour
coming up. I got a funny story about a beauty
pageant involving a representative from a fake country. Stick with us,
the folks who help bring you the program. It's the
(34:00):
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Speaker 10 (35:08):
It's an unjust indictment, and it seems like these intimidation
tactics have been pervasive. We spent weeks seeing different members
getting censured, all in hopes of intimidating and kind of
distracting from the Epstein files. And I look forward to
my dating course so I can I prove myself and
actually state the truth. But if this is what Congress
is becoming, where they're always trying to intimidate you scare tactics,
especially attacking minorities, black and brown people, then we're going
(35:32):
to have to keep fighting for the district. And everybody
has been giving me so much support, and we're going
to keep fighting until the district gets what it needs,
which is fair prices, housing and fair representation of comms.
Speaker 1 (35:43):
You properly, Oh she's not. I mean she got for the.
Speaker 10 (35:50):
People and keep working like we're doing now until they
get what they needed. So we're here for the people.
So the only people who elected me should have to
make that decision. Thank you.
Speaker 1 (35:57):
So yeah, you're here for the you're here for their money, welfare.
You glorified trash. That's Sheila Shurfless mccuormack who stole five
million dollars in federal disaster funds and she used it
on her campaign, probably get her extensions done, her nails,
did all this stuff? Five million taxpayer dollars? Man, this
(36:18):
is just like Democrats are really just ringing that bell today,
aren't they? Welcome back to the program? Bottom of this
or no? Sorry, top of this? First hour, she's uh
was charged, She's indicted for stealing five million dollars in
federal disaster funds and she funneled I think three million
dollars of it to her campaign. And she has the
(36:38):
audacity to say it's a distraction from the Epstein files. Girl,
you just happened to stupidly commit a crime and you
got in trouble for it. Simultaneously. That none to do
with the Epstein files. Don't look at my law breaking,
pay attention to everyone else's law breaking. They're using my
law break in as a deflection from their reported law
break in. That'supp she's say, we can chew them and walk.
(37:01):
At the same time, that has nothing to do with
wanting to get to the bottom of any of that.
We just want you to stop grifting off of the taxpayer. Golly,
why the fact that we just honestly having said we
just need to stop all taxation right now, is I mean,
I'm down for a war, Let's do it. You know
(37:22):
I'm at that point. Good Night. We're getting fleeced. We're
getting played. If we're not all footing the bill for
Al Shabab over in Somalia, we're paying for Sheila's Cheerfulless's mccormixes.
How many names you got, girl, We're paying for her campaign. No,
she's serving for this. She's not in it for the people.
(37:43):
She's in it for your money. She's in it for
your money. Did you hear about this? I tweeted about
this the other day. This was hysterical. You know, they
got the Miss Universe pageant right, and they had a
one of the contestants is the first ever Miss Palestine,
(38:08):
which is a country that doesn't exist. And it was
actually once again, I'm always gonna say this just for
the people who don't know that it was the name
given to an area by a dead Roman emperor as
a punishment for the Jews after the Second g Day
and Uprising, naming them after one of their greatest enemies
(38:28):
that had not been in the area. Two hundred years
before that's when they they'd been gone for two hundred years.
They were seafaring people. So it's a country that doesn't exist. Uh,
the contestant, and apparently because there's going to be a
Miss Universe, there's a Miss Universe pageant. I don't know
when it is. I don't watch any of that stuff.
(38:49):
When is it? Yes, Oh the Universe. Miss Universe pageant
was yesterday. I don't watch it. But they had Miss Palestine,
who is married to the son of Hamasa's most wanted prisoner,
Marwan Baguti, and her son is even named after Hamasa's
most wanted prisoner in the Miss Universe pageant, and her
(39:17):
name is not Nadine Ayoub. And the way that they're
the way that The New York Post writes about it,
they're saying that she appears to be she appears to be.
She got into the top thirty, and they said she
appears to be a twenty seven year old US and
(39:38):
Canadian citizen living in Dubai. And she was competing to
represent the territory that is not recognized as a sovereign
state because it's not And apparently now her personal life
is starting to get out there, so I don't I
know that there's a process to even get in. Miss
Mexico won yesterday, and so Miss Palestine was in the
(40:03):
top thirty, the first time that they've ever had someone
from that territory compete. But she isn't even from there,
She's not even She lives in Dubai. She's lived in
Dubai forever, and she has her father in law is
one of the head honchos for Hamas and she named
(40:23):
her baby after it. She's married to the son of
the head honcho of Hamas and is very supportive of Hamas.
By the way, there were posts that New York Post
found that she had on social media where she was
very very sad when any of the Hamas people were
killed in the response of you know, October seventh, and
(40:44):
I just thought it was very interesting that this rise,
how this woman was competing in this and I'm and
as I said, so did the New York Post. So
they were digging through and she apparently never won or
even entered a qualifying pageant. Like I said, there's this
whole thing that they do where you have to compete.
(41:05):
It's like the Olympics. You have to compete in certain
things to qualify for the Olympics. For Miss Universe, you're
supposed to compete in certain things to qualify for the
Miss Universe pageant. I don't know what all those are,
but the New York Post said that in the piece
quote she apparently never won or ever entered a qualifying pageant.
(41:27):
Oh well, how did she get in there? She bought
an organization in Dubai and gave herself the crown. That's
kind of interesting. So she bought her way in there.
They couldn't find the New York Posts couldn't find any
record of her. There ever been a pageant that she
(41:50):
was in that would have qualified her for Miss Universe.
So she runs the Dubai based Miss Palestine organization. But
she's a Missus, So how is she competing in a
Miss Missus for unmarried women. She's married and has a baby,
and that's she got that. She runs that group and
that's and crowned herself. So she basically purchased the rights
(42:14):
to host a national pageant, didn't even host it, and
just gave herself the crown. The colonizers. I'm telling you,
she's only competed I think in a couple of different pageants.
That's it.
Speaker 6 (42:28):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (42:30):
So I don't know. She didn't win, but she placed
in top thirty. I mean, I don't know how you
can represent a country that doesn't exist. It's like, hello,
I'm you know, I'm here representing terrorists terrorist Stan. Yes,
(42:51):
I'm representing I miss terrorists Stan. I'm Miss Delulieu of
terrorists Stan. That's it's the only thing I think of.
Speaker 7 (43:01):
Miss Lulu of terrorists Stan.
Speaker 1 (43:04):
I don't know, but she didn't. Yeah, she'd barely got
She bought that whole organization and didn't even get in
the top ten. Bought that whole organization just to crown
herself and she did not even get in the top twenty.
Oh my gosh, what a waste of money. But I
bet they don't see that. It's colonization. Yeah. She named
her son after her terrorist father in law, who was
(43:25):
who's a huge leader in Hamas from the beginning. He's
like one of the generals, and uh he is. He's
a big Hamas supporter. He's but he's in FATA, he's within.
They're all the same, by the way, just you know
Hamas has taken over the authority. It's all the same
FATA Hamas are supposed to be different factions under the authority.
Hamas has taken everything over. Bottom line is that they
(43:47):
weren't exactly sad on October seventh, Let's put it like that.
And New York Post has a bunch of screenshots at
some of the posts they she scrubbed her social media,
which is weird. If you're competing in miss university would
scrub your social media page right, doesn't have like a
lot of stuff on. She's not like a pageant person.
That's a whole industry, which, by the way, I love
the different subgroups of humans. Cane. You have the boters,
(44:10):
like or the cruisers. The yachtis the pageant people. What else?
Cat people, the knitters, who else? The crochets are different.
It's a different skill. And yeah, the pageant people are
very very interesting. It's like when some people were getting
(44:31):
were criticizing Erica Kirk for the way that she was
drying her tears when she speaks. That's a pageant thing, y'all.
In fact, that's a TV thing because you don't want
to get all your eye conceal her off. That's like,
and she's she was a pageant girl, so it's a
whole difference. She's not even like a proper pageant person,
a PPP cane. She's not even one of those. So yeah,
(44:51):
from terrorist stand, they crowned Miss Mexico and she has
way too many names, and she what did she apparently
got into it with the host. I don't know, I
don't care. I don't really don't really watch it. It's
not really my jam, but you know whatever, But I
just think it's funny that this chick who is a
daughter in law of a terrorist organization, legit buys an
(45:13):
entire beauty pageant in Dubai so she can compete. And
some people were saying, oh, it's so, it's so mean,
have a heart, And these are all the people that
were celebratory on October seventh, they say, oh, have a heart,
you know, I mean she's you know, maybe maybe Palestine
could have their own pageant if they weren't being bought.
(45:33):
She wasn't even in Hamas or a Palestine. She wasn't
even in there. She was in Dubai. She wasn't on
the Gaza strip. She's been in Dubai her whole life.
DEI pageant So in addition to that, and we were
talking a little bit earlier about Sheila Scherfullest McCormick not
knowing or claiming that the five million dollars in tax
(45:56):
paramonney that she stole wasn't a big deal. You have
Eric Swallwell, who's gonna be running for California governor. What
a weird thing him and Gavin Newsom. He's not gonna win.
I think he knows he's not gonna win. I think
he's doing it because he's got bills to pay. And
that's what it is. He has bills to pay. Because
(46:16):
there's no way any of these people honestly think that
they've got a chance against the Newsom money operation. That's
serious cash. We're going to talk more about that coming up.
We got headlines on the way as we move our
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Speaker 2 (47:43):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 1 (47:49):
Well, you may not be able to stop yourself from
getting raped or stabbed or set on fire something at
the New York subway station. But you know what, it
will smell less like butts and feet. Here's why the
subway smell is being replaced by a delightful fragrance in
a first ever Aroma ad. It's a new advertisement inside
(48:10):
Grand Central subway station, Cane. It's filling the air with
a seasonal scent. There's signs all over everywhere saying notice
the new scent while you're being raped to death. The
station is being freshened with a special fragrance. You may
see a faint mist from the scent diffuser. So I mean,
while you drown in a pool of your own blood,
(48:31):
at least it will seasonally smell good. So they have
bath and body works. It's a new ad campaign that
they're doing where they're actively diffusing fragrance into different shuttle
trained platforms throughout November, Cane, So while commuters remain oblivious
and getting assaulted, the scent of Aroma will fill the
air from a steel gird or attached above the platform
(48:55):
and along the walls of the connecting tunnel.
Speaker 5 (48:57):
What's next is porta potties and trucks tooms.
Speaker 1 (49:01):
I don't know, I mean, so it's basically gonna smell
like vomit, cigarettes, pee, and feet and also whatever Bath
and body Works decides to chemically fragrance to vaporize into
the air. We're coming back to this. There's just no
way I can leave it. Also, a man accidentally underwent
surgery after but well, he accidentally underwent surgery aftry accidentally
(49:25):
got a ceramic cup stuck up his backside. I mean,
you know who doesn't have that happen to them. They
get to Oh, I don't need to see the X rays.
Oh I don't need to see that. Everyone butt him.
That's right, he accidentally got a ceramic cup up his backside. Yeah,
it was in Taiwan. Medical staff at Lee General Hospital
(49:46):
realized how bad it was when the full size mug
popped up during an X ray scan. Handle it all, guys,
I don't even know how that happens, but okay, uh.
The hospital warned people that you might get hurt real
bad if you put large things up your backside, because
apparently you got to be told that maybe they can
(50:08):
do an advertisement campaign with Bath and Bodyworks and they
can vaporize some things into the air while it happens.
I don't know. A man who found a gold bar
fortune buried in his garden is going to get nothing
because he has to hand over everything to the heirs
of the presumed owner, which is the previous occupant of
the house. I would contest this all damn day unless
(50:28):
you unless you negotiated the mineral rights of that land
or any of the other rights of that land, and
it's not included in the contract, then it is Yo's
and it is their fault for not doing it. So
this man dug up the hall, he reported it was,
this is a stupid sentence. Reported it to your local authority,
as was his legal obligation. Well that's why the French
(50:50):
lose everything, because there's no way in hell I'd be
reporting any of that. You wouldn't know that I dug
up a bunch of gold bars. But there would be signs,
you know, like when canaan Wan would come to the studio,
there'd be a million dogs everywhere, and you know, I'd
probably be able to get my dodge demon that Chris
wouldn't allow me to get. So I'm just saying, you know,
there would be some signs, but I would never be
reporting it to anybody ever. Never I would ow zark
(51:14):
Lander that money so fast, so fast. So he's got
to give it all up. And uh they Yeah, and
the treasure even if they could not find that the
previous owner had errors, even if the guy didn't, he
has to give it all to the state. Who would
do that? Who's like, I'm gonna.
Speaker 8 (51:33):
Go tell the authorities.
Speaker 1 (51:35):
Look, I found all this gold in my yard. I
would not I'd be like, I don't. It's always been
in my family. What are you talking about? And uh, uh,
let's see a rare Clint painting smashes records two hundred
and thirty six point four million. I'm pretty sure those
gold bars are probably worth more than that, by the way,
because I found a lot.
Speaker 4 (51:51):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (51:52):
Also, let's see we have of this was in here
twice the seventy five there were so bird flu stuff.
There's apparently a fire to New Hampshire turkey farm one
week before Thanksgiving. Guys, Cain thinks that it was done
on purpose. Oh sure it was. You think stick with this.
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Speaker 3 (53:18):
For, make some common sense of the crazy headlines with
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Speaker 1 (53:31):
Hi guys, welcome back to the show. Dana lash heare
with you. Oh, we're in such a weird mood. It's Friday,
and we've been cutting up over the story for the
whole break. So I don't know how to start. I
first saw it. I think where did I first set?
I think it was over at page six. I'm going
to just share with you a couple headlines. Okay, New
(53:52):
York study celebrates fashion collection made from rule of gay sheep.
Gay sheeps. You heard of gay sheep before? Yeah, wool
the wool of gay sheep. So the Washington Post didn't
want to be left out of the fun. This was
(54:15):
actually a headline quote, once likely to be slaughtered, gay
sheep find refuge and a bit of glamor. They partnered.
So they have this story about how Grinder partnered with
Rainbow Wool. And I'm not saying this designer's name because
I'm sorry anybody that has if you're a male and
(54:36):
you have like the mom haircut from the eighties, no, no,
and it. They created a fashion show featuring clothing made
entirely from the wool of gay sheep. Pretty pretty. I
didn't know there was a market for that I didn't
know that people were walking into stores going that's great.
(54:59):
What is this made up? Oh wool? Is this gay wool?
A regular wool?
Speaker 8 (55:05):
It's like Portlandia.
Speaker 1 (55:07):
It is like Portlandia where the chickens happy. Can we
go see them? So uh And of course you know
when Grinder is involved, it's gonna be all class they are. Wow,
it's a real story. So they talked about how this
designer has no idea. I don't think how agriculture or
(55:34):
livestock management.
Speaker 11 (55:37):
Work.
Speaker 1 (55:37):
And I really kind of feel like he doesn't know
about sheep. Yeah, that's the Oh no, So he discovered
this is how the story reads. Let me just read it.
This designer he discovered that farms slaughter rams that won't
mate with female sheep. In other words, those who say
ew to use, or, as the design put it to
(56:00):
The Times, quote the sheep are killed for being gay.
Speaker 11 (56:05):
Oh my god.
Speaker 1 (56:08):
So he got on the phone with Grinder for sure,
and then he put together a collection. It's so it's
like a bunch of the worst gayest dad jokes ever.
I will survive, kill us all. And it was all
just a bunch of like basically Ymca costumes from the
(56:30):
village people. The village people costumes, and they that's what
they wore, and it was all knitted and it looks horrible.
No man's gonna wear an entire romper of knitted material.
No man's gonna wear a romper. No man wears a
romper after the age of like one. That's like baby wear, right,
or sometimes it's you know, lazy women. So they I
(56:57):
did not know this was a whole thing of the
gay sheep. And they said that they're trying to say
that there are some rams, some of the boy sheeps.
(57:18):
I'm not making it through those. I'm not making it
through this at all. Oh gosh, Okay.
Speaker 7 (57:24):
They said that as many as one in twelve of
the boys sheeps are non appropriative, but they show an
interest in other rams, and so they just kill them.
Speaker 1 (57:35):
They kill the sheep for being gay. Okay. So he,
I guess, decided to go to these franches and farms
and say, do you have any case sheep here to
get the gay wool? And yeah, that's it, you know,
(58:00):
is it?
Speaker 9 (58:01):
Is?
Speaker 11 (58:01):
That it?
Speaker 1 (58:01):
And then he says, you know, there's a lot of
male animals in the wild that will mount other males
because they're gay. I'm like, wait a minute, hold up,
Hold hold up. This guy, from what I read, is
like born and raised in New York, so he's probably
never even seen like any kind of wildlife outside of
Central Park. Do you realize that animals, male and female,
(58:22):
domesticated and wild use the mounting as a as a
way to establish dominance. It's not because they're gay or trans.
These are weirdo humans that are trying to project human
qualities onto animals, just saying so. I can't even believe.
(58:43):
This is the dumbest thing I've ever This man's older
than I am and doesn't know those I did ask
Google a No, what did you ask?
Speaker 12 (58:51):
Yes?
Speaker 5 (58:51):
How you can tell if a sheep is gay? And
so they set around eight to ten percent, which is
about the number that you said of are exclusively attracted
the other males.
Speaker 1 (59:02):
Now, I don't believe that.
Speaker 5 (59:03):
How they prove this is that apparently, according to this
health National Institute of Health and organ Health and Science
University study, some farmers dismiss the same sex mounting as
like high testosterone or dominance.
Speaker 1 (59:17):
Like yeah, but researchers, oh, they don't, are they gay?
Speaker 5 (59:21):
Researchers indicate a specific sexual preference.
Speaker 1 (59:25):
That one ram was looking at the other ram of
going really lack of horns bad. Oh my gosh, I
gotta move on. Let me ask. There's no way to
segue from this. I there was a I saw this
list from this check on a social media and I
(59:48):
thought this was interesting. There was a lot of responses
to it. She wrote a list green flags in a
man's apartment. So this means that this is a good
if you're at a man's apartment and you're considering him
for a relationship, these things you should look at as
a green flag, and she listed eleven things, quote expensive candles,
(01:00:08):
nice hand soap, actual toilet paper, not a single ply situation,
no clothes on the floor, no dishes in the sink,
uses face wash, sorry wash owns a hair brush, plants
that are alive, wine glasses that aren't stolen from a bar,
clean sheets that smell like detergent, and more than two
(01:00:29):
things in the fridge and nothing expired. And one of
the comments was apparently your type is my gay uncle.
When I first met my husband, he had nothing in
his apartment. It was like his grandmother's inherited furniture that
(01:00:51):
looked like it was never used. He had like a
dish and bowl and cup, and then I was most
the thing that really stuck out to me though he
had like he didn't have a scented candle because he
wasn't that gay. Sorry if you guys do I Caine
has one, but I gave it to him as a
housewarming gift. That's because it was comically huge.
Speaker 5 (01:01:11):
That's the only reason I have.
Speaker 1 (01:01:12):
That's that's yes, that's it's because a woman gave a use.
That's okay, But he had it's just like the right,
you know, the soft soap that's like at a grocery store, right,
the soft it's literally called that, right, just soft soap
is clear soap and has a pump. So I guess
one time they did a partnership with that PBS cartoon
(01:01:33):
Arthur the ant Eater, and they put it on the
soft soap, like the image of Arthur or the ant
Eater on the soft soap. And so the first time
I was at his apartment and I you, we were
at going to a movie and I used his restroom
and I went in and I saw the soap on
the sink, and it was one of the funniest things
I've ever seen in my life, because here was the
(01:01:54):
single dude that had you know, the Arthur soap on
the sink. But I just was dying laughing. I'm like,
what man in his twenty like nothing? It was just hysterical.
So I'm curious what you guys have. Do you have
any of these things?
Speaker 8 (01:02:10):
Now?
Speaker 1 (01:02:10):
Can let me start with you? Because okay, number one
you have because you have.
Speaker 5 (01:02:14):
A can't you know what? It's funny because number two
I have because of you. You gave me the gift
of that buff city.
Speaker 1 (01:02:20):
So yeah, that's a really good show. I have got
to I gotta keep the gents like you know, we
got to keep them topped down stuff here on the show.
Speaker 5 (01:02:27):
Right, I've always had to ply, never single ply.
Speaker 1 (01:02:30):
Yeah, I feel like she doesn't know men. Men, I
feel like are bougier on that kind of stuff than ladies.
Speaker 5 (01:02:36):
Yeah, nobody wants the.
Speaker 1 (01:02:38):
Thin Okay, nobody wants that.
Speaker 5 (01:02:40):
The stuff I used to payper houses with back in
the day. I do sometimes have clothes on the floor
mm hmm. Face wash. I don't necessarily have a focused.
Speaker 1 (01:02:51):
Face wash, and it can't be the three and one bonus.
Speaker 5 (01:02:54):
If it's not three, I do own a hair brush,
but I also own a comment. It's mainly for my beard,
it's not for my head, right. I don't have any
plants that are alive that I can think of. I
do have wineglasses that aren't stolen from a bar nice,
and I do have clean sheets there and there's probably
(01:03:14):
things in my fridge that are expired.
Speaker 1 (01:03:16):
Yeah. I think everybody has that, especially if there's more
than one person living with you. Everybody has that. Steve,
do you own any kind of scented expensive candles?
Speaker 13 (01:03:24):
I did run through this list. I only have expensive
candles because my mom works at Kirklands. We've talked about this.
Speaker 1 (01:03:28):
This is my favorite story that you guys don't know
on the show. Like Steve's mom is an og man.
Speaker 13 (01:03:33):
Hands everything else I don't. I'm pretty clean about dishes
and clothes. I'm good about that, but like plant, I
don't have greenery in my apartment. I think that's a
flaw of mine. And I do clean my sheets, but
then my fridge is a little weak, so a little
bout half of it.
Speaker 1 (01:03:47):
Your fridge is a little bit Wait, you think not
having a plant, you just the way you describe that
is a flaw of yours.
Speaker 13 (01:03:52):
Women do look for greenery in men's apartments. That is
a huge thing, especially in cities. I don't know why
that's the thing.
Speaker 1 (01:03:57):
Yeah, interest stain. I don't know how I feel about that.
Speaker 8 (01:04:02):
I don't think you need a Christmas so I come
against it.
Speaker 1 (01:04:06):
Wow? Interesting? Okay. Wand said he had the good TP
no clothes on the floor. Why does that not surprise me?
Wan is very particular from what we know of Wan,
Wan's very quiet, he's very pure soul. But I also
get the sense that like he brings his protein, he's
very very particular. He owns a hair brush, and he
has wine classes that aren't stolen from a bar. He's
(01:04:28):
got a lot of these things, the clean sheets and
more than two things in the fridge. So yeah, So
I mean it sounds like, you know, these are all
normal things, don't I don't. I wouldn't judge a dude
if he if you know, a single dude on his own,
if he had wine glasses that you know, we're stolen
from a bar. I mean, my husband still has beer
steins from Mississippi Knights that was on the landing that
(01:04:49):
closed back in the day. Yeah, he's said, oh yeah,
we got some of those. I have to we have
to take them with us everywhere, every every time we
moved halfway across across the country, and we had to
take them with us. But yeah, he had like nothing.
Everything was like bizarre, super clean to the most to
almost where it was like did you just clean everything
with bleach before I got here? And he had the
(01:05:10):
Arthur hand soap that I will never forget that, the
Arthur hand soap, and it was hysterical. But he had
nothing in his fridge, nothing, And but he had clean
sheets and I don't think he had any wineglasses at all.
Speaker 5 (01:05:23):
Also, sometimes I will have dishes in the sink. They
won't stay there too long, but that's the temporary hold
before the dishwasher.
Speaker 1 (01:05:30):
Gets right right. I just think it's funny that people
were going, your type is my gay uncle, or you know,
like are some guys were like, I have no reason
to own a brush, or like men own combs? What
is wrong with you these? It's hysterical, but it sounds
like that. It almost seems like she's describing a single
woman's apartment more than yeah. So let me ask you
(01:05:50):
guys real quick before we finish up this segment. What
is give me like one or two red flag things
in a woman's house or apartment, single lady's abode that
would like you where you're like, ooh, No.
Speaker 5 (01:06:05):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:06:06):
Pull out couch, a pull out couch.
Speaker 13 (01:06:09):
I don't think people own those anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:06:12):
What I would think if she has dolls or stuffed animals,
that's freaky. If she's a grown person and she's got
like dolls or stuffed animals. Remind me of that Friend's
episode where Ross dated a girl that had stuffed animals
in her in her apartment and it was weird.
Speaker 8 (01:06:26):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:06:26):
I never looked at that as any red flag. I
don't think about that. I think it's just if you
see it in the eyes, you notice, stay away, stay away.
That's the that's the litmus.
Speaker 1 (01:06:38):
What about you, Steve, what's a red flag for you?
Speaker 13 (01:06:40):
One time I hung out with a girl that had
a pet bird in her bathroom and I never saw
her again. That was the weirdest thing ever.
Speaker 1 (01:06:48):
A pet bird in her bathroom.
Speaker 8 (01:06:51):
It was so weird.
Speaker 5 (01:06:52):
Bathroom.
Speaker 1 (01:06:53):
What kind of bird did it? Could it talk?
Speaker 8 (01:06:55):
Yeah?
Speaker 13 (01:06:55):
Well it didn't like repeat what you said, But it
was just why you were storing it in the bathroom
like I'm using the.
Speaker 1 (01:07:03):
I am dead. Oh my gosh, all right, and then
oh want I knew he was gonna say this. Wan says,
a girl having a dirty bathroom is a pretty big
red flag. He's right, he's right. And I think dirty
cars too. I cannot stand a dirty car. My car
is like I have nothing on my car except sunglasses.
(01:07:25):
That even the middle console, nothing but sunglasses. I am
hyper crazy about it.
Speaker 5 (01:07:31):
I think the middle console when it's filled with like
three year old lipsticks.
Speaker 1 (01:07:34):
That's just now. No woman's going to store lipstick unless
it's a trans man in her car because that stuff melts.
So Wan says a girl having a dirty bath that,
I agree, that's a pretty big that's a red Yeah,
that's a big time red flag. It's our partners that
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Speaker 5 (01:09:29):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida man.
Speaker 1 (01:09:38):
In the wise words of Florida Sheriff Grady Judd, smoke brisket,
not meth. Florida man was walking buck naked in thirty
six degree weather, claiming he was doing a TikTok challenge.
He was arrested walking quote buck naked down a Polk
County street according to Polk County. But sorry, it's south
(01:09:59):
of already comes that's county according to the Sheriff's office,
Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd, so that when deputies asked
him for his name, the man gave a false name
and a wrong address. He was charged with disorderly conduct,
resistant an officer without violence, and exposure of his sexual organs. Yeah,
(01:10:19):
that's gross. Let's see if Florida man captures a giant
python was told to quote put it in the trash. No,
let's not. He used a snare in an axe to
subdue a massive Burmese python. He's coming home from dinner
and it was a twelve foot python stretched across the road.
(01:10:41):
So this is only in Florida. Can you drive home
to gather equipment you need for catching a snake because
they got snake catching equipment in addition to the machetes,
and it's a highly evasive species so they have to
get them out. And he captured. There are a lot
of capturing humanly kill it. And then they said, yeah,
just throw it in the in the trash. But that's
a lot of meat on that. I'm just asking for,
(01:11:03):
you know, general curiosity, right, you know, like, can't you
do some python fritters or something? Stick with us Third
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Speaker 7 (01:12:29):
Thank you, mistery leader.
Speaker 11 (01:12:31):
Are you at all concerned that the recent allegations against
Democrats such as communicating with sex offender and embezzling FEMA
funds are going to harm the momentum that your party
carried out of the elections earlier this month.
Speaker 14 (01:12:45):
We're going to continue to focus on the issues that
matter for the American people. Affordability, lower the high cost
of living, healthcare. We've got to fix our broken healthcare system,
and that begins with it renewing the Affordable Care Act
tax credits, not allowing Republicans to destroy.
Speaker 1 (01:13:06):
That's not the that's not an answer. That's a distraction.
That's Hakeem Jeffries. He was asked whether or not he's
concerned about House members literally talking to convicted sex offenders
while they're they're questioning people during a hearing, and then
also about embezzling FEMA funds and all this stuff. He
has dodged and run from this from how many days now,
(01:13:26):
all of all of the days. Welcome back to the program,
Dana Lash with you on top of this third hour,
joining us now and he's on video with us live
from DC is Congressman Jim Jordan from Ohio's fourth district
and Congressman always good to have you. I wondered you.
I'm going to dive into the Epstein stuff. But hold up,
because I just saw you drop this story yesterday. You
(01:13:50):
we've been talking about the Jack Smith, the spine on Republicans.
You were one of the Republicans that apparently the Biden
DOJ had secretly subpoenaed your phone records for two years.
And this was like months before that Smith investigation even started.
(01:14:10):
I mean, nobody's safe.
Speaker 8 (01:14:13):
No, and okay, do great point.
Speaker 15 (01:14:15):
If they can do it too to the top Republican
on the Judiciary Committee, to the Speaker of the House,
and then maybe most important to the President of the
United States, imagine what they can do to regular Americans.
So that is how wrong this this whole thing is. Yeah,
and it was for two and a half years. So
they start already crossed on excuse me, April twelfth, twenty
twenty two, this investigation into the quote alternate electorate issue.
(01:14:37):
So they started on April twelve, twenty twenty two. Twelve
days later they subpoena phone records of mine for two
and a half years.
Speaker 8 (01:14:45):
They gathered up clear back to.
Speaker 15 (01:14:47):
January twenty twenty, year before January sixth, almost a year
before the twenty twenty presidential election, and that information they
get it. It's who you called, who called you, when
you called them, how long the call lasted, and if
you initiated the call. They know where you're at for
two and a half years, and they didn't tell me
(01:15:07):
because they got a judge to tell Verizon to tell
the carrier. You can't tell your customer that Jack Smith
and his team the Biden Department and Justice are getting
access to my phone records. So that's how eargregious is.
And I want to know who signed off on it.
I know Lisa Monica signed Monico, the Deputy Attorney General
signed off and sent a memo to to the Attorney
(01:15:29):
General Garland to launch Artie Frost. Well twelve days later,
did they sign off on surveilling or getting the phone launch?
Speaker 8 (01:15:37):
Which of you know? The top Republican on Judiciary Committee.
I don't know, but I want to find out.
Speaker 15 (01:15:43):
And we're going to bring Jack Smith in as well
and make sure we get the right.
Speaker 8 (01:15:47):
Questions to him and see what kind of answers he
gives us.
Speaker 1 (01:15:50):
I know America would love to see that question and
the answers the questioning of him, and then the answers
that he may give because this is I mean, there
and I'm trying and I'm sure that from what I understand,
the same reason that Verizon did not. It's the same
in Senator Ted Cruz's case where they were saying it
was a national security issue, which I'm trying to wrap
my head around. How is not telling you that their
(01:16:10):
spine on your phone a national security issue? This is
going back to them trying to contest twenty twenty.
Speaker 8 (01:16:18):
Did Will you read the subpoena?
Speaker 15 (01:16:20):
We got the subpoena that they sent, and when you
look at it, it says, well, he might try to
intimidate witnesses, he may tamper with evidence, he may be
a flight risk. I'm like, I'm from Western Ohio. I
represent the good families in the fourth District. I'm not
going anywhere for this is the craziest stuff. But this
just shows you how weaponized the Biden DOJ had become.
(01:16:42):
We knew that they were censoring, working with big Tech
and E and the censor Americans. Now we want to
look they're surveilling members of Congress and all kinds of
other Americans. And as Senator Grassley said, this was one
giant fishing expedition to go after the other party. And frankly,
if you were close to the president, it looks like
they really went after you, as evidenced by the fact
they wanted to gathered up all the phone records of
(01:17:03):
mine for two and a half years.
Speaker 1 (01:17:06):
Who do you think that they were hoping to find.
Speaker 8 (01:17:08):
I have no idea. I have no idea.
Speaker 15 (01:17:11):
It's like I wouldn't be surprised data if they maybe
they looked at anyone who voted against seating the electors
and counting the electors from some of these states where
there was all kinds of concerns in the election. Maybe
it's anyone who voted against that, but that's one hundred
and thirty Some members of Congress and several Senators did
the same thing. And remember Democrats had voted against when
there was no question about elections. Democrats had done it
(01:17:33):
back and the other presidential elections back in twenty seventeen,
back with George Bush in two thousand. I mean, like,
that's how ridiculous it all is. I don't know what
they're after it, but I think it was a phishing
expedition to go after anyone who was close with the president,
and frankly, just their weaponization of government against the other party.
Speaker 1 (01:17:53):
They've been doing this since before twenty sixteen, when they
were using fusion GPS and trying to bypass the standard
operating proceed to get a surveillance worn on Carter page.
We're talking to Congressman Jim Jordan about all of this
because he's we've we've been a joined watching the stuff
that you're doing in DC, because you also went after
this charade that Democrats are pulling with this Epstein case.
This talk to us about this because this it seems
(01:18:16):
like Democrats keep saying that over Republicans are going to
get all caught up in the EPs when these files
are released, but the only people congressmen who keep getting
named are Democrats. We were just talking about that with
the King, Jeffries and this Stacey Plaskett, who's you know,
questioning the President's attorney at this hearing as you know,
for those who just joined us, and is reading text
(01:18:37):
prompts from Jeffrey Epstein, Congressman. That seems like they were
pretty close if he was able to just immediately personally
text her phone.
Speaker 8 (01:18:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 15 (01:18:45):
And the big takeaway I get is the one constant
for the Democrats the past decade is go after Trump,
And so the one thing that's keptain, the one thing
that they're focus is calling it obsessions, some call it
a syndrome.
Speaker 8 (01:18:56):
Whatever it is, it's real.
Speaker 15 (01:18:57):
But that was maybe the best example because she is
real time texting with mister Epstein during a hearing, and
the hearing is an effort to go after Trump because
they had Michael Cohen that they invited.
Speaker 8 (01:19:09):
In as their witness.
Speaker 15 (01:19:10):
If that doesn't just show you where the Democrats focus is,
I will text with Epstein see if I can get
information to ask Cohen. We're having this hearing with Michael
Cohen because we're trying to go after Trump. That's the Democrats.
Think about the email they released a week and a
half ago. They released an email from an email between
mister Epstein and miss Maxwell, two criminals. They released the
(01:19:33):
email and they black out the name of one of
the victims, which we all agree with, except in this
situation the redaction. No court had ordered the redaction, no
agency had ordered the redaction. The estate where we got
the email from, they hadn't redacted the name and the
person the young lady had actually already went public and
exonerated the president.
Speaker 8 (01:19:53):
So think about their position and the email between two criminals.
Speaker 15 (01:19:56):
We're going to redact the name of someone who went
president who went public in honerated the president, but the
resolution itself would release names of people who want to
stay private, who did nothing wrong. That's how focused they
are on trying to get President Trump. And it's just
part of this ten year cycle, ten year process, tenure,
whatever we've seen where the one thing that unites him
(01:20:18):
is go after the President.
Speaker 8 (01:20:20):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:20:20):
I mean from everything that I've seen too, I mean,
he looked like the whistleblower in this. I mean he
looked like he was one of the ones he was
tipping off the FBI, and then Bannon, the guy from
mar A Lago, and then after all of that had
King Jefferies is begging for money. Brooklyn Barack is what
they were calling him in those emails.
Speaker 8 (01:20:37):
Yeah, I mean, it's it's just so.
Speaker 15 (01:20:39):
And look, if there were anything on the President, I
believe the president. I think there's of course there's nothing
there because if there was something that they could twist
and spend and distort, they'd have done it a long
time ago.
Speaker 8 (01:20:51):
They had stinking four years to do it. And nothing.
Speaker 15 (01:20:54):
Nothing, Because there's nothing there on President Trump We all
know that, but we also know that the Democrats are out.
Speaker 1 (01:20:59):
To get exactly one last topic for your congressman, and
we appreciate your time today. I know that you're investigating
the last census, the counting with the last census that
apparently included a whole bunch of illegal aliens as well.
I know that you have been holding hearings on this,
and I'm actually how many people what is the what
(01:21:21):
is how much has it been overinflated by the inclusion
of illegal aliens?
Speaker 15 (01:21:26):
Well, a lot of a lot of studies and estimates
figure that it's It's made a huge difference for California
having several more members in their entire delegation, like we
lost one in Ohio even though our population is growing,
I think because of the way they did the census.
Speaker 8 (01:21:39):
So the constitution is clear account all persons.
Speaker 15 (01:21:41):
All we're saying is, when you do the sentences, also
figure out also figure out how many how many are citizens?
Ask that question too, and data if you win. If
you went on anywhere in the country, any small town,
any anywhere in the country, and you will walk down
the street and you said to mister or missus Smith,
they're walking along the street and you said, do you
think when we do this sense just encount the people
in this country? Do you think we should find out
(01:22:02):
how many are citizens? Guarantee? They would say, well, of course,
that's just so common sense, and then they would probably
follow it up like aren't you doing that now? And
if you're not, that's pretty stupid. But that's exactly the
Democrats position. So we're saying, follow the constitution, count the persons,
but also because that's what the constitutes say, count all
persons in the United States, but also find out who
are citizens, because that will give you the most accurate
(01:22:23):
way to determine how congressional seats are apportioned around the country.
Speaker 1 (01:22:27):
And it seems super interesting that the differentiation and numbers
benefited blue states. I mean, I really don't see any
benefits to Republican controlled states legislatures.
Speaker 8 (01:22:36):
Well said, Well said, And that's the point.
Speaker 15 (01:22:38):
In the end, it's almost always political with the left
and their positions they take.
Speaker 1 (01:22:45):
Yeah, I hope this, I mean, I would love to
see it resolve because, like you, I mean, Texas, we
saw our population explode and you know this is and
now I'm wondering, especially with some of these blue districts.
They're trying to inflate there. It's just it's unfortunate that
there's so much subterfuge from people who supposedly say that
they want what's best for the people, and obviously we're
not seeing it. Congressman Jim Jordan's so appreciate your time
(01:23:07):
with us today. We're gonna keep watching and appreciate your fight.
Speaker 8 (01:23:10):
Thank you, work you do.
Speaker 1 (01:23:12):
Thank urs you too. God bless Yeah, that's that's a
terrifying thing. The point that he made too. If they can,
if they can spy on him their spine. I'm I mean,
I mean, I really don't talk about anything. I told
you what my search is. I look. I look for
dog stuff and holsters and fun gun stuff. They're probably
like the algorithms, all confused, but you have to you
(01:23:33):
have to wonder too. I mean, they notice it because
they have the ability to check all this stuff and
they see everything that that comes through, and they can
get tipped off by different people in different whistleblowers and
these agencies. They know how to contract members.
Speaker 5 (01:23:45):
Of concres stuff that I search for the show, like
just today, how do you tell if Sheep's gay? Well,
they're going to know that.
Speaker 1 (01:23:51):
They're going to be like Caine is watching Gay Sheep
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Speaker 2 (01:25:09):
Now all of the news, you would probably miss It's
time for Dana's Quick five, like we.
Speaker 1 (01:25:15):
Had Phil Collins. We're just playing some studio coming in.
I just remember that song. Growing up. He was a
jam dude. He was like, he showed up looking like
an IT worker and would just rock out.
Speaker 5 (01:25:24):
Genesis was another fan.
Speaker 1 (01:25:26):
I looked dude for real. All right, let's see I'm
not doing that. Listen George, Oh my gosh, George Conway
wants to run for Congress. Are you serious? Why is
this a headline? Oh my gosh, New York Times is
Kelly and Conway's isn't an ex husband, former conservative lawyer.
(01:25:46):
I don't know. Apparently he's on fat shots he built.
He's apparently looking to run for office. He lives in Bethesda.
He's hired a polster to work on a campaign. He's
looking at taking over for Jerry Nadler. So you know
(01:26:06):
who else is running against Nadler. Isn't that Kennedy NEPO
baby at Schlosberg Bratt? I say, Brady, he's like mid thirties.
He's a middle aged dude, but he They infantilize their
dudes on the left, like to a really disturbing degree.
He's I thought already declared for that race, didn't he.
So that's kind of weird. So Conway is going to
(01:26:28):
try to run for this. We don't need any more
insufferable people in DC. But okay, Also, let's see here,
we've got our animals in AI conscious? What so I
think they mean self conscious? Don't they? Like? What does
that mean? Our animals in AI conscious? Like, yes, animals
(01:26:51):
are you mean self conscious? So I don't know. I
feel like this study is already garbage because they couldn't
even get that right in the headline, you know what
I mean. I mean, I would say I think animals
are self conscious. Yeah, I think they can be because
they can get anxiety and things like that. You know,
I don't know. Just interesting. Also, let's see a couple
(01:27:12):
of other ones we've got. We've got the gold Bar guy.
I want to make sure we got him. He's the
guy who has to give up anything to France. Let's see. Also, oh,
FBI apparently spied on signal chat of activists spide. This
is from the Guardians, so it's British. They're talking about
(01:27:35):
the New York Uh. The agency apparently accessed private conversations
of New York's Court Watch group that was observing public hearings.
Do I care? What do you mean? Court Watch group?
Is that the left, the left should be say this
is why I shouldn't ever be an elected office. I'm like,
the left maybe should be, I don't know. And this
crazy story I was reading about this h COVID. This
(01:27:59):
was over in Britain. A COVID inquiry found that lockdowns
quote brought ordinary childhood to a halt, and that the
closure of schools are going to have devastating will I
mean they're still I think, seeing how devastating the effects
were closing everything and keeping kids locked down for so long.
(01:28:21):
They said that this is in Britain. The lockdowns could
have been avoided altogether. They said that people failed to
react fast enough and that let's see the toxic and
destabilizing influence that it had on kids for shutting everything
down through the mental health aspect of it. So Britain's
(01:28:44):
at least coming around to seeing how devastating this all was,
So that's something. Also, the Trump administration is planning for
an eighteen dollars fee for airline passengers. People who arrive
at airport security checkpoints without a valid government issued ID
under a new plan from being proposed by the administration
(01:29:06):
could face an eighteen dollars fee. They said it's a
next step in the process of real ID compliance, So
that means it's that they say that's for enhanced security measures,
but I can't tell what's enhanced. Honestly, we have more
to comm stick with us. We got a lot more
on the way as we move. We've got headlines coming up.
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Speaker 3 (01:30:13):
The Danish show podcast You're Fast, funny and informative news
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Speaker 1 (01:30:24):
Welcome back to the program the chats at rumbull, Find
us on substacks, Sign up for the podcast Where's It
at Kane the podcast Apple Apple, Apple Yeah Podcast. Minneapolis
Police chief is held a press conference the other day yesterday,
and he asked forgiveness for exposing the reality of Somali
(01:30:56):
criminal activity in Minneapolis. There's been a homicide, a whole
bunch of other crimes and robberies, and shootings and car
thefts and assaults and all kinds of stuff. And he
indicated that quote East African kids are coming into Minneapolis
(01:31:16):
from out of town Greek havoc. He said, these aren't
the poor kids from Minneapolis that are our residents, our residents.
These are kids coming down a mommy's Mercedes Benz to
dinky Town and they don't know where they are. He
said in an interview, what amy they do have a
(01:31:36):
big problem in Minneapolis with crime. There's a major problem
and there's numerous I mean there's a lot. The data
is public, you know. And remember these police chiefs they
are political appointees, so they have to juggle. They have
to be very political about things. But what the way
(01:31:57):
that he kind of had to debase himself by apologizing
and then on top of it, if you can believe it,
the guy then brought with him a Somali translator while
he apologized profusely for enforcing the law. Listen to this
(01:32:21):
community to have that chief Obahani, i'm abahan.
Speaker 8 (01:32:27):
Hei, I can the act community and.
Speaker 16 (01:32:32):
Monico Crea, the Somali community here in Minneapolis has been
welcoming and has shown love towards me. And I appreciate it.
Thank Over the last three years, we have been working
together to try and address some of the real, serious
problems that we have in our community. We have to
be honest at times with the problems that we're having
in our community, and we need our community to help
(01:32:53):
us fix those problems together, because it's real and it's serious.
At the same time, if people have taken in anything
that I have said out of context in a way
that's closed harm, I apologize and I'm sorry for that
because that's not my intention at all.
Speaker 1 (01:33:08):
Help us with the real and serious problems. Because these
problems are serious and real, and I'm really seriously sorry
that I said that they're serious and real. I'm seriously
sorry about that. Seriously really sorry. They've shown me love,
meaning they haven't shived me yet. That's what that Oh
my gosh. Here's the thing. If if you don't want
(01:33:31):
to be a thief, how do you can how do
you avoid being called a thief?
Speaker 5 (01:33:37):
I would start with not stealing stuff?
Speaker 1 (01:33:39):
Smart? Yeah, yeah, I'll try different one. How would you
not be a murderer?
Speaker 10 (01:33:50):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (01:33:50):
I think the same starting point. You're just not murder
just like not stuff. Yeah, yeah, it seems right.
Speaker 1 (01:33:58):
Yeah. I mean that's like one way, you know, you
could not be called a murderer or you know, a thief,
a robber, you know, to not rob people, but you
can't say those can't say those are all know no
things to say in Minneapolis because we have to tiptoe
around the brazen fact of why crime is increasing and
(01:34:19):
how there is a refusal to assimilate and respect American jurisprudence.
And also, I mean we talked about the insane amount
of tax fraud, taxpayer dollar fraud and welfare fraud and
everything else in Minneapolis, which is it's crazy. They where
(01:34:39):
was this said, I was looking at this one statistic
where they were talking about the increase we talked about
this first hour. If you want to go back the
autism claims to Medicaid, so basically all the people that
are you have a huge section of the Somali community
that are falsely claiming autism so they can get taxpayer dollars.
The number of autism providers went up from seven hundred
(01:35:01):
percent went up seven hundred percent forty one to three
hundred and twenty eight just in the past five years
in Minneapolis. And they said Somali's are seven times more
likely to receive FB to receive autism services. The autism
spending increase from six million to one hundred and ninety
two million. It is a massive Somali autism welfare scam.
(01:35:22):
That's exactly what it is. Think about this and the
autism rates in Minnesota. One in sixteen Somali toddlers in Minnesota,
one in thirty one toddlers in the US. Minnesota autism
spending twenty eighteen was three million. Minnesota autism spending in
twenty twenty three was three hundred and ninety nine million dollars.
Speaker 5 (01:35:41):
That's a ten x JO.
Speaker 1 (01:35:43):
Yeah, and they're funneled to Somali militias. The Minnesota taxpayers
the number one funder of al Shabab. That's all been
proven Saul, because they got receipts. This is craziness. By
the way, where's Tim Walls there? I mean, you got
Somali immigrants that are using welfare fraudam Minnesota to steal
taxpayer dollars and then funnel it literally to an ally
(01:36:06):
of al Qaeda in Somalia. And where's Tim Walls? Where's
he at? Jim Andy? Christmas? This is just insane. I
saw this. Somebody had a meme, you know, the guy
who what was that movie where they were going around
the Horn of Africa and Tom Hanks was in it
and their ship got hijacked. It was a mersk ship
(01:36:29):
and it was the guy who's like, I'm the captain.
Now it's like I have autism now like that. Oh
my gosh, this is so it's just it's insane. I
got a couple of other things. Can we talk about Afton?
That girl from Tennessee aften band, remember her? She just
hates her town. Okay, So first off, can we play
(01:36:49):
ten first? And then no, wait, play nine first, and
then we got to play ten. So she's running in
a special election, She's running for congress Tennessee's seventh congressional district,
and this is uh. I think this is cut nine.
She hates the town she wants to represent.
Speaker 12 (01:37:06):
Listen, I've been heavily involved with the Nashville mayoral race
because I hate the city. I hate the bachelorettes, I
hate the petal taverns, I hate country music, I hate
all of the things that make Nashville apparely in Nike
City to the rest of the country.
Speaker 1 (01:37:22):
But I hate it.
Speaker 12 (01:37:23):
Yeah, I'm that girl at the airport that all these
bachelorettes are giddy walking out and there and they're two
toned colored pant hone pink shirts.
Speaker 1 (01:37:30):
And they walk out and I'm like, oh my god,
nationals so loud. Oh she's so edgy. No, you wouldn't.
You don't think that at all. You desperately want to
be one of them, you bottle blonde, stop it, good grief.
Oh my gosh, I'm so edgy. I'm so much better
than all these pepa Well anyway, so her name's Aften,
aft Y, n Okay, Monograham, Loui Pulitzer, bottle blonde, all right, whatever,
(01:37:56):
So she then this is cut ten. So now he's
trying to backpedal. Oh my gosh, her whole campaign is
in a tail spin and she's trying to save it.
Speaker 12 (01:38:05):
Listen, fairly, it makes city to the rest of the country.
Speaker 8 (01:38:10):
But I hate it. Yeah.
Speaker 17 (01:38:11):
Now, I always want Nashville to be better, right, I
want Nashville to be a place where working people can thrive.
Speaker 6 (01:38:16):
Right.
Speaker 17 (01:38:16):
But sure I get mad at the bachelorette Sometimes I
get mad at the pedal comperns. Right, Ben talking to
someone who has cried no less than ten times in
the Country Music Hall of Fame.
Speaker 8 (01:38:27):
The girl that just goes to.
Speaker 1 (01:38:28):
The rhyman to hang out.
Speaker 17 (01:38:30):
No, no, we're not We're not even gonna go there.
We are so close to winning this race, which is
why these rumors are getting more wild. So I can't
wait to see what they come up with next. What
is please keep doing the work. We had a huge
group show up today to Canva.
Speaker 1 (01:38:45):
That is you, girl?
Speaker 16 (01:38:47):
Is you?
Speaker 1 (01:38:47):
You are the one who said it. You said you
hated your town. You said you hated everything that Nashville's
about and that you were and then you made fun
of other women bringing money tax revenue to your sit
day and you will making fun of them all while
she's like, vocal frynah, you are one of them. You
the reason that you hate them is because you're describing yourself.
(01:39:09):
At least they have the money to spend. You're just broke. Wow.
Her name's Aften with a Why I hate that vocal
fry I cannot stand My voice is naturally low. I'm
an alto, and I cannot like. I just it's like
a South Park skit. Dude, red flag if she's yeah,
(01:39:34):
you know mm hmm. So Cain and I were from
Saint Louis and there's a suburb called Afton, aft O
n So to see it's spelled like this, it's hysterical.
I cannot get over. What do we get a name
of Aften? How can we make that sound like unique?
Why don't we put a y in it? That sounds great?
Aften with a Y.
Speaker 8 (01:39:55):
In there?
Speaker 1 (01:39:56):
Yeah, it's like a woman I met once Amber spelled
with a Y. Kid you not. No one believes me.
It was a y A Y m b R A. No,
I don't. I don't want to like laugh at it
because it was my very first, one of my very
first book signings. It was in Florida and I was
(01:40:17):
and she was like, oh Amber, and I was getting
I wrote the A and I was getting ready to
write it and she goes with a Y and I'm like,
what like a M B E R Y, Like I
don't even know what do.
Speaker 15 (01:40:26):
You mean with a Y.
Speaker 8 (01:40:29):
Between the B and the r?
Speaker 1 (01:40:31):
Amber Amb, I go where's the y? And she expelled
it a y mb r And I'm like, god, I
know I To everyone else, they were probably like, what
is her damage? That was behind this woman? Online? And
they were listening because I had to stop to process that,
and my brain did not want to write it, like
(01:40:51):
my hand was willing to write it, and my brain's
like no, and and I said, can you spell that again?
She's like it's unusual, and I I'm so sorry. But
I wanted to be like it's stupid, but I didn't.
I'm like a y mb r, Okay, I'm I probably
am hurting her feelings and I don't mean to. If
my name was spelled like weird, I hope you would
(01:41:12):
make fun of me equally. And it's not making fun
of her, it's making fun of her mother for naming
her that anyway, but just right. And I had to
write roll slow because I had to fight my brain
the whole time, like a.
Speaker 8 (01:41:25):
Y M.
Speaker 1 (01:41:27):
Actually what you said makes more sense, but that's not
how it was spelled, not how it was done. Oh
my gosh, so often with a y I just had
all those things. Now I really love them, but for me,
oh my gosh, right, I got millions sunk into this race,
so that I don't I don't think that's helping her
all that much. I also wanted to share before we go,
(01:41:51):
I had a threat about this on X yesterday. You
know how New York just love self defense, right, they
just love it? Kane, No, they don't. A Listen to
this story. This is from the New York Post. A
senior citizen who he sixty seven years old, Charles Fohner,
(01:42:14):
lives in Queens and a guy tried to rob him
at his own on his own property, at his own house,
and he used a thirty eight revolver to defend himself
and shot the guy. The guy was a repeat offender
who I think had like what how many I don't
even know how many arrests. This guy had a violent,
(01:42:36):
repeat defender. But anyway, it was at two in the morning,
he heard something. He goes and inspects it sees this guy,
and the guy apparently started lunging at him, and so
he had his revolver and he used it to defend
his life. Now he's going to spend four years in
jail because New York City said that he didn't have
(01:42:58):
a license for it. He didn't have a license for
his revolver. Not even making this up. This this is
one of the reasons why I've always said that it
is not even really so much about firearms that it's
about your actual self defense, because New York has a
history of jailing anybody that uses anything to defend themselves.
(01:43:21):
Like there's another guy, Ronald Stollerzik who another innocent man.
He was charged for defending himself with a revolver at
his New York property. To one of them was a
very violent ex Khan was a repeat defender that had
been like I was literally I got on probation to
repeat violent home invaders. They burst into his house and
(01:43:43):
he retrieved his revolver to defend himself, and he was
charged because he used an unlicensed revolver. The state would
rather him die. The state would have rather mister Feyner die.
Or what about the guy Jordan Williams. He and his
girlfriend and this was like two years ago. They were
attacked on the church. They were attacked minding their own
(01:44:04):
business on the subway and before the bath and body
works vaporization ads came and they were attacked by violent
ex khn. He started the ex con was targeting the
girlfriend and was and it got violent and so Williams
defended himself with a knife and New York charged Williams
(01:44:25):
for having a knife and sending him to jail. Or
what about Jose Alba, the bodega owner? Remember him? So
the only reason he was freed, You guys remember this,
like last year he got attacked in his bodega all
on camera and he defended himself and Alvin Bragg threw
him in rikers and it wasn't until massive public outrage
(01:44:45):
that he was freed. Then you have, I mean another guy,
Benjamin Prosser. He got charged after he was repeatedly violently
attacked in his own New York neighborhood, and then he
carried to de vend himself, and when he he had
to defend himself, they charged him. Same thing with a
man named Sam Little. Same thing with a man named
(01:45:06):
Lashawn Craig who was in his own apartment in New
York and he was violently attacked and he used a
firearm to defend himself and they charged him. New York
is lost. We got a lot more on the way
as we move our partners that he'll bring you the program.
The folks over at Berne gun I will always carry
and I am all completely a million percent comfortable, and
(01:45:28):
I've trained for it to use lethal force in defense
of my life or the life of a loved one.
So the issue is private property restrictions, municipal restrictions, you know,
anything like that where they will establish gun free zones, right,
and this is where it's really important to outsmart the
people trying to disarm you and have a diversified weapons array.
(01:45:51):
You do not want to leave your personal security to chance.
Absolutely not. And this is where the burnagun comes in.
So the burnagun shoots chemical irritant projectiles that can deter
threats from up to fifty feet away. And you might go, well,
you know stun guns. I have a stun gun. That's great,
good for you, but that's like one or two shots.
Speaker 11 (01:46:11):
Right.
Speaker 1 (01:46:11):
The cl the Compact Launcher, which which is what I
would recommend from Berna to you, has a fifteen round
shot capacity per cartridge. Everything made right here in the
US of A. So it's easy target acquisition, no recoil,
and the legal flexibility so this is key. No background checks,
no permits, no tax stamp, buy it online and it
(01:46:32):
ships right to your door and it does not care
about gun free zone signs. So if you're like a
college kid and you're living alone in your college town
and you know you're under the age of twenty one
and you can't carry to protect yourself. I mean you
could serve in the serve our country and go overseas
with fil auto, which you can't be here with a
nine millimeter and protect yourself. This is an option to
(01:46:55):
make sure you at least have you have some form
of protection when you are disarmed state or federal law.
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when you.
Speaker 3 (01:47:15):
Are subscribe to The Dana Show podcast because who says
you can't make fun of people while staying informed on
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you get your podcast.
Speaker 1 (01:47:27):
I feel like these two North Texas man, they should
have let them try this to see what happens. So
these two dudes were indicted for a scheme to sail
to a Haitian island, murder all the men and enslave
all of the women children, and make pornography. I'm not
even kidding. A man named Gavin Winsenberg twenty one and
Tanner Thomas twenty tannering Gavin. They were going there from Argyle, Texas.
(01:47:51):
They were indicted by a grand jury. They were going
to murder a name and kidnap a foreign country, and
they were going to produce child pornography. They were going
to travel to Gnave Island, which is part of Haiti,
and attempt to coop kill all the dudes and then
enslave all the women and children. These two little skinny
bunkins they were going to do that. I'll buy the sales.
(01:48:13):
Oh my gosh. By the way, Tanner Thomas enlisted in
US Air Force, but he failed out of fire training
after almost a month. Yeah, he barely made it a month.
All right, today's stupidity came all.
Speaker 5 (01:48:31):
Right, well this is this is cut twenty one, Mika Brazinski.
That's that's all it really happened.
Speaker 1 (01:48:37):
Baby.
Speaker 18 (01:48:38):
There there's data that shows sort of this if we're
looking for, if people want to backlash the antidote to Trump,
in many cases, that is women, that's women of color,
And I think voters are are really seeing that and
thinking about it.
Speaker 1 (01:48:50):
Yeah, Kamala har says why we should nominate a woman again.
Speaker 5 (01:48:53):
Don't do it. No, no, that is not it is
No one says that she speaks words to people on TV.
It's weird.
Speaker 1 (01:49:02):
No one wants that. That does it for us this week, everybody.
I hope you have a great weekend. Make sure you
find a substack Apple, podcast and Facebook YouTube can subscribe.
Back with you Monday,