Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
And that's why Democrats have been waging this fight, and
(00:04):
we'll continue to wage this fight no matter what comes
over to us from the United States Senate to the
House of Representatives. At some point this week, our position
as House Democrats has been crystal clear.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
Really, I mean, in what manner has it been crystal clear?
This is what I don't understand. It's been crystal clear
that they've been wanting to vote no, and they've been
voting no this whole time. I'm just so tired of
this nonsense. I really want to be able to say
what I want to say about it, but I'll get
fined by this despotted government because it's not considered acceptable speech.
(00:49):
I don't have enough middle fingers on my hand for this.
Can you tell I'm done? It's at the end of
the year, and I always go through this thing where
I'm just done by the end of the year, you know.
I mean, it's you got to ladies and gentlemen, take
your vacation time. But let that be a warning to you,
so the cause you when you deal when you see this.
This is why I could not go to d C.
I could not be an elected official in DC. I
(01:11):
would be dragging people out those damned steps by the
roots of their hair. God help them, not me them.
There would be no I could not deal with it.
I have I have enough time. I have enough frustration
in my life when people don't know how to use roundabouts.
I can't even imagine what it would be like in DC.
(01:32):
Can't even imagine, Kane. We wouldn't have any friends there.
You'd be the same way. I'd set up an octagon
out there right in the front. Actually it'd probably be
a parallelogram, so I wouldn't get sued. I'd set up
the fighting parallelogram the Washington d C. Fights, and I
would just be like, oh, you want to take this outside. Yeah,
let's take it outside. We need to make that but
(01:53):
like great again, make fistfights great again, you know, just
like let him hand like I mean, don't cane him
to death, but you know, just smack each other around
and solve some of this stuff. Because I just can't.
I can't stand this. I cannot stand it. Dear God.
I am so grateful that I am not a politician.
I oh my gosh, I would probably push the button
just to end it all, just because I've just you know, bye,
(02:17):
everything sucks. Bye, that's it. Welcome. Well, I'm just saying
you get tired of this stuff? Right? Oh no, I
got more because you know what, did you see what else?
Letting us know, let's just go ahead to get into it.
The chances at rumble if you want to complain, they're
not going to listen to it. They're not gonna hear you.
So just case in point. This is what pushed me
(02:39):
over the top this morning. It really pushed me over
the top because I keep seeing these stories. Here's another one.
Fanny May is gonna drop at six hundred and twenty
credit score minimum. Okay, tell me if you have heard
this story before. Tell me if you've seen this movie. Okay,
they're set to drop their sixy credit score minimum and
(03:02):
they're instead going to use their own analysis of risk factors.
Officials say they're easing barriers to borrowing. It's just the
latest in a series of policy changes aimed at creating
home ownership opportunities in the United States. Huh, I feel
(03:22):
like we've heard this before.
Speaker 3 (03:27):
It's like they want to create another real estate bubble.
Oh yeah, like intentionally mm hm.
Speaker 2 (03:35):
I mean it's literally the it's it's Obama two thousand
and seven, two thousand and eight, all over again. Everybody
get ready to buy some cheap foreclosures. It's how it's
got seriously that since maybe we should shorter own houses.
I'm just scared, just wondering, Wow, this is insane. I mean,
it's legit Obama two point zero, that's exactly what that is.
(04:01):
I mean, it's a stunning Hey, what happened the last thing?
What happened the last time we did that? Kane?
Speaker 3 (04:11):
Well, for people who don't know.
Speaker 2 (04:12):
They wait, wait, wait, but these are the people, if
they don't know, they're either branded or politics or the
people who think that politics began to day. They were
born right, because everybody knows what go ahead, go own a.
Speaker 3 (04:23):
Home back in the early two thousands and mid two thousands,
but they offered what were called no DOC loans or
NIA loans, no income, no asset, and all you had
to have was a credit score instead of any sort
of savings or any sort of financial structure. And all
of a sudden, all these houses were being foreclosed on,
and they were unfortunately being packaged up into these bundles
(04:48):
that investors would invest in. And then, of course because
they were horrible. It all collapsed and it all went
to hell.
Speaker 2 (04:57):
Wow, it all went to hell. Just a pit of fire.
Oh my gosh. This is I mean, so this is
we were having this conversation yesterday because everyone and I
love the people who are like, well, you just need
to build more housing. You just need you just need
to build more houses. So it is Kane. It's because
(05:23):
there's not enough houses being built, so you got to
build them. Why are the housing people not building the houses?
Speaker 4 (05:29):
I mean, what.
Speaker 2 (05:32):
On the next candice, Why aren't the housing people building houses?
But let's talk about to Jews. Too many Christmas swear
I throw this microphone. Hmmm maybe maybe, just maybe the
problem is government. Ooh, why are your trader? I mean,
(05:58):
this is this is why myre stuff right here. It's like,
this is like the nineteen twenties.
Speaker 3 (06:05):
Here, it's like no child left behind, only for mortgages
and real estate.
Speaker 2 (06:10):
It is. It's exactly that. I mean, this is this
will this will tip the apple card over, It'll tip
the apple card over. I was talking to my husband
and one of my kids last night, and I was saying,
it's a real bummer that politicians made it to where
and look they made it to where you have to
(06:33):
have both parents work outside of the home in order
to afford a middle class lifestyle. I mean, that's that's
the first thing that they did. The second thing is
that they made it so just punitively expensive, prohibitively expensive
to own a home and to start wealth creation, that
people are gonna have to go back to old timey
ways of generational wealth just to make sure their kids
(06:55):
have something. I mean, you're gonna have to leave your
kids there at your house just so that they can
get into the real estate market. It's insane, But it's
also they've been encouraged. Republicans have been just as not
as bad, but they are. They're not without blame. They're
not without culpability. Democrats obviously have been driving this. But
this is what really just pus is me off, is
(07:17):
that we have this, Oh, we've got to buy more
healthy Well, maybe we could this lower the credit score.
Let's just have everybody pinky squear to get a house. Sure,
and the youth are told this is the only way
it's gonna happen, which is a lie. It is a lie.
They're playing you for fools, They're making asses of you.
(07:39):
This is a lie. They're doing this purposefully to let
themselves off the hook. I mean they could cut spending.
That would be great. They could cut spending and reduce
the tax burden. But they're all vampires. They won't do it.
And the Republicans are a bunch of female copulatory cowards.
(08:03):
Why am I not a Republican? Why do I laugh
when I have all of the child groomer Nick Fouinta's,
you know bots, Whenever they're like, oh, you're a Republican establishment, No,
you actually are. They're too left for me. The Republican
Party is too left for me. I mean I have
(08:24):
to go speak at a Republican thing coming up, and
I'm like, Jiminy Christmas, do you realize that I just
don't like the GOP because you guys are too damn left.
You've made this socialist ascendancy possible with your cowardice. They're
letting themselves off the hook, and they're telling the next
(08:44):
generation it's so bad, we can't do anything. This is it.
We're gonna have to lower credit score. We went through
this in two thousand and seven and about damn, you're
killed the economy. In fact, we're still suffering from it.
We are, we're still suffering from it now. Yes, I
think that the the assessment of property value is also
(09:09):
out of control. That's a huge factor of it. Well,
another big factor.
Speaker 3 (09:15):
Big firms like Blackrock and the others, when they have
let's say, for example, they own, you know, they bought
up seven, ten, fifteen homes in a neighborhood and they
continue to buy in that neighborhood, They'll offer a higher
price for those purchases so that the other investments they
have will be increased in value falsely. And therefore, you know,
you rinse and repeat that method over and over again,
(09:37):
and now you have people that are that cannot afford
a home.
Speaker 2 (09:41):
That's just where we are, and that's where exactly, and
that's where and that's where it is. It's insane, it's
absolutely insane to me. And then the idea of pitching
the fifty or mortgages, that's the other thing. And I realize, yeah,
you know, I think on average eight to ten people
and they REFI but this whole that to me is
like the living wage argument. Well, we have to pay
people fifteen dollars an hour you know, to help them. Well,
(10:02):
if you really like them, just give them a million
dollars an hour. I guess you don't love them as
much as I do. Why stop at fifty your mortgages,
Let's just do one hundred year mortgages. Let's just go
ahead and allow the generations to lease, and let's go
back to feudalism. It's asinine. It's all of these band
aids over the problem, but nobody wants to deal with
the problem. And I damn mean nobody wants to deal
(10:24):
with the problem. No body, not any politicians you idolize
and worship. None of them want to do anything. They
all want to give themselves an easy out. Oh look,
we're just getting ourselves off the hook with us. So yeah,
I'm in a really bad mood about it because I
see people running for running, cover for the stuff, and
everyone's like, oh, Israel, the Jews, and you have all
(10:45):
of these foaming is Lombist fluffers who cobble together maybe
have a quarter of a brain cell collectively, and that
are like Jews, Jews Jews. In the meantime, you got
Muslims to like is Lomists, like actual Sharia supporting is Lomists,
like taking over in the United States. Look at Minneapolis,
(11:08):
look at New York City, people who sit here and
refuse to condemn you know, from the river to the sea,
or the global Intofada, none of that stuff. But in
the meantime, or all the Katari cash that's coming through,
or the CCP mobile homes right next to air force
bases where they could launch a drone attack and completely
take out you know, all of our are you know,
(11:31):
like a basically everything there, Yeah, really everything there. But hey,
let's make sure that we talk about like all the
stuff that's ancillary to this and not I mean, it's
all purposeful. And so in the meantime, we have all
of the same people looking to just tear down the
economy everything that we have done to straight back to
(11:53):
this point. And if you think that proposals like this
won't one and done tank it, then you clearly have
not lived long enough to participate in the conversation. Sorry,
but it's true. We don't hand out participation trophies here.
If he didn't go through the hell of seven eight
with real estate and property and the tax burden and
(12:14):
watching the dollar debase itself, then then sorry, this isn't
a no This is a no participation trophy zone. You
just didn't live through it. You don't you got to
be able to have that to compare it to. I mean,
I I'm amazed at all of the mathematically illiterate, like
people who are left leaning who think this is the
(12:35):
government's job to do. It enrages me, and it enrages me,
and it should enrage you, especially for your kids and grandkids.
They are never going to be able to buy a
house with this nonsense. And it's crazy because we're getting
all these wins everywhere else. I mean, we held the
line on government shutdown, and now I'm hearing that, oh, well,
you know, now we gotta let's go ahead and tank
(12:57):
the economy with proposals like this. It's just asinine. I mean,
I don't know. This is some This is some gope
stuff that's being pitched, and I don't know why people
aren't more up in arms about it. I mean, it's
everything that you hated, every big bad government compassion or
(13:17):
conservative gope policy is being pitched economically right now. We
protested all of this once already. I mean, we went
to war with the establishment once already, and now we
got it. Now they're pitching it again. Okay, what happened.
People were shown up, They were default and how fast
(13:39):
were they defaulting?
Speaker 3 (13:40):
In eight faster than the actual market could sustain, unfortunately.
But the one thing government can do is create a
law that prevents black rocking others from actually buying single
family homes. Like sure, you don't want to do the
multi unit stuff, you know, that's great, but the single
family home, unfortunately has been fun aulse rising in price
(14:02):
and unfortunately keeping how.
Speaker 2 (14:04):
Much of that is with property tax too, and those assessments.
Speaker 3 (14:06):
That's because you never actually own your home. If you're
if your home's paid off and you're still paying thousands
a year to the government, no, you just never will
own your home.
Speaker 2 (14:15):
We have had to fight the assessors in our area
every single year. They were one time trying to tell us,
so it's triple what you paid for it, And I'm like,
I will literally go to war with you. I mean,
you want It'll be Waco two point zero, you want
to do it, I'm there. I mean you just y'all,
just you know, just say the word and let's go.
I'm like, already, we went to war for a hell
of a lot less than this. Our partners that help
(14:36):
bring you the program. It's the folks over at Preborn.
Speaker 5 (14:39):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (14:40):
Preborn is a great organization that saves that saves lives.
And a year after an abortion, women were far more
likely to need psychic psychiatric care or struggle with behavioral disorders.
Speaker 6 (14:52):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
And that's not healthcare, that's trauma. So at Preborn women
are finding something different. When you're after an abortion, women
were fifty percent more likely to require first time psychiatric
treatment and eighty seven percent more likely to experience a
personality or behavioral disorders. When a woman walks into a
preborn clinic, she's welcomed with capassion, shown her baby through
an ultrasound, which is only twenty eight dollars by the way,
(15:15):
and that's often the first moment that she sees life
not lost and finds hope. And when she chooses life,
Preborn continues walking with her for up to two years,
providing counseling, diapers, maternity clothes, and so much more. They
care for the whole woman, mind, body and soul and
the baby. Since two thousand and seven, Preborn has helped
save over three hundred and eighty thousand babies in council,
over a half million women and just twenty eight dollars
(15:37):
can provide a free ultrasound and a year d giving gift.
I mean you can do it in a big way,
like fifteen thousand pays for an entire ultrasound machine. Think
of how many lives that saves that they place in
a needy women's clinic. You can dial pound two fifty
and say the keyword baby. That's pound two fifty, say
the word baby. Or give securely online at preborn dot
(15:57):
com slash Dana. All gifts are taxed to duct Well,
every dollar that you give help saves babies and changes lives.
Speaker 7 (16:05):
Get the loaddown on the latest news with a side
of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to the Danish Show
podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast, like.
Speaker 3 (16:16):
SAMs through the hour Glass. So are the days of
the United States?
Speaker 8 (16:22):
Yeah, well I didn't. I didn't really have that choice
this firstly, every day every time I was up, as
we called it, you know, I was up for the public,
and the days were long. So as you mentioned, to
save time, you know, I know, having a glam team
a trifecta. It feels like a luxury, but it was
(16:45):
a time time necessity. There's absolutely no way that I
would be able to do my hair and make up
and have clothes ready at that fit. You know, because
where is the woman that can live off the rack?
Speaker 2 (17:01):
Does she ever stop bitching? Does she no wonder Barack
Obama in around her half the time, because all she
does is bitch? Woe is me, the daughter who grow
up in a one percenter family. Woe is me who
is able to afford an Ivy League education. Woe is me?
(17:22):
I didn't have a choice when I was first lady?
Yes you did. What the hell are you talking about.
You had a choice as to whether or not you
wanted to be a first lady, and you sure as
hell seemed to make that choice when you were the
wife of a senator, after you pulled some tricks to
make sure your husband could be state senator in Illinois,
and then even after that, some very interesting primary tricks
to make sure he got that Democrat party nomination. It's
(17:43):
not a luxury and avacair and makeup team. Oh my gosh,
what a first world naval gazing, self obsessed, absolute bit
fantastic problem to have. This is why people don't like you,
because you sound like an entitled brat that is why
people don't like you. You know, there are a lot
of women whose husbands work even longer hours than your
(18:05):
husband did, who have more kids than you have, and
who also juggle work. And guess what they bitching about.
I don't have a hair and makeup. Our second hour
is on the way, ladies and gentlemen, you probably don't
want to miss it. We got a lot of fun
stuff to talk about. Oh, just the housing isn't even
(18:26):
that's not even just. That's a part of it. Stick
with us, guys. We do so are partners that help
bring you the program. It's the folks over at Berne Gun.
If you want to be able to protect yourself when
local or municipal laws prevent you from doing so, you
need to diversify your weapons array and check out some
of the stuff that they offer at Berne Gun. It
shoots chemical irrit and projectiles that can deter threats from
(18:47):
up to fifty feet away. Easy target acquisition, no recoil,
and burner, requires no background checks. It's illegal in all
fifty states. It ships straight to your door, and in
addition to that, they have several different models. The cl
is the most compact one that they have, but you
should definitely check it out. You can take advantage also
of Berna's Black Friday and Cyber Monday sale get fifteen
(19:10):
percent off sidewide. It's their biggest sale of the year.
I can't believe we're already in Black Friday season, Black
Friday and Cyber Monday. Visit Berna dot com. B y
r Na dot com.
Speaker 9 (19:21):
Meant for people, and you know what it does is
it really puts the comfort in the country a jeopardy.
People that need it have to get it.
Speaker 2 (19:28):
I'm all for it.
Speaker 9 (19:29):
But people that are able bodied can do a job,
they leave their job because they figure they can pick
this up it's easier. That's not the purpose of us there.
It is.
Speaker 2 (19:40):
So he's saying, look he's talking about and he's talking
about the whole fifty year mortgage thing. Welcome back to
the program, Dana lash with you. By the way, guys,
it's okay to disagree with policy that's bad. It doesn't
mean that you don't like the candidate. It doesn't mean
that you're a trader to your country. It doesn't mean
that you like Democrats. It doesn't mean that you worship Satan.
(20:03):
All of these things. I always hear. Every single time
I disagree with a single Republican policy, I'm told that
I'm a trader to my country, that I should die,
that I you know, all of this stuff, that's all
I hear. If I disagree with a single Republican policy,
that's what I hear. Happy to show you the emails too.
I got a couple of other ones this week. Welcome
back Dane Lash with you top of the second hour,
(20:25):
the chats at Rumble. You can watch us through the
radio show if you want to. But this isn't Fox.
I don't have a teleprompter. So we talk and we
hang out, and I have a four and a half
foot screen in front of me, so don't ask me
why I look down on my screen. Those are for
the dry buys who just like to nag. So I
don't like this policy because it's just it's feudalism. I mean,
why are we and it enrages me. This is the
(20:47):
thing that has me set off almost more than anything
else right now. Is this because you are These are
politicians that are letting their parties, Republicans and Democrats, off
the hook for bad policy by doing this stuff. So
there's a number of things that we could do for
(21:08):
housing to become affordable. And it's not We're just going
to build more houses. We had a candidate for election
here in one of the previous ones that was talking about, well,
we just got to build more houses. Due the problem
is not building houses. That isn't the issue. The issue
is the unaffordability created by heinous, bad, big government policies,
(21:28):
the incessant spending, spend spend, spend, spend, spend, zero accountability,
and now we want to spend more money by sending
out more stimmy checks. Spend spend, spend. No. I mean,
there's a lot of things that we could do, cut taxes,
cut spending, but that means that that means Democrats and
(21:49):
Republicans have to live responsibly, and they don't like to
do that. Neither of them do. Neither of them do.
This isn't like a one side or other thing. By
the way, it's both of them. Both of them literally
got us into this mess two thousand and seven, two
thousand and eight. They both were doing the same thing
with too Big to Fail. We lost our minds over that.
I went to war with the establishment. So this idea
(22:15):
that a fifty I mean it's reminds me of the
minimum wage. All we've got to pay fifteen dollars an
hour to everybody, no matter what they're doing. And if
you don't, I guess you hate them. You hate poor people. Okay,
well let's pay them a million dollars an hour. Then
I guess I love them more than you do. Oh
you don't agree. You see where this goes. It's how
stupid it can be. And this is going to be
(22:35):
such a disaster. You got Fanamin and Freddie Mack already
looking to get once again to lower credit scores for acceptance.
This is the other thing in addition to be able.
I mean, young people are toltally you can't buy how
you can't do You're just perpetuating the problem by not
doing anything about all of the things that are causing
the problem. That's the big issue. And I it's so
(22:59):
it's fresh strating because I want people to be able
to afford houses. I want them, I want them to
be able to afford Ford houses. This is four this
is uh uh we just played this right, potus on us?
Oh okay, I thought we were playing for okay, play
for real quick. This is what I'm talking about. The
SNAP and ifits Trump is right on SNAP benefits. He's
(23:19):
absolutely right on SNAP benefits, because if you're able bodied,
you should be working. This is not I actually don't
believe that SNAP should exist at all. I think it's
a big government. But when you create a society where
government takes half of your income every year and they
waste it and there's no accountability, people are not empowered
to be good stewards of their fellow men by themselves
(23:40):
because they're too busy trying to keep a roof over
their head. That's all by design. It's all hurt and rescue,
all by design. So Trump is exactly right on SNAP.
I mean, I don't an absence of it not existing
entirely as policy. The very least you could do is
require people to go to work. If you can go
get your eyebrows done, you can get off SNAP. You can't.
(24:01):
You have to make some difficult decisions. People don't like
being told that they have to make difficult decisions because
they think that their decisions should have to be the
same as everybody else's decisions. And if it's not, then
that's quote unquote inequality. That is part of the critical
theory that came from the Frankfurt school of Marxism. You
have economic critical theory and you have race critical theory.
These are the two variables that are being used to
(24:23):
divide the right and Economically it hasn't been so successful
because people like keeping the fruits of their labor. But
as it pertains to race, it's absolutely in fact to
the right. This is where Trump is talking about those mortgages. Listen,
it's not.
Speaker 9 (24:34):
Even a big deal. I mean, you know, you go
from forty to fifty years and whatever is is you pay,
you pay something less from thirty that some people had
a forty and then now they have a fifty. All
it means is you pay less per month you paid
over a longer period of time. It's not like a
big factor. It might help a little bit, but the
problem was that Biden did this. He increased the interest rates.
(24:56):
And I have a lousy fed person who's going to
be gone in a few months.
Speaker 2 (24:59):
So here's the thing. People are not going to ever
be able to afford a house at this point. And yes,
we're in a difficult economic period. You don't repeat the
mistakes that got us into this period. I mean, that's
you know, that's one of the things that we're dealing
with here. Also, honestly, I think a lot of people
have a super hella unrealistic view of what their first
(25:20):
time home should look like, and a lot of that
is social media. I mean, look, I feel bad for
gen Z because gen Z got bent over a barrel
and royally screwed by Republicans and Democrats. You owe no
part of your loyalty. My mantra is I don't owe
my loyalty to a single damn soul who's ever made
me question theirs. You don't owe your loyalty to any
(25:41):
party because they both screwed you over. Republicans just said
that Democrats did it worse. Maybe they did, but Republicans
want you to think that they're not culpable because they're Republicans.
So when they do it, it's more justified because there's
an R instead of a D after the name. That's
the reality of the situation. So you're going to pay
(26:02):
less for longer, and you're never going to own your property. Uh,
it's a band aid that doesn't that absolves politicians of
the responsibility while making it seem like it's your issue. Look,
the younger generations, I get why gen Z is enraged.
I'm enraged for them. My kids are gen Z, I
(26:22):
get it. They can't afford it, buy a house. You
you have the duo of social media creating idiotically unrealistic expectations,
and then you had COVID lockdowns that Republicans championed, except
in like a couple of spots, and then everyone's like, oh, well,
(26:46):
pull yourselves up by your bootstraps. You made everybody stay
home and lose two to three years of their formative years,
while also social media was the standard of comparison that
they had. And then you consolidated federal loans for college
students to make everything more expensive, the same damn thing
(27:07):
with housing to make everything super expensive. And then you're
wondering why gen Z is enraged at you. You know, honestly,
I'm going to tell you something, and this is what
goes into a lot of the woke Reich stuff part
of me. And I'm going to tell you, I'm going
to be very honest in my feeling. Thirty percent of
me thinks that all the other generations I would say
(27:29):
with except to gen X, because we hate everyone more
than you could ever imagine. You your rage we just
mask our rage because we were latchkey kids and we
were neglected as children, so we learned how to deal
with it. But thirty percent of me wants to see
gen Z just devour everything. And I don't care how
(27:49):
just because I feel like, you know, the bills come due,
it's unfortunate. But then the rest of me is like,
oh my gosh, my kids are gen Z. I don't
want that to happen to them. I don't want their
souls to rot off. No horrible, but there's a problem
that's been created, and it's every generation has its own
set of problems. And I got to be real with you.
(28:11):
I think that some of the problems with gen Z
if you compare it to the Greatest generation, Greatest generation
with their what how many wars? Two wars three actually
if you want to consider Korea, and then the ones
that were babies when they got to World War two,
technically they still could have gone and served in Vietnam,
you know, depending on you know, when they entered. So
they saw a lot. They saw Cold War, they saw
the Berlin Wall go up, they saw the Berlin wallfall,
(28:34):
they saw nine to eleven. They've seen everything under the Sun.
I mean they they've been through it. They are country
was targeted and attacked by communists culturally, and we start
kicked off in Chicago and went through the rest of
the nation. We've been fighting multiple cultural fronts. They've seen
it all. Every generation has its problems. You don't wallow
(28:58):
in it and make excuses for yourself as a result
of it. There's always a choice, and that's where character
comes in. That's where virtue comes in. Character and virtue
dictate what you're going to do if you're going to
take the choice and make it better, improve it, or
fight against it. And these types of policies ignore that
and they want to make you comfortable in it without
(29:19):
doing anything about it. They want to they with these
sorts of policies, they want to tell you, Nope, this
is how it is. There's nothing we can do. So here,
we're going to have it to where you're just going
to be renting your home in perpetuity. You're not going
to pay a lot and it's not really going to
be yours. But hey, that's okay because you'll be in it,
right you see what I'm saying. That doesn't you know,
(29:40):
build generational wealth that way? You don't build wealth at
all that way. They can't even think about generational wealth.
So this is where I get mad at those generations
because they're like wipe our hands of it. There are
enough Republicans pushing this stuff that I can say both,
this is not what about is them? This is calling
it out. This is accountability. And I know that's not
(30:00):
a big thing on the right lately with discernment, but
it is speaking of the woke right because we still
have these issues. I was looking at some of the
surveys I'm going to I want you to think about
this for a minute, and I saw this, Actually, where's
this audio? I should probably wait for the bottom of
(30:21):
the hour to let me set it up. I saw
this audio. I don't know who this lady is. She's
like a sixty year old whatever. I don't know. Is
she the interior designer that they're trying to make the
bembo version of Joe Rogan for the left?
Speaker 9 (30:36):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (30:36):
Are you talking about Stephanie Milly?
Speaker 2 (30:38):
No? Not her, No, her name never crosses my mind.
I'm talking about I don't know she was that interior designer.
She married some rich man and that's how she got
famous and she was on a television show and she's
botox within an inch of her life. I don't know,
I can't remember it. Don't remind me. I don't want
her name in my head. Anyway. She was going on
(30:59):
and on and going off on white Republicans and you know,
oah blah blah blah, don't go to Hispanic restaurants and
all of this, and I was thinking, you know, that
is so and I'm going to play We'll get into that,
but let me set it up. I was thinking, you know,
the one of the fastest growing demographics for three elections
in a row has been the Hispanic vote, right black
and Hispanic vote, but particularly the Hispanic vote. And Democrats
(31:23):
don't understand that Hispanics Americans hate illegal immigrants and illegal immigration.
They hate the act of criminality probably more than anybody
else because they did it the right way, and they
went through and they did everything the correct way, and
then they watch all of these other people get welfare
and et cetera, et cetera while and they're penalized while
(31:45):
they're working hard. And I was thinking, wow, Republicans have
really been making a lot of gains with that demo
for three years in a row. Now it has been
the fastest growing demographic for Republican voting and then other minorities,
black Americans, women have been migrating over slowly for women.
(32:09):
If you were trying to sigh up a stop to that,
what would you do? Oh, you would foster a worship
of identity politics in the right and make it to
where everyone starts talking about race to drive away the
(32:30):
fastest growing voting blocks that Republicans have seen in the
past fifty years. Think about that, because we have headlines
on the way and we're going to dissect it. If
you're looking to create a stable financial future, consider Noble
Gold investments. Gold and silver are tangible assets, not just
numbers on the screen, with thousands of years of trust
(32:53):
behind them. Gold iras let you hold real assets and
tax deferred or tax free retirement accounts. Noble Goald is
the number one ranked gold IRA company for four years running,
handling over two point five billion dollars in precious metal transactions.
And here's what's to like about Noble Gold. Their US
based team is available six days a week, providing personalized
and consistent service. Pricing is clear with no hidden fees
(33:16):
or fine print. Whether you're setting up a gold IRA
or making a direct purchase, they make it simple. You
even get a photo of your actual medals. Hundreds of
thousands of happy customers come back and refer others because
of Noble Gold's helpful, informed and straightforward approach. Open a
new IRA or cash account now and receive a free
ten ounce silver flag bar plus a silver American Eagle
(33:37):
Proof coin. Visit Noblegoldinvestments dot com, slash data. That's Noblegoldinvestments
dot com, slash data.
Speaker 3 (33:44):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for data's quick five.
Speaker 2 (33:50):
So I want this to be real. It's a very
credible bigfoot sighting in central Pennsylvania. According to our researcher.
If he doesn't have his camera, I feel like maybe
he'd be run over by a truck. But I kid
do I though. Researchers said they spoke with an eyewitness
who said they saw bigfoot crossing Interstate eighty and then
it was sincere incredible. Okay, everybody's got a phone and
(34:11):
a video and a camera on it that can record video.
Where is it? Where is it? Where's the video? I'm
so tired of elusive beast I mean, for the love.
They said that they reported the sighting. Blah it was
five point thirty pm on a Saturday, blah blah blah,
blah blah blah. It was one hundred forty yards behind
another vehicle. He saw a dark figure appeared to enter
(34:32):
the highway ahead of the other vehicle. He said, it
was human like. The whole body was dark, and I
thought the guy was going to get hit, but apparently
he didn't. He said, he just glided across the lanes.
You know, I'm sure that's what it was. Bigfoot. I
want to believe it so badly, but I just can't
when no one is able to get footage. And I'm sorry,
you're elusive to a point, but I don't. There's no
(34:56):
I don't have any excuses for that. Trump says that
US would be can be denied to fit people from
now on.
Speaker 9 (35:02):
Now.
Speaker 2 (35:02):
This is how New Republic, which is a toilet of
a website, this is how they write it. They said
that they're encouraging embassies and consulates to deny visas to
people with obesity or their health issues, and so what
we absorb them into our healthcare system which is barely
operating right now, and it's so burdensome that people can't
afford care is that we're talking about because they try
(35:24):
to push us all to single pair. You wanted single pair,
so we don't. We don't have to accept anything that
makes it more expensive. Your problem, not ours. Las Vegas
casinos are selling bottled water at about nine dollars. Yeah,
you're a captive audience if you're there at a casino
and you're gonna get bottled water and it's nine ounces
for twenty or nine dollars for twenty ounces of aquafina,
(35:45):
which is like tastes like soap and is the worst
bottle water out there. It's horrible. It tastes like soap.
It's like the water in your pedicurate. That's what it tastes.
What I imagine it tastes like. It's disgusting. Then you know
you got to pay nine dollars for it. And let's see,
a man who is digging a swimming pool in his
garden in France discovered gold worth eighty eight hundred thousand dollars.
(36:06):
I'm wanna go dig for a pool in France. Now
stick with us. You guys are very familiar with the
superbeats folks, and the company Human. Human was founded out
of the UT Health Science Center and it was built
on real cardiovascular research around blood flow and nitric oxide.
Unlike other supplement brands, Human is science born, not just
(36:27):
science ish. The products work and you can feel them working.
UT athletes have used superbats for over a decade, calling
it their cheat code for recovery and endurance, and you
can use it for the same reason to support healthy
blood pressure and circulation. Today, more than one hundred and
sixty college and pro teams use Human products, so your
(36:49):
favorite team probably does as well. And if you've seen
the Human logo on the Longhorns field this football season,
that's more than a sponsorship. It's a signal from Human
and un leading the future of cardiovascular health for athletes
and everyone. You can pick up super Beats at your
local Walmart and start supporting your cardiovascular health today. You
(37:12):
can get on the better road, or get on the
road to better health with super beats from.
Speaker 7 (37:16):
Human makes some common sense of the crazy headlines. With
a data show podcast, you're on the go guide for
getting up to speed on today's most important stories. Subscribe
on YouTube, Apple or your favorite podcast platform.
Speaker 9 (37:29):
Yeah, So I don't know what happened to Montree. A
nice woman, but I don't know what happens. She's lost away,
I think. But I have to view the presidency as
a worldwide situation, not locally. I mean, we could have
a world that's on fire, where wars come to our
shores very easily if you had a bad president. But
(37:50):
with all of that, I passed a great, big, beautiful
bill which is the biggest tax cuts in the history
of our country. So when somebody like Mandreie Tayler Green,
who's now catering to the other side, I don't know
what you know. I guess she's got some kind of
an acculate but I'm surprised at her. But when somebody
like Marjorie goes over and starts making statements like that,
it shows he doesn't know.
Speaker 2 (38:11):
So he's I think his answer here was spot on,
by the way, and what is he talking about? He's
like touching on her Israel stuff, right? Is that what
she was discussing. There's been so much of it. Some
people all they focus on is that, and they pretend
to be very concerned about where our tax dollars go,
(38:31):
but they say nothing about or who about foreign influence
in the United States, but they're suspiciously silent on Katari money,
which overshadows literally everything else. Welcome back to the program,
Dana lash with you. I love what he said there.
He said, I view the presidency as a worldwide situation.
He's not president of the world. And that's not what
he's saying here. Trump is saying that he've used the
(38:52):
presidency as a worldwide situation that requires war not to
come to our shores. And he's talking about making smart
decisions geopolitically that keep all of that away from us
and over elsewhere. That's smart, that's part of it. That's
a good strategy to have. And Marjorie Taylor Green, for
(39:13):
whatever reason, has just gone off on a tear on
Potus lately and doesn't seem to be super happy about
I don't know, I don't know. I just some of
these people. I just I got a lot of questions.
But he's said that she lost her way and they've
been fighting. You know what all of this is, I'll
(39:33):
tell you what all of this is. These are people
who are trying to expedite the erosion of Trump's influence
as he grows closer to turning out so that they
can power jockey for what's next. That's what all this is.
(39:58):
I actually think more and more people on the right
are going to start attacking Trump because they have to
set up the ascendancy of the next. They have to
have somebody who comes after him, and he is a
personality that looms so large and a presence that looms
so large. Some of them feel like that that's what
they have to do. I really do feel like that.
(40:22):
I mean that, I mean, am I wrong? King? Doesn't
that seem like that to you? That's what it really
seems like, because I don't, I don't get it. He
said that she has some quote act to going, and
he said that he was surprised at her. He was.
One of the things that we're talking about was the
one big beautiful Bill. There was a couple of other things.
(40:44):
She was, I think critical of some of the stuff
in the cr and that's fine, and then critical of
some of the geopolitical things in which the United States. Remember,
everyone said everybody from from Tucker Carlson to like wherever,
all of these people bull have said over and over
again that Iran that we were going to get into
(41:04):
World War IIE with Iran if we had these strikes
and that never happened, and that's part of what some
of this was as well. So I you know, I
don't I it's frustrating. All of this is frustrating. Now
in addition to this hang on, because we had a
(41:25):
couple of other I like what Trump says here this
is this is cut one from his interview Listen, will.
Speaker 10 (41:32):
Be much better than normal because we're buying the most
sophisticated avionics and you know, technology for our control towers,
and we didn't have that.
Speaker 9 (41:42):
We had again named Buddha Dige.
Speaker 10 (41:44):
Boot edge edge is this We're just say two edges,
like well, if the edge of a cliff, which is
where they were taking us. By the way, boot edge
Edge was the secretary of transportation.
Speaker 2 (41:57):
They're kind of laughing about it. It's true. I think
did anyone ever show Trump a boot edge edge riding
that bicycle. I'm never going to get over that for
as long as I'm on this planet, and probably also
in the afterlife, I'm going to laugh about it still
because it's that ridiculous. We've played it for you guys
a million times, so I don't want to play it again.
But you guys, there was the thing where he was
(42:20):
he had to be driven chauffeured in a fleet of SUVs.
And then he's two blocks from the capitol and he
gets out and they take his bike like how you
would get a bike out for your kids, you know,
when your kids were learning how to ride a bike
and you're helping them stop on their little I I
didn't do helmets. I didn't do helmets when I was
a kid. I didn't put helmets on my kids. They
but you're riding around the driveway. Come on, dandy, you're
(42:40):
such a bad parent. I got a couple fingers here
if you want to, if you want to retroactively criticize
my retroactive parenting. But they had his little helmet on.
They got the other people took his bike out of
the back of the suv and they put it out
and then he got on it. And did he have
(43:02):
a security Did he have this detail that was on
an electric scooter because they had the big fat tire
or an e Bite Sorry, they had the big fat
tires like you would have on an E Byte. Yeah,
so dumb, so dumb. But I get this now, if
you want to criticize. If you want to be critical
of Potus on something and I don't agree with them
(43:22):
on everything, I'm confused. Is that because previously you were
a trader if you didn't agree one thousand percent, and
now you're a trader if you agree with certain of
his policies. It make it make sense. This is cut three.
This is one that I don't actually agree with. He's
explaining these six hundred thousand Chinese students coming to the
(43:46):
United States because when part of I think this was
part of this neutral I don't want to say an
agreement because they don't have an agreement finalized, but it
seems like it was part of this sort of neutral
ignore knowledgement between the United States and China, and that
part of that would be that these Chinese students could
(44:06):
still come into the country. Listen to those.
Speaker 4 (44:10):
You've said, as many as six hundred thousand Chinese students
could come to the United States. Why, sir, is that
a pro MAGA position when so many American kids want
to go to school and there are places not for them,
and these universities are getting rich off Chinese money.
Speaker 9 (44:24):
Sure, never said about China, but we do have a
lot of people coming in from China. We always have
China and other countries. We also have a massive system
of colleges and universities. And if we were to cut
that in half, which perhaps makes some people happy, you
would have half the colleges in the United States go
out of business.
Speaker 2 (44:44):
Oh well, I think that's a big deal.
Speaker 1 (44:47):
You would have these states.
Speaker 9 (44:49):
Yeah, but you would have as you know, historically, black
colleges and universities would all be out of business. That
you would have a system of colleges and universe cities.
I think it's good to have. I actually think it's
good to have outside countries. Look, I want to be
able to get along with the way.
Speaker 4 (45:10):
We're not the French. They're the Chinese. They buy on us,
they steal our intellectual Problemy.
Speaker 9 (45:14):
Do you think of French are better?
Speaker 2 (45:15):
Yeah? Actually I do. I think the French are I
can't hop in saying that, but yeah, I do think
the French are better. Actually, the French are not a
geopolitical threat. The French didn't unleash COVID the woo flu
on us. The French haven't been trying to bully everybody
out of the South Seas. You know, the French haven't
been boosting algorithms on social media to try to divide
our youth. The French haven't been doing any of that.
(45:38):
My gosh, the French can't even keep it together. They're
barely amble. And by the French, come on, I've got
I got a real problem with I do. I have
a problem with anybody from a communist nation that in
order to even leave the nation and go and get
educated anywhere else, you have to be a member in
good standing with the CCP. That's a fact. I don't
want to bring any I don't want to import any
(45:59):
more communist into the United States of America. I don't
care from what corner of the globe they come from.
The common denominator that I loathe with the burning passion
of a thousand suns is the communism that unites them.
I don't want to import more communists into the United States.
We already have enough communists in the United States. I
(46:22):
don't want to import any more Communist trash into our
American colleges and universities. And a lot of these universities
that these CCP students go to are very wealthy and
very well endowed. They've got a billion dollar endowment multi
billion For some like Harvard, they can handle themselves, they
(46:45):
can handle their own financial issues. Let them handle it
for a little bit. I don't care if some of
these colleges and universities go out of business. I don't care.
What have they done besides poorly educate, fleece and divine
a nation. And we call it academics. It's not academia.
(47:05):
It's propagandizing. It's all a giant psyop. None of this,
barely any of it is considered academia. They come out
not knowing whether or not a vagina makes you a woman.
I would say that that's a problem. They come out
not knowing basic things about mortgages. I would say that
(47:27):
that's a problem. I went to when I was in college.
There was only one class, and one alone that I remember,
and that was actually worth every cent, and it was logic,
and I had at the time. I thought he was
a lefty, and he was one of those who drove
a Volvo, and he wore corduroy all the time. I
(47:48):
have never seen so many shades and variations of corduroy
in my life. Came kind of just full stop for
a second when the hell did Corduroy start? When was
that a thing?
Speaker 3 (47:57):
Well, seventies.
Speaker 2 (47:58):
I would imagine they're trying to bring it back. Okay,
it is Corduroy.
Speaker 3 (48:06):
Is boys joke that they could possibly start a fire.
Speaker 2 (48:10):
Oh, Corduroy. I would go to war over Corduroy. If
you're like Dana, if you just pick up arms and
go to war, and we'll never have Corduroy as a
fashion choice again. I'm already there. I'm already mags loaded,
ready to rock. Let's go. Uh anyway, Uh. My whole
point and talking about all of this is that in
(48:31):
bringing all of this up is what we don't need
any more of this in here. We don't need any
more of it. We don't need any more communists in
our universities. We don't need any more of this stuff.
And these universities, if there's an economic or financial issue,
they can handle it themselves, can they not. I mean,
what was Harvard's endowment cane with multi billion dollars. They
(48:52):
got a lot of money. I think they're gonna be okay,
they'll be all right. It's not worth it's not worth
the investment of our of any of our energies it's
just simply not. It's simply not. So I don't know.
The whole thing is frustrating. It's incredibly frustrating. Now this, Uh,
(49:17):
I don't know if we're going to do the whatever
happens in the house. I know that they're trying to
negotiate some things in the house as well, and we'll see.
We'll keep an eye on all the shutdown stuff. This
is let's see air traffic control. This is cut five.
Potus was asked about air traffic control. Is listen to
what he says here?
Speaker 9 (49:36):
Did is say the ones that's sayed, of which were
there were a lot of them. I'm sending them a
ten thousand dollars.
Speaker 4 (49:42):
Where's that money coming from?
Speaker 9 (49:44):
I don't know. I'll get it from someplace. I'll get
it from I always get the money from someplace regardless.
It doesn't matter. We did a lot of I do
a lot of bonuses for people because it's really something
that it's like the American way when you think about it.
Speaker 2 (50:01):
Okay, what do you think about that?
Speaker 3 (50:06):
The bonuses themselves. Uh, Look, I don't mind people that
stuck around and took an entire month without pay to
continually do the job. To reward them in some way.
I'm not against that.
Speaker 2 (50:20):
Shouldn't it be the companies that do that though, Yeah.
Speaker 3 (50:24):
In this instance though, it would be air traffic control
and everything funded by the government, so it would be
a government bonus at that point. But I'm not against
a bonus for these people. But but I'm not sure
where the ten grand number came from.
Speaker 2 (50:42):
And yeah, hy ten grand? And how many air traffic
controllers are actually? Look like, let's ask ai. Let's ask ai.
I hate asking it. I don't actually want to ask ai.
I think I've only done this once before as a joke.
How many Let's see how many air control.
Speaker 3 (51:01):
I believe in giving bonuses to people who do an
exceptional job and the ones that made the sacrifice for
an entire month without getting paid.
Speaker 2 (51:09):
So there's fourteen hundred. Now, how many stuck around? How
many actually stuck around?
Speaker 3 (51:14):
I would imagine sixty percent?
Speaker 2 (51:20):
Uh, really, I don't know. So let's see. Let's see
how many how many seconds? So about nine about thirteen
thousand reported for duty as essential employees. So and that's
(51:40):
I think that that well, no, they're saying approximately, really
approximately approximately thirteen thousand reported for duty as essential employees.
So if you're talking about giving, uh, that's a lot
of money came Uh, that's a lot of money, guys.
(52:02):
It's one hundred and thirty million dollars that we're giving.
That's where does that money coming from? I mean all
of it's taxpayer dollars. There's no special fund in the
US government that that magically money just sort of apparates
into the vault.
Speaker 3 (52:21):
We've taken in tear of money that has that didn't
come directly from you know, taxpayers.
Speaker 2 (52:27):
But yeah, so to be like the third thing that
we're yeah, but taxpayers, but but taxpayers are paying higher
costs for certain items that do so but not all
the way even started with the Italian pasta thing. We
got that coming up. I'm just I'm just saying. I'm
just saying. I mean, yes, it was a long I
I feel like the I feel like the the flight,
(52:48):
the the airlines. Audus Stee's telling us we got to go,
I will come back. We come back with us. We
also have floor to man on the way as we
move our partners over to mos Square, they want to
sit you talking about saving money. I just hate the
fact that I didn't come up with this business myself,
and I'm a little salty about it because this is
such a great idea with AMO Squared, so I use them.
And you guys remember the panic buying of COVID lockdowns.
(53:09):
You had empty shelves and sky high prices and a
lot of regret. You don't want to be in that
position again. There's a smarter way to stay prepared, and
you can do it with AMO Squared. It's America's ammunition reserve.
It's a worry free It's a worry free solution to
collecting AMMO and storing it for the future and so
you're never caught empty handed. You can choose from over
(53:29):
seventy calibers such your monthly budget and let Ammos Squared
curate your supply automatically so you can set it, you
can forget it, and you can ship it when you
need it. It's a secure, climate controlled facility. It keeps
your AMMO fresh and safe till you decide to have
it delivered. There's no minimums, no hidden fees, free shipping
on orders over two fifty, and it's great for trying
(53:50):
out new calibers or topping off your rounds, et cetera.
Visit ammosquare dot com and secure your supply for the future.
Don't run out when it counts. Stock up before training,
restock after to stay ready. That's amosquared dot com and
tell them that you heard about it from the Dana Show.
Speaker 3 (54:09):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida Man.
Speaker 9 (54:19):
So.
Speaker 2 (54:19):
A Florida man was charged after police found lots and
lots of drugs in his truck. So it was a
traffic stop and they pulled him over because he was speeding.
Susan fort Wayne and the canine did an open air sniff.
Is that when they just get out and go like that.
(54:41):
They just kind of sniff in the air and he alerted.
The canine alerted to the presence of narcotics. They found multiple,
well over thirty individually packaged kilos of cocaine. So they
were looking at a million dollars in street value. This
guy had a lot, so he was of course taken
into custody. I'm just surprised that he didn't go, oh, well,
(55:02):
that wasn't that's not mine. That's not mine at all.
A Florida man was accused of stealing a car and
trying to run over. The victim found hide in a
porta potty. Oh boy, he looks madly Kunty Florida Joshua
Mulnick's was arrested on Santabo Island after police say he
stole a construction worker's car and then tried to run
him over. The victim had to jump out of the
way to avoid being hit. He entered the property, tried
to break into a shed, ended up getting into this
(55:24):
getting into this worker's car, and yeah, he ran through
a gate. He cost thousands of dollars in damage because
he ran everything over trying to flee. Not helpful. We
have our third hour on the way stick with us.
So our skin changes in subtle ways over the years,
especially after having kids. Maybe your hair and your nails
and your skin don't seem as strong as you'd like
(55:46):
for them to be, but there are smart ways to
support them as you maneuver through the seasons of life.
Bub's Naturals College and Peptides offer a very powerful solution
to help restore health to your skin and your nails,
reverse the signs of aging, and support your body from within.
So starting in your twenties, your body produces less collagen
every year and collagen is the protein that holds everything together.
(56:08):
It's like, you know, the glue for the body. So
with Bubbs you can restore collagen levels to what your
body had before when you were in your twenties, and
that means stronger joints, healthier hair and nails, smoother skin,
and faster recovery, especially after workouts. Bubs Naturals offers the cleanest,
most effective collagen peptides made from grass fed, pasture raised cattle,
and the powder is tasteless, it's odorless, and it dissolves
(56:30):
instantly in your coffee, smoothie, juice, whatever you want to
put it in. And it's third party tested NSF certified,
Whole thirty approved, and free of sugars or fillers. So
for a limited time, get twenty percent off with code
Dana at bubsnaturals dot com. That's bu bs naturals dot com.
Support the show and tell them that Dana sent you.
(56:53):
So it's Antifa. They were very upset because heaven forbid
there be anybody who's a conservative speaking at UC Berkeley
and they decide to go and set fire to stuff,
and I mean, that's not even hooliganism. They just decided
to act like a little Marxist brats because they cannot
(57:16):
stand a difference in opinion. It's very interesting the left
is when they show you who they are, believe them.
Welcome back to the program, Dane Lash with you at
the top of this third hour. So where to start. Yeah,
we were reliably told, as can reminds us that that
doesn't exist. The Antifa doesn't exist. It's not real, don't
(57:37):
you know the real organization they're supposed to have, Like
you know, they got a d cards and burst jackets
and they have insignia these people. You believe that? Do
you believe it? So a few things we've been talking about,
the housing thing, and this is going to be a
major issue going forward, and it's really used a lot
(57:59):
of this is really used very divisively on the right.
There's a couple of things I want to get into
some of the woke left also. So I saw this
from the New York Post. This was a couple of
years ago. Apparently Coca Cola still has a major problem.
They're apparently still practicing DEI hiring at their company.
Speaker 9 (58:24):
Now.
Speaker 2 (58:25):
They first got in trouble for this back in twenty
one when they had a training I'm looking at their
materials diversity training that urged people to quote be less white.
Remember that, I don't even know how you do you
show up in blackface? Like what does that mean? You
show up eating tacos? I don't know. I mean technically
they're white, so I don't I don't understand. Like, how
(58:46):
what does that mean? Kane? Well, how do you be
less white? Be less white? Over there? You're so white
half white? Hmmm. This is what they said. Apparently the
way that they described it is you're supposed to be
less whatever that means less arrogant, ironic, less defensive, super ironic,
(59:06):
less ignorant. Who I feel like the Vince McMahon meme
where his eyes shoot lasers at the end of the panel.
Be less ignorant, be more humble. Listen, believe, what break
with apathy? What break with white solidarity? There isn't white solidarity?
Have you seen the right lately? There isn't any white solidarity.
That's all nonsense, that's all driven by people who worship race.
You see the godlessness of it. But do you also
(59:27):
see the horseshoe theory where you have some people on
the right that aren't really on the right, but they're
just they say that they're very far right, but they're
actually on the left. And that's horseshoe theory. When you
get so far over that you go right back to
where you started. That's what it is. Why are they
still doing this over there? Apparently this is still a thing.
They are still there were whistleblowers sending stuff into different
(59:51):
writers online saying that they're apparently still practicing this to
a certain degree. How do you just be like ari
soda company, just make stupid soda and shut up. It's
gotta be less white, gotta be with white cane, whatever
all that means. I don't even understand what less white is.
(01:00:13):
What's less white from.
Speaker 3 (01:00:16):
The company that creates cola?
Speaker 2 (01:00:19):
I mean, it's not even the good like Mexican coke either.
It's just the stuff with the aspartain in it.
Speaker 3 (01:00:25):
Clip that little bit. It's not good like the Mexican coke.
Speaker 2 (01:00:28):
Well that they use real sugar in that. And I
ain't gonna I ain't gonna lie. It's way better caine is.
Where's a lie? No lies, detected sirs, And ma'am's none
of it. Be less white, be less stupid, be less
godless goodness.
Speaker 3 (01:00:45):
So no sprite.
Speaker 2 (01:00:48):
I mean sprite's but great. If you're sick and you
have the flu.
Speaker 3 (01:00:52):
It's gotta be less white.
Speaker 2 (01:00:55):
Otherwise I don't I only like carbonation if there's high
fructose corn syrup with it. Otherwise I don't like carbonation
unless it's prosecco or yeah, like a cola. I don't want.
I don't want to. Carbonated water is evil because it
like evaporates once it's in your mouth and you're like,
did I take a drink? I don't know, that's what
that's like. So let's cut into some of this other stuff.
(01:01:19):
All right, So the uh what do we got here? Oh?
I wanted to. I touched on this very briefly. I
don't know if I really want to. I'm gonna play
this broad because it's coming making the rounds. They're trying
to make this uh female. I guess like the dumb
(01:01:42):
bimbo version of Joe Rogan for the Left. I don't know,
And I want to play this and then I'm gonna
bring this full circle to woke Reich. So this is
some interior decorator lady who is on Bravos Real Nags
of whatever county. I don't know. I don't watch any
of this stuff because I'd rather gouge my eyes out.
If I wanted to go see over dramatic people, then
(01:02:03):
I would look at members of my own family. Go
ahead and play, Go ahead and play this one.
Speaker 11 (01:02:07):
White people that triple trump, that have the nerve and
the audacity to walk into a Mexican restaurant, a Chinese restaurant,
an Indian restaurant, go to perhaps their gay hairdresser. I
don't think you should be able to enjoy anything but
(01:02:29):
cracker barrel. And if you want to triple trump and
you want to browbeat DEI, and you want to browbeat
gay people, and you want to browbeat black people as
you've been doing for four hundred years, and you want
to browbeat this generation of immigrants that come over here
and open up businesses, earnestly, pay their taxes. You want
to demonize them and call them rapists and felons and
(01:02:51):
all that, when the felon is the teeny weeny mushroom
piece of cankles mctaco at the top of the ticket.
Speaker 2 (01:03:01):
So I wasn't going to get mean, but then I
heard the full clip. Kane, I'm real, I'm trying real
hard to be the shepherd here ring go. I wasn't
(01:03:21):
going to be mean. I just find it very ironic
that someone that has a face like a prolapsed anus
is so upset over people who vote for Trump and
where they eat. Like, how far do you want me
to go from here? Kane, choose your path? Okay, I'm
(01:03:44):
just saying, she seems to have a lot of time
to think about this. She seems to have a lot
of time to obsess about where Trump voters go to eat.
You know, time that may have been taken up by
a loving husband or children, or community involvement, and without
(01:04:11):
all of those things, seems that she's left with a
lot of time on her hands too embitter herself, harden
her heart, immobilize her face, and do everything except be
a good person. And I also hear a woman who
(01:04:37):
it seems like she just ripped off that clanhood and
went to town because there are a lot of Hispanic
voters that voted Republican and that voted for Trump. In fact,
as I said in our first hour, it is one
of the fastest growing demographics within the GOP, and for
(01:04:58):
the past three elections, there's been a deluge of voters
that have voted for Republicans, that have voted for Trump,
specifically Trump, and they've joined the right leaning coalition, And
(01:05:20):
so I get that unfulfilled, lonely aging progressive white women
love to fantasize about being the white saviors of minorities
all throughout the United States. It's a position that makes
them feel better about their sad lives, and it also
(01:05:43):
is kind of a reflection of their own bigotry, because
they feel like their white saviorism is the only thing
that's going to help minorities. And meanwhile, you know, you
have Hispanic voters and Chinese voters and everybody else is like,
we don't need that, We're doing quite fine by ourselves.
It's that quiet bigotry of thinking that you can do
(01:06:06):
it better for someone and they can do it for themselves.
That's really you know, just Chef's kiss here. And I
was thinking about this, you know, as I was overloaded
with insulting remarks that I could say, and I could
be really mean, I could make her cry if I
wanted to, But you know, I'm trying to be a
nice person, really hard trying to be and I was
(01:06:27):
thinking about this and I thought, you know, if there's
this big coalition that's been built on the right, it's
a coalition that is even larger than what we saw
with the Tea Party and the Tea Party days, and
that was a very large coalition, even larger than what
we saw in the nineties with the New Conservative Revolution
(01:06:49):
under a Ginggridge, when Gangridge was at the House. And
I thought, you know, if I were someone on the
left and this is becoming a real stronghold for the GOP,
and I needed if I was on the left and
I really wanted to redirect those voters back to the left,
(01:07:09):
how would I accomplish that? And then you know, it's
interesting because then I started seeing like Nick Fouinte's stuff
pop up and the embrace. No one's talking about the platforming.
That's a misdirection by people who know that if they
(01:07:29):
were to actually debate this stuff on the merits that
they would lose. So they try to say it's about platforming.
It's not even about platforming, it's about the absence of
a pushback. There was no accountability. There were no hard questions.
And I watched everything, there's no hard questions asked, So
spare me that defense because those people didn't watch it
as I did. I would think that constructing your own
(01:07:54):
strawming of identity politics on the right and worshiping it
is going to be one of the things that arrives
apart the coalition. That's a great way you infiltrate. And
then you start being an unapologetic disciple of Marxist identity politics.
(01:08:17):
That is going to go, that's going to build, and
that will go a long way and destroying this coalition.
And I was thinking about that as I was looking
at some of the data from the last election, particularly
in Pennsylvania some others. Now, I don't think any of
this has built up enough to have an effect immediately
(01:08:39):
on that Democrat in this last election. However, in Pennsylvania,
Democrats are pushing back in the registration battle and they're winning.
They're winning in terms of active party registrations, in terms
of people who are registering. At first, Republicans were beating Democrats,
(01:09:00):
and now Democrats are beating Republicans. And then of course
we just Democrats just want to be go Jerry Mandarin battle,
which we'll I'll mention here coming up. So my point
is is that I think you need to be very
very careful about some of the stuff that's out there.
And think about this. There are a million different ways
(01:09:23):
right now that they are trying to destroy the coalition,
and a lot of people honestly sound like this, lady.
You gotta be careful where your information is coming from.
Insanely now, more than ever, we have more to come
as we move our partners that will bring you the program.
It's the folks at All Family Pharmacy. If you want
to know that your medications that you're taking, these are
(01:09:46):
things that the inputs everything you can trust, you need
to order it from All Family Pharmacy because everything that
they have is made in the USA. Furthermore, they have
ever met and they have hydroxychlorical when they have methylene blue,
they have an ad plus, they have been They have
your flu kits, your sinus infection kits, your TAMA flu,
your anti biotics, anti virals, your daily medications, and you
(01:10:09):
should stock up and be proactive, which beats being reactive
every time. Prevention is cheaper, easier, and healthier. Don't wait
until you are family You or your family members are
incredibly ill. And one of the things with All Family
Pharmacy is that you go online, you fill out the form,
you pick what you need. A doctor looks at your
(01:10:29):
prescriptions and sends it out to your door in two
to four days, or you can get it overnighted if
you need it in a pinch. Stock up today at
All Familypharmacy dot com slash data and be sure to
use Coddana ten again. Don't wait until flu season knocks
at your door. Visit All Familypharmacy dot com slash data
Coddina ten for ten percent off.
Speaker 3 (01:10:52):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 2 (01:10:57):
So we have a repeat offending bear. It broke into
a Colorado home twice in one night in Boulder twice
early Wednesday morning. According to Denver seven, the bear was
breaking into the car somebody's car weeks prior, and the
situation grew when the bear broke into some woman's home
right through the sliding glass doors about one am. They
(01:11:18):
actually had a crawl out of a window and run
to a car, and then police arrived and yelled at
the bear, and the bear ran away, but it came
back a couple of hours later and ransacked the kitchen.
How does it still getting in. I'm curious because it
doesn't say they broke anything. I mean, how they're getting
ready to hibernate, right, So that's probably just saying there's
(01:11:40):
a little reason why they're let's see. I don't blame them.
The alien ship apparently's going to hide from humans when
it closes in on Earth before Christmas. That's what everybody's
saying about that giant space turf that went around the Moon.
The Harvard astrophysicists says that the three I Atlas is
going to hide from humans when it closes in on Earth.
But we already saw it, he said, seven jets were
(01:12:02):
released from it. I really wanted to be an I
wanted to be Aliens.
Speaker 3 (01:12:06):
I mean I think it is.
Speaker 2 (01:12:08):
Do you really think it is? Really?
Speaker 9 (01:12:10):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:12:10):
I mean how do you change You change your direction
unnaturally and it changes the brightness and the shape and
everything else. It's yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:12:19):
I like the fact that there's still mystery in the universe.
So I don't know. I just think it needs to
come and humble us all. But it apparently yet it
has a complex jet structure and a glowing halo. It
passed by the Sun and it's the three I Atlas.
And so they said that, yeah, it has a large
glowing halo. I mean, that's at least what they're saying.
(01:12:41):
But this guy says, this astrophysicist says, that's probably alien
life and it's going to hide itself as it gets
closer to Earth. But we already saw it. It's like
a toddler playing hide and seek. We already see you.
What is your theory.
Speaker 3 (01:12:55):
We haven't seen any of the aliens. We've just seen
the ship. I'm thinking he's talking more about the aliens
hiding the.
Speaker 2 (01:13:01):
Like they're going to be here. I would hide myself
to I wouldn't even want to come here, locking the doors.
So I've been saying forever. I've been saying this for
ten years. They locked their doors when they fly past,
wouldn't you? I mean, for crying out live. We had
a national like freak out over butter stick with us
as we move our partners that he'll bring you the program.
It's the folks over at Relief Factor. Relief Factor can
(01:13:23):
help you out with your everyday aches and pains. They
want me to tell you about a man named Bob
who is sixty three years old and has forty years
as a car painter and a body man. Bob could
barely walk, Bob could not make it up the stairs,
and by day four or five Bob felt the change.
But after eight days on relief Factor he was seventy
(01:13:45):
five percent better and thoroughly impressed. As Bob shared, after
just eight days he felt seventy five percent better. Those
kinds of transformations just can't be ignored. So Relief Factor
targets inflammation that can keep you from doing the stuff
that you want to do freely with maximum mobility. It
looks at, you know, directly, inflammation in the body's response,
(01:14:06):
and it decreases discomfort from all of that stuff, maintaining
healthy joints and muscles. And they do it with a
whole bunch of ingredients. You can try Relief Factors three
week quick start for just nineteen ninety five. It's ninety
five cents a day, less than a cup of coffee.
Don't wait. Visit reliefactor dot com or call eight hundred
four relief and get your three week quick start today
for just nineteen ninety five.
Speaker 7 (01:14:26):
Not Able to catch all three hours of the data show,
subscribe to the full podcast and get news and laughs
delivered in short, easy to digest episodes ideal for your
busy lifestyle on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.
Speaker 6 (01:14:41):
I cannot set forth a plan right now that takes
money out of a system that relies on the fares
of the buses and the subways. But can we find
a path to make it more affordable for people who
need help? Of course we can, and so child childcare
I already committed to. So we'll be on a have
to get there because I'm committed to this as mom governor,
(01:15:03):
I get it, but also to do it statewide right now,
it's about fifteen billion dollars, the entire amount of my reserves.
Speaker 2 (01:15:11):
All significa got lied to. Then, oh, you're not getting
free buses all. Oh, no free buses for you. By
the way, you know, all the people that were voting
for the free buses, probably most of them don't even
take the bus because it was all the super rich
communists that live in Manhattan that do it. That's just saying.
Speaker 3 (01:15:33):
I also noticed she didn't bring up this information until
after the election, that there was no real you know,
money to squeeze out of the system for free buses.
Speaker 2 (01:15:44):
No free buses, just saying I don't know I we
all knew that wasn't going to happen because none of
it ever made sense. None of it ever made sense.
We all knew it was going to happen. Just this
is like when you when you're when you're you're promising,
(01:16:06):
like Santa stuff. I don't know, so one of the
let's see here because we've got a lot of stuff
still to get into, and uh, we've had where do
I want to because there's a million some crazy ways
that I could go. Oh gosh, By the way, did
you guys hear this new Jane's Addiction spoken word track?
This is cut thirteen. It's such garbage. I'm sorry, just
(01:16:28):
listen to this. This is so bad. I don't know
why they're doing spoken word, but here it is outrageous.
Speaker 12 (01:16:33):
That a group of Senate Democrats just joined with Republicans
really to undermine our efforts on healthcare. That's what this
fight has been about, extending the premium subsidies so that
people's insurance costs are affordable. What's happened now is they
will continue to be outraged, doubling or triggered that.
Speaker 2 (01:16:53):
You know, he had a hard times the last show
when he had that thing with Dave Navarro, but Perry Farrell,
I just don't got like spoken words, not the way
to go. I'm just saying. Also, what in thanos hell
is happening on her fingers? With all the jewelry?
Speaker 3 (01:17:07):
Oh, she's always like that.
Speaker 2 (01:17:08):
Like how many rings? I can't stand things like hitting
each other and making that sound bracelets, rings, Oh, I
can't stand it. I cannot stand the feeling of having
two rings on your hand touched? Why how do you
do that? How do you wear all the things?
Speaker 9 (01:17:26):
Like?
Speaker 2 (01:17:26):
Is she afraid that something's gonna happen. She's gonna wear
all the jewelry, so she's buried with it. I don't
get it. It's weird, it's bad. That's what's her face,
Rosa Delaro. Sorry if you mistook it for Perry Ferrell.
I understand it's very difficult nowadays. It wasn't ai. I
actually don't even understand. I didn't hear a thing she said.
She was complaining about something with Obamacare. That's all. I
(01:17:49):
just wanted to play play that for you. That's it.
That's all. I don't care. I don't care about anything else,
all right, So, uh.
Speaker 10 (01:17:56):
The.
Speaker 2 (01:17:58):
Fight with on the left, this is cut tin aoc
in terms of favorability. I know a lot of people
are trying to make her happen on the left. She
is such a tiny little district. But listen to this.
This is very interesting analysis. Unfortunately it was on CNN
that listened to cut ten Hey.
Speaker 13 (01:18:16):
So you know, you see this opening slide here and
you see, of course that Chuck Schumer is underwater with
Democrats nationally. But of course the ultimate way to get
Chuck Schumer out of office is to beat him in
New York State. To how do New York State democrats
feel about Chuck Schumer? And take a look here the
net favorable among New York Democrats. Chuck Schumer is above
water with the Democrats in his home state, but just
(01:18:37):
by sixteen points. Look at Alexandria Costokritez running way ahead.
If she decides to challenge Chuck Schumer come twenty twenty eight,
she's got a real leg up on the competition. I
dare say at this point she would be the favorite
to beat him, which would be something that was.
Speaker 2 (01:18:49):
Never going to happen. But that's adorable that you know,
they keep saying that this is what happens when you
give the left when the left allowed the crazies to
take control. That's a big thing. One of the things
that we've been talking about, at least, you know, for
a segment out of the show every day, is the
woke Reich stuff, which is huge, and we've been talking
about some of the things that contributed to this, and
(01:19:13):
there's was some great analysis that we had last week
and it's a lot of it's up on substack by
the way, chapter and verse if you want to go
and read it. But this the issue of what the
left or what the right is struggling with as it
relates to gen Z is a serious thing. We're talking
about the housing stuff, you know, education, all of this,
(01:19:36):
but I also think that people are being fed just
a line of garbage about different alliances and foreign influence.
And I don't see the same amount of concern for
foreign influence when it details the ungodly amounts of Katari
(01:19:58):
money that are coming into the United States. And we
know that they were pain influencers because there was some
stuff that came out and there were some influencers that
were pretending to be on the right that it came
out that they were being they were pain influencers. To
promote certain talking points and to try to amplify things
(01:20:20):
like the twenty two World Cup and all of this stuff.
There was a lot of that. They apparently the Wall
Street Journal had a major story about this, had a
lot of research into it, where Cutter had targeted two
hundred and fifty influencers on the right to try to
change policy. Now we know that they also do that
(01:20:40):
on the left too, and this is something you know,
Soros pays a lot of people on the left, a
lot of people on the left, these the Tides Foundation,
all of that. There was a lot with Antifa for
this too. But the issue with Cutter and then out
of money, the very with it's called unconventional lobbying campaigns.
(01:21:05):
They're trying to gain broader support in the US. There
are billions of dollars flowing through this. There was one
account that came out and it was being paid. It
was a one of those that received money from Cutter,
and as it turned out, the person that was receiving
(01:21:27):
the money was based in Pakistan but pretending to be
based in the United States. And it was like they
were calling themselves like Maga Patriot or something. They had
like two million followers, and the account was only a
couple of years old. There's a whole network of this stuff,
and I don't hear any of the people who are
complaining about foreign influence mentioning this at all. And there's
(01:21:50):
a reason why there is. My thought on all of
this is that there is a major, major op that
is happening to where the purpose is to divide the
right and keep everybody focused on one thing so all
this other stuff can happen. And I think this is
something we're going to be talking about as the days go,
(01:22:12):
but it's a very real thing. Like, for instance, you
know you're talking about Islamists students that are at University
of Illinois Chicago where they're saying that America's cancer, America
is cancer, Islam is the answer. I mean, speaking about
this stuff on college campuses right, A lot of people
are being baited into only focusing on Israel so that
(01:22:33):
you don't talk about any of this stuff. You don't
talk about Epic City and Texas trying to change its name,
or the tricks that are reported on in terms of
how they're able to be a predominantly Islamist community by
saying that you have to your hoafe has to go
to the mosque. A lot of people are kind of
uncomfortable with that. That's what's being reported. A lot of
(01:22:53):
questions exist about this or how Texas is the number
one state in the nation that's being targeted for Islam
development and islamis as you know, is the politicized, highly politicized,
highly radical Islam that we're seeing that's you know, dominating
Iran and is dominating you know, Husbalah and Hamas and
all of this stuff that's all islamis. There's not a
(01:23:16):
lot of questions being asked, not enough, because everybody's focusing
on the paltry amount that APAC which is an American
thing with American donors, what they're spending to lobby because
lot I know it's shocking, but lobbying groups will lobby.
That's a fact of life. If but I can't take
any of these people seriously because they don't have a
(01:23:37):
peep about Cutter. They don't have a damn thing about it.
They're not talking about any of these developments in Texas.
They're not talking about the billions upon billions. They're the
number one donor to American universities. If you want to
know why there's this fast growing sentiment just in the
past decade on American colleges and universities where people are
really just there. They're preaching this, you know, received virtue
(01:24:01):
of Islamism while attacking the United States. There's a lot
that explains this, and it's all by design. And I
will say that on the left and the right, we're
not the same. The left votes they're freaks into office.
On the right, people are trying to correct information and
(01:24:21):
stop people from being influenced by the freaks. This is
something I don't like Bill Maher because Bill Maher repeated
this predators lie about me. This guy who apparently was
trying to use my name to advance his career. Never
even met this guy, couldn't recognize him in a lineup.
And I've been mad at Bill Maher for years because
(01:24:42):
Bill Maher repeated verbatim a story that this guy tried
pushing on me in Daily Mail that I was trying
to do a reality TV show when I had an
agent for crying out loud with the biggest agency in
the world. I don't know why I would go with
some Z lister guy that I've never met. I don't
know It was after Parkland, and he repeated that lie
on air. So I've been mad at billmhar ever since.
(01:25:03):
But he makes my point here, so I'll play it.
This is cut twenty six.
Speaker 5 (01:25:08):
It does seemed like the entire Republican establishment lined up
against this. I'm not sure you could say that about
the Democratic asse. I mean Ted Cruz. You know we've
had on this show, and I certainly have had my differences,
but I'm glad to talk to everybody on this show.
He was very good on this.
Speaker 11 (01:25:25):
He said.
Speaker 5 (01:25:25):
The danger I want to highlight tonight is anti Semitism.
In the last six months, I've seen it on the
rise in a way I've never seen it before on
the right. Here's the interesting thing I thought he said.
He said, about a decade ago, anti Semitism began rising
on the left and the Democratic Party did nothing, and
then the decade that followed it has consumed the Democratic Party.
(01:25:47):
I'm not so sure he's not right about that. I'm
not so sure the Democratic politicians are more afraid to
challenge their left who think Hamas is terrific, than the
Republicans are.
Speaker 3 (01:26:00):
Ted Cruise is right. I agree one hundred percent with Ted.
Speaker 2 (01:26:03):
Cruz, it's kind of interesting. That's Moscowitz who said, yeah,
I agree with him. He's right on that. That's a
very interesting thing on and that's how it's always been
on the right. I remember the early days of the
Tea Party when we would have people that would dress
up in like Ariyan Nation stuff, and they would have
these insignias and they would try to show up at rallies,
(01:26:26):
and we had signs printed up saying not with us,
et cetera. Because the media was so eagerly reporting that, oh,
look at these you know, these notorious you know, white
supremacists that are showing up at these rallies. And we
were able to kind of drive that out and stop
the media from trying to discredit this grassroots movement by
(01:26:48):
with guilt by association, and we were practicing our free association.
We didn't want to be harmed by that ideology. And
now you're being told that your establishment if you don't
entertain it. It's not about platforming it, it's about embracing it.
And don't sit here and tell me that you're asking
hard questions. When I watch the interview and you don't
ask hard questions, and I feel like I've been really
(01:27:10):
cool up into this point, especially with people that I've
known that you guys don't know that I know behind
the scenes and have talked to. And I'm really getting
tired of the people who puffed themselves up and they're like,
if you have a difference, then call me first before
going online. Well guess what we do. Call and you
don't answer, and then you go to text message and
you try to argue book length and text message about it,
and then decline to go on any space where you
(01:27:32):
might be asked a hard question. So spare me the
tough guy stuff. It's incredibly frustrating. Everybody has right of
free association, and sure ask questions about geopolitical moves that
the United States does, but don't sit here in mott
baile it and pretend that you're asking a question when
in reality you're accusing people of dual loyalty and things
(01:27:58):
of that nature, which that's a very different thing. And
a lot of people maybe they don't under I don't know,
Maybe they haven't lived long enough where they don't realize it.
I don't know. But I don't want to see the
right become what the left is. I don't want everything
end up to end up being somebody like you know,
Ma'm Donnie or Hassan Piker versus you know, the Grapers
(01:28:21):
or something like that. Good grief, but that's everything's going
to be going to a version of identity politics if
we don't course correct. And while all of that is happening,
and while everybody's focused on that, guess what you have.
Islamism is spreading in the United States. And I do
think it's very interesting that that Graper movement has no
problem with Islamism. They like it. Actually, I mean, who
(01:28:45):
was it, Knowle's or whatever. One of those guys that
I don't know what's happening over at Daily Wire actually
came out and said, you know, you say what you will,
but the hit job is actually a very conservative, you know,
modest clothing for women, Like how you know what, how
are you a male American and you're saying and something
completely cooked like that. I don't know. We've got we have.
(01:29:08):
We have an intellectual anemia with supposed thought leaders on
the right. If you're looking to create a stable financial future,
consider noble gold investments. Gold and silver are tangible assets,
not just numbers on the screen with thousands of years
of trust behind them. Gold iras let you hold real
assets and tax deferred or tax free retirement accounts. Noble
(01:29:30):
Gold is the number one ranked gold IRA company for
four years running, handling over two point five billion dollars
in precious metal transactions. And here's what's to like about
Noble Gold. Their US based team is available six days
a week, providing personalized and consistent service. Pricing is clear
with no hidden fees or fine print. Whether you're setting
up a gold IRA or making a direct purchase, they
(01:29:52):
make it simple. You even get a photo of your
actual medals. Hundreds of thousands of happy customers come back
and refer others because of Noble Gold's helpful, informed and
straightforward approach. Open a new IRA or cash account now
and receive a free ten ounce silver flag bar plus
a silver American Eagleproof coin. Visit noblegold Investments dot com
slash data that's noblegold Investments dot com slash data. Whether
(01:30:15):
you're planting now or later. Fast Growing Trees has everything
that you need to create your dream yard, starting with
the best quality and selection of plants delivered straight to
your dower. As America's largest online nursery. They offer over
sixteen hundred unique trees and plants, delivering healthy, expert grown
trees since two thousand and five. From fruit and flowering
(01:30:35):
trees to privacy trees and shrubs, they have all of
the plants that your yard needs. There are a live
and Thrive guarantee insures that your plants arrive happy and
ready to thrive. All locally grown and cared for by
US experts. People love not having to deal with getting
their cars dirty with trips to the nursery. Fast Growing
Trees has over six thousand plants for every space with
(01:30:55):
a fourteen point quality check to ensure that your plants thrive.
Order online and get your plants delivered in days. Their
plant experts are ready to help. No green thumb required
this season. Get the best deals for your yard, including
up to fifty percent off plus get fifteen percent off
at Fast Growing Trees dot Com with code Dana at checkout.
(01:31:16):
That's fifteen percent off your next purchase using code Dana.
Now is the perfect time to plant. Visit Fast Growing
Trees dot com and use code Dana to save an
additional fifteen percent today. Offer is valid for a limited
time and terms and conditions may apply.
Speaker 7 (01:31:33):
Subscribe to the Dana Show podcast because who says you
can't make fun of people while staying informed on your
own personal time. Subscribe on YouTube, Apple or wherever you
get your podcast.
Speaker 2 (01:31:45):
Welcome back to the program. Make sure you go sign
up over at chapter and verse my substack. I was
looking at this. We mentioned the story yesterday, the bomber
flight that shares a fence with the trailer park that's
linked to Chinese intel Taie fraudster. This story is absolutely
beyond insane. It is incredibly crazy. I mean, you basically
(01:32:09):
had this couple who live in Canada and belong to
organizations controlled by Bannenfriend and disgraced Chinese CCP tycoon Miles
Glow and all these shell companies. They were established just
to buy this trailer park and then they did so.
(01:32:32):
It's right next to Whiteman Air Force Basis is a
Missouri This is just crazy story. And the couple that
purchased them like they were all in. We're gonna talk
more about this tomorrow. We talked about with Steven Yates.
I just want to know how this happens. How does
this stuff happen? I think I ran out your time
for today's stupidity, Kane. I apologize, but we were going
(01:32:53):
to have it. We uh make sure again. You find
us on substack, find us on YouTube, Facebook, like and
subscribe Vibe. I'll be back behind the mic with you
tomorrow