All Episodes

November 23, 2023 96 mins
Note: This is a best-of Dana Show podcast

Please visit our great sponsors:

All Family Pharmacy

https://allfamilypharma.com/dana
Save 10% with code DANA10 when you order today at https://allfamilypharma.com/dana

Headrest Safe

https://theheadrestsafe.com
Use code DANA for an exclusive $50 off.

Nimi Skincare

https://nimiskincare.com
Don’t compromise. Use promo code DANA for 10% your order.

Patriot Mobile

https://patriotmobile.com/dana
Get FREE activation with the offer code DANA.

Wise Food Storage

https://preparewithdana.com
Save $50 on your 4-Week Survival Food Kit plus free shipping when you order today!
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:02):
The Dana Show. All politics islocal. If you're not involved locally,
why the hell should anyone care aboutyour opinions on national issues. I feel
like some of the people that I'vebeen seeing, I feel like they should
be ridiculed out of the public square. Like everybody has a particular set of
skills, right, and one ofmy skills is I will ridicule a bigot

(00:24):
out of existence show. This isa moment of profound opportunity. The benefits
of AI are immense. It couldgive us the power to fight the climate
crisis. How how is it goingto fight the Look, I know,

(00:48):
I'm dealing with a migraine and I'mlike, ugh right now, and I'm
kind of my allergy meds. Butthat sounded whack. That sounded majorly whack,
right, I heard her correctly?Do I give her a credit for
saying that she's unburdened by what isbend or now? Okay, AI benefits

(01:11):
orements. It could give us thepower to fight the climate crisis. Or
hear me out, It could makeit to where everything is dumber than it
is. Do you know that?Well? Yeah, it sute late.
So do you know in the thingthat he signed and first of all,

(01:33):
welcome back to the program, DanaLash with you your lovable chromogeon. You
can listen coast to coast. Youcan watch the simulcast of the nationally syndicated
radio show on YouTube, Facebook channelthree forty seven direct TV. I was
looking at the fact sheet on theExecutive Order on Safe, Secure and Trustworthy

(01:53):
Artificial Intelligence. So what did Iask last hour the segment before we went
into order, man, I hadasked where all the DEI and CRT morons
were with regard to the students fightinganti Semitism on college campuses. Right,
well, we found them. Theydecided to go into robots. So the

(02:16):
Executive Order, I'm looking at theUH fact sheet. Here, can I
just say, let me just readthis one sentence. It says, the
Executive Order establishes news standards for AIsafety and security, protects Americans, privacy,
advances equity, civil rights. Waitwait, well yeah, civil you

(02:46):
can't. You can't. You can'tdo both of these because they're at their
their they cancel each other out.Equity is not about equality that in fact,
they're they're completely different. They're antitheticalto antithetical to one or the other.

(03:06):
So I'm just fascinated by this becauseit gets literally gets into AI like
it says advancing equity and civil rights. It's like a thing advancing equity.
That's a thing in the fact sheetit says. I'm rereading it from White
House doc up. Irresponsible uses ofAI can lead to and deepen discrimination,

(03:31):
bias, and other abuses injustice,healthcare, and how's it? Wait?
What the Biden Harris administration has alreadytaken action by publishing the blueprint for an
AI Bill of Rights and issuing anexecutive order directing agencies to combat algorithmic discrimination
out East cidebar. You know noneof that's going to be about discrimination against

(03:53):
conservatives, right right? They?Okay, I swear this gets dumber.
I was reading this last night.This is one things I was reading the
last night. I had a bookmarket to finish the fact sheet this morning
because it was so dumb at meand my head hurt more. They write
to ensure that AI advances equity andcivil rights. The President directs the following

(04:15):
additional actions to provide clear guidance tolandlords, federal benefit programs, and federal
contractors to keep AI algorithms for beingused to exacerbate discrimination to address algorithmic discrimination
through training technical assistance in coordination betweenthe Department of Justice and Federal Civil Rights

(04:36):
Offices on best practices for investigating andprosecuting civil rights violations related to AI.
Can you imagine, I mean theywant this is going to be AI that
will be formed with the principles ofCRT. That's what this is. So

(05:03):
imagine like a code equivalent of Ibrahimx Kendy's CRT nonsense as part of AI

(05:26):
forever. That's going to go well, right, because that's exactly what they're
pushing here. Yeah, go ahead, Kane, go ahead and share.
It's just share. Well. Ijust know the government has been trying to
get control of the Internet with netneutrality for a long long time, and
I think they've realized that that's anuphill battle they're unwilling to continue. So

(05:46):
I think with this AI, Ithink they're going to also usher in government
control. Right, there has tobe controls with AI or else it just
goes crazy. And oh yeah,you know, society will be better off
with government and control. And thisis their effort to do that very thing
that they've been trying to do itin that neutrality for so long. So
yeah, here's exactly what it's goingto be this. I mean, I

(06:10):
was reading the fact sheet and itsounds they like they want fairness, but
why would you use AI in sentencing? And they want to use AI for
everything? Do you realize what thisis? It's humans giving up and so
but before they give up, theywant to make sure that they incorporate all
of this AI, DEI, CRTstuff in it. Really it's going to

(06:31):
be Peter Singer on steroids. TheyOh my gosh, this is terrifying.
This is like I read this andit reads like a horror film. The
fact sheet of it. It isabsolutely terrifying. Imagine because the algorithm Borrow

(06:51):
is built on what it is given, so whatever perspective someone has, they
will shape it. So the whatis it The winners write the history books,
Well, it's not going to bethat anymore. The winners are going
to be writing the algorithm. Ifyou think that this isn't going to happen,

(07:13):
I would just direct you to howFacebook and Instagram and Twitter, et
cetera, all of these have beenrun. Just look at how all of
this has been ran. This isI mean, this is exactly how this
is going to go and so canyou imagine this being applied? I mean,
how is this going to work inhealthcare? Workplace equity? Health equity?

(07:36):
What the hell is health equity?What is that? That sounds like
a death panel sort of thing.That sounds like someone is going to be
actively incorporating discrimination, because that's whatequity is. Equity is about making sure
that everything, Like equality is,everybody has the same opportunities. Equity is

(07:59):
everybody to have the same outcomes,regardless of the choices that you make,
because that's what people omit when theytalk about equity versus equality. Equality is
that making sure everyone has the sameaccess to opportunity. But equity isn't about
opportunity. It's about you must havethe exact same outcomes, and it disregards

(08:22):
choice, It disregards a lot ofstuff. For the purpose of claiming that
making sure that all the results arethe same, that that's it's better than
equality. That's how equity is advertised. It's better than equality. It's equality
two point zero. But that's notequity has to incorporate discrimination in order to

(08:48):
achieve the same outcome. It meansthat some people have to be penalized like
if they're they're no fault of theirown. And some people will be penalized
for making the right choice, andsome people will be credited for making the
wrong one. I mean, justso that you can get the same outcome.
Isn't that horrible? That's one ofthe most evil things. Equity is

(09:11):
evil. It is absolute evil,and I think that this is disastrous.
This is one of the reasons whywe cannot lose in twenty twenty four.
I don't really want to talk aboutall the primary stuff, but I want
you to realize that the primary isthe general here, and you can like

(09:35):
whoever you like as much as possible. But I'm telling you right now there
are some candidates that don't have ashot in hell at winning a general election.
I mean, I've looked at that. My job is to look at
the data and it much more.Look. I would much rather do things
that are most advantageous to me,but unfortunately that would require me to lie,

(10:00):
and I just I don't like doingthat. So I'm telling you this
is one of the I think theAI stuff and writing the algorithms for this
and who controls that is one ofthe that is to me One of the
biggest things I mean they're I meanis they talk about AI ecosystem in this

(10:22):
they actually have a phrase in here, use existing authorities to expand the ability
of highly skilled immigrants and non immigrantswith the expertise and critical areas to study
staying work in the US. Theywant to incorporate into the algorithm the premise
that illegal immigration is actually legal andis fine, and that cannot be used
as a negative. This is thetype of perspective that's going to shape this.

(10:43):
This is what I'm talking about.Now. Imagine this with healthcare as
well. Twenty twenty four is goingto require some really hard decisions to be
made. Like, for instance,I know a lot of people are talking
about Nicki Haley. Let me bereally frank with us. Nicki Haley doesn't
have a shot in hell at thegeneral election. I don't dislike her as

(11:03):
a person. She's come to thetown I live in a lot, and
she's fundraised with a lot of alot of people that I consider friends.
They've had fundraisers with her. Ihaven't gone, but you know, I
mean, that's that's their choice.I don't have anything against her personally.
She just I disagree with her onsome of her foreign policy, but I'm
telling you she doesn't have a shotin hell at winning. She is not
going to be able to pull Trumpvoters away. Trump voters are not only

(11:26):
Trump voters, the most hardcore group. They're not going to Nikki Haley represents
someone who is an takes an opposingview to some of the principles they hold,
particularly with regards to foreign policy.You're gonna have a lot of capital
Libertarians that went over to Republican sidethat aren't going to be voting for her
because of foreign policy. Some peopleare going to be looking at her monetary
policy. She just doesn't the polling. The only reason she's doing well.

(11:48):
She's getting Tim Scott's stuff, she'sgetting down that he's out of the race,
She's getting some of his voters.She's not doing well, and I
don't think that it's going to last. And so that's my petve on it.
I think that people are silly totry to sit here and call who's
going to be winning and who isn'tthis early in. But that's just the
truth of it. And you alsohave to look at independence. I mean,

(12:09):
there's I'm not going to dive intoit right now, because we're very
far away still from Iowa. Butyou have to look at the lay of
the land, and you also haveto realize that this election is bigger than
one person, and it's bigger thanone candidate. I want to win because
I don't want stuff like this beingwritten by progressives. And if there are
people out there that are willing tosacrifice their future, the future of their

(12:30):
children, and the future of theirgrandchildren, and allow progressives to write stuff
like the quote unquote AI ecosystem andincorporate forever equity as a premise of the
AI future of the United States,and they are unwilling to get over their
own ego or obsession with any candidatein any race to do so, then
they are as bad for this countryas the left is, because this is

(12:54):
about winning, and people who windon't take suicide missions. Politically, this
stuff is I think, out ofeverything, this is the scariest stuff to
me is the AI stuff. Thisis absolutely terrifying because so much of this,
I mean, this touches geys,This touches on criminal justice, it

(13:15):
touches on health care decisions, ittouches on education. Everything I mean imagine
some sentencing being determined by AI.You realize they're already using AI to solve
problems. You need to watch thelatest Mission Impossible because they get into this.
I mean, imagine AI controlling conflictand determining military strategy based on AI.

(13:35):
But with Democrats, they're going toincorporate, honestly, the Ebram x
Kendyes of the world as a perspectivefor shaping the AI ecosystem. That's going
to be disastrous, But that's what'sgoing to happen if we lose in twenty
four and that is not an exaggeration. The choice is either country or ego
for twenty twenty four. The primaries, the general pick a side. And

(13:58):
now all the news you would probablymiss. It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Oh so gross. I'm so tiredof seeing stuff about bed bugs.
It's so nasty. So now inLondon it's apparently totally out of control.
They found bedbugs now in a WestLondon library. Pest Control all over the
city says the spread is out ofcontrol. The Ealens Central Library closed because

(14:18):
they found bedbugs like everywhere there.You know they can get into books too.
They said they're getting inundated with calls, and they said that they found
them in some of their furnishings.They had to shut the whole library down.
I mean, it is so bad. Have you been reading about this
like it's everywhere in Paris, inLondon? Oh my gosh, that's just

(14:41):
crazy. So oh man, ittotally grosses me out. I don't lou
this good dog. We don't deservedogs. Kro Arlington, Washington. At
pet dog helped the Arlington Police Departmentarrested thirty six year old burglary suspect he
was hiding under a tar. Thepolice said they heard from a homeowner who

(15:01):
had discovered an unknown male that escapedout the back door when they were turned
home and the dog found them.Because they would try to break they broke
in through the doggy door. Idon't like doggy doors man. They totally
freaks me out. But they saidthat they suspected somebody was hiding in the
yard and the dog found them,So kudos to the dog. Let's see
this. FDA warns that twenty sixeye drop products, including large store brands,

(15:28):
could lead to eye infections and visionloss. They said twenty six that
have been sold at CBS Target andRight Aid, US Food and Drug Administration.
They say that there's unsanitary conditions inthe manufacturing facility and it's produced positive
bacterial test results from the environmental samplingof critical drug production areas in the facility.
So they say that like sold underbrand CBS Health, Right Aid,

(15:52):
Target Up and Up and Leader andVelocity Pharma are supposed to be sterile.
They said there's no reports of injuriesright now, but they said that anybody
who takes them and has signs orsymptoms of an in infection, they should
immediately go and seek treatment for that. That's look like give one job,
one job right, Stick with us. We've got more in store. The

(16:12):
United States is all also working withan American Development Bank to establish a fund
for Nature to seed more investment innature based climate solutions like debt for nature
swaps and Blue and Green bonds.I supported a debt for nature swaps dating
back to my time in the UnitedStates Senate, and this is a ripe

(16:34):
area for considerable growth. In myview, investors are eager to support projects
that are with demonstrated potential, andby providing early stage funding the technical assistance,
we will help more promising climate solutionsget off the ground than ever before.
The hell's in nature? Swab?Is that what I heard? I

(16:56):
think swap I heard. I heardswab like they swabbed the earth and sounds.
I don't know what that sounds like. I'm not I'm not. I
don't know what I feel about that. Welcome back to the show, Dana.
Last year, It's Friday, Stevewas making fun of me on break
because we were talking about how Iwouldn't want to live forever because you just

(17:18):
got to deal with this stupid You'dlive forever with all the stupid people that
could also live forever too. Whowould want that? He said that that's
like the darkest thing he's ever heard. La la la la la. Happy
Friday. It's Friday. It's likea Monday on a Friday. So we
do things a little weirder in thatI don't rely, just we just we
just sit down. We just talkabout all the things and people we don't
like. So pull up a chair, get you coffee, gets you a

(17:41):
SODI, whatever it is that yougot. You can listen to the radio
show across the country. If youlike to read with pictures, you can
watch the s I'm joking. Youcan watch the simulcast as well, Janna,
if you're gonna get hate mail thirtyforty seven direct TV YouTube where they
there's always a rowdy riot in thecomments every day there uh and uh Facebook
as well. So what the helldid he say? Nature? That was

(18:03):
nature swab? Dude? I clearlyheard that. Is that like some kind
of new environmental things like you heardYanni and I heard Laurel or something?
But yeah, he's talking. Idon't know what the deal is with with
him outside of just what dementia andold age. I don't know what else
to say. Yeah, nature schwab, nature schwap. I don't know what

(18:25):
that is? Is that like anew green initiative swab the earth? He
can't move his he can't. It'slike he doesn't have the muscle control to
pull his top lip up and thenuns he ate better. It just all
the meat on his face slides downand just falls into his teeth and he
can't talk. There's a soundbitekle Leeman alive. I'm telling you what.

(18:48):
Somebody give us some one hunter's Coke'sa thing. Debt for nature swaps?
What? Yeah? Or debt forclass you're you're claiming that he's saying swap,
Yes, swap. I feel likeyou're trying to make up something that
he said, so you can makeit stupid and you can destroy him further,
not that he needs help. Thatdoes track with what I normally do.
But that is not what I'm doinghere. Okay, it's not what

(19:11):
I'm doing here. It is areal thing. Debt for climate swaps and
Debtford, Well, what is thedebt for climate swap? What's that?
Can? I guess it's restructuring debtwith the incentives behind the green agenda,
right, So it sounds like aracket. Yeah, it's like a government
racket. Okay, So my nextquestion is how do we get in on
this. It's a great question,like the whole climate, what is it?

(19:36):
The carbon credits, which are basicallyindulgences, modern day greeny indulgences.
Sure, you can go ahead andtake that plane ride, give me a
thousand dollars and I'll plant you atree. Yeah, I'll plant you a
tree. Debt for carbon swaps.I cannot believe people. Do people actually
believe this? I mean, it'sone thing. If people actually believe it,
it's something else entirely if they don'tbelieve it, and they just do

(20:00):
it to give the optic of goingalong, because look, we're part of
the crowd. We're not causing anyproblems. We're a part of the inquisition.
Look at us, right. Idon't know, I just there's something
to that. I don't know.I guess they really believe it. I
don't know. It's just weird.I still, I still don't know if
that's what he said, swap,but I'm willing to go with what you're

(20:22):
expert audio engineering. Ear heard,Kane, because all I heard was mashed
potatoes. It's all I heard.It's like, when can I just give
you an aside? And then I'mgonna move on because I got other things
to talk about. So, andI love my grandfather and I'm not that's
not I'm not paying that as apenance to get ready to rip him for
something God helped me. I'm not. But he was such a he was

(20:45):
such a rubble So he was youknow, World War two vut naval vet
and he ended up having to getdentures later in life. Man hated wearing
dentures. The only time that hewould put him in for there for a
while. Was if my grandma wasaround and was aggravating them about it,
because she would she'd get at himall the time, you know, how
are you going to put put yourteeth in? Because she told him that

(21:06):
he had to get used to wearingthem, and he didn't want to wear
them right, and his doctor kepttelling him, you need to wear them.
So we quit seeing his doctor becausehe was like, I don't need
those people to tell me what todo. This was the man who hated
banks and kept his money in abible that was unlocked, like one of
the big giant family bibles, likeit comes with a case and everything.
I didn't even know where it camefrom. I think the Lord gave it

(21:26):
to them when he was a boy, I don't know, and kept it
on the coffee table in the middleof the living room. And I'm just
like, why would you do that? Because people are going to robb and
he's like, no, Heathen's goingto open this. It's fascinating, and
he's right, like it never ever, nobody ever took anything out of there.
It was probably supernaturally protected. Anyway, long story short, he you
know, he just thought what hethought. Believe what he believed, and

(21:49):
he did not want to wear histeeth. And so when we were little
and we would sit at the dinnertable, and I was at my grandparents
a lot grown up because my momhad to work like three and four jobs.
And when we would sit at thetable, my favorite thing ever in
the world was watching him eat mashedpotatoes because he wouldn't wear his teeth because
he said they hurt and he couldn'tand he said that they his teeth were

(22:11):
just made the food weird and soand then he would sometimes spit it out
at you and it was hysterical.Like he loved entertaining the grandkids at dinner,
and so that was my favorite thingin the world. It was like
watching nat geo right there at thetable, and sometimes she would, you
know, gall at to Howard,you need to wear your teeth, et
cetera, et cetera, and hewould talk back to her and sound just
like Joe Biden did just then withoutdentures and a mouthful of mash taties.

(22:34):
Nobody knew what he said, butyou could kind of get the gist of
it. And I just when Iheard Biden sit there and go like Grandpa
I don't know it just you know, brought back mix up. My grandpa
was sentient, Biden isn't. Wedon't know what's happening there. How dare
you make fun of baby Hunter Biden'sdad, Kane? You're so mean?
Well I have another one from himthis morning? Oh wait, yeah,
that's right, there's more. Canwe hear some more mashed tato? I

(22:55):
found it this morning, but itdid happen last night, samey. We
know that we're working to address historiclevels of migration the hemisphere. Okay,
can I pose it right there?Can I just pose it right there?
From minute? Because we are goingto talk about the border. What the
hell is this record levels of migration? These aren't geese. These aren't Geese.

(23:18):
Why do we talk about why dowe allow elected officials? Well,
there's the migration that's coming from thisothern they're not Geese. There are people,
including a Jordanian terrorist. By theway, Okay, go ahead,
Sorry, I don't mean to interruptit. No, that's all right.
Here we go. We gether.We're working to address historic levels of migration.
Has a sound of a a lotof people moving around, so much

(23:38):
energy, particularly much energy Venezuela andthe record Gees, which you've set an
examples for the region. And soif we embark on this next century of
partnership. Who the hell is hittingthe table? That's the crackling fire?

(23:59):
That's the fire. It sounds likesomeone's hitting a roller on the table.
There's a fire in the fireplace goingAnd is there a metronome to keep him
on beat? Is that what itis? It looks like split oak logs
crackling? Man, I want anactual wood burning fireplace. Can I just
blow a hole in my ceiling andput one in? Not sure that's how
it works. I think I'm gonnado that. I'm I'm pretty sure it's
how it works if I want to. Because this is America. I have

(24:25):
no idea where I'm going with that. Uh what did he say there?
I couldn't hear. No one knowswhat he said. That was just what
does his voicemail sound like? Emthat's what it is? How dare you

(24:45):
make fun of Baby Hunter's dad?Baby Hunter? Biden? This cocaine or
crack? One more sidebar? AndI got more things to do. I
don't know the difference between coke andcrack. Is crack just like like,
uh, the Genera brand of coke. I literally don't know. I know
this was a big debate during theWhitney and Bobby era. I don't know.

(25:07):
I think there's with crack. Itis cocaine, but it is whack.
I'm told it's cooked in some way. The cocaine is not cooked.
I do not need a mail explaineron this. The audience in some way
to make crack and we're not givingthose instructions out clearly. I just I
The reason I ask is because Iwas just thinking, like, are they

(25:30):
are they different? And wouldn't hego I mean, it's the bidens.
Wouldn't they want to go for theboogiest drug you could be addicted to?
Isn't that cocaine? Is that whatall the bougie people I don't know in
the eighties, that's what That's allthe eighties movies I watched as a kid.
That's all the boogie people, allthe John Hughes stuff. Right,
Yeah. I think it morphed intolike heroin and other like even pharmaceutical type

(25:52):
drugs. I'm just wondering anyway,And also because I didn't know whether it
would to attribute to him as acocut or crackhead. So I mentioned the
borders just a little bit ago.I don't know if you guys heard this
pretty unbelievable story. A Georgania nationalwas arrested in Houston allegedly planning an attack
on the Jewish community. So heb Ayubayash oh boy Yash twenty, was

(26:15):
studying how to build bombs and likeevery other dumb terrorist, posted about his
support for killing the Jews. Federalofficials claim he had very specific, detailed
content posted by radical organizations on theinternet, and he made lots of statements
talk about how he's going to killJewish people, going to target the Jewish
community. I mean, I'm lookingat him, he looks like a ton

(26:37):
of fun. I mean, somebodyskips leg day. I mean, when
your thighs in your butt are completelyjust in your midsection is completely disproportionate to
the rest of your legs and yourskinny little neck and no shoulders, that
just means to me that you maybeneed to talk less on the internet and
work out in the gym war ButI digress. So they said that he
got charged because he's not here legallyor not here, he's out of citizens

(27:00):
so he's here on a non immigrantvisa. Uh, he was in unlawful
possession and they apparently finally they werethey were monitoring his his activities since August
and they but you know, it'sa good thing that we have that Islamophobia
outreach, Kane. You know,maybe maybe that's maybe that's the goal of
the vice president is you know,let's you know, tell him that he

(27:22):
doesn't have to go and kill theJews because you know, he's it's okay,
you don't have to go. Isthat what their whole outreach is?
Is that? What is that howthey're approaching this curious He was actually planning
to attack the Houston Jewish community,and finally the FBI moved forward. They
were gonna they went after him onan unlawful possession of firearms charge. So

(27:44):
this is where I might shock youwhen you have people who are here on
very with with great restrictions because hewas here on a very specific type of
allowance, and when you're posting aboutkilling other members of our community and you're
talking about how I mean, Ijust think you know what, I'm just

(28:07):
let's just go ahead and just thumpyou right now. I am of the
mind that, so long as youare not a citizen of the country and
you're talking about killing people in thecountry and you're just voluntary to get thumped.
Can I just point out as oneas preparing to show and I'm only
doing this, this guy's preparing toshow this Jordanian terrorist picture on the simulcast.

(28:30):
I've never seen anybody with no shouldersbefore like this. He looks like
a child's drawing. Have you everseen anything like that? He's fat,
He's not fit. He's fat.I mean, he's a chunk. He's
muffined out. All that man hasno shoulders none. They slope right into
his elbows. Again, it's likehe's like the human version of Elon Musk's

(28:53):
electric truck, like child's drawing cometo life. That's what That's what he
looks like. So he's a hereon a non was here on a non
immigrant visa. He couldn't legally obtainfirearms, yet he had them, and
he was just talking about going andhe was being inspired by al Qaeda,
and he was talking warmly of Hamasand he wanted to go and kill Jewish

(29:18):
members of the community in Houston.Hmm. So now he's behind bars on
an unlawful possession of a firearm bysomeone with a non immigrant visa. Uh,
he spoke of publicly of committee martyrdom, et cetera. I mean you
he had very detailed plans. Imean, obviously I would assume that they're
working on on charges with that,but you realize that there that there are

(29:41):
certain forms of unprotected speech when you'retalking about killing people on the internet that
are not protected forms of speech andare legally actionable. So I'm just curious
as to why, especially with someof the stuff that's a public about what
he did post, why that's whythere were no charges on that. I
mean, you could be a freespeech purist, but when you're talking about
where you're going to go and howyou going to murder people and that you're
absolutely going to do it, andit's pretty immediate, just saying so,

(30:08):
I don't know, live in peaceor live in pieces. I think he
should be sent back to his homecountry in bags. Multiple. That's my
two cents. We have a lotagain, there's no gray area with me.
We have a lot more in storeas we get moving, because we
got some culture to jump on.We're going to talk about some of the
latest with the administration and the Houseas well, the latest with the House.

(30:32):
And we're going to talk about howHunter Biden's tax case. How we
can't talk about it because how dareyou talk about baby Hunter Biden and his
Coke addiction. Yes, I knowwe're talking about like corruption and all that,
but you can't because Coke right likeSAMs through the ally glass. So
are the days of the United States. Be the President. We look forward

(30:52):
to welcoming you soon to the DominicaRepublic at the desk at the next Sawming
of the Americas in twenty fifty,where we will continue to develop the moons
of propriety, security and democracy thatbuying us to give it, and that
saw me will be in Putakana,so you have time to be on the

(31:15):
beach. Oh my gosh, thatis the Dominican Republican Dominican Republic President Louis
Abanator who's telling Biden that the nextSummit of Americas will be on Putakana.
So you'll you'll get to be onthe beat. Wow, you know what
I mean. Usually men don't don'tslide into a put down the way that

(31:37):
women do. But it is Ithink, uh, just a mark of
high intelligence when they do. Andthat was that was like a straight lady
level put down. Dude. Thatwas I gotta I gotta give, gotta
give profits for that man. Thatwas well done, Well done, sir,
well done. All right. Sothis is what we got coming up

(32:00):
for you in our second hour thisFriday. We're getting you set up.
Candy corn is the best candy.I'm just gonna make you mad, make
you pay attention right there. We'realso going to get into all of the
latest the pause that the Biden administration'strying to float Democrats support for Israel's crumbling.
What does that mean for Biden?We got all that and more.
Stick with us. Weird, whatis it? Weird? Maybe? But

(32:22):
this RoboCop, well, it's somuch more than that. We taking existing
technology, cameras are being able tocommunicate with people, and we're placing it
on wills. Behold the NYPD's newestcrime stopper, K five, autonomous,
a security robot that will soon patrolthe Times Square forty second Street subway station.

(32:45):
We will continue to stay ahead ofthose who want to harm every day
New York kis Mayor Eric Adams unveilingK five today underground, part of his
new push to increase law enforcement technologyin the country's largest transit system. The
four hundred pound five foot three Kfive is nothing short of being high tech.
It's equipped with four cameras that willallow it to send back live video

(33:07):
without audio to the police department.K five will not use facial recognition technology
either. It will patrol the subwaystation's mezzanine level, not the platforms.
But some subway riders say they're abit concerned about their invasion of privacy.
Others appreciate another set of eyes.Where are the guns? I mean,

(33:29):
let's go ahead and open up thebetting pool here. Go ahead and place
your bets as to how soon thisdom thing is gonna get yeaded right up
onto the subway tracks. Welcome backto the program, Dana Last here with
your top of this second hour.Go ahead, you know, just place
your bets. How long do youthink it's gonna take for this thing gets
straight up yeaded onto some subway tracks. There's no audio, Like you have

(33:49):
a four hundred pound robot and there'sno audio, and then people are working
like there's no facial recognition, whichI just think like if you're saying I
want it, I just think ifyou're gonna go and create something that's stupid,
that you would include that, right, I go ahead and put all
the bells and whistles on it.There should be a little arm that pops
out. This is like the crappiestR two D two I've ever seen.

(34:10):
There should be like a little hatsit opens and a little that's the sound
of an arm, mechanized arm comingout that's holding a gun. That's what
should happen. Maybe a glock.Right, I'm just saying stop, that's
should be like that. Does thatthing scare you? I could kick it.
It's kickable. You could easily vandalizethat thing. I have so many

(34:36):
ideas on how to destroy it.I mean, how much does this thing?
How much did they say they've paidof their text? Since there takes
period dollars they can I'm just sodone. Oh man, I can't even
deal with it. Why is it? Why do they do this? They
they want to defund the police forthis. Do you honestly think someone's going

(34:57):
to be deterred from crime? Yourlovable curmudgeon Dania last year with you.
You can listen Coast to coast.You can stream the radio program. You
can also watch the simulcast YouTube Facebookchannel three forty seven direct TV where one
was showing you some of the footageof it's almost as tall as Eric Adams,

(35:19):
a mayor in New York. Thewhat is it? The cop bot
RoboCop? It literally is it's justa dumb one night scope the RoboCop.
So remember we had this couple ofyears ago where one of those robots just
fell into the phone. No,it didn't fall, it committed suicide.
Let's let's get it right. Whoahold on, hold on, hold on,

(35:42):
hote me. What's preventing people fromkicking this thing down the stairs or
in the foot? Robots literally keepkilling themselves. So this is, uh,
this is in twenty seventeen. Thisis the one's in twenty one and
twenty seventeen alone. It was arobot security guard committed suicide in a public
fountain and it was this actual nightscope robot. The night Scope security robot

(36:06):
was supposed to patrol the Georgetown Waterfront, a ritzy shopping an office complex along
the Washington Harbor in DC, butthe pressure was too much for the sad
little bot, which can turn andbeep and whistle in order to maintain order.
It rolled into the fountain and drowneditself on Monday. We I thought
we were gonna have like flying carsand like the technology to have like a

(36:30):
helmet go on our head. Andthen thirty seconds later we got a hairstyle,
right, and instead we have robotsthat drown themselves in fountains. That's
what we get. Instead. BestI can do is a robot. It's
like pond Star. It's like pondStars. Best I can do is a
robot that drowns itself. Switch You'sall I can do. I mean,

(36:51):
just let me die. That's allit has. I just so, the
one that drowned itself in DC wasliterally the exact one that drowned itself.
The one that drowned itself is theexact one that they have in New York,
literally the exact one. Now that'snot all. Apparently there are others

(37:15):
that have done it. Now.The one was saying that the one in
DC, they said, that's namedSteve. They are sorry, Steve.
That's literally what it's named. It'sthe independent that said that. There's argument
as to whether or not it actuallykilled itself. Or whether it was there
was just a mishap. But ifa rumba knows not to take the stairs
into a fountain, pretty sure.Why are there stairs in a fountain anyway,

(37:37):
it's a fountain, Where are therestairs that go down into it?
That's like entrapment? Why is thatlike that? Uh So I don't know
this, I don't know, butyeah, this robot killed it just did
totally mrked itself. You know whybecause it has to deal with us.

(38:00):
Honestly, just let me die.Boo. If you're a criminal and you
saw that on the mezzanine level andyou were going to commit a crime,
you know, I don't know whatcrime you would commit on the mezzanine level,

(38:21):
but would you be just would yoube deterred by the presence of a
suicidal robot? I mean, Ijust I don't know, man, I
just don't even know. But that'sthat's the Uh. Yeah, what we
we ordered something? We thought wehad something different and no. But see

(38:43):
there're some like The Financial Times hada story two days ago where they said
that security companies are turning to robotsas the labor shortage bites. And uh
I was reading this piece on interestingengineering about how it works, and you
know all of this stuff and thisthing is so this one will be in
the Times Square subway. I thinkthat's the only place that it is.
I don't think it's in all ofthe subway like all of the it's not

(39:07):
going to be in all of thedifferent subway stops. But it's just in
the Times Square one. They saidthat, uh that when something happens,
we'll be able to step in froma remote location. How are you doing
that? It doesn't do anything.It just like rolls around. I say,
we test them at the border beforewe start letting them loosen the dude,

(39:30):
right, Let's just like like letan army of these, you know,
little robots go out there. Chipgo get them. If they fall
in the water. We know they'reno good around water. Up in New
York. You can't enter. Now. What what'll happen is you'll have Biden

(39:52):
send his agents down there and they'llbe kicking him into the rio. Cally,
we are so stupid as a specie. I love our government just spend
spending our money on important things.Wait a minute, no, no,

(40:15):
Steve, is the story of thehitchbot. What is this? It's the
cheerful hiking robot. I guess thisis it got vandalized in philadel I remember
this story. They had a nobodylikes robots. The hitchbot's trip came to
a violent end in Philly. Theywere in Boston, Boston and Salem and

(40:36):
the New York City and then whenit went to Philly, it totally got
murked. I mean it was thiswas the talk of campus. This was
my senior year of college. Andsomeone it was about someone who someone knew,
the guy who took it and beheadedit and throw it the trash can.
I mean, it's like a littlerobot. It had little wellies on
and then had little little kid rainboots on and little jeans and yeah,

(40:58):
it's a The hitchbot was beheaded.It's a it was like a robot.
Flat Stanley, so he took itand cut the hat off. Steve,
Oh yeah, Philly don't play withthat type of stuff. Yeah, Philly's
like that thing looks stupid. Cutit now. Hey, Google, is
hitchhiking safe? Don't hitchick? Ohman, I can't, dude, I

(41:24):
can't this in this video that keepsauto playing of the first female college football
kicker just kicking at twenty yards.It's just chef's kiss man. Oh my
gosh. Can I tell you guys, I got other stuff. I know
we got to talk about this.I can the law and order and I'll
so Hunter Biden, let me touchon this. Hunter Biden is suing Rudy

(41:45):
Giuliani and attorney Robert Costello because he'ssaying that they hacked his laptop data.
And by hacking, he means mygruggy ass left it at the computer repair
shop and I signed a waiver statingthat it would be the property of the
Scottish computer repair shop owner and whowas like a character, and so I

(42:08):
married an ex murderer by the way, like he just he looks like one
of Mike Myers's family. Uh.And by hacking, I guess, you
know, sign the form stating thatif I left it here for X amount
of days then it was going tobe your property, et cetera, et
cetera. I left it for likeyears, and then it comes out because
it's, you know, my laptop. But wait a minute, hold up,

(42:29):
before we get into all of that. Though, I was reliably told,
and so were all of you goodpeople in radio land, reliably told
by a host of intelligence officials thatwrote a big fancy letter and they all

(42:51):
signed their names to said big fancyletter stating that this was in fact,
not Hunter Biden's laptop. Nay,twas Russian misinformation. That's what we were
all reliably told, reliably by thesetrustworthy, intelligent people that work in intelligence

(43:15):
matters. We were told by thesepeople these things. They said that this
was Russian disinformation, it's not hislaptop, but now it is. Wait
a minute, I think we're goingto have to have another hearing, and
then let's bring back all of theseseen people, the Clappers and the Brennans,

(43:38):
and just I want them to arguewith Hunter. But you guys told
us this wasn't his laptop. Nowhe wants to sue over it. Can
you just imagine being such a recklesssack of meat that you just take a
deuce all over Democrats well laid strategy, there's a pun there, uh,

(44:04):
And where they worked so meticulously andtirelessly, and they got all these people
to sign this letter, We'll protectyou, son, baby infant, fifty
something year old Hunter will protect you. And they had all these people sign
this letter stating that no this isRussian disinformation. No one is this depraved
like everything was fake, right,all yeah, all the people that Joe

(44:28):
Biden just put on the Homeland IntelligenceExperts Group, which sounds like a Sunday
morning talk show. Today on HomelandIntelligence Experts Group, we look at the
crack video from Hunter Biden. It'sRussian disinfo? So which is it?
Which is it? I'm I've gotquestions. Hopefully we have someone who works

(44:52):
in reporting things to the people thatcan go to the gathering of other people
who report things to people and yeah, yeah, yeah, and they could
ask questions of the person who workswith the president, who takes questions from
the people who report things to otherpeople. Feels like we used to have
them. Yeah, Like Kane,I got an idea. It's a business
idea. All right, we gotwe got a lot more on the way,

(45:17):
and now all of the news youwould probably miss. It's time for
Dana's Quick Five scientists have developed anAI system that can detect aliens with a
ninety percent accuracy. Put in yourJohn Fetterman and see what happens. It's
an artificial intelligence system that can detectscience of life with ninety percent accuracy.
They say it's a great advance,blah blah blah. But what if it's

(45:40):
lying to you? What if itbecomes sentient just decides to lie. I
don't know. I just don't trustanything anymore. But I mean, that's
great. We're just gonna have AIdo everything for us and then pretty soon
will we be needed. Oh boy, that was heavy, wasn't it.
Uh? This is weird because thisis like the sixth or seventh like Captain
and that has been fired. Captainof the missile submarine USS Alabama was fired

(46:04):
for loss of confidence. The submarinecan be armed twenty twenty nuclear missiles,
but you can fire in a matterof minutes. This guy, Commander Michael
Lyle, was relieved of command onSeptember twenty second. This was announced yesterday
Rear Admiral Nicholas Tilbrook, whose commanderof Submarine Group nine, relieve Lile of
command due to a loss quote lossof confidence in his ability to command.

(46:27):
That's according to the Navy news release. That's a very it's kind of apparently
it's reported as being patch all wordingwhen you have leaders that are relieved.
But it is kind of interesting becausethere have been like six I think so
far that have been relieated. Isent that out to you and your prep
so you would have some of that. Very interesting. Indeed, So get
this. The FBI was sued afterallegedly losing hundreds of thousands of rare coins

(46:52):
during a ray. Yeah lost,gosh, dang. They we just absolutely
just accidentally lost all these rare coins. So they're being sued. According to
a couple of different sources, heretwo Americans are suing. They said that
it's the FBI the loss that orstole their property and the way that they
seized it. They said it wasa shady process. It was in a

(47:13):
box and a safe and the FBIbroke in. According to an attorney with
the law firm that's representing the parties, they said that we don't know what
happened after the FBI broke into thebox. The Institute for Justice file two
lawsuits on behalf of their clients.It was a safety deposit box. That's
where these things were taken from.In March of twenty twenty one, they
said that the FBI they prevailed inCore. They said the FBI agreed to

(47:34):
return their property. When the Piersonsthat the one of the parties discovered their
property was missing. So you know, it's just like how you lose your
guns in a boating accident. Moving. I don't know. I think whether
from all parts of the political spectrum, one of the biggest issues that we
have when it comes to immigration isthe fact that we have an undocumented population.

(47:59):
Now, you can fix that bytrying to build a wall, or
you can fix that by trying todocument people. Hmm, what okay,
what's the matter with you? Whatare you doing over there? What's she
doing? She's almost got it,She's almost there there, that's AOC.

(48:19):
Welcome back to the program, Danalash with you. Bottom of this second
hour. She's just about there onthe she's trying to get off the struggle
bus. Maybe we have an undocumentedpopulation. That's a problem. Wow,
really tell us more about this.How does it? Yeah? What how
does that happen? So wild?It's crazy. Now on top of that

(48:39):
audio sound bait seventeen Customs and BorderPatrol they're saying, hey, you guys
know that border that nobody's paying attentionto right now? Yeah, there's all
kinds of stuff coming across FYI guys, Hey, hey listen, but the
Intel Arm of CBP has a newbulletin out and the headline is pretty alarming.
It says, in bold letters rightat the top or in fighters of

(49:00):
Israel Hamas conflicts may be encountered atsouthwest border. The Daily Caller got a
copy of this material. It wasdistributed three days ago, and it's about
Hamas Hezbla or Islamic Jehad fighters exploitingthe poorest border to get into the US.
Part of the concern is that terroristscan see a ton of traffic down
there. One rather, the newnumber is two point four eight million encounters

(49:22):
in a fiscal year, and amongthem at least one hundred and seventy two
people from the terror watch list.That is one hundred and seventy two who
actually came face to face with lawenforcement and didn't get away. That's kind
of a big deal, I think, big big deal to have that many.
I mean, we've been we haveno idea what's happening with our own

(49:43):
southern border, and we already knowthat there was at least one Hesboa linked
militant that came that was trying tocome through. So it's a big issue,
a very big issue. Courine JeanPierre speaking right now, We're not
going to take it. But well, Heaven knows what I can't imagine.
Heaven knows what she's what she's whatshe's gonna say, yeah, yeah,

(50:05):
or how she's going how she's goingto spend this. So the question of
when this kind of I don't thinkwe're going to know when any kind of
ground invasion takes place. I dothink, like I said, that they're
trying to bait us into war.I do believe that, uh. And
I also think that you can supportthe actions of israel I support however,

(50:35):
they need to take care of this, That's what they need to do.
And I think that the implications gofar beyond just that region. I gotta
tell you, this is a weirdstory. I saw this first a Daily
Wire. There was a survey thatwas done. Ryan Savadeira has the story.

(50:58):
It was a new survey that wouldreleased and it found they surveyed over
two thousand people from October sixteenth toOctober eighteenth to measure the public's not just
awareness of what was happening in theMiddle East, but attitudes about what was
happening, and they said that therewere fifty percent of people who had a

(51:20):
positive opinion of Israel, twelve percenthad a negative opinion, thirty seven percent
were neutral. The two groups,when you break it down further that had
the highest negative views of Israel wereMuslim Americans at thirty six point five percent,
followed by Democrats at fifteen percent,and the largest positive views were Jewish

(51:43):
Americans at eighty five percent and Republicansat sixty five percent. But they said
that the survey of the demographics,Muslim Americans seemed less aware of all of
these different aspects of atrocities that werecommitted by Hamas than Jewish Americans. So

(52:05):
apparently, like less than ten percentof Jewish Americans were unaware of the fact
that Hamas was decapitating kids, comparedto thirty four percent of Muslim Americans who
were not aware. Do you thinkI got to pause there, aware or
care? They found the survey thatHamas is viewed by the majority of Americans

(52:30):
as the same as Al Qaida,the Taliban, and ISIS. Muslim Americans
mostly agreed, but they over indexedslightly for saying that Hamas is not as
bad as each of the other terrororganizations. According to the survey, now
here's where it gets really really frightening. Fifty seven point five percent of Muslim

(52:52):
Americans, and there were over twothousand surveyed, said that they agreed that
quote and this is how it wasstated, and you agree or disagree,
was justified in attacking Israel as partof their struggle for a Palestinian state.
Of the surveyed, fifty seven pointfive percent said that they agreed. A

(53:15):
plurality still had a positive view ofthe leader of Hamas, almost forty percent
viewed him positively. That they justmurdered over fourteen hundred people. They just
murdered over thirty one Americans brutally.People were burned alive, and ten percent
of Americans, including nearly forty percentof American Muslims, have a favorable view

(53:38):
of the leader of Hamas. Thatis terrifying. Now. I think it's
worth noting in this that there iswhat I think, the number of Americans
who hold a negative view of Israelis very small in the survey. I

(53:58):
think they said what less than twelvepercent consider themselves in that category. I
don't know where it's just as wildin the United States, and this is
census information. They're not a hugepercentage Muslim Americans are a very small percentage

(54:23):
of the American population, but it'slike, you know, they really vote
overwhelmingly democrat. I'm trying to figureout the psychology of this because how you
can view Hamas in a positive manneror think that they're what they did was
justified. And this gets into thislong gooing and I know that you probably

(54:45):
heard me talk about this before,but I think it's so important that this
is a it's a problem that's morewidespread than just this area. There's a
very good piece that was written byJonathan Tobin, and this is kind of
what I've been saying, how notall Palestinians And I don't believe in that
term. I don't believe in thatterm because I don't think that it's a

(55:07):
group of people. They're Jordanian really, And again, I don't believe in
a Palestine that's never existed. It'snot supported by two thousand years of antiquity.
It's not mentioned in the Quran,it's not mentioned in the Bible.
And once again, the name comesfrom a reference that Hadrian gave the Jewish
people after they quelled another Judaeian uprising, and they named them after Syria Philistina,

(55:30):
the enemies of the Jews that had, like I think been that was
from several centuries earlier, and namedthem after the Philistines, who were actually
from Crete. They were seafaring peopleand not at all Arabic, and they
had they had left that area likeforever ago. So it was done spitefully
to disassociate Jewish people from the land, and people like Gasser Arafat, before

(55:52):
he became warden Food, promoted thisidea of like this magical group of people
that just like came out of theether and exists. I'm not I'm not
going to conjure this into our realityany more than I'm going to conjure into
reality the idea that a man canchop off his wighing and become a chick.
It doesn't exist. I believe inscience, and I believe in history.
I believe in fact. That's whyI'm a conservative. Not to that

(56:13):
point, it's a very good piece. Not all Palestinians are Hamas, but
Hamas does represent them, and thatis true. I told you before they
were popularly elected in two thousand andsix. Surveys in twenty twenty one showed
a landslide victory coming for them inthe elections. And so the reason that
the elections were postponed is because theruling authority of the two territories determined that

(56:35):
they didn't want Hamas to take overboth territories. And there was and probably
is some truth to the geopolitical approachto keeping these two factions, whether it's
FATA or Hamas, kind of ateach other's throats as to divide to control,
because even everybody understands that when youdivide people and you have different groups

(57:00):
at each other's throats so you cancontrol them. Can I just cyber from
a this is what I don't getabout the about the left. I hear
the left say this all the time. Oh well, net and Yahoo wanted
to give money and he wanted tosupport Hamas because that was a great way
to keep the two territories under control, because HAMAS and FATA were constantly at
each other's throats. Do you notrealize it's literally what you do here in
the United States with identity politics,and you're too much of a dumbass to

(57:21):
even know it. You literally dothe same thing, You support the exact
same tactics here in the United Statesto keep everybody at each other's throats so
you can control the population better.Interesting, the left has no concept of
irony, so they represent them becausethey were popularly elected. Numerous surveys had

(57:42):
showed that they have. They oh, they enjoy overwhelming support from gosins,
and so the idea I kept.You know earlier, I was hearing twesdays
solution from Anthony Blinke, and it'snot gonna It's not gonna happen. Hamas
is not an outlier. Uh.One of the things Tobin noted is that
in the Federalists is that New YorkMagazine, all these other people, they

(58:04):
try to argue that, well,you know, they don't represent the people.
Actually they do. I mean theyended up getting they were popularly elected,
and they view their own civilian casualtiesas like an asset to them politically,
as opposed to like a tragedy oran atrocity. I mean that's just
the way that they've always they've alwaysviewed it. They used their civilians as

(58:25):
human shields. But yet what getsme is that they've done this for decades,
but that has not at all contributedto a groundswall of opposition towards them,
not at all. You have peoplewho take to the streets to celebrate
terror attacks against Israel, and notjust in Gaza. You had tons of
people in the streets in Gaza thatcelebrated. You had tons of people.

(58:47):
We saw it. I mean,you saw the video. You can't deny
what you see with your own eyes. You can't deny what's being reported.
You can't deny what friends of yourswho are traveling through Europe see in big
cities that they're in. You can'tdeny it. And there were people who
were who were cheering. There werecheers they when they came back after they
they attacked Israel. I mean,they gave them like a hero's welcome.

(59:14):
FATA is the more moderate party andtheir leader, Machmad Abbas is the president
of the Palace quote unquote Palestinian authority, and they had this they had the
election in two thousand and six.That was something that w had pushed and
Hamas was they I mean, theywere so successful that Tobin notes too that

(59:36):
that was sort of the impetus fortheir coup that kicked FATA out of Gaza
strip and that's when in two thousandand five Israel withdrew everything. They did
everything possible to chase the peace thatnever comes. Because if Hamas wanted peace,
you would have peace. They wantedGaza, they got Gaza. That
wasn't enough. It's not that theywant Gaza, it's not that they want

(59:58):
West Bank, it's not that theywant their own place. They don't want
Jews to exist. That is Hamas. And by the way, they have
not been challenged for authority in Gaza, and that has just made them more
radical and more violent. It's atheir position. I mean they have and

(01:00:19):
and and you can say Fata ismoderate and that Obvius might be more moderate
than Hamas's leader, but they stilldo martyr's funds. That doesn't sound moderate
to me. I mean, you'repaying people's families that go and engage in
suicide bombing and else. That's theyget pensions for life. That's weird.
That's weird to me. That's notmoderate. Now they're in Geopol. In

(01:00:46):
a geopolitical situation like this, youhave to realize that at some point you
have to eliminate the threat. Andthat's why they've been warning for people to
get out out of the way,people to leave. Although Hamas. You
know, they need them there,so they've been blocking the roads, et
cetera. But Hamas has to beentirely struck off the face of the earth

(01:01:09):
otherwise this is never going to end. And this it's going to end up
causting more lives. It's going toend up going on and on and on.
It has to end. However,it has to end. We're sort
of like how you know, wewere looking at Japan in the in the
forties. This has to end.And you can't pretend that people who voted

(01:01:34):
for a ruling authority aren't supportive ofthe ruling authority. That's not to say
that every single person voted for them, but we are far beyond I think
decades passed prolonging things to take allof this into consideration. And that is
not a choice that Israel has made. That's not a choice that you've made
or anyone in the United States.It's a choice that Hamas made. And

(01:01:54):
it's a choice that all of thecountries that have been holding Israel back this
entire time have enabled it to make. Let's be honest about that. We
have more on the way. Wegot Florida man coming up too, and
you don't want to miss Florida Man, because that's the sanest part of the
day anymore. It's his life missionto make bad decisions. It's time for

(01:02:22):
Florida Man, all right. Sothis so he's a Tampa man in a
Buccaneers jersey, and he posed asa police officer and was trying to pull
over cars on I seventy five thathe's facing because you can't impersonate law enforcement.
So he was trying to pull peopleover in Brooksville, said troopers Earl

(01:02:45):
Cesario sixty two of Tampa. Hewas arrested taking to Sumter County Jail with
his Tampa Bay Buccaneers Charley On.A trooper pulled him over because he was
getting all these reports that this redGMC pickup was using red and blue flashing
lights and over other cars in histruck. Like who would pull over for
that? Though? Would you pullover for a truck? Like the hell?

(01:03:07):
I wouldn't. I'd be like youcome get me, and I'll be
like you weren't in a mark.I didn't trust you. I just say
I see lights. I'm not gonnadude, he's got red fuzzy dye in
his car, like, right,on the you know, because that's what
police do in their ford and theirGMC pickups. So they said he told
authorities that they were apparently lying thathe did not actually have his lights on,
but he did, uh, Andhe the driver said he thought it

(01:03:30):
was undercover law enforcement at the time, and he started pulling over. But
then he became suspicious after the trucksped off, So he was the one
who ended up uh contacting law enforcement. They did detain him. They they
took him into custody without incident.But oh my gosh, oh, let's
see here, boy, we gotsome Parents of the Year here coming up

(01:03:52):
in this too. Uh a Florida. So we got a Florida man arrested
for stealing and damaging an excavator.Let me, let's do the iguana.
This is a thing. So thisis a new one, not the same
one that I had like last month. This is brand new. A guy
in Hollywood, Florida, found aniguana straight up in his toilet. Took

(01:04:13):
a video of it too. Hesent it to Channel six NBC in South
Florida. And the lizard was hangingout in the dude's toilet bowl. It
looks huge. They called animal control. They got it out. They said
that the iguana tried to slither backdown the sewer system in the same way
that it came in. This seemslike it's common. And also the guy

(01:04:35):
has a pot leaf mat right thereby his toilet. I don't understand the
mats by the toilet. I don'tget that. Just like my grandparents and
the grandparents of millions of Jews.From now on, my team and I
will wear yellow stars. Hmm.This is the We will wear this star

(01:04:59):
until you condemn the atrocities of Ramasand demand the immediate release of our hostages
never again, is now. Thatis the Israeli and ambassador who oof.
That's they all put them on there. They put that old the yellow patch.

(01:05:21):
That that's what they were. Imean, you know the history behind
it where they were I mean duringNazism and caliphates, during the Middle Ages
and all of that. I mean, good Heavens, So that sends a
strong message. Welcome back to theprogram, Dana Lash here with you.
Always good to be with you.You can listen coast to coast. You

(01:05:42):
can stream the radio program. Youcan watch the simulcast channel three forty seven
on direct TV as well as YouTubebased book all that good stuff. Yes,
I'm dressed as Wednesday Atoms today throughwatching the simulcast. We do have
our werewolf here. He's which I'mgoing to I think we're gonna make him

(01:06:03):
green and put like a Santa haton him so he can be the Grench
for Christmas. Because you know,it's really good animatronics. It's this really
good. You can't even get thisat the Costco anymore. You can't even
get it at the Costco anymore.So anyway, so this, I that

(01:06:23):
was a very good I mean Ithink that that's that's I mean, it's
a good reminder and they're gonna haveto deal with it until they condemn this
stuff. Me. In the meantime, we've been talking about this ongoing spread
of anti Semitism across the nation atdifferent college campuses. I mean, we
were talking about University of Wisconsin,Madison, Cornell. What gets me is

(01:06:45):
at University of Wisconsin at Madison,I mean, they had people standing outside
of their Jewish center for students.It's all like their worship center, screaming
blank the Jews through a megaphone,talking about screaming from the River to the
Sea, the fictional country that's Palestine, that never existed in history, will
be free all this other stuff.Now, apparently that's okay, But didn't

(01:07:12):
they say, I mean, they'relisteners that have made a really good point.
Were this is Halloween, right,it's Halloween. People were told you
can't even wear a sombrero for Halloweenbecause you might make somebody feel unsafe if
you wear a sombrero. You can'tdress up like an American Indian because you

(01:07:36):
might offend somebody. You make themfeel unsafe. You could offend them,
make them feel make them feel bad. So no, you can't. You
can't dress up as that. Whatare all some of the other costumes.
You can't dress up as Kane,you can't know sombreros, you can't Helly,
you can't even eat tacos on Tuesday? What else? No, you
can't like ninja outfits. Remember theygot all upset at ninja outfits. Wait,

(01:07:59):
I'm sorry what? Yeah? Yeah, you can't dress up as well
over ninjas. Yeah, you're Asianappropriating. Well I know that they u
There was a girl who was dressingin a kimono for a prom because she
thought it was just it was gorgeousand a lot of people got mad at
her and they went after her.Oh yeah, so yeah, Ninja and
Samurai. Oh you can't do that, can do everything is so stupid.

(01:08:23):
But you can stand outside of astudent center with a megaphone and scream about,
you know, blank the Jews,no good jew like a dead Jews
what they were screaming. Apparently,that's okay, And there's apparently and I
apparently there's video of it that existstoo. But hey, that's yeah,
that's that's that. They allow that. That's you know, that you can
do. But no sombrero for you. Yeah, you can't wear sombrero.

(01:08:45):
Uh, you can't do any ofthat. I mean, by the way,
So University of Wisconsinent Madison, wherethey have people outside the Jewish Center
they're screaming all these invectives and allthis blood libel, that was okay.
But back in twenty twenty one theyremoved rock because they said it was racist.
Yeah. I am looking at theoffice of the Chancellor and they have

(01:09:09):
a piece up there. It's onthe University of Wisconsin at Madison, their
website, what a rock has todo with racism? They said that they
removed this forty two ton rock knownas the Chamberlain Rock from their main campus.
They said that it's a rock.By the way, They said that
they talked to people from the geologydepartment and all these other things about the

(01:09:31):
rock, and they said that somepeople said that the rock was the symbol
of anti blackness. I'm sorry,what it's a rock? Are you what?
What? They don't actually tell youwhat the hell the rock is.
They have Oh my gosh, thisis like a oh my gosh, it's
like a four thousand word piece onthis dumb ass rock. I'm not kidding

(01:09:53):
you. They don't actually tell youwhy because I know nothing about this rock.
And they were they moved it backin let's pull this up. They
removed it. It's literally just arock. People said that it was a
symbol of racism. Why is ita symbol of racism? Well if you
were, They said that it's becausethe it had a nickname at one point.

(01:10:16):
What can anyone write a story wherethey just tell you what the hell's
going on instead of just, youknow, giving you all this stupid stuff.
They said it was it's the ChamberlainRock, and let's see if the
AP can do it right, Let'ssee if the AP can get it,
if the stupid if their stupid pagewill load. Maybe not. But they

(01:10:39):
said that it was apparently a symbolof racism somehow, and that, uh,
it's forty two ton rock, itoccupied Varia, blah blah blah,
there's a photo bl blah blah.Oh can you just tell me that not
even their morons, that their papercan do it. Apparently, they said
that the Black Students' Union said therock was offensive and harmful. Well why

(01:11:00):
why? Oh? It had anickname. It had a racial slur as
a nickname. At one point Ihad to actually google an old image of
an old newspaper to get the storybecause none of these people educated at these
universities had been taught how to writean actual damn news story. So it

(01:11:23):
had a racial slur as a nickname. So why don't you just rename it,
right you? I mean, whocares? It's a rock? Hell?
Have I know? So it's gonnabe racist wherever it's moved, it's
gonna go spread. I mean they, I don't know if I've ever seen

(01:11:43):
anything so dumb in my whole life. They literally got in a giant work
crew, and they got this massivesling to get the rock in the sling
a Precambrian irre glacial erratic, whateverthe hell that is. It's a rock.

(01:12:06):
And they removed it. And thenthey had to do a whole big
thing because they said they had tohave their historical society sign off because it
was located within fifty feet of aNative American burial site. Oh my gosh,
it is a rock. They gota giant flatbed and they literally it
was just because of a slur forthe nickname. Fifty thousand dollars it cost

(01:12:28):
to move the rock. I mean, you could just rename it. I
mean you could have just done that, but I don't know, Cain.
Anyway, My whole point in bringingthis up is that at University of Wisconsin,
Madison, they removed they spent fiftythousand dollars to remove a rock because

(01:12:54):
the rock was racist. But it'stotally fine to stand outside of the Jewishish
Students Center and scream blood libel througha megaphone. I'm confused here, Kane.
So again, the rock was racist, not like the rock the actor,

(01:13:14):
but like an actual geologue. Whatdid they say? It was a
pre Cambrian geological erratic, whatever thehell that is. That's racist. The
physical thing, the rock, actualpebble, the large pebble boulder. But
standing outside again the Jews student centeryelling blood libel through a megaphone is okay,

(01:13:38):
okay, So that's okay, Andthat's not just the only mean.
You have University of Michigan Cornell wherethey had to literally lock students in the
library. That's crazy. All ofthis stuff so bad. They've they've spent
We've have sheltered and doctrinated kids atthese educational institutions. That is what has

(01:14:03):
happened. I think they need tolearn, lose their accreditation and all of
that. Carol Markowitz, my friendCarol Markowitz, made a great point because
she says, remember how they didthe cancel. The left was going,
oh my gosh, you're engaging incancel culture. You're trying to cancel the
students that are screaming blood libel.Well, there's a difference between speech,

(01:14:24):
and there's literally a difference between thatand agreen with a terrorist group that wants
to kill us all and start withjust the Jewish people, there's a big
difference. Are you too stupid?Are you too inbred to know the difference.
So I'm curious. Is your familytree one branch, just a giant
trunk, is it? I mean, seriously, I question these people.

(01:14:48):
Oh that's not a tree. It'sa pole. It's a pole. Oh,
you sweet little thing, it's apole. It's not a tree that
leads people to you know, callthis cancel culture. Carol Marcowitz made the
point, I'm just so worried thatif these kids are named to their future
employees find out that I'll be participatingin cancel culture. You know, ugh,
like sand as a joke about it, but for real though, So

(01:15:10):
wait a minute. I mean we'rein Halloween. Everyone's told you can't dress
up as this, you can't dressup as that, you can't dress that,
you can't do this. Apparently I'mviolating some kind of made up rule
from some one of the writers whatever, because you're you're not supposed to dress
up as characters from things that theywere boycotting or something. So Wednesday Adams

(01:15:30):
was part of it. Shut up, I ain't doing that. Uh,
I'm just I'm curious. It's gota lot of questions about this, right,
lots of questions. So safe spaceor no. And then also,
here's the other thing I'm confused aboutwhere it comes to cancel culture, because
I was told that it's totally fineby the left to cancel all the things.

(01:15:55):
These are their rules, right,I mean, isn't that that those
are their rules about cancel culture.So it only goes to prove that what
now they're against cancel culture? Itmakes this make sense, Kane, I

(01:16:18):
wish I had the ability. Idon't. I don't either. I don't.
I mean, I just I thoughtthat cancel culture. Now they're for
it. I don't know. Yeah, the Chamberlain Rock is what it's called.
I wanted to share this too,so the Welsh Labor Party shared a

(01:16:44):
tweet where they said the paths ofBlack history and Welsh history are indivisible.
There's no history of Wales without thehistory of black experiences in Wales. I
think you can totally say that allthese experiences today are a part of you
know, modern Whales. But thisis a country that's like literally what zero

(01:17:10):
point nine percent minority. I thinkpeople are reacting to the try too hard,
That's what I'm getting out of this. The virtue signaling is off the
charts, so coming up. Theyreplaced all the dwarves and snow White with
CGI. Well they didn't. Theyweren't dwarves. They were regular I don't

(01:17:34):
know how to say it came.They were people that were just magical people
dressed as hippies. They weren't dwarves. And a lot of dwarf actors or
little people actors were mad because they'relike, we wanted a dwarf role and
Peter Dnkli's ruined it. I meanthere were a ton of little people actors
that came out. They were ragingabout this, which is understandable. I

(01:17:55):
mean it's like, I mean,hell, I would I want that role.
They'd be fun to do, right, to run around and get They
let me probably use a table saw. I mean all kinds of stuff.
I'm just saying, you know,I don't get to do that in my
house. Uh, but like allkinds of fun stuff. But my whole
point is that they've had have youseen, like there was a still that
they say is from the movie andit's the CGI dwarves with the real like

(01:18:20):
human snow White. It looks sodumb. We got to talk about this
also. DeSantis Versus Meet the Pressover guns, and he stood his ground
and was right, we're gonna talkabout that as well. And now all
of the news you would probably missit's time for Dana's Quick five. I'm
like bummed we didn't get into thelike the aggressive guitar strumming with that song.

(01:18:42):
Uh okay. So apparently doctors saythat you've been blowing your nose wrong
and they should shut up. Reallyis there? They said, yeah,
you can like it. You shouldonly blow one nostril at a time.
Says who, I do what Iwant. I do what I want,
just saying they say, it's supposedto be gently from my nostril at a
time. Okay, just let peopledo with it. Really, there's a

(01:19:05):
thing. Yeah. So this guywho's dressed up as a banana try to
run away from the police. Thisactually should be a Florida man story.
It's not, though. It was. In Key West, a man dressed
as a banana tried to slip outof police custody. He was caught peine
on a Key West sidewalk. Hewas flagged down at the police who were

(01:19:27):
looking for a white male in abanana costume, and they found him.
He was peen across from a rowof forty potties. So and he was
Kyle Mortimer twenty was taken. He'sso drunk, he's just drunk. It
dressed as a banana. Goodness.All right, we got a lot more
on the way. Stay with us. Bottom of the hour. Ooh,

(01:19:49):
Philly Canaan and I chose a hometownfavorite, the urge going to the liquor
store or open all night as itwere, because we feel like this represents
the hunt for bread in Philly.Uh. That's what we can see on
the videos. If you're watching thesimulcast of the nationally syndicated radio show on
channel three and forty seven direg TVYouTube, Facebook. Always good discussions,

(01:20:12):
that's what's happening. Maybe the breadis in liquid form and in a bottle.
It could be. Science has donesome amazing things. I've seen watermelons
grown as cubes and available in supermarkets, so who knows, but diluting the
criminal actions everything. We had thisheadline where you have CEOs of major retailers
that are saying, look, youguys, this is getting out of handed.

(01:20:34):
And it's not just in a coupleof cities anymore. This is so
widespread that this is affecting local economiesbecause stores are having to leave for crying
out loud. Okay, what wasit Nike in Portland? They had that's
like their home, isn't there thatseaper Fontane and ever, that's like their
whole thing. They closed forever.Oh my gosh. Joining me right now,

(01:20:57):
my good friend Jason Rants, whohas a book out of this where
he dives into all of this what'skilling America inside the radical left's tragic destruction
of our cities. And Jason's fromPacific Northwest, So I mean he I'm
shocked at the Nike store closed.That's that's an iconic that was like their
headquarters. That's an iconic thing.And to lose that, no one on

(01:21:20):
the left, Jason has stopped andsaid, wow, now this might be
getting out of control now finally,I mean, if anything, they look
at this as some corporation that's finallygoing somewhere else, which was basically how
they responded in Seattle where we closeda very Nike store. Portland. I
mean, we're seeing this all acrossthe board. Of course, this week

(01:21:42):
we learned that Target was also closinga number of stores across the United States.
In New York, some in Oregonand in Washington State, and you
know, you would think that atsome point someone might step back and say
things are going in the wrong direction, but of course they don't seem to
think any thing is wrong, andthat's a big problem. That's frankly,
it's why I wrote What's Going America? Yeah, and with with this too

(01:22:08):
kind of I guess this has beenkind of a sort of a result of
this restorative justice where we've seen theseyou know, these prosecutors and I think
even you know in LA and we'veseen them in Saint Louis and New York
obviously, where they'll even give anAlbuquerque, they'll give standing orders. Well
let's not go and go after thesetypes of misdemeanors. And I know in

(01:22:30):
California they had a limit like ifyou if it only up to this limit,
it's okay. So it's like ayou're advertising to all these criminals,
Okay, it's a free for all. If you engage in this kind of
behavior, We're going to give youa pass in the name of restorative justice.
That I don't think that has thatworked anywhere to lower crime. Jason,
in any city that's tried no certainlynot at the level that we're talking

(01:22:51):
about now. If we're talking aboutlet's say some sixteen year olds who steals
a butterfinger from a seven to eleven, restorative justice is meant for that person.
This is someone who can obviously besaved. But when you are going
to that same seven to eleven forthat butterfinger armed with a handgun and you're
holding people up and you are gotshooting that gun, then no, this
is not supposed to be for you. And unfortunately we're sort of justice advocate.

(01:23:15):
They make no difference between both ofthose cases. They treat them exactly
the same, and that does adisservice not just to the individual victim who
maybe we can save, including savedfrom ultimate death, because usually they get
into more trouble the farther out thatthey go into their career here. But
we're obviously we're not serving the community, we're not serving the victims. But

(01:23:38):
a key tenant for the radical leftis that they believe that the actual criminals
are victims, that the criminal justicesystem itself is something that needs to be
dismantled because it's a system of oppression, which doesn't actually mean anything. That's
a great point. I'm talking withJason Raysay's new book, What's Killing America
Inside the Radical lefts tragic destruction ofour cities, and that restorative justice is.

(01:24:00):
When it was originally conceived and introducedto the public, it was just
as you said, like, oh, here's a young individual. They're making
their first mistake. You know,maybe they don't have the greatest support structure
around them. Let's work and tryto get I mean, I understand the
motivation behind that way more than howwe see it used today, where if
you have repeat offenders, who violent, violent criminals, Oh well, let's

(01:24:25):
just you know, it's because theythey keep being taken advantage of by this
this horrible system. It's so discriminatorytowards them. Well, at some point
this repeat defender has to take responsibilityfor what they're doing and these crime I
mean, we're having retail leave thesecities. I think in San Francisco I
was looking at that. It variesdepending on who's reporting it, but the
number of businesses that have left,I don't know what that's going to do

(01:24:47):
to their tax base. You know, these cities, Jason, that rely
on those tax dollars to help fundyou know, the security and the police.
This is this is really reforming whatcities look like. What do cities
look like now? Absolutely, SanFrancisco, I think, is a perfect
example. This was a city thatI legitimately think this is a city that
cannot be saved at this point.I think it's too far gone. I

(01:25:10):
think that a lot of other citiesare at the precipice and we can pull
things back, We can go inthe right direction. You just have to
know what to look for. Sortof justice on paper sounds great. Harm
reduction sounds great. Housing first soundsgreat. Now, if I were to
ask the average person out on thestreet if they could define any of those
terms, not a single person willbe able to tell me that that's a

(01:25:32):
problem, because all of those issuesare behind the crises that are facing these
cities. You go into any majorcity, you're going to see homelessness out
of control. You're going to runinto people who are openly smoking fentanyl or
meth, and you're going to seea crime crisis. And yet, weirdly,
at the exact same time, thecost of living in those cities is
sky high. And for the peoplewho thought that it would just stay in

(01:25:56):
these big cities. Let me tellyou this is Vegas. The bad policies
of San Francis, Go or NewYork, Atlantis, Chicago, Seattle,
they don't stay there. They spreadvery quickly. When the radical left told
us that they wanted to dismantle systemsof oppression, they were being upfront with
us. That's the one thing onecredit I will give them. They didn't
lie to us. They told usupfront that they wanted to dismantle these systems.

(01:26:16):
Well, they've done that. They'verebuilt, and they've implemented some significant
institutional changes that are not just goingto go away with the flip of the
switch. So number one, youhave to understand what it is we're looking
for the why, why do theybelieve what they believe? Why are they
implementing certain programs? And when youhave that information, you can then get
to a point where you can startpulling them back. Because right now I

(01:26:40):
fear that there are a lot ofpeople all across the country, a lot
of people are listening right now andthey say to themselves, yes, something
doesn't feel right, something's off.We see the crime crisis, we're seeing
homelessness out of control, housing crisis, We're seeing our education system go into
the trash, but they don't knowwho's responsible or what's responsible. Can't connect
the dots on their own. Theyneed some help. And that's what I'm

(01:27:02):
trying to do with What's Killing America. We're talking to my friend Jason Rants,
a talk radio host himself his newbook, What's Killing America? You
you brought up a really good pointwith that in terms of connecting the dots
because for a long time, andI still think that, you know,
elections where you have judges on theballot, and you know, you people
are looking at attorney general and they'relooking at some of these you know,
lesser known, maybe more unattractive.They're not really in the headlines all the

(01:27:26):
time. Well now they are,but you know, at least, you
know, ten years ago, theyweren't. And I think that's sort of
they were sort of forgotten by alot of voters. And then I also
see, and which I understand,the narrative of the Soros backed prosecutors.
I do think that that's absolutely true. But we've been getting bad das and
bad judges for a long time.This is this is like the would you

(01:27:46):
agree that this is sort of thethe result of a problem that's been decades,
not just a decade in the making. Absolutely, and I would go
a step further. It's not evenjust the judges. It's pretty much any
race in which you just don't geta lot of attention, including school board
directors, which I think are incrediblyimportant, but you have so many people
who either don't do the research,or you've got people who don't have kids,

(01:28:09):
who don't really care, and they'renot really connecting the dots themselves.
Of well, those kids who graduatebecome our next leaders, and they're getting
farther and farther to the left.So in cases of judges, I mean,
we're seeing these stories every single day. We have one in Washington State
recently where a suspect was accused ofa pretty significant and long term series of

(01:28:30):
rate against his minor daughter and hewas released on ten thousand dollars bail.
That means he only had to putup one thousand dollars and he's out there.
You've got individuals who are shooting weapons, shooting guns at police officers,
and they're being released on their ownpersonal recognizance. We have a cash list
veil system. Whether we're talking aboutIllinois or New York where it's spodified into

(01:28:53):
law, or in places like Washingtonand California, which effectively just have judges
who have that discretion and they're ableto do whatever it is they want.
How often in any media reports doyou know the name of a judge?
How often do they tell you that? Almost never? And so for me
personally, when I'm covering these storieson my radio show, in any of
my work online, I go outof my way. I'm going to make

(01:29:14):
sure you know who this judge is. You should know they are in Washington
State. All of our judges areelected, some of are pointed when some
step down, but they're elected positions. And it's absolutely insane what's been going
on, but no one knows,no one's following it. That's such a
great point. That's a very goodpoint. Well, this is I think
a very like such a timely book. Obviously, what's killing America inside the

(01:29:38):
radical left? Tragic destruction of ourcities. And as you were saying,
you know, just kind of lastlast thoughts on this, and it was
with cities like San Francisco you said, which I acknowledge it, but I
don't think I've ever heard anybody verbalizeit just like that that you're given up
on, like San Francisco. Soif San Francisco is is has failed at

(01:30:00):
this point, what's the next citythat's getting ready to fall over that cliff?
I think there are lots you canput on that list. I think
Portland and Seattle, I think Chicago, Atlanta are always at the top of
the list. It doesn't mean thatthey're going to fail. It means they're
clearly on the wrong path and theyare quickly failing. And so unless people
get in the way of that failure, it's just going to continue to go.

(01:30:20):
It's going to snowball, like what'shappening in San Francisco, where all
of a sudden people are leaving,businesses are leaving, and lots of people
are suffering, and the unforce realitythere are a lot of people on the
ground who want to pretend nothing iswrong withsoever. They want to just completely
gaslight us, and they're doing itto their own detriment. Yeah they are.
It's it's sowing chaos and like insome ways legalizing it by not enforcing

(01:30:45):
the law against it. Jason Rants, the book is what's killing America Inside
the radical lefts tragic destruction of ourcities. And you can listen to Jason's
radio show as well, and ofcourse his hometown in Seattle. There.
Jason, thank you so much forwhat you do. Good to see you
own five as well. Good totalk with you. Of course, take
care. We have more to comefolks, as we wrap up this third
hour of our broadcast. Yeah,San Francisco. I it's it's like something

(01:31:11):
I think we've all thought of,but that's the first time anybody's ever said
it. I think it's too fargone, too far gone. I the
last time I was in San Franciscowas gosh, maybe maybe six maybe fifteen
years ago, actually fifteen or sixteenyears ago, and it was kind of

(01:31:32):
sketch even then, you know,with drug addicts and stuff like that.
And I remember I was in anice hotel and walking out of the hotel
and there was literally like a homelessperson who had urinated on themselves and there
was that was like the first timeI ever saw, like out in the
wild, a drug syringe, youknow, right next to someone. I'm
like, oh my gosh. Andit was right it was like across the
street was a Starbucks. I meanit was just that, and no one

(01:31:55):
else was like really paying attention toit. With me, it was like
seeing a two headed calf. I'mlike, oh my gosh, that's yes,
that's wild. I wake up everyday optimistic. I'd say, put
your money on me. We're goingto get this done. Now. I'm
not counting you. That's that's onething people say. That's one thing people
say, don't count you out.But I'm just talking about whether you're able
to wrangle those those crazy cats onboth crazy cats. That sounds like a

(01:32:20):
beatnick, But those crazy wrangling catsthat you're trying to accomplish, What are
the chances that that finally happens.I don't We don't know. If you
want to do it by a clock, I don't know what to give you
the odds on a clock. Butif you want to, if you want
to gauge at the end of theday, do we get this done?
Yeah? Well, I don't thinkthat we need to get anything done.

(01:32:41):
That includes whether it's you know,I billions for Ukraine and Tim Scott consider
here go. Oh, they're goingto pay back. I promised as much
as he wants to. But nobodybelieves that as long as it includes anything
like that. No no, no, no, no, no thanks.
We're not buying it. Believe it. And with this the shutdown is supposed

(01:33:02):
to be twelvel one Saturday night twelvelone am Sunday morning technically, but you
know what I mean. And whetherthey I don't know they can get it
or not. There are some Republicansthat are trying to save themselves with us.
You need to be concerned about savingthe American people, not If you
do the right thing voters, votersare gonna support you. You're not going

(01:33:25):
to be punished by your base fordoing the right thing and being responsible,
a responsible steward of their money.This is not gonna happen. So stopping
afraid of doing the right thing.Then do you see what Fetterman did.
I don't feel bad for him.I don't like him, and I still
think he's a buffoon, and Ithink that he does costplay as the every
man, even though I do thinkthat he feels bad about himself. He

(01:33:45):
I guess thought I saw this onTwitchy. He was trying to pull a
stunt. He got a case ofbud Light and this is so cringe.
He got a case of bud light, He tweeted this morning, I directed
my staff to deliver a kipt tocongratulate and slut representative of Comer and his

(01:34:06):
Team America squad as they embark onthe historic impeachment journey. And it had
a note that said to Rep.Comer and his squad, a profile encouraged
can make a guy thirsty. Congratulationsthe buds for you, and it's a
case of bud light and okay,you're gonna give them crap beer? And

(01:34:30):
how did he think that this was? This is just stupid. What is
this supposed to? You? Likebud light? So why would you give
him something that you like? Isee that and I think he's admitting Dylan
mulvaney's a man. Oh really,because he's like, well, makes a
man thirsty. So it's a littlesome bud light, right, so maybe

(01:34:53):
who knows. I it's just it'scringe to me. I don't know why
I thought that. Ugh just deepand miles awide it just so, nah,
I don't know, this is bad. Yeah, that's to me.
You really showed him whoa wow?What a what a put down? Whoa

(01:35:14):
whoa? No, No, it'snot how it works. You didn't have
that up? Did you? Howdid it? Yeah? Oh you know
what? Here here, I'll fixthat right now. It's my birthday.
There it is. That was everysingle time that you know, Vivek spoke,
I was just just shut up,dude, turn your mic off.

(01:35:35):
I said. Earlier someone was likeEugene Levy. I don't get it.
Google Eugene Levy and look at hiseyebrows. I said that the last night's
debate was just a giant, elaboratesting organization to make Doug Bergram give back
Eugene Levey's eyebrows. That's all Isaid. All right, today's stupidity came.
All right, this hearing going onfor the impeachment inquiry. Jasmine Crockett's

(01:35:56):
a Democrat. She was out aboutsay the only thing she thinks Biden is
guilty of. Let's hear this.But I will tell you what the president
has been guilty of. He hasunfortunately been guilty of loving his child unconditionally.
And that is the only evidence thatthey have brought forward. These moves

(01:36:16):
are as transparent as the glue onour fake lashes. Stop it. That
talking point went out. That talkingpoint went out. It's literally all they've
been doing in this hearing is talkingabout guilty unconditionally. He loves the Sun's
wrong with you people. I didn'teven get to do the Aztec death whistle,

(01:36:39):
but we'll do that tomorrow. We'llsay that is a Friday treat.
There you go, folks, havea great night. Go subscribe over to
subsack chapterain verse. I'll be backbehind him view tomorrow. Thanks for the
happy birthdays.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

It’s 1996 in rural North Carolina, and an oddball crew makes history when they pull off America’s third largest cash heist. But it’s all downhill from there. Join host Johnny Knoxville as he unspools a wild and woolly tale about a group of regular ‘ol folks who risked it all for a chance at a better life. CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist answers the question: what would you do with 17.3 million dollars? The answer includes diamond rings, mansions, velvet Elvis paintings, plus a run for the border, murder-for-hire-plots, and FBI busts.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.