Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Danish show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in, thrilled to be with you. A bunch of
stuff to talk about out there in the world. My
voice might not be as strong as it usually is
because I wound up going to the Yankee game again
last night. Last second decision and a terrible decision actually,
with how the Yankees got beat up at the end
of that game by the Astros. Anyway, you don't care
(00:20):
about that. Let's get to some of the news that
matters to you, to me, to everybody. Let's start with this.
This is just a weird thing, and I don't know
if I'm going to do a lot on it, but
I wanted to mention it. And I think there's even
audio of like, and there's video out there on social
media of people discussing this. Kim Jong un, who traveled
(00:40):
to China, the dictator of North Korea, he brought his
own toilet. This is something I guess he does a lot,
and I think we've seen stories about this before, but
it's to protect the information regarding his health from anyone
else knowing anything about it. Which, by the way, if
you're at a point in your life where you need
(01:01):
to bring your own toilet along. You're probably not healthy,
you know, like, I can't imagine you do this same
level of craziness if everything's fine with your health. But
they say that it's important in the crazy place that
is North Korea to protect the you know, health information
of the dictator. And so he brings his own toilet.
(01:21):
And then here's the funniest part to me, not like
funny haha, but funny. Oh that's terrible, which is a
weird way to describe it. He actually has staff members
who have to clean the toilet and remove the things
in the toilet because you know, again it's a portable
one that he brings along with him. It should be
a porter potty, that says Kim Jong un, only on it.
(01:44):
That would be funnier to me than the fancy porcelain
thing that they have. They really should just bring along,
you know, a I don't know, one of those John
toilet things and have that be what he uses. But
darn it, he brings his own toilet. He actually scrubs
any place he stays in for hair and other things too,
you know, so normal behavior, not completely insane ridiculous behavior,
(02:07):
which is of course what probably happens when you become
a dictator of some plays. But nonetheless, this is all
to make sure that you don't know if he's healthy
or not, which makes me feel like he's not healthy.
All right, other stuff out there. Jadie Vance took a
trip yesterday to you know, remember the people who were
killed in the shooting in Minneapolis, the little kids who
(02:30):
were shot at a church tied to his school. And look,
mainstream media hates jd Vance. They hate Trump, of course,
but they hate Vance differently. Dvance is very capable of
saying things the way that other politicians say them. He
doesn't always do it, but he's very capable. He's very
very articulate, eloquent, he's well spoken, and they don't like
(02:53):
that about him. He's well educated, all those things, and
he behaves that way. He did say what I thought
was pretty moving stuff after a day interacting with the
families of both the victims, those who lost their children
and those who had their children injured in the shooting,
and he said, this is the kind of thing that
(03:14):
stays with a person forever, and I bet you it does.
So this is a very human, but very interesting comment
from the vice president of the United States. Again, mainstream
media will not use this audio because they don't want
to humanize other people that they want you to hate.
But this is about as human as it gets. From JD.
Van's Here we.
Speaker 2 (03:32):
Go, I have never had a day that will stay
with me like this day did, because I really felt
like these parents, in the midst of the worst grief
of their entire lives, they opened up their lives and
they opened up their hearts and they made me part
of it.
Speaker 1 (03:47):
So I'd ask a couple of.
Speaker 2 (03:48):
Things straight from the parents and straight from the families
to my fellow Americans. First of all, while two kids
lost their lives, there's still one kid that's in very
serious condition. And every single family, the family of Lydia,
who luckily recovered, but we visit her in the hospital,
the family of the two who died, Harper and Fletcher,
all three of those families said, please say a prayer.
(04:10):
So now, my fellow Americans, if you're the praying type,
say a prayer for this innocent girl who's actually in
surgery right now, that the swelling will go down, that
she will be okay, because she's still in a fight
for her life. And every single family to a person
is desperate that the death toll, which currently is at two,
stays it too. And I think if you're a praying type,
(04:31):
you ought to say a prayer for the Sennessee young girl.
The second thing that I'd say is, look, I'm speaking
to my fellow Americans who are parents in particular. There
is nothing that you can say that can take away
the grief that these parents are dealing with. There is
no word that can possibly describe the feeling, or the
emotion or the heartbreak. One of the ways that I'm
going to try to honor these parents and the children
(04:54):
that they lost is by being a better dad and
hugging my kids tight tonight and making sure that they
know that their dad loves them, because there are two
families who are not going to get that opportunity ever again.
And if you do have kids, if you're lucky enough
to have a son or a daughter, make sure that
they know that they love you. Make sure that you
hug your kids tight, because there are families in Minneapolis
(05:16):
and won't be able to do that everything.
Speaker 1 (05:17):
I know it's annoying to have the plane behind them
just going in the background, but that's incredible and heartfelt
and honest. It's a lot of different things, and it's
the kind of thing we probably all would feel if
we interacted with the families of people in the situation
that they're in. It's surreal in a way. And again,
(05:38):
the biggest reason I play this and all of the
different calls for prayers is because of the ongoing back
and forth in media and all the places, all the
Democrats who say prayers don't matter and they don't do anything,
and they're not effective whatever the families are asking for them.
The families are people of faith and they would like
for you to pray for their families and their children
(05:59):
and the little girl who was in surgery yesterday. They
want you to offer that for them. And so to
say no, say it's inappropriate, no one should do it
is a unique slap in the face to people who
are going through one of the most horrific things that
happens to any family anywhere in the world. It's something else.
But again, I wanted to play the audio because I
(06:20):
think jad Vance is actually quite good at that. If
you remember, during the debate, he kind of crushed his opponent,
who was a fairly easy opponent to crush but this
is something that he doesn't get credit for. They shape
Vance as some you know, horrible, terrible person, just like
they'd shaped Trump, but differently. And so I think it's
important to play that audio today for a lot of reasons.
(06:42):
All Right, something else I really love that's out there.
Ben Shapiro crushed CNN. It was hilarious to watch on
a multitude of issues. Ben Shapiro was, you know, seeing
even just making faces sometimes when the Democrats were talking.
But what I think is really funny is when you
(07:02):
show up unprepared and you're going up against the guy
like the Ben Shapiro and he has all the goods
and all the receipts, and you do not. It doesn't
go well for you. And I'll play a couple of
these pieces of audio. We probably will play more of
this throughout the show. But here's a couple moments where
Ben sparred with talking heads on CNN.
Speaker 3 (07:22):
Those pictures around it was about patriotism. It was about
trying to get people excited about what could happen in
this country. This president is trying to raise money by
putting tariffs on our adversaries and allies alike in ways
that don't make any sense.
Speaker 4 (07:34):
There is no demonstration largest TIFFs in America.
Speaker 3 (07:38):
Nothing.
Speaker 4 (07:39):
Spent most of his administration ripping on what he called
the malefacturers.
Speaker 3 (07:42):
The great well, we're still living off of a lot
of the public works administration were building.
Speaker 4 (07:48):
By the way, why are you against what Trump is doing?
Because he's doing a much lesser version of what FDI.
Speaker 3 (07:53):
No Trump Trump Trump has Again, the left hand doesn't
know what the right hand is doing. Let me give
you an example an incohip building. If you're a competent
of you better well you're just this is this is rhetoric,
but shipbuilding is a great.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
Okay, I really love the if you were competent, it
would be better as opposed to being incompetent. About how
he's adding tariffs to society and how FDR himself very
much believe the tariffs with the right road to gain
money for the government, not necessarily to take a whole
bunch of our money via taxes, which is what Trump
also believes. And by the way, I do love that
everybody pretends as though this is all willy nilly, like
(08:28):
it doesn't make any sense, But all of it is
an aggressive This is how I understood the math an
aggressive version of whatever our deficit is as far as
trade goes with the country, We're going to go ahead
and fix that by having a tariff that corresponds to
that deficit. And then you're like, well, wait, some of
the countries we added you know, tariffs to, we don't
actually have a deficit with them. Well, we kind of
feel like we do in other ways, whether it's red
(08:50):
tape and things that block the amount of goods that
we think we should be sending into those countries that
are not actually going there, the inability for our you know,
companies to make a lot of money when going into
other countries. There's other ways that we do the math.
You can call it girl math if you want, which
is a funny thing from social media where you decide
to buy something based on all the money you're saving
(09:12):
by not buying it more expensive later down the road,
Like if something's on sale, you have to buy it.
Is what I've heard is the version of girl math,
because if you buy it when it's not on sale anymore,
twice the cost, so really you're saving the sale money.
We could have done a version of that with tariffs,
but who cares. By the way too, because the effective
part is that it's creating a bunch of deals, which
(09:33):
is all Trump really wanted. And for anyone that's not
doing a deal, we're raking in tons of money, hopefully
money that the judicial system doesn't make us go ahead
and refund and send back places. But I just love
every part of that one. Here's another one. This is
Ben Shapiro blasting CNN and their tone deaf stance on
Trump's crime crackdown. This is something that even amazingly, David
(09:57):
Axelrod is all four. I'm saying, again and again, just
accept the help from Trump. Stop saying that you love
the crime that exists in cities. So we'll go ahead
and play the Shapiro clip. Now, we'll probably play axe
the Rod a little bit later on in the show today,
but here we go.
Speaker 5 (10:12):
What is to stop that?
Speaker 6 (10:13):
Ben?
Speaker 4 (10:14):
I mean, I think that, to be fair, the exertion
of more power by the executive branch has been an
ongoing process for the course of the last twenty years.
Minimum And you saw the Obama administration declared national emergencies
something like twelve national emergencies, or under President Obama something
like nine under Joe Biden, and they've had President Trump
declare a why variety of national emergencies? This isn't a
unilateral problem. I think it is a bilateral problem. With
(10:37):
that said, I think that we should separate a few
strands here. One is the legal that Eli was talking about.
One of the other things here, though, is I think
what Van was referring to, which is President Trump does
have a habit of wrong footing his political opponents in
a unique way on this sort of stuff. There are
five hundred and seventy four murders in Chicago last year,
and you can make the argument, I think a plausible argument,
that National Guard troops should not be on the ground
(10:57):
enforcing crime, both legally and just as matter of general policy.
Speaker 7 (11:01):
But if the.
Speaker 4 (11:02):
Position you end up taking is that there is no
serious crime emergency in Chicago on rhetorical level, not on
a legal level, on a rhetorical level, or you make
the case that actually crime in Chicago just isn't that
big of a deal, which seems to be the mistake
that many democratic politicians are making right now. Yeah, Trump
is going to win that battle all day long.
Speaker 1 (11:18):
I mean, I hear you, but I also think I
hear you, but I don't want to listen. I hear you,
but I don't want the thing you said to be true.
That's evidently true.
Speaker 5 (11:27):
There is the rhetorical level which we could focus on,
but I mean, I also want to focus on the reality,
like the actual things that are happening. And even to
that point, I mean, voters are not I think we
treat voters as stupider than they are. You ask them
the goals and they say, we think crime is a problem.
We don't like the way Trump is handling it, in
(11:48):
the way that he is sending the National Guard.
Speaker 1 (11:49):
Yeah, why do you think some voters are saying that?
Not all the voters, by the way, just some of
the voters. It's because of the way Democrats are reacting,
pretending as though this is some sort of authoritarian takeover,
when the reality is that if you just accepted the help,
if the National Guard came in assisted Chicago, assisted all
these places and whatever fashion that looked like, worked with
(12:09):
the police there instead of working instead of the police
in certain places. Whereas Shapiro is starting to talk about
the legal problems in that world, yes, there are laws,
there are things that prevent a military from behaving like
local police forces, but it doesn't prevent them from assisting
local police forces. So a willingness to accept help, which
(12:31):
again even David Axelrod is begging Democrats to start doing,
makes all of this problem go away. It's the defiant fight,
the refusal to take the support, that is the only
problem in this entire situation as of right now, and
it is something where the American people definitively believe. I'm
not a fan of crime. I want less of it
(12:51):
wherever I live. All right, quick break, A lot coming up.
Craig Collins filling in on the Danish show.
Speaker 8 (12:56):
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Speaker 9 (14:00):
How is September the worst month of the year for
the taxpayer? Government agencies have to spend every single dime
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Speaker 10 (14:21):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 1 (14:26):
That's right, it's time for a quick five on the
Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins filling in d Lash,
Dana Lash Radio and X on Twitter to stay connected
to all things Dana Active. Very popular page or at
radio Greig Z if you want to hear about the
Yankees occasionally and be one of the four hundred chosen
that are on that social media app or page. The
NFL is still incredibly popular as it's about to kick
(14:49):
off this weekend. I love when they put a poll
out that they didn't need to put out. YouGov did
this one. Forty eight percent of people said their favorite
sport to watch or their face sport in general is football.
Twenty nine percent actually said baseball. It came in right
after football. I actually tied with basketball at twenty nine
percent as well, and then hockey was pretty distant twelve Actually,
(15:12):
soccer also inched up to now tie with hockey, which
is sad to me. I'm not a huge soccer guy.
I know a lot of younger people are into soccer now,
but ice hockey is a wonderful sport and it's never
gotten its due in our country, which is fine. It's okay,
but I'm sad, but I love that baseball actually came
in at number two. I think that only happens this
time of year. I think during the offseason for baseball
(15:34):
it probably plummets. And how much people think they like
it because a whole lot of people go to games.
I don't know that they watch them as much as
NBA or NFL, but yeah, forty eight percent of us.
I say the football is the favorite sport as it
kicks off tonight, and there's gonna be a whole lot
of great things that happened in the world in the NFL,
maybe for the New York Football Giants. I am a
little bit excited about this season, which I haven't been
(15:56):
in a while, for my favorite team, and I'm pretty
sure they're going to and disappoint me quickly at the
gate like they normally do. All Right, there's a TikTok
trend called the Great lock In. It's not COVID shutdowns,
which is what I thought it was when I read it,
that you lock yourself in willingly like they forced us
to be locked in a few years ago. This is
where you lock in a change in your life. You
(16:18):
say you're going to actually commit to doing it, go
to the gym every other day, whatever it might be
that you do, and you lock it in until the
end of the year because there's only so much time
left already. Surprisingly, in twenty twenty five, the great lock
in is something a lot of people are celebrating. I
think that's totally fine. One other thing that I thought
was pretty funny. Publisher's Clearinghouse used to give those forever
(16:39):
checks to a whole bunch of individuals. The company went
bankrupt this past April, the forever checks stopped. Some winners
got very few forever checks. It was always exciting to
see them at the door with the check. Very happy,
pretty sad if you didn't pick the lump sum though,
payment if that was an option, because apparently these companies
can go out a bitines, which, of course, again a
(17:01):
publisher's clearinghouse not going to be cutting those checks for
everybody the way they used to before. I never won one,
so I guess I don't care. All right, quick break
a lot coming up. Greg Collins filling in on The
Dana Show.
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Speaker 11 (17:57):
Not Able to catch the full Dana Show, follow in
his Absurd Truth podcast and get news and laughs delivered
in short, easy to digest episodes ideal for your busy
lifestyle on Apple or wherever you get your podcast.
Speaker 1 (18:11):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you d Lash Dana
Lash Radio on x on Twitter. Great ways to stay
connected to her all the things she does and her
team does. To stay active on social media. I used
to check that stuff out. Producer Steven crushes it every
day a bunch of stuff goes viral. Let's do this
a sitting US senator who at one time was a
(18:33):
vice presidential candidate and actually a lot of people think
is surprisingly similar to Tim Walls, and how weird and
dumb he seems to be. But Tim Kaine, who you
probably forgot about, just demonstrated that he has not read
the Declaration of Independence. This is real bad as far
as the look goes. Real casually stating what he does.
(18:55):
I'll play it first, and then I'll whip out this
document again called the declar of Independence and refute some
of the stuff he's saying, at least one of the
things very easily. I here we go first, though, Tim Walls, Kane,
whoever you are, go ahead and speak the notion.
Speaker 12 (19:10):
That rights don't come from laws and don't come from
the government, but come from the creator. That's what the
Iranian government believes. It's a theocratic regime, no, that bases
its rule on Shia law and target soonies behinds, Jews,
Christians and other religious minorities. And they do it because
(19:32):
they believe that they understand what natural rights are from
their creator.
Speaker 1 (19:36):
Okay, just a quick thing. I want to play that
first part again. Let's just make sure he said it
the way you thought he did.
Speaker 12 (19:41):
The notion that rights don't come from laws and don't
come from the government, but come from the creative.
Speaker 6 (19:49):
That's what the is bad.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
That's his saying he's bad. Let me roll out this
document again, called the Declaration of Independence. Let's see how
this puppy starts. Let's see what's at the beginning of
this thing. I again, am already said that I just
called the Declaration this puppy, my bad. We hold these
truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal,
that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights. Well,
(20:12):
that's weird that among these are life, liberty and the
pursuit of happiness. If I were Biden at this point,
I would say, you know the thing, and I would
just move on, which is hilarious too. But I can't
believe that you say that and then you actually use
the word the creator. You can say God if you
wanted to. I'm fine with that, whatever you say, because
that's in the text, Bud. And that's insane that to
(20:36):
secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their
just powers from the consent of the governed. We consent
to this, We actually give you the ability to do
certain things to govern us, but the rights you don't
give them to us. We have them anyway. This is terrible.
All right, let's watch other politicians be idiots in front
(20:57):
of a bunch of people. This is Elizabeth Warren. She
decided to have a sparring match with Robert F. Kennedy
Junior about big Pharma, especially about the COVID vaccine and
whether or not the government is going to keep paying
for every vaccine for every American when we don't even
really want them anymore. Not many of us are showing
up to get punched and jabbed. Still, that doesn't matter
(21:19):
to Elizabeth because she's got to make her pharm of money,
which Robert F. Kennedy Junior did a great job of
throwing throwing out there during their back and forth sparring.
They do talk over each other, but nonetheless, I think
we can make it out here.
Speaker 13 (21:32):
We go lead denying people vaccines.
Speaker 14 (21:35):
We're not going to recommend a product for which there's
no clinical data for that indication, which is that what
I should be doing, what you.
Speaker 13 (21:42):
Should be doing, is honoring your promise that you made
when you were looking to get confirmed in this job.
Going like that is you promised that you would not
take away vaccines from anyone who wanted them. You just
changed the classification of the OVID vaccine.
Speaker 6 (22:01):
I'm not taking them away from people, Senator.
Speaker 13 (22:03):
It takes it away if you can't get it from
your pharmacy.
Speaker 14 (22:07):
Well, most Americans are going to be able to get
it from their pharmacy for free dollars. Most Americans will
be able to get it from their pharmacy.
Speaker 13 (22:15):
Question is everyone who wants it? That was your promise?
Speaker 14 (22:19):
I know I never promised that I was going to
recommend products with which there is no.
Speaker 8 (22:24):
Indication what you said.
Speaker 15 (22:26):
And I know you've taken eight hundred and fifty five
thousand dollars from pharmaceutical company.
Speaker 16 (22:32):
Did you hold up things?
Speaker 1 (22:33):
Oh my god, that was great. And they're going to
go back and forth and keep youy on each other,
but talking over Elizabeth and how angry she is about
the changes to COVID and whatnot, and she's pretending this
is for you, for me, for the American people. Again,
as I say this, I'm not getting a COVID shot.
I doubt many people listening to the show are getting one.
No interest is what a large amount of Americans have
(22:54):
even the ones who took seventy five jabs already. I
have no interest in more of them. But I love
that he eventually says, Robert F. Kennedy Junior. I know
you've taken almost a million, eight hundred and fifty five
thousand dollars from pharmaceutical companies. I know that's why you're
actually screaming and yelling about this, because they cut you
the check and they're waiting for you to go defend
(23:15):
them on Capitol Hill. Not because you care at all
about any of us. That is excellently done a Robert F.
Kennedy Junior. All right, let's play this. This is interesting too.
Marco Rubio talked about a couple different things. I love
the way that this is summarized online. He made the
leftist cry because Trump blew up some narco terrorists. Here's
(23:38):
what Marco Rubio said about blowing a boat out of
the water. That's uniquely cool. I know other people have
said some things that they don't like about this. I
think rand Paul was on Newsmax talking about what he
does and doesn't like about blowing up a Venezuelan drug boat.
I'm fine with this across the board. Fine with this,
because I don't want drugs in this country, and the
(24:00):
United States is capable of targeting and blowing the smithereens
a boat that's carrying a bunch of drugs and a
bunch of people that want to do bad things. Here
we go.
Speaker 17 (24:10):
The United States has long, for many many years, established
intelligence that allow us to interdict and stop drug boats.
And we did that and it doesn't work. Interdiction doesn't
work because these drug cartels what they do is they
know they're going to lose, you know, two percent of
their cargo. They bake it into their economics. What will
stop them is when you blow them up.
Speaker 6 (24:30):
When you get rid of it.
Speaker 17 (24:32):
The President of the United States is going to wage war.
Are narco terrorist organizations. This one was operating in international
waters headed towards the United States to flood our country
with poison. And under President Trump, those days are over.
Speaker 1 (24:46):
That is fantastic. I'm a big fan of that, because yes,
any version of you know, slowly and painstakingly trying to
prevent some of these drugs from getting into our country
without just blowing stuff up and terror and causing terror
for the people that are doing this terrorizing the terrorists
is what I wanted to say there a second ago,
(25:07):
or the drug cartels or whoever they might be. This
is great. This is an actual deterrent that makes me
think twice before I hop in a boat with other
guys to try to drive some drugs in the United States,
because there's a chance we might get blown to smithereens.
And that is entirely fine and exactly the way we
should defend this country from horrible, terrible things that are
(25:29):
brought into the country that make people do horrible terrible things.
All right, one last thing I do want to play.
I mentioned this earlier, and I do want to play it.
This is David Axelrod, you know him, media and political consultant,
guy who did a lot of things in the Democratic
Party for a while. He is begging, absolutely begging Democrats
(25:50):
to work with the President on trying to rid crime
from cities, not fight against him as adamantly as they
are because they don't like Trump. They hate Trump, and
they don't want anything to do with Trump. This is stupid.
And the American people don't like crime. We're not fans
of it. We don't like bad things that happen in
our cities as often as they do. It's not a
(26:12):
hard issue to understand. Here's axel Rod and what he
said about it.
Speaker 16 (26:15):
I would be careful about playing twenty eight politics on
this issue, because the right answer is we'll take all
the help we can get, as long as it's appropriate help,
as long as it's stuff that will really help. I mean,
as National guardsmen aren't even trained to do that work.
They're not authorized to do that work. So you know,
(26:37):
send us the resources that we need. We want to
work with you. If they are a criminal. If there
are people doing violent crimes here who are illegal immigrants,
we want them out of our city. We'll work with
you on that. I think that's the appropriate position.
Speaker 6 (26:51):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (26:51):
We want to work with you on that. I do
like that he craps on the one resource that actually
is making a difference in Washington, d C. By the way,
a military men and women, a National Guard men and women,
and asking them how they can help to defend from
horrible people doing terrible things. But yes, they can't actually
act like police. They're not supposed to. I get that,
I understand the law, and so I just think it's
(27:11):
fascinating that the way in which Democrats are going about
arguing this is essentially rejecting any help at all and
basically saying we love crime, We're big fans of crime.
Bring your crime to our sanctuary cities of crime, and
we'll do everything we can to protect you, the criminal,
from the big bad people that want to stop crime,
(27:32):
which are actually everyone else in our society. It is crazy.
One last thing, I'll play this too because I mentioned
it so I might as well. This is Ran Paul
talking about the Venezuelan drug boat and how it's hard
to have sympathy for drug dealers. But you know, at
what point do we stop once we start blowing stuff
out of the water. And I don't think ever, I
(27:53):
think it's totally fine to do a lot of this,
to put more resources into blowing up as many boats
as it takes people to decide they don't want to
keep trying to come into our country that way and
bring their drugs into our country that way. But here's
what Ran Paul said on Newsmax of that cartel boat,
which you know, as I personally think that's a brilliant
(28:14):
deterrent to this kind of activity. Is that how you
see it?
Speaker 18 (28:18):
You know, I guess, you know, it's hard to have
any sympathy for drug dealers, you know, trying to import
product into our country. But at the same time, I
guess you might ask the question, you know, where does
it end?
Speaker 6 (28:28):
Are we the world's.
Speaker 18 (28:29):
Policeman, the international policemen?
Speaker 6 (28:31):
Are we going to be blowing.
Speaker 18 (28:32):
People up off the coast all around the world trying
to interdict? Really, I'm not sure we have the finances
to the world's policemen. So on the face of it,
town on's good. Nobody's going to have any kind of
lost love for a bunch of drugs going down in
the ocean and killing some some gang members. At the
same time, really, where does it end? And is it
(28:52):
really the constitutional duty of our government to be, you know,
policing international drug trade everywhere around the world.
Speaker 1 (29:02):
No, it's not. I think we just police it here
in the United States. If you're coming here with any
of your drugs, we blow you up. I think that's it.
I think that's enough, And I'm totally fine with that
and fine with spending whatever the money is to do that,
and also entertained by the idea of it that we
demonstrate the strength of our military in a very unique way,
on a very small scale operation kind of way. But
(29:24):
it should terrify anyone and everyone that would ever want
to mess with us. It's a deterrent in two ways.
It not only stops the drugs from coming into our
country in a way that we can easily detect it happening,
but it also demonstrates the precision of our ability to
strike anything else we want to strike. So I think
I think there's a twofold demonstration of strength there that
(29:44):
we should be doing. And again, regardless of the cost,
all right, regardless of the cost to a degree you
never say, regardless of the cost of the military to
the government, actually, because who knows what happens there? All right,
quick break, a lot coming up. Craig Collins filling in
on the Danish show Burn A gun.
Speaker 8 (30:00):
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Speaker 11 (31:33):
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Speaker 1 (31:45):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you d Lash Dana
Lash Radio on X on Twitter. Two ways to stay
connected to her and everything that she's doing at radio.
Craig Z if you want an occasional tweet about the
Yankees and one of the chosen four hundred or er
people that follow me, a very small group compared to
(32:05):
Dana's massive audience. All right, let's do this real quick.
A couple of sillier things out there. First, The New
York Giants are selling ten percent of their organization to
the Koch family, specifically Julia Coke, who you know inherited
a whole bunch of money when her husband passed away
and control of that organization. And yeah, ten billion dollars
(32:27):
is the evaluation for the Giants to ten percent is
one billion dollars. And that's insane that they only get
that amount of control or that amount of ownership of
an organization like the Giants for a billion bucks. But
if I were, you know, anybody else involved in this decision,
if I'm the mar family or whoever else, then I'm like, yeah, sure,
(32:48):
give me a billion, you get ten percent. I'm gonna
do some partying this weekend. That'll be great for me. Actually,
I can't see that happening with that family either, but
he asked. That's a big deal in the world of sports.
I thought that this was funny. There's a trend online
that is called date them until you hate them. This
means that you stay in a relationship that you feel
(33:08):
is slowly going under until you truly despise the person
that you're dating, because when you hate them, it's easier
to break up with them. I don't know why this
would be a trend that anyone would actually do. But
here's a TikTok influencer telling you why this is the
best way to go in your dating life.
Speaker 19 (33:25):
Get ready with me while I tell you how I
end in my four year relationship and wasn't totally heartbroken after.
The reason I was able to walk away from my
four year relationship is because I dated him until I
hated him. Now, I know some people are about to
come for me and be like, oh, you should just
end it. It's not always that easy. Some people make
it really hard for you to walk away from a relationship.
(33:46):
Or maybe you're really really comfortable with them. You've been
with them for forever and it is hard to walk
away sometimes, so again, date them until you hate them.
Speaker 1 (33:53):
This is horrible. This means that you're mostly done with
a relationship, but you stay until you hate them even more.
Speaker 19 (33:59):
You know.
Speaker 1 (33:59):
It's funny about this. Though. This has probably gone on
for much longer than the social media in the Internet,
I believe it has. I remember my first girlfriend. This
was early on in my dating life. I think I
was a freshman in high school when I had an
official girlfriend. I broke up with her once and I
was working with her at a grocery store. That's how
we met, and she didn't seem to get it. I
(34:22):
think I was too nice about it. I did all
the things wrong that the social media people would tell
you you'd do wrong, but I was new to this. So
I broke up with her. The next day, she came
into work, kissed me on the cheek and told me
that she was happy to have lunch together that day,
and I was like, I broke up with you yesterday.
I didn't say that to her. I just was thinking
that in my brain, and I remember that I asked
her after work to chat again, and I broke up
(34:45):
with her much much harsher. I think I said things
like I want to make the basketball team. I think
you're taking up too much of my time. I made
it all about her. The first breakup was all about me.
The second time she was the problem, and she hated
me after that day. So break up with them to
make them hate you is another version of a thing
you could go through. She would complain about me constantly
(35:07):
at that job until eventually I just quit after the breakup.
But I think that young people, for some reason do
struggle with the whole breaking up thing. Just rip it
off like a band aid. Man. I live that life.
Tell people what you think, how you feel. I don't
be afraid of any of that. It seems like there's
way too much fear in so many of those areas now,
all right, moving on from my own personal stories about
(35:29):
breaking up with women twice. I still apologize to Claire
to this day if I ever knew her or anything
about where she is, because the second breakup was mean.
I didn't do it on purpose anyway, all right, moving on.
Taking your phone to the bathroom ups your hemorrhoid risk
by forty six percent. The reason why is you're sitting
on the toilet for too long. This is something that
(35:50):
can cause issues then eventually cause problems. Words like tear
or in this article, I don't want to say all
those words in conjunction with this story, but they're there.
You can figure out what's tearing and how that's happening.
But anyway, if you leave your phone with you, you reduce
your hemorrhoid risk by about fifty percent, the exact opposite,
(36:11):
of course, And that seems like a good thing. But
I don't know who can do that. Now. You used
to have, like things to read inside the bathroom. You
put like a little rack of magazines or whatnot there.
We all did this. We all know this, especially if
you're going to take a longer trip. You want to
read an article, something, maybe something from an airplane magazine.
(36:31):
Now that doesn't exist. No one has any of those
because we all have cell phones. So I think that
has to come back. I think you have to put
the rack back in the bathroom, put some random magazines
on it, whatever you find, wherever you're getting them. Not
that many people even get those anymore. Then eventually get
rid of the phone, and then we won't have hemorrhoids.
This is a great spot stopping point, quick break a
(36:51):
lot more Craig Collin's filling in on the data show.
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Speaker 1 (37:55):
The Dana Shell. My name is Craig Collins, filling in,
Thrilled to be with you. A bunch just stuff to
talk about. I do think this is kind of interesting.
It's off the beaten path. We'll get to more of
the big news in just a second, but this is
Rob Low and fellow actor I think Adam Scott talking
about how corrupt California is, even when it comes to
(38:16):
how they treat Hollywood and how so many things now
were filmed places other than California because of the ridiculous
level of costs that are added to all the different
productions of things. I just thought this was interesting, the
way in which money and criminal organizations are words that
get thrown around by Hollywood elite actors when they're talking
(38:36):
about California. Here we go cheaper to bring one hundred
American people to Ireland than to walk across the lot
right fox, right past the sound stages and do it there.
Speaker 6 (38:47):
Crazy.
Speaker 1 (38:47):
Do you think if we shot parks right now, we
would be in Budapest?
Speaker 6 (38:51):
We would be We'd be in Budapest, we would be.
It's so weird. There's nothing shoots in one nothing, nothing nothing.
Speaker 20 (38:58):
I had a my you know, my next show already done, scripts,
deals closed, you know, and they said we're shooting this
in New York and I said, I'm not moving to
New York to do this, and then it went away,
the show's done, I'm not doing it.
Speaker 21 (39:14):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (39:15):
Yeah, it's terrible. It's crazy apparently for the Hollywood elites.
But he goes on to call California criminal and he
wants leadership fired there. This guy and his you know,
fancy job in life. But I just thought that was
interesting because there is obviously a time I would maybe
you scratch my back, I scratch yours. I was more
common in the world of la and Hollywood and still
(39:37):
feels like it's mostly there. So maybe Rob is just
not working the right gigs to get the sweet, sweet
kickbacks they used to get before. Talk about a breakup
that would be interesting to watch happen if it truly does,
and you start getting more behind the scenes information and
more of those Hollywood elite people start realizing that they've
been you know, victims more so than anything else, of
(39:57):
all the different things they do with you know, certain
law and certain politicians, and you know, breaking bad in
them would be amazing for us and the insight we'd
get into it. All Right, let's talk about real things,
things that actually matter. I played some of this audio yesterday,
but several Epstein's survivors came forward and spoke at a
press conference, said a lot of things. One of the
(40:19):
more important takeaways for me, not mainstream media, is that
they consistently seemed to say that Donald Trump was not
involved in any of the things that they would think
are horrible and terrible all the things that happened to them.
So there were several moments with the accusers or the victims,
whatever you want to call them of Jeffrey Epstein came
(40:41):
forward and seemed to exonerate President Trump of any wrongdoing
and involvement in this. Even though that's the kind of
thing that gets talked about a lot in mainstream media,
those moments easily ignored by those same pundits, talking heads, politicians, everybody.
So I figured, I'll mention it, but this audio is
not about that. This is about something else. They did
(41:01):
also seem to admit there's no official list, I meaning
Epstein didn't write names on a piece of paper and
put them in a lock box somewhere, But there might
very well be a way for them to put together
the list of frequent individuals that they saw, interacted with,
or even were victims of as well. That's what one
of these survivors is saying into the microphone. Let's go
ahead and play.
Speaker 21 (41:21):
That transparency is justice, release the files and the secrecy,
and stand with us and declaring that no one, no billionaires,
no politicians, not world leaders, is above the law.
Speaker 1 (41:37):
I agree with that. That sounds great, and.
Speaker 21 (41:41):
Let me announce now, several of us Epstein's survivors have
been discussing creating our own list of names. We know
the names many of us were abused by that Now, together,
(42:02):
as survivors, we will confidentially compile the names we all
know we're regularly in the Epstein world, and it will
be done by survivors and for survivors.
Speaker 1 (42:12):
I think that's a really interesting thing that she's saying.
And actually, Bill Clinton's name I came up yesterday at
the press conference, people saying that he was on planes
and went certain places, which is something that a whole
lot of people believe is absolutely going to be a
part of any of these eventual you know, discussions of
the terrible, horrible things that these people went through. And so,
you know, it's just so interesting to me too about
(42:34):
this is that if they don't get Trump, a lot
of mainstream media feels like they don't actually care about
this story, which means once again, they don't actually care
about people. They don't care about women, they don't care
about any of the things that they say they care about.
They're not after justice for the sake of justice or
for the sake of, you know, helping the victims. Get
(42:54):
some sort of a win after a lot of bad
things happen to them. They only really care about the
target they have on one guy's back, and so that's
what's kind of fascinating to me. There were several moments,
and again I was playing some of this audio yesterday
where people seem to indicate that Trump will not be
a name that the victims put on a list in
any way where they say that they had actual interactions
(43:18):
that turned out bad with him. If anything, the biggest
mention of Trump was that Jeffrey Epstein bragged about knowing him,
not actually saying that they ever saw or interacted with him,
but just that Epstein claimed to be really good buddies
with the current president of the United States. That doesn't
feel like the kind of damaging information that mainstream media
(43:39):
seems to be hoping for as far as that person
is concerned. And again, it's just kind of sad. It
reminds me of something odd, but I'll tell you what
it is, and you decide with me if you think
it's odd too. But my brain first went to I
remember when Britney Griner was imprisoned in Russia, and eventually
we wound up trading like the Merchant of Death was
(43:59):
the name of the guy we gave back to or
the nickname of the individual we give back to Russia
to get the w NBA player out of lock up
for bringing marijuana with her on her playing while she
was playing in Russia. But here's what I thought was
really interesting about it. There was a moment where Griner
was going to call I think her wife for somebody
here in the United States, and the Biden administration was
(44:20):
setting this all up, and they were bragging about how
woke and important it was, and they were LGBTQ and
all this other stuff. The Biden administration was behaving as
though they cared about all the things that they think
some of their voters care about. And one of the
reasons they try to virtue signal to their voters to
get them to vote for that side of the aisle.
And then nobody showed up to orchestrate the phone call.
(44:44):
I like the wife showed up at the White House.
There was nobody there. She couldn't get in. The call
didn't happen. A Griner was making it from a prison
in Russia, and like they let it happen. Russia organized
their side and we didn't organize our side, And not
that I'm trying to advocate for all the crap and
things that I think are stupid within this story, and
(45:04):
all the false versions of pretending that you care about
this or that it's just hilarious to watch that happen,
to see it on display where people actually go, oh,
wait a minute. This is not the political win part anymore.
This is some other part of the equation. This is
the part I can ignore and not care about. That
feels like, what will happen with the Epstein story If
Trump isn't actually harmed by it, if he's not actually
(45:27):
someone who's substantially a part of it, I think mainstream
media will quickly lose their interest in it. And that's
a shame. I actually feel uniquely bad for all those victims,
all those survivors, who are looking for this sort of
media attention, not to take down any one person specifically,
but to take down the whole, the entirety of that
(45:49):
horrible thing that existed. But we'll see what happens there.
All right, let's do this. I really enjoyed this. Ben
Shapiro popped up on CNN. He's doing a book tour
I think there's probably ants that you'll be hearing Ben
Shapiro from Ben Shapiro in the near future on The
Dana Show with Dana lash right here. But anyway, I
do think what's kind of amazing about this is all
(46:10):
the moments where CNN just looks so stupid and where
Ben Shapiro looked so much smarter than those individuals. Here
is one of those moments. There are a lot to
choose from, though in some of the back and forth
discussions they had.
Speaker 22 (46:24):
Our national debt shot up significantly after nine to eleven,
after we started invading countries in the Middle East. You
just sending hundreds of billions of dollars on Israel, on Ukraine.
I mean, honestly, these foreign conflicts have a lot more
to do with our national debt, as.
Speaker 23 (46:43):
Israel is a bigger portion of our budget than social security.
Speaker 22 (46:46):
I think we spend way too much money on this
on military foreign countries.
Speaker 1 (46:51):
Do you think Israel is more Do you think.
Speaker 22 (46:53):
That social security is more of an issue compared to
how much money we just shell out for conflicts of.
Speaker 6 (47:02):
Both?
Speaker 1 (47:03):
And I like that Scott Jennings and Ben Shapiro are
both laughing at this comment. As it's being made, because yeah,
we definitely spend a whole lot more money on Social Security, Medicaid, medicare.
Here's been continuing this conversation when you're talking about hold.
Speaker 5 (47:15):
On, when you're talking about the government pay you're talking
about Social Security, which is people's money.
Speaker 4 (47:19):
Well it is, Well, it is not the money you paid,
it's the.
Speaker 5 (47:23):
System that they pay in.
Speaker 4 (47:24):
Well, yes, believe me, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (47:30):
I promise you.
Speaker 4 (47:30):
The amount of the amount that people are taking out
is not the amount that is going in, which is
why we are going bankrupt.
Speaker 5 (47:34):
Okay, but it's not the government just heading out a
blank check.
Speaker 6 (47:38):
No, it's that I'm in borrowing money to pay.
Speaker 4 (47:40):
Well, you pay in x dollars and then you get
multiple times x dollars when you retire. That is how
the system works. It is not a lock box, is
what al Gore was arguing about in two thousand.
Speaker 1 (47:50):
I love the lock box thing from two thousand. By
the way, I love referencing that being like, how many
people have any understanding of the history of any of
this stuff. We do not pay enough in social Security
to afford all the money that comes back out. This
is actually one of the bigger reasons too that they
say that as a lot of baby boomers retire, the
current system is incapable of spending money to support them
(48:13):
because the people who are still going to be paying
into it, people like me, I don't number the amount
of people who will be getting payouts. Meaning not only
did all the money the baby boomers put in, well
they were working all their way towards social Security, does
that not amount for enough money to afford their retirements?
But we can't even do it with the current money
going in. So yes, the government constantly borrows money from
(48:33):
itself and creates more debt in order to pay Social Security.
It is amazing that the CNN people don't seem to
understand that, and Ben Shapiro does. It's actually uniquely pretty sad.
All right, let's do one more.
Speaker 6 (48:45):
Why not?
Speaker 1 (48:45):
Let's do this predictable?
Speaker 5 (48:47):
I mean, I think this is the problem. Everybody knew
that this was what Putin was going to do. That
they said so from the get go. The only people
saying that Trump was a genius and that this was
going to be all totally different were folks like you
two and Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 (49:01):
I mean, to be fair, I'm not sure that even
President Trump said things were going to be totally different.
He said that he was giving the opportunity for things
to be totally different.
Speaker 1 (49:09):
But let's be real about this.
Speaker 4 (49:10):
Six months ago, everybody would have celebrated on the left
and in the center and on my part of the
right if President Trump had said we're going to maintain
arms shipments to Ukraine and who may consider further sanctions
on Russia and actually we're not going to force Ukraine
into a bad settlement.
Speaker 6 (49:24):
Okay.
Speaker 4 (49:24):
So Trump hasn't done any of the things that everybody
thought he was going to do in January of twenty
twenty five, and now we're ripping him for what not
being hawkish enough. It's kind of funny how they have
the gold posts move every time Trump moved. Trump is heterodox,
but he is responsive to reality.
Speaker 1 (49:38):
Yes, that's amazing. That's a fantastic thing. And I love
that Abby is about to say, I don't think the
goalposts move. The main thing we do constantly and the
way in which we're significantly and consistently hypocrites, all of
that is irrelevant to what you're saying, a Ben Shapiro,
But yes, how do you criticize someone for fearing he's
going to be too strong on an issue. Then when
he actually gets in office and is more measures, you
(50:00):
criticize him for not being strong enough. That's the I
can't win no matter what I do thing that Trump
has talked about a lot. And actually it's kind of
funny in my own personal life, especially since I do
what I do for a living and certain people in
my life know about it or I work with them
in some capacity. You do feel often like no matter
what you say, the person that you're communicating with is
(50:20):
going to tell you that you're the problem, you're the jerk.
In response to whatever you say, whatever you're trying to do,
whatever fair treatment you're looking to get, the response back
is going to be you're horrible because of this because
they just don't want to treat you fairly. All right,
quick break a lot coming up. Craig Collins filling in
on the Dana Show.
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(51:42):
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Speaker 10 (51:47):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 1 (51:52):
That's right, it's time for a quick five on the
Dana Show, a dlash a Dana Lash Radio and x
on Twitter to stay connected everything going on with her.
One in eight Americans or overthinkers. According to a brand
new survey, forty percent of us say that our daily
decisions are second guessed by us that we're not really
sure what we're doing there. But one in eight of
(52:13):
us dives real deep into all the different things that
we contemplate if we did right or wrong. Second guessing
is kind of normal. As I said, almost fifty percent
of people do that part. But I think that more
often than not, your first decision is usually the better one.
Whenever I've gone to the second guest decision after doubting
my first decision, things end up worse, not better. Twenty
(52:36):
seven percent of people admit that they're regularly stressed over
simple decisions that stuff like anxiety at the supermarket on
what you buy there. There is also a portion of society.
I'm not saying it's just younger people, but it feels
like it is a lot of younger people who are
stressed by things that everybody else isn't stressed by. Maybe
because you're less conditioned to work in the real world
(52:58):
and more conditioned to see the Internet version of society
is some portion of the real world. I really think
that's a problem, or that's the cause of some of
the issues we see. You shouldn't be nervous when you say,
order a meal at a restaurant. Just pick what you want, man,
and if it doesn't go well, pick something else, order
a second thing. Do life, however you need to do
(53:20):
it in order to survive other things out there. A
man bug sprayed a couple. This is because they had
cut him in line. Sixty five year old guy got
upset he was cut in line. He was like, how
dare you do this to me? His name is Daniel.
He actually was in Florida. I should have saved this
as a Florida story, but I'll do more of those later.
But he was in line at the public's grocery store
(53:41):
and after they decided that they weren't going to change,
he just started whipping out and spraying them with bug spray,
right in their faces too. He then ran off, which
is my favorite part of the aggravated battery and bodily
harm assault. One of the victims was actually hospitalized. They're
both going to be okay, but bug spray to the
face is not usually a good idea. Daniel seemed to
(54:03):
think it was appropriate after he got cut in line.
And then, finally, I'm gonna play a quick game with you.
I know we only have about a minute to do this,
and I know you can't actually respond as well as
I hoped you could. The game is called is it
TikTok or medieval health tips? I have a list of
six medieval health tips and a list of like ten
TikTok tips, So I'm gonna throw one out there, wait
(54:24):
for a second for you to decide which it is,
and then move on to the next one. You should
shove garlic in your nose. Is that medieval or is
that TikTok? The answer is actually that that's a TikTok trend,
and it also is quite dangerous that you should put
a vinegar mask on your face for glowing skin. Is
that medieval or is that TikTok? That one's actually a
(54:46):
medieval trend. Apparently they used to rub vinegar, flour and
oil on their face to make it better. Finally, and
this is my favorite one, Dead Vulture to cure everything.
You decapitate a vulture after you catch it in the while,
and then you use every portion of it to do
certain things. One of them tie feathers to a woman's
leg to induce labor. Yeah, okay, find that one's medieval.
(55:08):
Maybe I'll do this more later. Quick break a lot
coming up. Greg Collins filling in on the Danish show.
Speaker 8 (55:13):
So many young individuals are not allowed to carry, which
I think is an unconstitutional aspect under age twenty one.
But that I'll digress. But I think the Burner gun
fits this niche, particularly for these college kids that are
living on their own and want to be protected, especially
young ladies. Bernegun shoots chemical irritant projectiles that can deter
(55:34):
threats from up to fifty feet away, and unlike you
know stun guns where you have maybe one or two
rounds they have depending on what type you get, you
can have fifteen round shot capacity per cartridge. So you
have the burn of CL and the Berna SDDSD up
until this point I think has been their best selling model.
It's a pistol. The CL is thirty eight percent smaller
(55:56):
and you're not losing any of that deterrent power. You're
not losing any of that, but it's just it's small
enough that you can have better concealment. And it's here's
the kicker. It's legal everywhere. There's no gun free zone signs.
This doesn't pay attention to that. There's no background checks,
there are no fees, there's no waiting period. It's ships
right to your front towards accessible to everybody. When you
(56:17):
have private property restrictions or municipal restrictions that are disarming you,
intopriving you for your constitutional right and making you one safe,
you need to be able until that's remedied. You need
to be able to have a stopgap. And that's what
this is. And like I said, there is legal in
all fifty states, and it's affordable too, and ships right
to your house. Visit Burna dot com slash data, b
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(56:40):
cl I think this is also perfect for that college
student by r inna dot com slash data.
Speaker 11 (56:47):
Brighten up your timely news consumption with a Dana Show
podcast where every update comes with a little dash of
not so serious. On YouTube, Apple or wherever you get
your podcasts.
Speaker 1 (56:58):
This is the Danish show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in a thrilled to be with you. A bunch
of stuff out there to talk about. Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Is testifying in front of senators and they're playing a
game of ridiculous gotcha. That seems very stupid. Jade Vance,
a Vice President. Vance actually tweeted this out a little
bit earlier. When I see all these senators trying to
(57:19):
lecture and gotcha Bobby Kennedy today, all I can think
is you all support off label, untested, irreversible hormonal therapies.
Therapies is in quotes for children, mutilating our kids and
enriching big pharma. You're full of bleep and everybody knows it.
That is JD. Vance. Today. Let's play a couple of
these clips. First, Let's play this moment demonstrating how unserious
(57:43):
Democrats are in the way they're questioning and handling Robert F.
Kennedy sitting Robert Kennedy Junior sitting in front of them
and having a discussion about how maybe it doesn't make
sense for our medical experts or the medical people in
charge in our country to add Kate for a bunch
of untested pharmaceutical things that we probably shouldn't be taking.
Speaker 6 (58:05):
Look.
Speaker 24 (58:06):
Two young ladies in Las Crusiste, Mexico to town Hall
recently gave me this starfish pin. I was going to
give it to you today, but after your questioning today,
I don't think you deserve it, because what this represents
is to remember that every one of us can make
a difference, sir, to something as small as a starfish
on a beach that maybe got washed up.
Speaker 6 (58:25):
You throw it back in the ocean.
Speaker 24 (58:26):
You might not save them all, but you can save one.
I'm sorry that you're not worthy of this nice little
pins or is a nice reminder. I'm going to pray
for you, Secretary Kennedy.
Speaker 6 (58:35):
I hope we do better.
Speaker 24 (58:36):
I want you to do better, but today was a
failure for you.
Speaker 25 (58:39):
Man.
Speaker 1 (58:40):
I'm not giving you my pin. Man, that's what I'm
not doing. This is so dumb. You can't have my
starfish pin. I'm sorry. I'm taking my toys. I'm going home.
I'll see you guys next time. You're also not invited
to my birthday party. It feels like that's a version
of things I hear. Is Elizabeth Warren going back and
forth with Bobby Kennedy about a varrye of topics, but
(59:01):
among them is her demand that he go back on
on some of the changes that have happened with COVID,
even though the vaccine is available for almost anybody still,
even though very few Americans want any version of this anymore,
even the ones who got a multiple jabs you know,
a couple of years ago. I no longer have interest.
(59:21):
But Elizabeth Warren and the money she makes from pharmaceutical companies,
I mean, she has to be irates and Bobby calls
it out at one point here we.
Speaker 13 (59:29):
Go, you are effectively denying people vaccines.
Speaker 14 (59:33):
Were not going to recommend a product for which there's
no clinical data for that indication, which is that what
I should be doing.
Speaker 13 (59:40):
What you should be doing is honoring your promise that
you made when you were looking to get confirmed in
this job. Like that is, you promised that you would
not take away vaccines from anyone who wanted them. You
just changed the classification of the COVID vaccine.
Speaker 6 (01:00:00):
Ta get them away from people. Senator.
Speaker 13 (01:00:01):
It takes it away. If you can't get it from
your pharmacy.
Speaker 6 (01:00:05):
Well, most Americans are going to be able to get
it from.
Speaker 14 (01:00:08):
Their pharmacy for free dollars. Most Americans will be able
to get it from their pharmacy.
Speaker 13 (01:00:13):
Question is everyone who wants it? That was your promise.
Speaker 14 (01:00:17):
I never promised that I was going to recommend products
with which there is no indications.
Speaker 6 (01:00:23):
Wait, you said, and.
Speaker 15 (01:00:25):
I know you've taken eight hundred and fifty five thousand
dollars from pharmacy.
Speaker 1 (01:00:31):
Did you hold up a bit on you know what?
You know what's amazing about this too? And this is
something that I think Vice President Vance was trying to
get to in the discussion. The Democrats want you to
believe two things. They want you to believe that Republicans
are the bad guys, whoever they are. President Trump of
course is the big, horrible bad guy, He's the devil himself,
and then everybody else is also a bad guy. And
(01:00:52):
they want you to believe that Democrats are fighting the
bad guys. That's the whole job of the Democratic Party.
They're the good guys. They care about you, they want
to give you money and support to you through the government.
That's the entire narrative that they want. And so when
they get mad and yell at a bad guy, a
Republican you're supposed to like whatever the thing is that
they're yelling about. However, the problem with that is when
(01:01:15):
you actually look at the topic itself, you remove the
assumption of bad guy and good guy and do what
every American should do as a you know, intelligent, well
thinking individual, not biten brained human being. Is the best
way to say it. You should think about the topic first.
And in the discussion here, what Robert F. Kennedy Junior
(01:01:36):
is saying is that he would not like to recommend
things that have no medical basis as a treatment for
whatever the issue is that you're trying to treat. Meaning
there's no test, there's no information, nothing proves that there's
a value to this medicine being put in your body.
That's a very simplistic a line to draw. It's actually
(01:01:57):
one that a lot of people would ask, would be
even harsh or then if you can give me some
medical studies that prove the value of this, I can
go ahead and continue to advocate for it. That's all
he's saying. When Trump is trying to send National Guard
troops into cities that have huge problems with crime, all
he's saying, and it's very simplistic is I'd like crime
(01:02:18):
to be eliminated. Here's a way that I think we
can do it. And again, all these other avenues where
you go down this road. In that road, the question itself,
or the conversation should men play women's sports, should men
be able to go to the bathroom in women's restrooms,
all of these topics. If you remove bad guy and
good guy and just think about the the conditions and
(01:02:40):
the context of the discussion, you can't support the Democratic position.
They know it, we know it, You should know it
if you pay attention closely at all. It's just not
a position that's supported. So instead of that, you're not
supposed to think about the topic itself. You're not supposed
to think about the you know which side of this
common sense issue do I deserve to be on. You're
(01:03:01):
just supposed to perceive the Republican position is bad and
the Democratic position is good and nod and say thank
you more of that, please, even if what they're fighting
for is medicine to be readily available for free through
doctors where pharmacies get a ton of money for it,
that has no medical reason to be given to you
and no proof that it's going to help you at
(01:03:22):
all for whatever the issue is, COVID or other things
that you're being treated for all. Let's play this audio.
This is Dick Durbin from the other day talking about
the amount of guns in Chicago. This is another version
of what Lori Lightfoot and others have been saying, trying
to claim that the problem is not that people use
guns to kill other people, but that read evil states
(01:03:43):
the bad guy, which is the conservative again in this case,
is doing something that's causing the good guy to struggle.
He's causing the problem. It's not really us that has
an issue, it's them. Here we go.
Speaker 4 (01:03:55):
It's great when the numbers go down, but people don't
walk around saying I feel twenty two percent safer.
Speaker 1 (01:04:01):
What do you think people feel like is happening in Chicago.
Speaker 6 (01:04:05):
Well, I tell you one thing.
Speaker 26 (01:04:06):
They feel like. They feel like they are too damn
many guns in Chicago, and they're coming in from other
states like Indiana. Federal government want to help us stop
this flow of weapons into our city of Chicago and
state of Illinois. We know they're coming in from state
with lax laws when it comes to firearms, and the
federal government can do something about it.
Speaker 6 (01:04:24):
What has this.
Speaker 26 (01:04:24):
President done about it. He's eliminated, dramatically eliminated the people
who are supposed to make sure these gun dealers are
held in the law.
Speaker 1 (01:04:33):
Let's stop it right there. So here's what's interesting about it.
Right now. The Democratic plan is anything and everything that
involves violence, blame guns and by an extension, blame Republicans.
That's how it works. So right now, if there are
guns that are in Chicago, they have to have come
from Red States. There's no way that they could exist
(01:04:53):
in Chicago. There's no way that a lot of police
find unmarked even ghost guns is what they call them
a lot of times, which are guns you create yourself
to a certain degree. None of that at all could
be possible. It's just got to be the evil, horrible
Red States who for some reason don't see the same
amount of violence going on even though they have more
lax gun laws. Yes, Indianapolis has issues, for sure, it does.
(01:05:16):
But other parts of Indiana, closer to outside of Gary,
closer to Chicago, don't have the same issues. And yet
they have the gun laws that the people are complaining
about being quote the problem with how guns are getting
into Chicago. Maybe what they should actually think about are
the reasons that Chicago ends, especially on the South Side
and West side of the city, seem much more likely
(01:05:37):
to shoot each other and kill people than other parts
of this country. And maybe one of the big reasons
for that. And this is coming from someone who lived
in Chicago for a very long time and actually for
a very short time I lived on the South side
of the city. This was toward the end of my
run in Chicago. Actually just to see that wasn't the
only reason we did it, but it was a reason.
(01:05:57):
But anyway, and it was terrible, But anyway, I'll time
tell you this that there's a lot of cops who
would like to do more to protect some of these
communities and know they can't. They don't have political support
if they go into a certain community in order to
try to fight some of the crime that exists there,
and there's rampant amounts of it in parts of Chicago,
if they come out of it with something that optically
(01:06:18):
isn't right for the Democratic politicians in charge, Meaning they
arrest somebody who you know, looks different than them. They're
a white person, they arrest a black kid, they arrest
a Hispanic kid. There's a chance the politicians are going
to turn on them if the narrative from the community
is the cop did something wrong, even if it's not
the truth. If the truth in all the video backs
(01:06:39):
that the cop did everything right, behaved exactly the way
you're supposed to and actually a lot of times when
you see this video where it becomes a nothing story,
the cop went over and beyond anything you'd expect of
them in order to behave as you know, understanding as
possible to the people doing bad things, well, eventually arresting
(01:07:00):
someone like overwhelmingly calm like they do this to a
degree that's sort of saintly. Those are the only people
who don't wind up with any sort of backlash and
problem for the back and forth of some of these issues.
If you're a police officer in Chicago, you know you
can't handle that. You know you can't on your own
take a risk that could endanger your family when the
(01:07:21):
narrative becomes that you're a racist or you're something else
just because you went into an area where people don't
look like you to try to do some good. It
is crazy, but it is absolutely a byproduct of how
police feel like they can't do certain things. By the way,
all of this is terrible. At least it's not Canada.
It is something that kept bouncing in my mind. We
could do more, We could protect our cities better. President
(01:07:43):
Trump has demonstrated that in DC, but if you look
at what Canada's up to today, the Canadian police chief
was urging residents to surrender to home invaders and never
resist or fight back. We've seen this before when they
do it, but it's crazy and actually, quote from what
he says is uniquely horrible sounding. It's the kind of
(01:08:04):
thing that is so anti American, anti free society that
you think to yourself, man, things got bad to our
neighbors in the North over the last few years that
you would say this and actually speak the words exactly
the way he speaks them when trying to tell people
that you should never fight an intruder coming into your house,
which is also insane.
Speaker 27 (01:08:24):
Here we go, in the unlikely event that you find
yourself the victim of a home invasion, we are urging
citizens not to take matters into their own hands. While
we don't want homeowners to feel powerless, we urge you
to call nine to one one and do everything you
can to keep yourself and loved one safe until police arrive,
and be the best witness possible.
Speaker 1 (01:08:45):
Yeah no, that's not everything. If you're going to comply
and give up entirely.
Speaker 27 (01:08:49):
This could mean locking yourself in a room away from
the perpetrators, hiding, fleeing the home. But don't engage unless
absolutely necessary. But as it stands, we know the best
defense for most people is to comply. As you've just
heard a number of recommendations.
Speaker 1 (01:09:08):
Horrible horrible advice, horrible discussion and sort of uniquely crazy.
Of course, there's all kind of gun laws and things
that prevent you from being capable of defending yourself the
way you should in Canada. And now you have the
police chief saying just go ahead and comply with the
home invaders who come in. Honestly, don't even lock the door,
just swing it wide open, maybe make a nice home
cooked meal for them as they rob you and harm
(01:09:31):
you in whatever way they choose to do it, and
then go ahead and wave goodbye and thank them for
the time that they spent robbing your home. Crazy crazy thing. So,
no matter what we have here, I keep thinking of myself, Hey,
at least it's not Canada. A quick break a lot more.
Craig Collins filling in on the Danish show.
Speaker 8 (01:09:48):
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Speaker 10 (01:10:47):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions.
Speaker 1 (01:10:54):
It's time for Florida man. That's right, it is time
for Florida man. This is the Dana Show. My name
is Craig Collins, filling in dh Dana Lash Radio and
X on Twitter to stay connected to everything that she's
doing at radio. Craigsey, if you want to be one
of only a very small handful of people who follow
my random Yankee tweets on social media, but at Dlash
at Dana Lash Radio to get the good stuff. A
(01:11:16):
boy was found at a Chick fil A in Florida.
So this is Florida boy. I guess he's going to
grow up to be a great Florida man. He's five.
He decided to leave his house in the morning to
get breakfast at delicious Chick fil A. So smart kid,
he knows value. Video went viral, audio and viral of
this because cops got the kid at the Chick fil
(01:11:36):
A and brought him back home and he had a
quote adorable reaction to the fact that cops had to
pick him up and bring him back to the house again,
starting a trend that hopefully doesn't exist for the rest
of this young man's life, although he does live in Florida,
where police bring him back home? Here we go.
Speaker 25 (01:11:51):
We arrived on scene, Hello, and as we walked in,
we see a little kid sitting at the table eating
his breakfast with one of the managers. If we ask
where he came, and he kept saying he walked to
Chick fil A.
Speaker 24 (01:12:02):
You know where your house is, right right?
Speaker 25 (01:12:07):
I want him to patrol car and iget. No, I'm
not going to put you in jail. And we started
checking the ear if he had a white fence right here? Yeah,
and that's when we pull it up in the trap way.
Speaker 2 (01:12:20):
Oh you have a sign on?
Speaker 12 (01:12:22):
Yeah a little boy?
Speaker 25 (01:12:23):
Yeah, yeah, he was down at the chick filt Now
we haven't bet our police.
Speaker 20 (01:12:27):
Card want him.
Speaker 19 (01:12:28):
Yeah.
Speaker 25 (01:12:28):
You could just see the look on his face would
be for any parent, including myself, it's disbelief.
Speaker 1 (01:12:33):
Yeah, what do you mean my kid was at the
Chick fil A? Yeah he got a free meal. Because
a five year old walks into a Chick fil A
by himself, and managers take care of that. Call the police,
the police, get the kid back home. I do love
the little boy being like, am I going to jail?
I hope not I don't know if I am, but also,
this Chick fil A is delicious again, I agree with
him entirely. Some other Florida stories more the typical version
(01:12:54):
you expect During this segment. A Florida woman was recently
in a court case about losing her legal license. She
might be disbarred because she missed a meeting. She is
a divorce lawyer who skipped out on a divorce lawyer
you know hearing, which is not usually a good thing.
The reason why, and this is probably what makes it
(01:13:16):
so Florida. She actually was in jail because she wasn't
paying alimony to her ex husband after her divorce. So
a divorce lawyer by the name of Dorothy Huffnagel decided
that she doesn't have to pay her own alimony. That
someone else got on her and that causes her to
miss a hearing for another you know person that she's
representing in a divorce. I gotta think that her advice
(01:13:38):
is going to be terrible. You probably don't listen to
anything and everything she says. All right, one last one,
this one just interesting. Twenty nine year old Michael Hudak
was recently arrested in Florida he stole a sixteen thousand
dollars rolex from his neighbor's home. Well, his neighbor was traveling.
The negative for Michael is that he's actually a television
reporter for an ABC affiliate in Miami, Florida. So the
(01:14:01):
guy who got arrested and was talked about on television
is a reporter who used to work at that station.
I imagine you get fired after you steal a rolex
out of your neighbor's home when you're pretty sure they're
not catching you, even though I guess they have surveillance
video that showed what happened. He was suspended without pay,
and again, I'm pretty sure he's getting fired. A way
(01:14:22):
to report on the news by making the news Bud
quick Break a lot more. Craig Gallin's filling in on
the Danish show Our.
Speaker 8 (01:14:28):
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Speaker 1 (01:15:35):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in, Thrilled to be with you. A bunch of
stuff out there to talk about. D Lash Dana Lash
Radio on x on Twitter two great ways to stay
connected to her and everything going on with this show.
A producer, Steven does a great job with social media,
all the social media platforms. You can check them out too.
And then at Radio Craigzy if you want to see
(01:15:56):
what it looks like when I do social media myself,
do about four hund people, which would be nice if
you like my Yankee tweets. All right, we'll move on.
Jd Vance recently visited the victims of the Catholic school
shooting that happened in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Two children were lost,
one other is fighting for her life. Still, there is
(01:16:16):
a lot to digest in everything going on with the families,
the horribleness of this, and honestly, how it's easy for
almost all Americans to be on the same side of
the discussion on how terrible this is and how good
it might feel for the parents of victims to see
someone in a position of power showing up and demonstrating
the importance of this. Jd Vance then also called for prayer,
(01:16:40):
which is something the left hates and thinks is inappropriate,
and he told us why, And it's kind of amazing
to still push back on this idea. If this is
the reason that Jade Vance thinks you should say a
prayer for these families. Oh yeah, they're asking for it.
Here's a little bit of the audio of jd Vance
and what he said he took away from this interesting trip,
(01:17:00):
this life changing trip to see families that are dealing
with a horrible, horrible tragedy.
Speaker 2 (01:17:07):
I have never had a day that will stay with
me like this day did, because I really felt like
these parents, in the midst of the worst grief of
their entire lives, they opened up their lives and they
opened up their hearts and they made me part of it.
So I'd ask a couple of things straight from the
parents and straight from the families to my fellow Americans.
First of all, while two kids lost their lives, there's
(01:17:28):
still one kid that's in very serious condition. And every
single family, the family of Lydia who luckily recovered but
we visited her in the hospital, the family of the
two who died, Harper and Fletcher, all three of those
families said, please say a prayer. So, my fellow Americans,
if you're the praying type, say a prayer for this
innocent girl who's actually in surgery right now. That the
(01:17:51):
swelling will go down, that she will be okay, because
she's still in a fight for a life. And every
single family to a person is desperate that the death toll,
which currently is at too stays it too. And I
think if you're a praying type, you ought to say
a prayer for the Sennessee young girl. The second thing
that I'd say is, look, I'm speaking to my fellow
Americans who are parents in particular. There is nothing that
(01:18:15):
you can say they can take away the grief that
these parents are dealing with. There is no word that
can possibly describe the feeling, or the emotion or the heartbreak.
One of the ways that I'm going to try to
honor these parents and the children that they lost is
by being a better dad and hugging my kids tight
tonight and making sure that they know.
Speaker 1 (01:18:35):
That their dad loves them, because there are two.
Speaker 2 (01:18:37):
Families who are not going to get that opportunity ever again.
And if you do have kids, if you're lucky enough
to have a son or a daughter, make sure that
they know that they love you. Make sure that you
hug your kids tight, because there are families in Minneapolis
and won't be able to do that.
Speaker 1 (01:18:51):
Every now again, I can't imagine actually visiting and being
around people with this level of loss, this level of
questions faith who would look to God but then also
be curious or like you know, demand answers from God.
Might be a better way to say it as to
why this happens. You have a certain evolution of stuff
(01:19:11):
you go through when you struggle in any part of
your life, and this one I can't even remotely fathom.
But also the things jd. Van says, Pray for these
families because they're asking for prayer. Hug your kids tighter.
These are the bad guys according to mainstream media, the
people you should hate, the people who are horrible, and
he says something uniquely human, and mainstream media, left leaning
media will refuse to humanize him because they want you
(01:19:33):
to keep hating him. So I thought it was really
important to play that audio. He also said this about
narcotics and narco terrorists being blown out of the water,
and a reporter who wanted to ask a really dumb question,
Here we go undefendanzuela. That's so little, you know Professor's
striketh quote. Legal authority were you guys working under? And
(01:19:54):
will there be an after on the strength, Well, I'm
sure they're going to be an after report.
Speaker 2 (01:19:58):
I mean, the legal authority I would to talk about
these kids is that there are people who are bringing
literal terrorists, who are bringing deadly drugs into our country,
and the President of the United States ran on a
promise of stopping this poison from coming into our country.
Speaker 1 (01:20:11):
Another question, I do love that. Next question, you want
to move on, what's our legal authority? Our legal authority
is that we don't want drugs here, so we're gonna
blow up people who are trying to bring drugs into
our country. It's that simple that you want you want
more on that we're gonna blow them up more. I
don't know what to say. All right, let's move on
to the testimony that Bobby Kennedy, Robert F. Junior, Robert F.
(01:20:34):
Kennedy Junior is giving to senators and some of the
ridiculous things that are being said back and forth. I
kind of find it kind of amazing that these are
the questions that the senators are bringing or the conversations
they want to have, and how easy it is for
Robert F. Kennedy Junior to, you know, Perry to you know,
fight and counter punch a lot of these things because
(01:20:56):
it's just ridiculous. Here we go.
Speaker 28 (01:20:58):
Clearly you have an agenda. It is a threat to
the public health of the American people. It's clear that
you are carrying out your extremest beliefs, which is why
you attempted to.
Speaker 6 (01:21:11):
Fire I'm the sickest people on earth. I'm speaking. How
am I, Secretary Kennedy?
Speaker 1 (01:21:19):
I love that response. We are the sickest people on earth?
How am I a threat? How is what's going on
right now working? We have some of the most expensive
healthcare in the world and some of the least effective
healthcare in the world. We have tons of treatments that
don't succeed. You know what's funny about this, This isn't relevant.
It doesn't really compare all that much. I have a
(01:21:40):
hernia in my stomach. You don't care about it. I'm
only saying it within the context of the story. I
promise I got it treated like twice medically, where people
did surgeries on it and stuff, and they promised it
was going to work, and it failed almost immediately. The
hernia is still in my belly button. I know this
is not blaming the medical system for my own unique
health thing. It's very anecdote what I'm mentioning here, But
(01:22:01):
I find that sort of funny that you sit down
with the doctor here in this country and they tell
you how great they are, how they're the best person around,
how it's going to be easy for them to fix it,
how there's not gonna be any issues, even if I
have to sign a paper that says there's a unique
amount of risks. They're very confident that it's going to
go well, and then it immediately fails. I don't think
I was healed for any days in the fact that
(01:22:22):
I tried to get the hernia a fixed, And that
I think is the experience a lot of people have
with medicine here in the United States is even when
you can afford to go and get it, it doesn't
actually give you the level of treatment success that you
were hoping for. And you wonder why that's a thing,
because in other parts of the world, they are less sick,
the medicine costs less, the treatment costs less, and they're
(01:22:45):
not struggling as much with dying young like we are
young people now, I'm a millennial. I have uniquely bigger
risks in the world of certain cancers that generations before
us never had, things like colon cancer, and eventually the
answer for the medical community is, we don't know. Seems bad,
seems like it might be diet specific. Robert if Kennedy
(01:23:06):
Junior seems like the kind of person that actually wants
to figure out what the reason is for this stuff
is and try to stop it. That actually does seem good.
All right, Let's move on to another breaking story. ICE
agents are going to surge into Chicago for a immigration crackdown.
DHS has actually also requested the National Guard, so National
Guard troops are going to be mobilized in Chicago too.
(01:23:28):
These things are interesting. Apparently Mexican Independence Day parades are
coming up in the city too, so they're wondering if
there's going to be uniquely viral videos of a cop
showing up at parades and arresting people there or whatnot.
But ICE agents are going to disregard anything that jelly
Bean Pritzker and Brandon Johnson and the leaders in Chicago
have said and not care and actually try to enforce
(01:23:50):
the law there, even if Chicago wants to fight them
on it.
Speaker 6 (01:23:53):
It's not just the National Guard.
Speaker 29 (01:23:54):
Multiple sources telling Fox News that ICE agents are set
to move into Chicago's for an immigration crackdown. Now that
city's democratic leaders are expected to resist, but many locals,
like our next guests, say is a long time coming. Well,
Sean tun Sol will join us in a moment talk
about the resident sentiments in a moment they're in Chicago.
Speaker 1 (01:24:13):
Yeah, you know, it's interesting. I won't play that audio
actually of the guest. I forgot to take that part out,
but I will say that you hear it a lot
of places. And this is a black guy who's a
guest on Fox News talking about how a lot of
people in certain communities think that the support being given
to people that are there illegally is unfair. These are
communities that say that they've long felt like they're not
(01:24:34):
given enough of what they need to survive. Now, granted,
I don't have to agree with them on their position
that they need more government handouts to do better, but
I understand the position they're taking when they're like, hey,
we've been asking for certain things for a long time.
You're not giving them to us, But all of a sudden,
you're giving them to people who have no status to
be in this country. Legally, that makes no sense. You're
alienating your core voter now by demonstrating how little you
(01:24:57):
actually care about them. That seems to be a d
version of a conversation to go down that rabbit hole
of man, you're pushing away even more voters. All right,
This is also interesting to me. This is Tim Kain,
a one time vice presidential candidate who's often been compared
to Tim Walls because they seem very similar in a
(01:25:18):
lot of ways. I think SNL even made fun of
that a one time. Anyway, Tim Kaine apparently has never
read the Declaration of Independence, because he said a thing
and even used certain words that seemed shocking to everybody
else in the Senate today.
Speaker 12 (01:25:32):
Here is this audio the notion that rights don't come
from laws and don't come from the government, but come
from the Creator. That's what the Iranian government believes. So
the statement that our rights do not come from our
laws or our governments is extremely troubling.
Speaker 30 (01:25:52):
So Senator Kin said in this hearing that he found
it a radical and dangerous notion that you would say
our rights came from God and not from government. I've
just walked into the hearing as he was saying that,
and I almost fell out of my chair, because that
(01:26:13):
radical and dangerous notion, in his words, is literally the
founding principle upon which the United States of America was created.
Speaker 1 (01:26:23):
It is it absolutely is way to go Cruz, way
to take him down. For that, I can read it.
I can dust off this document that maybe Caine has
never seen before, the Declaration of Independence in Congress July fourth,
seventeen seventy six. We hold these truths to be self evident,
that all men are created equal, that they are endowed
by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these
(01:26:45):
are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. That to
secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, derived their
just power from the consent of the governed, etc. Etc. Again,
if I was Biden, I would have very quickly into
that reading said you know the thing, and just moved on.
But yes, this is literally word for word in the
(01:27:08):
Declaration of Independence, even the use of the word Creator
not God, which I would have been fined with either one. Apparently,
to Tim Kaine, radical horrible things. The founding document of
the country in which he is a political representative couldn't
be more slap in the face moment for him, I'd
have said that out loud into a microphone in absolute moron.
(01:27:28):
Thank god he was never the vice president of this country.
All right, quick break, a lot more Craig Collins filling
in on the Dana Show.
Speaker 10 (01:27:36):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's quick five.
Speaker 1 (01:27:41):
That's right, it is time for a quick five on
the Danish show a d Lash, Dana Lash radio and
x on Twitter. Great ways to stay connected to her
at radio. Craig state, if you want to be kind
enough to follow me and follow my very random, very
seldom Yankee tweets. A man was covered in mud wearing
only a speedo. Well, he was running from police. When
I saw the headline to this, I was pretty sure
(01:28:03):
it was going to be a Florida man story. It
is not. This happened in the Denver area. But the
dude a lot of unanswered questions. Why were you covered
in mud? Why were you only wearing a speedo? Was
this your deterrent for cops to not arrest you? They
chose to go ahead and do it anyway. Here is
some of the audio of the cops chasing down the guy.
His name is Alec, who's running from them again, all
(01:28:27):
muddy and speed out up. The kind of person that,
if I were a cop, I would rather just let
go than actually apprehend. But darn it, we got up
hold the law. I guess here we go.
Speaker 6 (01:28:39):
He's running.
Speaker 7 (01:28:40):
Let tells you quite male, covered in mud and underwear.
Speaker 6 (01:28:45):
Oh man, you had a chance, you had a choice.
Speaker 1 (01:28:47):
I was scared, bro, Yeah, now you were more than scared.
You run away. I love the end part of that
audio where they're actually talking to him and they're like,
you have a choice. You could have done whatever you
wanted to do, and he chose to run in the
speedo because you did not make the right decision. You're scared, bro.
Why are you covered in mud? Why are you wearing
only the sit I was scared, bro, Yeah you were
(01:29:08):
Denver guy arrested. Probably also high, I imagine. I'm guessing there.
I don't know, but we'll find out more information about
that later. A College football fans are gigantic fans of
the sport and their favorite team. A recent survey found
just how far they'd go to watch the game, especially
like say a rivalry week game, instead of doing other
things in their life. A third of people said they
(01:29:31):
would skip a friend's wedding if it meant they had
to miss out on the rivalry week game for their
favorite college football team. That's hilarious to me because there's
ways to get around that, by the way, and it
even was like a best friend in some questions. Just
bring the phone and watch the game on the phone
at the event. People do it the old fashion way.
At least listen to the audio with a earbud in
(01:29:54):
your ear as you have the phone in the pocket
and occasionally glance at it. Go to the bathroom a
bunch of times, do whatever you need to do so
you understand what's happening in the game without actually looking
like a complete cherk and skipping it. People would travel
over a thousand miles to see these games. We do
all kinds of things a college football fans, and we're
not upset about that. We don't mind. You'd even give
(01:30:14):
up coffee, not forever, just for a few days in
order to see your favorite football game. Doctors warned that
pickleball is a drug. Players are going to wild lengths
to make sure that they keep playing even if they
get injuries. All kinds of other things The reason I
guess that people love pickleball is that even though it
is somewhat difficult to be very good at the sport,
(01:30:36):
it seems fairly easy to be decent at pickleball. It's
a sport with a large net for those who feel
like they want, you know, to get in shape again
or be active again, actually even act like they're you know,
playing sports again without having to do something harder than pickleball.
So that's the reason it's a drug. You feel like
you're good at something without it being as taxing on
(01:30:57):
your body, so inevitably you let it beat the crap
at your body. All right, quick break a lot more.
Craig Collins filling in on The Dana Show.
Speaker 11 (01:31:04):
Keep your finger on the pulse with a Dana Show podcast,
delivering timely news with insightful analysis whenever you want, straight
to you on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 1 (01:31:15):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you. A bunch of
stuff to talk about. I like to do these things
called palette cleansers on another radio thing that I do.
They're brought to you by Elbondido Yankee Tequila. I have
a tequila company that actually sponsors by talking about things
other than serious news. Producer Steven just sent me something
(01:31:36):
that absolutely is a palate cleanser to me. I love this.
This is a military guy comparing branches of the military
to different types of churches, different church denominations. This is funny.
Please put your funny pants on to not be offended
by any of this, because this dude is definitely kidding,
and he's actually a person of faith himself, which is
probably the reason he can make these jokes. I think
(01:31:58):
those are the rules, But here we go. I do
like a whole lot of this.
Speaker 7 (01:32:01):
If you served in the military and you're wondering which
denomination of church you should go to, this will narrow
it down for you. Now, the Marines and Baptists go
hand in hand because we're number one in God's eyes.
We don't work well with others. We're pretty much right
and you're wrong. Also, we're extremely uptight. Now, the Air
Force will be like Presbyterians. They got all the money,
they're highly educated, and I'm pretty sure you have to
(01:32:22):
pass a written test to join them. And it's comprehensive.
Speaker 1 (01:32:25):
Matthew's church is gonna be like the Navy.
Speaker 7 (01:32:27):
It's gonna be a lot of women leading it, and
there could be some other questionable things that they're okay
with now. Catholics are gonna be most like the Army.
They've been around the longest, They got the most members,
They definitely got the most money. They have a lot
of secrets they don't want you to know about that
could threaten national security. The National Guard be non denominational.
It's full of a whole lot of washed up marine
slash Baptists. They don't really care if you go to
(01:32:48):
church full time. Congregation is normally full of other branches
or denominations. Not a whole lot of rules to follow,
definitely not a dress code, and I'm not really sure
who's in charge. But they're good people at Church of Christ.
Like the Coast Guard. They're real smile group. A lot
of them are half crisy, and we just kind of
let them do their own thing.
Speaker 1 (01:33:06):
Me any hate letters if you're from the Church of Christ,
I like everything about that because the guy is trying
to add some humor, some levity to also encouraging you
to have a faith of some kind, especially if you're
former military, and you can find out what your past
life and future life will look like if you join
a certain type of church. Now, I'm not saying everything
he said was absolutely correct, but I also don't mind
(01:33:26):
that as a Catholic I was put into the army.
My grandfather served in Korea and fought in the army,
So again, I kind of feel like that's a cool
branch to be put in. My uncles are all Marines,
though I don't think they'll be as happy with the
fact that they didn't land in the Catholic Church, but
I think they will like the description of the Marines
that they're right and everybody else is wrong, and that
(01:33:46):
they're difficult to work with. That part is pretty funny.
At least one of my uncles definitely jumped off the
page at May as someone that fits the description. Although
you love them, you know that it's going to be
tough if you have more than a five minute conversation
with him on something you disagree here on. Luckily him
and I agree on a lot of stuff all right,
other things out there. I do love this. Now that
the palate cleanser and the shot of the day is over.
(01:34:08):
Robert F. Kennedy Junior was going back and forth with senators.
I've played a bunch of different pieces of this audio today.
There's a lot of it out there. Go check for yourself.
A lot of it's very good. But this unique moment
seems pretty important. This is a back and forth. It
starts with Senator Ron Johnson in which there's a discussion
about how CDC a chief scientist in two thousand and
(01:34:31):
two buried some things he shouldn't have buried that seem
to be uniquely impactful not just to people and health
in general, but actually to a specific minority of individuals.
Two black kids that were a part of this study.
And so again Democrats claim to be the party that's
fighting for, you know, disenfranchised groups. It seems like they're
(01:34:54):
doing a whole lot more than fighting for them, if
this is to be believed.
Speaker 14 (01:34:57):
Yeah, I mean, I'll just tell you one examp, but
I could sit here and give you thousands. But in
two thousand and two, the CDC in an internal study
of Atlanta in Full County, Georgia children and looked at
children who got the MMR vaccine on time and compared
(01:35:19):
those two kids who.
Speaker 6 (01:35:21):
Got them later.
Speaker 14 (01:35:22):
So in other words, kids who got them before thirty
six months and kids who got them afterward. Data from
that study showed that black boys who got the vaccine
on time had a two hundred and sixty percent greater
chance of getting an autism diagnosis and children who waited.
(01:35:43):
The chief scientists on that doctor William Thompson, the senior
said Vaccine Safety Science, said at CDSA was ordered to
come into a room with four other co offers by
his boss, Franktice seven, who's the head of the immanization
Safety Brands, in order to destroy that data, and then
they published it without that fact.
Speaker 1 (01:36:06):
That is insane. Did you just hear what he said?
There a study into of all places of Fulton County
in Georgia, which made the news a lot for going
after President Trump did a study where they found that
young black babies who did not get the vaccine. You
heard all the stats of it, the measles vaccine at
a certain time versus a different time, that if you
(01:36:27):
got it the way that you're currently recommended to do
it a two hundred and twenty six percent increase in
the likelihood of autism. Now, a lot of people say
that any of those claims that are Robert F. Kennedy
Junior makes are not proven. They're not verifiable fact. And
there's a reason why, and this seems to be an
example of that that any study that would actually verify
(01:36:47):
the things that Robert F. Kennedy Junior and others are
saying is being entirely buried and thrown out. It's being
destroyed in a room of people who are bullying you
to make it go away. It is tough to verify
that fact now, course, because of the idea that the
data is actually destroyed. But nonetheless, this is a unique question,
and certainly one where your own rights is both a
(01:37:09):
parent and a person, come into play. Should you be
allowed to choose what to do when it comes to
the health and safety of your children of yourself? The
answer to most people is rationally yes, you should be
able to choose to do that. For some reason, for Democrats,
the answer apparently is no, which is odd, all right,
a couple other things. Quickly, odd is a good word
(01:37:31):
for it. Horrible is a better word for it. John
Thune now says that the Senate is preparing to clear
the backlog of President Trump's nominees. This is good, This
is something we want to see. It's been a while
since a hundred plus people were nominated for positions and
then we're buried and not allowed to actually pass the
nomination process. We're going to kick this thing into high gear, baby,
(01:37:53):
and get these all through the Senate. This sounds awesome.
Let's hear him talk about it.
Speaker 23 (01:37:57):
We just had a very productive meeting where our conference
talked about clearing the nomination's backlog, and we are where
we are right now because of the Democrat obstruction, which
is historic and unprecedented. We have never seen a time
where the opposition party has literally blocked and forced the
(01:38:22):
president and his team and us here is the majority
in the Senate to go through all the machinations of
trying to get a nominee across the finish line.
Speaker 6 (01:38:32):
It used to be done.
Speaker 23 (01:38:33):
That used to be that these were done largely by
unanimous consent or voice vote. And this president is the
only president at this point in his presidency going back
to Herbert Hoover.
Speaker 6 (01:38:45):
We went back all the way to the Hoover.
Speaker 23 (01:38:46):
Administration, who hasn't had a single one of his noms
confirmed either by voice four unanimous consent. So of the
Democrats making it is. It's not something that we can sustain.
This business model doesn't work. This president was duly elected
by the American people, and they expect him to be
able to put his team in place to govern the
country and act in enact the agenda that they voted for.
Speaker 1 (01:39:09):
Yeah, all that stuff is true. By the way, whenever
President Trump claims that anything going on, even some of
the stuff involving the Epstein case, is disruption, is conspiracy,
is you know, distraction, whatever he calls it, is a
game being played by Democrats to undermine the authority of
the office of president. You could very easily point to
(01:39:31):
this as a demonstration that that's probably true, because they're
doing it in a myriad of ways all the time.
Always Democrats want to run as much you know, counter
offensive as they possibly can. The moment that Trump gets
into office a second time, voted by the American people,
rightfully into that position of power. And actually, I do
(01:39:51):
want to mention this, and I know a lot of
people certainly question the validity of the twenty twenty election
based on even new data that comes out sometimes and
new accusations of voter fraud on individuals. Even in our
most recent presidential election. But I will say that as
a sitting president, he got the most votes anyone has
ever gotten. So he was wildly popular even in the
(01:40:13):
year where he lost. And I might have used air
quotes as I said that in the election. So you
decide how important it is for him to actually be
able to do the things he wants to do, to
run the country the way he sees fit. Is it
a reflection of the desire of the American people? Obviously
the answer of that should be yes. The majority of
people chose to put him in a position of power.
(01:40:33):
He even won the popular vote, which is often something
that Democrats usually point to to say, see, people don't
actually want this person to make decisions, even though they
do all right. One last thing I just find this amusing.
David Axelrod, of all people, is begging Democrats to take
the high road or the yes, thank you for the
help road when fighting crime in certain cities. You should
(01:40:56):
not say no to federal government assistance in things that
are absolutely a problem. Every single major city that Trump
would like to send National Guard troops to does have
a crime issue, a crime issue that most Americans would
like to have fixed. It's like a ninety ten issue.
As far as people say, and I imagine the ten
percent are people who are committing the crimes. Like now,
(01:41:17):
we don't want this fixed, we want to keep going here.
But here's how Axelrod said, Please at least pretend to be,
you know, accepting assistance. Reject the National Guard, which makes
no sense to me, but accept any other form of help,
because saying no across the board looks bad for you.
It looks like you're now the party of criminals. Here
we go.
Speaker 16 (01:41:35):
I would be careful about playing twenty eight politics on
this issue, because the right answer is we'll take all
the help we can get, as long as it's appropriate help,
as long as it's stuff that will really help. I mean,
there's National Guards men aren't even trained to do that work.
They're not authorized to do that work. So you know,
(01:41:56):
send us the resources that we need.
Speaker 6 (01:41:58):
We want to work with you.
Speaker 16 (01:42:00):
If they are a criminal. If there are people doing
violent crimes here who are illegal immigrants, we want them
out of our city. How we wop with you on that.
I think that's the appropriate position to take.
Speaker 1 (01:42:10):
Yeah, Democrats are not taking that position, by the way, Bud,
They're not taking anything near that position. They're taking the
same position they take on getting Trump's nominees through. On
anything that involves President Trump, he said it, it's terrible.
We can't possibly do it.
Speaker 15 (01:42:24):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:42:24):
It's also amusing about this. I remember when Barack Obama
was in office, a big complaint of a lot of
Democrats and the Democratic Party and the talking heads that
exist within that party was that Republicans played opposition and
refused to do anything that Obama wanted in any capacity.
And what's amusing about that. Whether or not you think
that's actually true, I'd rather not debate that. I don't
(01:42:47):
really care to debate something that's that old. I just
think what's interesting about it is Democrats are now doing
exactly the thing they accuse Republicans of doing because they
don't like the person in position of power. It's not
even that they actually fundamentally disagree with some of the
things that Trump would like to do. Because if they do,
as axel Rod is saying, disagree with cleaning up cities
(01:43:07):
from crime, that's a bad take to have. That's a
bad position with the American people. It's simply that we
hate the fact that Trump wants this thing to happen.
So we have to say no, no matter what it is,
because his name is tied to it, which is bad,
you know, governing to say the very least. All right,
quick break, A lot more coming up in a very
little amount of time left. This is Craig Collins filling
(01:43:29):
in on The Danas Show.
Speaker 11 (01:43:31):
The Danish Show podcast. You're fast, funny and informative news
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Speaker 1 (01:43:42):
This is The Danish Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you. So much stuff
out there to talk about. Real quick. The NFL kicks
off tonight. Baby, you got Dallas, You got Philadelphia. The
Iggles are going to be playing. You really wish for
a better I think opening game. The points spread is
like eight and a half points, so they're favoring the
Eagles by more than a touchdown. Mike is gone, which
(01:44:04):
means Dallas's defense is questionable across the board, especially considering
the fact that disgraced former Chicago Bears head coach Matt
Eberflus is actually their defensive coordinator, someone easily to blame
if things go horribly awry in this game. And also
the Eagles have a very good offense that's gonna be
tough to contain. If there's one area of interest for
(01:44:27):
anyone who actually cares this much about sports analysis from
the guy filling in for Dana Lash on Dana Show,
it is going to be the Eagles secondary and if
they can contain the wide receivers for the Dallas Cowboys.
They have some very very good cornerbacks, but they do
have some question marks and Dallas has some good players,
so we'll see there. But I definitely expect the Eagles
(01:44:47):
to win, and win significantly in this game. They're calling
it a opening game statement for the defending champions. All Right,
we'll move on from the world of sports. As I understand,
I'm not a sports anchor. On the show, the reality
stars are sharing dating tip hacks that apparently help women
steer clear of misogynistic, terrible men, men who like them
(01:45:09):
for their bodies and not for anything else. Here's my
favorite part of these tips. The woman, one of the
women who is giving them. Her name is Abby, has
a bunch of really scantily clad photos she put up
on her dating profile in order to try to entice
men with her looks. She wants people to look at
her the way anybody on a dating app does, swipe
(01:45:31):
right because they think she's hot, and then maybe send
her some kind of message about how hot she is.
She says that in order to defend yourself from these horrible,
terrible men, you engage in conversation with them, and you
let them truly show you how interested in you they are,
how dirty and horrible they are, and the things they say,
and then eventually you just you block them all, I guess.
(01:45:53):
And also if you reject them a little bit, you
see if it makes them go crazy. Those are her
tips for dealing with misogynistic a men. Again, as she
also puts on very little clothing and takes a bunch
of photos of herself, it puts it up in social
media because she is someone who's standing up for all
the things that you'd want to be in the world of,
you know, feminine ideals, feminine ideology. On her dating app profile,
(01:46:16):
I'm not talking about it. If she just like, where's this
stuff out and about in her everyday life. If you're
advertising yourself a unique way to a unique place, who
you want to date you and what they want to
be thinking about when they're dating you, and then you
ridicule them and post the messages that these guys send
you on social media when you are much more scantily
clad than the average person on a dating app. I
(01:46:37):
think there's a problem, and I think it's partly on you.
I will say though that as I said, as I
mentioned that, I know that people might have pushedback and
whatever to it. The men don't look good. I'm not
defending the dudes who send like six messages to someone
you don't know where you're like, man, baby, I'd love
to do bleep, bleep and bleep to you. I don't
think that usually works. I don't think you wind up
(01:46:58):
having a lot of successful you know, back and forth,
unless it's the kind of person who's interested in that
kind of thing. And then good luck to you kids,
be safe out there. I guess the rest of my advice.
One last thing that I think is interesting. There is
a hunched and hideous digital model that has created what
life will look like as we get older because of
(01:47:18):
how hunched over we are by digital media, by our
phones and whatnot. By twenty fifty, the expectations that will
all be hunchbacks or all be people with weird craned
neck things, strange faces. Just a lot of bad stuff
going on in the world of our bodies caused by
the technology that we have. Maybe some skin issues to
giant lips seem to be a byproduct of this, and
(01:47:41):
I don't know where that came from, but that is
a social media trending thing that AI says humans will become.
Let's hope not as far as the answer to this
question goes, But by twenty fifty, man, I'll be old
enough that I won't care that it'll be well past
my time to worry about my own hunchback and whatnot.
But let's hope for the best here. Let's occasionally do
(01:48:03):
things where you don't bend over and look at your
phone so that your body doesn't start to contort in
a way that you don't want, because darn, it's evolution
and the things it does to us. All Right, that's it.
That's the show. Thrilled is always to be a part
of this with you. Dana is going to be back
on Monday. My name is Craig Collins, filling in on
the Dana Show.