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August 15, 2025 107 mins
Trump and Putin head to Alaska for a high stakes meeting. A woke progressive pastor claims Jesus was queer because he was 30 years old, had no wife, no job and hung out with 12 other dudes. Dana recaps her interview with Shadi Khalloul Thursday and explains how Qatari activists are trying to divide the “Woke Right”. Kamala's Step-Daughter says she's really struggling because she's experiencing “climate anxiety”. Dana previews Trump’s high stakes meeting with Vladimir Putin in Alaska. The reality of Washington D.C.’s crime reporting is worse than originally reported. Gavin Newsom holds a redistricting press conference absolutely seething over Trump’s trolls about running for a third term. Which law would you break if you were allowed? Zohran Mamdani DOUBLES DOWN on his city-run grocery plan. Gabe Eltaeb joins us to explain why he walked away from his dream job at DC comics over Hollywood’s garbage, his take on today’s woke superhero universe and his latest projects with Dean Cain.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

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

Speaker 2 (00:02):
A tweet here. This is what I would love is
for to have you read this in your voice, if
you'd like to just take a shot at it.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
Well, I mean, wow, tomorrow history will be made. Now,
I'm not going to be as effectively as the person
that you may recognize is on true social But in
this case we pushed this out on Twitter. Caroline Levitt
will have no answers.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
Well, hold on, hold on, I don't need you to
breeze right through, right through the brilliant go on. It's
not just Carolyn Levitt.

Speaker 4 (00:36):
Caroline Caroline Levitt.

Speaker 5 (00:41):
Have no answers for.

Speaker 3 (00:42):
The supposed fake media about California's beautiful, big, beautiful maps.
People are saying. People are saying that were the greatest maps.

Speaker 6 (00:51):
They're just saying this.

Speaker 3 (00:52):
They are Ryan. People are saying the greatest maps many
people have heard the ever created even better than Christopher Columbus.
That'll the failure Trump be warned that tomorrow maybe the
worst day of your life, all because you missed the deadline.
He misses a lot of deadlines. Liberation Day for America,
g c N. I should have said thank you for

(01:14):
your attention to this matter.

Speaker 4 (01:17):
He is such a snarky little Say something nice, Dana,
say something nice.

Speaker 7 (01:22):
He is a snarky person trying really hard to be
somewhat kind and FCC compatible. For the lack of a
better way to put it, he's dramatically reading these like
true social things, that's what he's doing. And he's making
fun of you know, he's trying to make fun of
the redistricting and everything, and the DC crime and all

(01:44):
of this stuff. The it's kind of amazing this. Uh
the post that he put out, well it was him,
but it was his press office. Did you see that
the other day where he literally he typed it all
in caps lock and then said thank you for your
attention to this matter.

Speaker 4 (02:03):
You know, he's it. I didn't think.

Speaker 1 (02:05):
Oh.

Speaker 7 (02:06):
I tweeted it and I said, I would like to
report murder by cringe because that's it was just really cringey.

Speaker 4 (02:12):
And I just don't think that that.

Speaker 7 (02:15):
I don't know what if he thinks that that's going
to be a way, like a great way to talk
to people or to reach out to voters or whatever,
but it's it's not going to be welcome to the program,
Dana lash with you. That's right at the top. That's
Gavin Newsom, you guys know Mayor Gavin Newsom and the
ongoing battle over the issue of crime and cleaning up DC.

(02:39):
One of the reasons, and I was thinking about this
last night, one of the reasons that they're so unbelievably
mad about it is because it highlights the they're in action,
not just you know, recently, but for all of these years.
Because people are asking like, well, we're paying all of
these tax dollars in what are we getting for it.
We're getting carjacked, and we're getting our houses are getting robbed,

(03:01):
and it's it's a nightmare. What are we getting for this?
And they're realizing this is like one of those moments
when Democrats policies, the reality of their policies come are
come to the surface and it's impossible to to to
explain it away or deflect it. And you know, attacking
Trump isn't going to be the thing that does it.

(03:22):
I hate to tell them that, but well I do.
I love to tell them that when I'm talking about it.
It's not gonna be the thing that that's not gonna
be the thing that does it for them.

Speaker 4 (03:30):
So welcome to the program.

Speaker 7 (03:31):
We got some things to set up because you have
potus Alaska today. Today is the big day, and so
that is, uh, he's gonna he's supposed to be talking
to Putin and Alaska today.

Speaker 4 (03:46):
We're going to dive into all of that.

Speaker 7 (03:48):
And we've got some of the latest too with we
have foreign policy, we got we've got some culture.

Speaker 4 (03:52):
We got all of that. So welcome.

Speaker 7 (03:54):
And if you see me in my eyes, look swoll
and I'm gonna adress it now. Your girl had a
serious allergic reaction. We don't get days off, So there
you go. Don't it's it's allergic reaction edition of the show.

Speaker 4 (04:05):
That's what it is.

Speaker 5 (04:07):
Horrible news. Are you allergic to horrible news?

Speaker 3 (04:10):
Oh?

Speaker 7 (04:10):
I'm allergic to apparently like almost every type of makeup. Yeah,
it's super fun. That's like a whole wellness episode that
I should do one day. Uh So when everyone's like, oh,
you had this done or that done, I'm like, I
can't have anything done. I'm allergic to everything. I can't
have anything done. What are you talking about? What are
you talking about here?

Speaker 4 (04:28):
All right?

Speaker 7 (04:28):
So this we pulled this up because I've got some
stuff we've I was watching this too. No, I'm opening
this up now, so headline that stuck out to me
yesterday was this where they were taking this. I almost said,
I almost made up a word. Poetus deployed spy planes

(04:50):
of worship in a sub in an escalating response to
a massive threat in a southern the Southern Caribbean. See now,
I saw that. This is like one of the first
stories I saw this morning, and.

Speaker 4 (05:02):
I thought, what is the threat?

Speaker 7 (05:04):
And you know how when you wake up, you're not
you're not all the way awake yet, and you're you're
just sort of, you know, coming to and you can
kind of roll over and I'll read some you know,
my my daily devotional and I'm flipping through the news.
I saw the story and my not all the way
their brain. You know, what I thought came Kaiju. I'm like,

(05:28):
there's a threat in the Caribbean. It has to be
a kaiju, like some attack on Titan kind of stuff. No,
it's dealing with the cartels. So last week, if you remember,
Potus had ordered the Pentagon to prepare military options in
the region, and now d Od's ordered the deployment of
US ERA and naval forces. And I that's going to

(05:51):
be to classify them as or to classify the cartels
rather excuse me as a terror group. That is, it
opens up a whole new way to deal with these entities.
And the adminds said that they had deployed it at
least two warships to help in border security efforts in
drug trafficking. Remember, they offered to Claudia shine Bomb down there?

(06:15):
Can I is it not PC if I ask what
Claudia Shinebaum's family was doing during World War Two?

Speaker 4 (06:23):
Okay? Does that mean don't care?

Speaker 7 (06:26):
So they he had offered her the use of some
of our troops to help combat drug trafficking and the
fentanyl and all of that.

Speaker 4 (06:34):
She was all indignant.

Speaker 7 (06:35):
She refused, and she said, oh, she declared that the
country's never going to accept the presence of the US
Army and their territory.

Speaker 4 (06:43):
So except when we took Texas.

Speaker 7 (06:45):
Uh so, the I would think that if you because
she's a cartel puppet, Let's be real, I mean, shine
Bomb's you can't really get up anywhere in Mexico without
being one.

Speaker 4 (06:54):
Wouldn't you welcome that?

Speaker 8 (06:56):
Well?

Speaker 7 (06:57):
I guess unless you're worried about the cartel is coming
to visit you, then you would welcome it until until
that point, So they said that they are looking at
specially designated narco terrorist organizations in the region. So they're
really getting serious with the cartels. Do you think came
that the cartels are going to be swayed by the

(07:21):
presence of I mean military, I mean we sent two
warships down there. Are they going to go, wow, we
could die and take a gander around?

Speaker 5 (07:30):
Possibly, or because there's a lot of drugs and a
history of them having control that it'll probably end the
only way it can.

Speaker 7 (07:42):
I mean, you really only need like a couple of
teams to send down there, and you could you could
get that area in shape, you know what I mean,
that's all you need.

Speaker 4 (07:51):
That's all you need. So excuse me.

Speaker 7 (07:53):
So we're are That's that's definitely one interesting development. Now
obviously we're keeping our mind eyes on that.

Speaker 8 (08:00):
Now.

Speaker 7 (08:00):
In the meantime, you have Potus going to be talking
with putin a high steak summit.

Speaker 4 (08:07):
It is a high stake summit.

Speaker 7 (08:08):
They're going head to head, as the Wall Street Journal says,
head to head with clashing objectives. And it's the in
person It's the first in person meeting since the start
of their full scale invasion of Ukraine. And they've had
conversations on the phone since then, but they haven't been

(08:29):
you know, talked, and they've been spoken in person. So
they're going to be talking. This sounds like a Mission
Impossible movie. It's a high stakes talk at a military
base on the outskirts of Anchorage. It's going to prove
a revealing test of wills over which of the two
presidents will back down. I really don't think Trump will.
I know a lot of people who hate Trump think

(08:49):
that he's going to back down to Putin.

Speaker 4 (08:51):
But I don't think that.

Speaker 7 (08:52):
I don't think that he will. And the reason I
don't think that he will is because out of spite,
Trump has more spitefulness than than Putin does. And if
absent anything else, that's a great motivator. It is a
great motivator. So their meeting high stakes meeting, and they
are coming together to discuss well, they've been talking about it.

(09:15):
This is audio somebody thirteen. He was asked specifically about
guarantees for Ukraine.

Speaker 9 (09:19):
Listen, well, just one thing, what about the possibate That
is the possibility of the United States providing security guarantees.

Speaker 10 (09:27):
To Ukraine, maybe along with Europe and other countries, not
in the form of NATO because that's not gonna you know,
there are certain things that aren't going to happen. But yeah,
along with Europe, there's a possibility of the hmm oh possibility.

Speaker 4 (09:43):
I saw this as well.

Speaker 7 (09:44):
You know, we talked about Sergey Sergei Larov, who's he's
the guy who met with Hillary Clinton and she gave
him that reset button.

Speaker 4 (09:52):
She's their foreign minister. This is such.

Speaker 7 (09:58):
So petty Sergei Larov's showed up wearing a gray sweatshirt
and the gray sweatshirt was emblazoned with the letter CCCP,
which is the Russian letters for USSR, and he had
a black puffer vest over it. But that's what he
was wearing. He was wearing a USSR shirt. He's trying
to troll over Ukraine.

Speaker 4 (10:19):
How old is he?

Speaker 8 (10:20):
How is the world?

Speaker 4 (10:20):
I don't know.

Speaker 7 (10:23):
E I think so he was the guy who got
the and here's the video of it one showing you
this is how he legit showed up. He comes in
and he's got the USSR sweatshirt on. Yeah, that's the CCCCP.
Cc CP stands for a uss R. So that's he
was trolling. Comes in wearing that and he kind of

(10:43):
he sort of obscures it with a black puffer vest,
but he makes sure that it's kind of open in
the front so you can still see it. That guy's
a brat. That is a brat. You know what I
would have done. I wish Potus would have thought about this.
This is when someone asks, how petty are you? I
turned into Richard Petty. Yeah, turn into Tom Petty, any

(11:04):
one of the amazing Petties.

Speaker 4 (11:05):
You know. I would have had a guy.

Speaker 7 (11:09):
Somewhere out there with like signs or T shirts or
something the KGB still watching you or.

Speaker 4 (11:17):
Something like that.

Speaker 7 (11:18):
Like I would have like all the memes like in Russia,
you know, I would have had a guy with signs
or selling merch, engaging in some kind of capitalism, you know,
right out right outside there. And then maybe, you know,
just because it would make Putin mad, have like a
picture of a I don't know, like a like a
Reagan picture, or play the Reagan speech or something like that.

(11:41):
Would have had something so Ukrainian officials are not invited
to Friday morning, to the summit this morning in downtown Anchorage. Now,
Trump has said that his goals are to convince Russia
to agree to a ceasefire in a meeting with Putin,
Zelenski and himself so they can have formal peace negotiations.
But the fact that Rob showed up there and he
wouldn't have done that, by the way, if he either

(12:04):
didn't have the clearance from Putin or if he thought
that Putin would have a problem with it, because he
doesn't want to get I mean, he doesn't want to
get fed to dogs or be you know, a snack
for some Siberian bears. He doesn't want that to happen.
So that was with he did that. That's a they
did that on purpose, and that's fine. You guys can
wear your sweatshirts, you know, that's fine.

Speaker 8 (12:24):
You know.

Speaker 7 (12:25):
By the way, how's that pipeline up north? Oh wait
a minute, anyway, all right, as we move our partners
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Speaker 9 (13:26):
Here's what happens when you pick winners and losers in
a free market economy. Biden gave car manufacturer Rivian six
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Speaker 5 (13:46):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 4 (13:52):
Foreclosures rock up.

Speaker 7 (13:54):
They're up in Vegas after some some ripoff prices. But
you know what, I was talking to a front of ours,
our Vegas friend who lives out there. Why does everybody
think that Vegas is just the strip? Like all of
the rat pack stuff is outside the strip, you know.

Speaker 4 (14:08):
Like actual Vegas. It's all outside the strip.

Speaker 7 (14:11):
And that's where they're not like Nickel and Dimini for
absolutely everything Vegas though, and a lot of it was
previous Democrat policies where with the housing market, so they've
seen some foreclosures. Some people said that Trump boycotts are
also behind some of it, but that's so dumb.

Speaker 4 (14:26):
That is so dumb. Clark County again.

Speaker 7 (14:28):
All Democrat areas, like Democrat ran they had two hundred
default notices filed in June. But they said it's high
rates and then they said that by the way that
the uncertainty this precedes terroriffts. This is just an excuse
that they're using. It's so stupid, and any kind of
reduction in tourism would be related that that's still a
tail off of the previous We're still not out of

(14:50):
the Biden economic era. I don't know why people think
that we are, but we're trying to punch out of it.
But it doesn't happen like that. It's not a switch
that you can just flip.

Speaker 4 (14:58):
We're gonna have to.

Speaker 7 (14:59):
Explain this with Carol. We're off at some point in
the future. Let's see here. Apparently now they're saying gay
dating apps are threatening to expose Republicans. Wait, do they
think that there are no gay like identifying as gay Republicans.
I'm curious about this because there are actually a lot
of gay Republicans. They're going to try to use it
overfell and versus Hodge. Hodge's case, that's going to be

(15:20):
something they use as this scotist tries to figure out
whether or not they take that Kim Davis case.

Speaker 4 (15:26):
But they were.

Speaker 7 (15:29):
This argument, how that somehow you're going to have dating
apps that are threatening to expose Republicans. In the face
of this, I think all of them are pretty out
there anyway, you know, That's that's the thing they're all.
I mean, everybody's not like, oooh, this isn't nineteen ninety
Shut up. Let's see Ooh, Shane O'Connor buyop is in
the works from the Slow Horses folks, and I think

(15:51):
it's going to be called Nothing Compares.

Speaker 8 (15:53):
You know.

Speaker 7 (15:53):
Prince wrote that and then he gave it to her.
He loved her voice and he wanted to hear her
sing it, and it blew him away. So apparently they're
doing a buyop of Tonad O'Connor, and it's the Irish
production company that's done Slow Horses, Power of the Dog,
Lady Macbeth, all that stuff, so it should be pretty good. Also,
let's see here, Oh my heavens, would you do those ladies?

(16:14):
Woman has her late husband's tattoo cut from his corpse
and framed. Is a cool tribute, she says, it does
so much more than a picture. She doesn't wear her
heart on her sleeve. She wears her husband's tattoo that
was on his arm in a frame on her wall.
They it's wow, it is. Yeah, it was his first
leave tattoo and their.

Speaker 4 (16:32):
Favorite because I think it kind of is yeah, I mean,
I don't know.

Speaker 7 (16:40):
They said they used a marker to outline the tattoo
they wanted to preserve, and then the mortician carefully removed
the skin, put it in a special preservation kit inspired
by an Ohio company, and then they sent it off
before his body was cremated.

Speaker 4 (16:52):
And it's his. It's very.

Speaker 7 (16:56):
I don't know what I don't know. I mean, everybody
mourns differently, so I don't know about this one. We
have a lot more in store. Stick with us. Bottom
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Speaker 11 (18:31):
The Danish show podcast. You're fast, funny and informative news
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Speaker 12 (18:42):
How Queer was Jesus? He was an observant Jew, but
he was thirty years old, no wife, no job, hung
out with twelve other dudes. That's pretty queen.

Speaker 7 (19:01):
Wow, I can't stand So that guy's not a pastor,
but he's pretending to be a pastor.

Speaker 4 (19:07):
He's not a real one man alive. I'm gonna tell
you something.

Speaker 7 (19:10):
These people that do this stuff, that claim to be
shepherds when they get to the gates and they're expecting admittance,
clearly they have not read scripture where it talks about
shepherd's misleading people.

Speaker 4 (19:24):
I would I mean, you want to talk about shoes.

Speaker 7 (19:26):
I would never want to be in Who boy, that's
what this progressive somebody called him an impastor, which I
think is great.

Speaker 4 (19:36):
That's wow.

Speaker 7 (19:38):
And stands up there and he's got the Rainbow flag
and all of this. I don't even know what other
stuff he has up there. That's just a major problem,
a major problem. There's false shepherds everywhere, tons of false shepherds.
You have this guy who I mean, I'm looking at
his setup. It's all like identity politics, Like he's got
the Pride flag of and all this other stuff. Pride

(19:59):
is SI by the way, so it's fitting, right. I mean,
even the devil can cite Scripture and apparently can stand
up and pretend to be a pastor.

Speaker 8 (20:07):
Too.

Speaker 4 (20:07):
Welcome back to the program. Dana lash with you bottom
of the second hour.

Speaker 7 (20:10):
I feel like they see, you know this, they see
everything through the uns of sex because it's all they
think about, absolutely all they think about. I mean, that's
pretty blasphemous to step to stand up there and act
like what you're doing is a is a representation of faith.
I'm gonna tell you something else. I found it no
different than that nun in George Stephanopolis's sister. And there

(20:32):
were some of these I call him digital baka Bazi
that get out there and they were having fits about
because we had Shaddy Khlul, who is an actual Christian
who lives in Israel and part of the Mother George
Stephanopolis's arguments were something like, how there's you know, there's
just no Christians there and they're treated so much better
by Hamas. I mean, you know how this pastor can

(20:54):
stand out there with the Pride flag and say all
this stuff, so can Mother George Stephanopolis put on a
nun's habit and say that same thing. It's no different
than a man who dresses up as a woman. She's
a trans nun, a trans Christian, someone who isn't but
pretends judge them by their fruits. You have the power
of discernment, you can see. So I was looking at

(21:15):
some of this yesterday. I will triple and quadruple down.
I mean, I'm not sitting here trying to flex, but
clearly some of these people don't aren't familiar with me,
because I will not only dig the trench, I'll bury
you in it. This idea that you're going to hold
up someone who is pushing division and that you know interview.

(21:35):
One of the things that the discussion was shoddy, I
think highlighted and have to forgive me to day. I've
got allergies, and you know, we're not Fox, so we
don't have all these little things. You know, we got
cameras for three hours. So the thing that stuck out
to me was just how purposefully divisive she was. She
consider here and call herself a nun, but I'm not

(21:57):
gonna call I don't recognize her as someone who shares
my f eight because she's out there pushing Katari narratives.
It's Katari propaganda. My speculation is that Cutter is paying
a lot of influencers, including some on the Right to
divide alliances in the Middle East and push a Shia

(22:17):
Islamism that serves Iran and cutter. That's honestly, I mean,
it all makes sense. And usually Okham's razors that you
know the most, the simplest explanation is typically correct. I
feel like that is applicable here, and missus, there are
a lot of these false pastors. You have Lorraine reminding
us of James Tallerico. He calls himself a pastor. That

(22:40):
guy's not a pastor. If you're out there misleading your flock,
I mean, look up, what about the millstones and depths
of the sea.

Speaker 4 (22:47):
That's what's waiting for you.

Speaker 7 (22:50):
But there are a lot of people who misrepresent There
are people who fall short because we're all imperfect. There's
only one person who did not fall short, which clearly
this pastor is missing in the audio that we played
coming into this segment. But this uh idea that and
I watched this. I saw this unfold in comments yesterday

(23:10):
and I saw it this morning. Oh my gosh, how
dare you criticize that George Stephanopolis's sister mother nun?

Speaker 4 (23:16):
How dare you?

Speaker 7 (23:17):
How dare you criticize mother hamas sister.

Speaker 4 (23:21):
Hamas over there. She doesn't even she doesn't even live there.

Speaker 7 (23:23):
For twenty years, she lives in like I think, what
like upstate New York or something like that, New Hampshire,
that's where she lives.

Speaker 4 (23:29):
I think she doesn't even live there anymore.

Speaker 7 (23:32):
But the point is that it was a lot of
very easily debunked narratives, and many people have and we
talked about it on the show, kind of blew it apart.
But you have these people and they are on the
woke right, and I've been talking about them for a
while and I say that they're on the woke right
because they use identity politics just like the left does,
the same way that the left uses identity politics to

(23:52):
try to stake a claim or to try to increase
victimhood or do anything like that. That's what the quote
unquote woke right does. And they hate when you use
that phrase, but that's exactly what they are. They are
just like the left. They just think that somehow it's
more virtuous because they claim to be on the right,
and it's not. I mean, these are also the same
people that are pitching you the idea of paying women
to have babies and a standard like a national minimum wage.

(24:16):
They're the exact same people who promote those things. So yes,
judge them by their fruits, use your Christian discernment, but
there is an absolute effort, and it's so blatantly obvious.
I think that there's a bunch of Katari bots. I
think they've compromised a number of people on the right.
If I was a betting person, I would absolutely put
money on it. Absolutely, you would be surprised that people

(24:38):
on the right in commentary and in politics, some of
them names that.

Speaker 4 (24:42):
You know how.

Speaker 7 (24:44):
Easily it is for people to be corrupted when they
spend just enough time in DC, when they spend just
enough time being flattered by people with money and people
who are in power, pretty much anybody will turn. I
have seen it happen so many times. It's one of
the reasons why we stay where we are. We stay
in the midwest Missouri, Texas, and I will not move

(25:05):
east of the Mississippi for nothing.

Speaker 4 (25:07):
Love Florida.

Speaker 7 (25:08):
Florida might be a little different, but otherwise I am
moving east of the Mississippi. I like staying here away
from all of that perversion, because I've seen it happen
to too many people.

Speaker 4 (25:21):
It's just weird.

Speaker 7 (25:21):
I you know, I don't know about Tucker's background, and
you know, full disclosure. I consider him a friend. I've
known him for years. He helped elevate the school board
fight that we had here. But I've got to call
balls and strikes. And I don't have blind allegiance to,
you know, just anything, and I just find it, you know,
I just with something like this, I feel like you

(25:42):
have a responsibility to disclose people's associations, especially when it's
a Stephanopolis, especially when it's someone who has benefited from
Clinton power. It's widely reported that George Stephanopolis helped his sister,
using his power that he got from Bill and Hillary
Clinton numerous times to help her with specific things. I mean,
that's privilege, that's entitlement. And anytime there's destabilization anywhere, or

(26:07):
an effort to destabilize anything, why is it always related
to a Dame Clinton. There's always a Clinton involved, whether
it's Libya was said Blumenthal, and how as Secretary of State,
Clinton was trying to get in there, and they were
trying to maximize and exploit everything.

Speaker 4 (26:23):
They wanted Goadaffi out.

Speaker 7 (26:24):
They wanted to I guess they thought they were going
to take in and install a puppet government, but they
completely underestimated the factions of the different terror factions in
the area. Gaddaffi, for all of his faults, was the
only person keeping them together because they recognized a brutality
greater than their own. That is the only thing that
they respond to, a brutality greater than their own.

Speaker 4 (26:46):
And it showed an.

Speaker 7 (26:46):
Absolute illiteracy of foreign policy in that area to do
what they did. Destabilized a whole damn region in the
vein of Jimmy Carter and the Shah. Every single time
there's destabilization a modern ereraa. Since Carter's now dead, it's
always a Clinton in Egypt, same thing getting behind the
Muslim Brotherhood and Hondura's same thing, back in a dictator

(27:08):
every single time. In Iran, they ignored the people in
the streets and they back the Eyetola every single time.
So is it truly shocking to see them trying to
undermine the abraham Accords, because it's exactly what this all
comes down to. They want a divide in the Middle
East between Christians and Jews because somehow they want to

(27:31):
want you to believe that Hamas and Islamists have been
better to Christians than israel Has.

Speaker 4 (27:37):
I don't care how.

Speaker 7 (27:38):
Much of an anti Semite you are if you can't
acknowledge that that's just a bunch of hogwash you're I mean,
the only thing that can explain your absolute lack of
education and stupidity is that you are a product of inbreeding.
There is no other way to explain it. Now, I
will suffer someone's wrong opinion if it's predicated upon something.

(27:59):
You know that all they got a criticism with the
Israeli government, et cetera.

Speaker 4 (28:03):
That's not what this is.

Speaker 7 (28:04):
These are just people who are morons or who are
ticklers for Katari overlords and they just hate Jews and
they want to find something that a confirmation bias so
that they can they can feel justified and just hating Jews,
that's what it's all about. That's the new thing. That's
the new trend on the woke right to hate Jews.

(28:24):
And it's always people who are really leftists.

Speaker 4 (28:27):
That are pushing it.

Speaker 7 (28:29):
Again, judge them by their fruits, but it is an
absolute effort you need to be aware of. And there
are a lot of pretty you know, high placed people
that have been compromised. This stuff just doesn't come out
of nowhere like this, and it's very interesting. I feel
like the Qataris think that they have to compete against
the Saudis. Cutter such a small country, they feel like

(28:51):
they got to compete with the Saudis. The Saudis are
getting involved in you know, sports and all of this
other stuff, and all of these people have been accusing
the Saudis of, like I I think I heard the
phrase sand washing their past sins of a previous ruling leader.
But you know, let's let's ignore that. But I feel

(29:11):
like they're trying to sandwash their past offenses. That's what
they've said. They're trying to sandwash their past defenses. Or
maybe you could look at it like the Saudis doing
film and fashion and gaming, they're doing es, sports and
all and soccer and all the football, all of this
other stuff. Maybe sports is washing them, Maybe Western entertainment

(29:33):
is washing them. Maybe gaming is washing them. No one
thinks about how it goes, you know, the other way.
But there is a This is all a power play
in this region because it's between these factions, the Qataris,
the Iranians, and then their little subgroups of Hesbola and Hamas,
and they're facing off against UAE and Saudi Arabia. They're

(29:54):
facing off against all of the Abraham accordinations and the
nations that have indicated that they are willing to sign
the Abraham Accords. That is where the division is. That
is where the division is. And it's very interesting that
they're now trying to divide the biggest supporters for the
Abraham Accords, people on the right, including Christians and Jews,
and they're trying to find someone that they can use,

(30:15):
that they can hold up. Oh my gosh, how dare
you criticize Mother Hamas, Sister Hamas? How dare you she's
a Christian? She's no more a Christian than Bruce Jenner
is a woman. So she puts on a nun's habit.
And I mean, there are men who use the women's
bathroom here in the United States and they call themselves women.

(30:36):
And what's your point? Even the devil concites Scripture. If
there is going to be a real offense against that
in the Middle East, they have to divide that those
that group into two factions. And that's exactly what they're doing,
or what they're trying to do. I think most people

(30:59):
are smart enough to see that. But then you've got
a lot of thirsty influencers on the right. They would
be happy just to gobble up Tucker Carlson's crumbs. It's
so desperate. These people are absolute clickhors, and they would
be happy for those crumbs, and so they try to
get in on it, and oh they amplify it. If
you notice, all like on social media, and a lot

(31:21):
of you who don't live on social media, I understand,
don't change that. Some of us because the nature of
our work would have deleted our accounts a long time ago.

Speaker 4 (31:31):
But we stay there.

Speaker 7 (31:32):
But that is where this stuff is fought, and that's
where you can see these narratives. It's the germination of
all these narratives before it hits your television screens that
you might catch at night, before it hits the discussion
at your workplace, before it hits you know, the discussion
between classes at your kids' college campus. It happens there,

(31:54):
and there is a real intent, there is an absolute
organized effort to drive this division. So be very very
discerning on this stuff. Because this lady, this sister Hamas,
like I said, she hasn't even lived there. She's been
busted so many times pushing Pollywood false stories that anybody else,

(32:20):
if you got caught doing that in your place of work,
you would be fired. You'd be fired after the first defense, fired,
f definitely after the second, definitely after the third. And
then you have Shadi who was on the program yesterday,
a Christian who lives his faith, and he calls balls
and strikes, and he criticizes the treatment that Christians have
received in Arab nations, and he tells the truth about

(32:43):
how he lives in Israel, and these people lose their
minds because he is a living affront to their narrative.
I'm telling you this is a big problem on the
right right now, this effort, organized effort to divide. Many
people are scared to speak out about it. But because
they're not independent, they all get a check from some

(33:05):
media entity or this media entity, or they got a
sponsor here or there, they're terrified to talk about it.
Note the ones who do and the ones who don't.
This is the time when you are just as much
a player in this as any of us that are
talking to you on screens, because your discernment is where
the key is we have more on the way the

(33:27):
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Speaker 4 (33:44):
This is where bernergun comes in.

Speaker 7 (33:45):
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Speaker 11 (34:50):
Get the load down on the latest news with a
side of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to the Data
Show podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast,
like SAMs through the hour Glass.

Speaker 5 (35:03):
So are the days of the United States.

Speaker 6 (35:07):
I think everything with the environment is really sending to me,
and it is one. I experienced a lot of climate anxiety,
like a lot.

Speaker 4 (35:21):
I don't care.

Speaker 7 (35:23):
Stfu jeez, Like I'm worried about climate anxiety. Oh my gosh,
you're entitled bi s h Please. I think I'm upset
because of the weather. I've got weather anxiety. We'll get
an umbrella. You know who that is, right? That's Kamala

(35:45):
Harris's stepdaughter who got a modeling job because her mother
was the vice president or stepmother was the vice president
of the United States. That's why she's a NEPO baby. Yeah,
she legit got a modeling job.

Speaker 4 (35:57):
Dude. Yeah, I don't even know, man, I don't even know.
Don't even know. It's just really wild. But that's what
I have.

Speaker 7 (36:07):
Climate anxiety, that's weather anxiety, it's weather stop.

Speaker 5 (36:10):
I think she just has regular anxiety.

Speaker 7 (36:13):
I think she just is a brat. I think she's
just an entitled brat. You know, other people have anxiety.
They have anxiety about being able to afford stuff from
her mother's term, her stepmother's term. They have anxiety about crime,
they have anxiety about, you know, inflation, making sure that

(36:34):
they're saving a nest egg, making sure that their kids
are taken care of. All she does is just sponge
off of her parents. And she's like in her mid twenties.
She works as a model, and she has anxiety about weather.

(36:54):
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Speaker 11 (37:51):
In the office with President Trump on Air Force one,
heading in what's your initial feeling?

Speaker 5 (37:56):
How are you feeling about what you're going to get.

Speaker 8 (37:59):
Out of this?

Speaker 4 (38:00):
I think we're going to do very well.

Speaker 1 (38:01):
Our country is doing very well. We're setting records economically
like we never have before, including the sock markets are
all at a record high. We're taking entredions and trillions
of dollars with tariffs. We're going for a meeting with
President Booton in Alaska, and I think it's going to
work out very well. And if it doesn't, I'm going
to head back.

Speaker 5 (38:20):
Home real fast.

Speaker 4 (38:21):
I mean, if it doesn't, you walk, I would walk.

Speaker 2 (38:23):
Down ooh ooh.

Speaker 7 (38:27):
Well yeah, and I think he will. I actually I
do think that he will. Welcome back to the program,
Dana Lash with you. We are at the top of
the second hour, and that's Trump on the He's on
his way to Alaska. He's on his way with Alaska
audio something at fourteen. This is him talking a little
bit more about this too. Listen, were the hottest.

Speaker 10 (38:48):
We were a dead country, like dead like doornails and
dead country. One year ago. We were dead as a doornail.
And now we have the hottest country. And he wants
a piece of that because his country is not hot economically.
In fact, it's the office and China's not.

Speaker 8 (39:04):
Doing well economically.

Speaker 10 (39:06):
But we're all look, I want everybody to do well.
The war's got to stop and the killing's got to stop.

Speaker 4 (39:14):
Well, there you go. We'll see.

Speaker 7 (39:15):
I mean, this is the first time that they are
meeting uh in person since everything with Ukraine began, and
they've talked on the phone, but that's not the same thing,
so we'll see. But he says, yeah, you know, it's
uh you know, he's got he's got business. He wants
a piece of the American economy. I'm gonna tell you
that is that's important. That is incredibly important to be

(39:38):
able to do that, that's I mean that changes nations. Okay,
Japan they wanted a piece of the of Western economy.
That look, I mean look at the look at Saudi Arabia,
look at United Arab Emirates, and they wanted a piece
of the of Western economies. And they they wanted to
get in and be players. So now they've got expansion
and doing all of this other stuff.

Speaker 4 (39:58):
Sway.

Speaker 7 (39:58):
It is audio somebite sixteen journalists from the uh Kremlin's media,
the Provda, like all their papers or government run they
there's not a lot of hotel rooms, so they have
to stay and makeshift accommodations at a local sports arena.

Speaker 4 (40:15):
Look at those.

Speaker 7 (40:17):
Still better than Sogi. It's probably better than what they
usually got. I would think that's a lot of cots
in there. It's better than Soji. Remember that the Olympics

(40:38):
and people were talking about stuff falling down. It was
like a Jacques Tati film. The whole like all the
hotels that they If you haven't seen uh uh, Playtime.
It's this uh, one of the funniest films I've ever
seen in my life. They don't talk in it at all.
It's not a silent film, they just don't talk in it.
It's for ins director Jacques Tati. It's one of my
son's favorite movies. And they they're making fun of, you know,

(40:59):
snooty p bull and ridiculous traditions that we invent just
with it's just goofy, but he makes it's a it's satire,
and I just felt like soci was the satirical real
life extension of that of that Playtime film, especially at
the restaurant scene where they had just built this restaurant
and everything's falling apart and it's a very fancy restaurant

(41:21):
and they're trying to keep up, you know, the the optic.

Speaker 4 (41:24):
It's very interesting. But yeah, that's they got a lot
of people, They got a lot of people staying there.

Speaker 7 (41:29):
Now, the h he was talking about here, I feel
like Trump already cut the idea in case anybody was
talking about NATO and Ukraine, It's not going to happen.

Speaker 6 (41:41):
Uh.

Speaker 7 (41:42):
But when they were asking, I wanted to play this
once more. When they were asking him about security guarantees
for Ukraine because I already see people on social media
trying to like go at him over this, and it's
like he literally just said that there, it's not going
to be NATO.

Speaker 4 (41:56):
Listen on just one thing, what about.

Speaker 10 (41:59):
The passion that is the possibility of the United States
providing security guarantees to Ukraine along with Europe and other countries,
not in the form of NATO, because that's not gonna
you know, there are certain things that aren't going to happen.

Speaker 4 (42:13):
He just immediately, Yeah, along with Europe. He's right there.
I think he's correct there.

Speaker 7 (42:17):
I mean, we've got enough welfare recipients on NATO, we
don't need to add more on there. So he's correct
with that. So this was this should be very interesting.
Then you have Nancy Pelosi. She is immediately saying, I
just don't know why he's going there to do this.

Speaker 4 (42:33):
Listen to this, but I wish him well on that.

Speaker 13 (42:36):
I don't trust put at all. I don't know what
Putin has on the president, but that he just are
you coming to Alaska?

Speaker 4 (42:46):
They shouldn't be going to Alaska.

Speaker 7 (42:49):
Russia claims elastic, crying out loud was she drunk to
notice how none of these people had they no condemnations
when Hillary Clinton was meeting with the head of Muslim
brotherhood to push them to take over Egypt while they
were a banned entity. Let's ignore all of that. Unbelievable.

(43:12):
It's so goofy. These people are so goofy. But she,
I mean, the reason that he's going that he's talking
to him is because it's regardless. Sitting down a meeting
with someone isn't an endorsement of your perception of their trustworthiness.
Just because you don't trust them doesn't mean you shouldn't

(43:32):
keep the lines open. I mean, in fact, I would
think that that means that you want to be able
to have that access more even if you don't trust them.
But this just sitting down and engaging in diplomacy isn't
a statement of faith and their trustworthiness. That's so stupid,
What a dumb argument to make. That's just a bad argument.
This is diplomacy. The fact that you have to engage

(43:54):
in it at all, I would think kind of in
a way signals the fact that there isn't trust there,
because you wouldn't have to have diplomatic negotiations if you
could just fully trust the other individual correct exactly.

Speaker 4 (44:07):
So we'll see, we'll see how this all. We'll see
how this all goes out.

Speaker 7 (44:12):
So a couple of other things to discuss, because we've
we've talked a little bit about and you can see
our interview with Shaddy Khlul, an actual Christian who's living
in Israel, who is disputing the narratives that were being
spewed by Hamas apologist and trans none I mean meaning
that she's like not really actually a shepherd George Defanopolis's sister,

(44:34):
sister Hamas, She's got decades of saying this crazy type
of stuff that's been debunked, et cetera, et cetera. Anyway,
you can find our interview with Shady Khalul. It's up
on YouTube, Facebook, it's clips. Some clips of it are
on x as well, so you can check all of
that out now. In the meantime this, I wanted to
share this story from the Washington Examiner that rain yesterday.

(44:56):
If you get the prep over at substecond, chapter and verse,
you got this a lot of people questioning whether or
not you can trust the statistics coming out of DC
that measure crime, the answer being no, and the story
of the police chief that was fudging these stats to

(45:18):
under under report or just really undercount crime at large,
that's been making the rounds. But so is this this
headline a man went to prison for assaulting me. DC
police crime stats show he was never arrested. What, Yeah,
it's true story. This is another example of why it's

(45:40):
incredibly difficult to say, the monitoring the statistics for crime there,
the reporting of this apparently this is like they're grossly
under reporting violent crime in DC. So this person was
saying how they were walking. It was Saturday, Saturday morning,
a couple of years ago, leaving there apart on Capitol Hill.

(46:00):
They were going to mail a package at the post office,
and it was just a couple of blocks from the Capitol.
The writer says, she puts on her she put on
her black sweatshirt and sweatpants and headed out the door.
She never made it to the post office, she said,
just one block for my apartment building's entrance. I was
attacked by a large man well over six feet tall.

Speaker 4 (46:20):
She says.

Speaker 7 (46:20):
He charged at me for a reason I still do
not understand, in broad daylight on a well traveled street.
It was Second Street, northeast next to Union Station. She said,
I fought to get away as he sexually assaulted me.
She said, if it had not been for others in
the vicinity, including a construction worker who heard my screaming
and random I rescue, I don't know that I would
be here today. And she said that even though she

(46:41):
has a background working with federal law enforcement, she writes,
it was only through my experience as a victim that
I learned personally of two ways that DC police and
courts failed the public. She says her attacker was arrested
on the street months later charged pled guilty to sex
abuse nearly two years later. The crime cards, she says
that the Metropolitan Police Department there are onlines statistics page

(47:02):
supposedly counts omitted it, though.

Speaker 4 (47:06):
They just didn't even count it.

Speaker 7 (47:08):
She asked MPD why the incident was not on its
crime map, and they said that it only includes first
or gray felonies under its crime stats. That would mean
for every person robbed or assaulted or sexually abused in
anything less than egregious ways, you would not have been
counted into the total tally. If your pain isn't severe enough,
if your injuries aren't severe enough. She writes, basically, well,
I mean, she says, if the pain, if you suffered,

(47:29):
wasn't severe enough according to MPD standards. Now just pause
on that for a minute. So they were saying that
her suffering and what she went through wasn't enough to
count that as a stat She kept following up on it,
and she said that her attacker, the crime against her
landed him in prison, be yet he still was not

(47:50):
listed including She said she was at least trying to
get the map to represent or at least log all
of the sex abuse cases and convictions and charges. And
they said that that.

Speaker 4 (48:05):
The what the.

Speaker 7 (48:08):
IMPD Crime Cards states on its page, oh, to provide
more clear information about the more serious sex assaults that
are closely aligned with public perception of rape and attempted
rape public perception. What they said that they only include
these most serious abuse categories, and all of the left

(48:28):
leaning reporters they use these stats as a way to
communicate to people that oh, well, no, look, the crime
is actually not bad. People aren't getting you know, there's
no like sexual assault or anything like that. She said
that the DC police did do something correct on the
day of her attack. They collected her clothes for DNA evidence.
They said they had a match of a DNA of
a homeless man who had been previously arrested. But then

(48:49):
when they arrested him, he was immediately released from jail
by the judge who presided over the case, and they
said they didn't want to keep their jail from overcrowding.
She's a single woman who's attacked one block from her
front door, and they weren't going to jail him until trial.
Now he lived basically in a tunnel just two blocks
from where she will look for where she lives.

Speaker 4 (49:09):
Now, how are they.

Speaker 7 (49:09):
Going to ensure her safety if they can't even get
you know, sexual predators off the streets. The George Floyd
riots happened. They were delayed his trial. It was set
to begin in fall of twenty twenty, but then they
delayed it by a year, and then it got delayed
by another six months. And she thinks it had to

(49:33):
do because of all the January sixth cases. Yeah, and
then the man who attacked her was still out there.
She tried to move across town and he was arrested.
After he attacked her, he attacked other women. He was
arrested in five separate incidents. This is after he attacked her,
and every single time the judge allowed his immediate release,

(49:56):
even when he was caught swinging a machete in public.

Speaker 4 (50:03):
So they said that. She says, DC police.

Speaker 7 (50:05):
Must have been as aggravated as she was because you
keep arresting the same guy over and over again. So
this is that's I mean, her story is there are
a lot of people that have not had any justice
and it's because of the way that they run this
in DC. Now remember the case being delayed over and

(50:27):
over again. Remember what I told you, Yeah, federal courts
basically it's like runs like a federal court, and the
judgeships are I think what twenty percent at a disadvantage.
They have a lot of MD seats and they're just
not nobody's paying attention to that. That's a major problem

(50:47):
because now you have justice delayed for her case. I
can't imagine being attacked a block from your door and
then the guy who did it not only is allowed
to stay out there before his trial, but then until
that his trial, he attacks five other people. This is
crime continues because elected officials and weak judges and bad

(51:12):
prosecutors allow it. I think that they are just as culpable.
I think this city is responsible, especially because he has,
you know, all of these priors. You're a violent offender.
I think that violent offenders, if they are released by
these judges and they're allowed to go out and offend again,
I think the judges should be culpable as well. I
think the judges should actually be arrested for not doing
their due diligence and allowing these violent offenders back on

(51:33):
the street. Because if this guy was to attack a
female judge, holy hell, they throw the book at him.

Speaker 4 (51:42):
If he was to attack a judge, oh my gosh.

Speaker 7 (51:45):
But since he didn't attack a judge and he just
attacks some random women, it's allowed, you know, believe all
women or whatever. On the left, it is sickening. Yeah,
there is a I'm glad that they're doing it because
this is what happens. You don't do your job, the
National Guard will get sent in to do it for you.
As we move our partners that will bring you the
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Speaker 4 (52:49):
Tell them Dana sent you.

Speaker 5 (52:51):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 7 (52:57):
So everybody's favorite pastime is to talk about how hot
it is they are in Israel. It's one hundred and
twenty degrees apparently. Yeah, they got Jiminy Christmas.

Speaker 4 (53:06):
That's crazy.

Speaker 7 (53:07):
It's a record breaking heat wave, like one of the
worst that's been that they're talking about, unusually high. It's
going to decline over the weekend. That is insane. One
hundred and twenty degrees. It's like Phoenix at its worst
for a week.

Speaker 8 (53:22):
Woof.

Speaker 7 (53:23):
Mississippi may require age verification and parental consent for social
media according to a Supreme court. Oh, let's see here.
I don't want your stupid pop up ad. It makes
me hate the company. Supreme Court allowed Mississippi to enforce
the state law that requires the nation's largest social media
companies to verify the age of the users and obtain
parental consent for minors. They said they want to protect

(53:46):
kids from online predators. Apparently since parents are.

Speaker 4 (53:48):
Just like, yeah, go ahead and get on the internet.
I don't know what.

Speaker 7 (53:52):
Yeah, they said that it's like Apparently Kavanaugh said that
in a brief concurrence that it's likely unconstitutional, but that
the companies who suited not sofi demonstrated that they would
be harmed by a temporary order from the state, So.

Speaker 4 (54:04):
That's kind of interesting.

Speaker 7 (54:06):
Also, an object resembling a helmet was spotted on Mars's
surface by a rover. What in the world makes them
think this looks like a helmet? Have you ever seen
a helmet? It just it looks like a like that,
like a tent, a little tent I don't even that
does not look like a helmet.

Speaker 4 (54:23):
Stick with us. We've got more in store.

Speaker 7 (54:25):
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Speaker 11 (55:27):
Keep your finger on the pulse with a Dana Show
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straight to you on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get
your podcasts.

Speaker 3 (55:39):
Well, I think it's pretty sick and pathetic, and it's
just said everything you need to know, the setting that
we're under, that they chose the time manner in place
to send their district director outside right when we're about
to have this prescotch shit. Everything you know about Donald
Trump's America, and that was top down.

Speaker 5 (55:57):
You know that for a fact.

Speaker 8 (55:58):
They'll deny it.

Speaker 3 (55:59):
I'm sure maybe they won't deny it. Should everything you
know about the authoritarian tendencies of the President of the
United States, I said in a moment, wake up, America,
wake up. You will not have a country if he
rigs this election. You will have a president will be
running for a third term. Mark my word. I wasn't
exaggerating when I said that I received in the mail

(56:20):
at Trump twenty twenty eight hat from one of his
biggest supporters. These guys are not screwing around. The rules
do not apply to him. The most corrupt president in history,
doesn't believe in free enterprise, crony capitalism. What he is
wrecking this country, wrecking the economy. It's a lawless president.

(56:41):
Wake up, America, wake up to what's going on.

Speaker 7 (56:44):
Guys, they send me a hat, cubely they some one
of his supporters sent me a hat. I mean it's
a meme. They're trolling him, and he's so he takes everything.
So seriously, can you believe that one of the support
or something a hat eight hat? Because they're they're stunting

(57:05):
on you, man this way, welcome back to the program,
Dana lash with you or at the bottom of the
second hour, it's speacause, my gosh, it's Friday. There is
not enough We do not have enough patience to deal
with that manchild today.

Speaker 4 (57:15):
Oh my heavens.

Speaker 7 (57:17):
So Gavin Newsome, he's having this press conference and he's
I thought, I just thought it was hysterical that he.

Speaker 4 (57:24):
A meme hat.

Speaker 7 (57:25):
I mean anybody can make a hat. But he somehow
took that to mean.

Speaker 4 (57:28):
Well, he's gonna rig the election. How are you gonna
rig the election? What do you mean? Midterms? He's gonna rip.

Speaker 7 (57:33):
This is what Democrats are setting up. No one wants them,
No one wants them. They are the annoying person at
the bar, guy or girl who won't leave you alone.

Speaker 4 (57:41):
You know what I mean? Guys, you know what. Ladies,
you know who I'm talking about.

Speaker 7 (57:44):
Right, Just imagine men, it's that annoying chick, right, she's
you know, you don't want to jump on that land mine.

Speaker 4 (57:51):
You're you're not gonna lie your friends to jump on
that land mine.

Speaker 7 (57:54):
But she will not take no for an answer, right,
and or ladies, the man who won't take no for
an answer keeps insistent on buying you a drink and
he wants to talk to you. And no, they don't
get it. Democrats don't get it. They don't understand that
the American public is not into what they're selling. It's
why they keep losing and losing and losing and losing.

(58:14):
Nobody wants that, nobody wants these policies. Come on, it's
just uh huh. But now he's there. So he's there
and he's whining. You know, he's saying, oh.

Speaker 4 (58:26):
He's what did he say that? He's he's not for
a free market, free enterprise.

Speaker 7 (58:35):
He's like the sister Hamas for Democrats. Kevin Newsom is
you know George Defhanopolis's sister who puts on maybe no
one will notice. She puts on a habit and then
spits poison.

Speaker 5 (58:47):
Gavin has less of a mustache.

Speaker 4 (58:49):
But yeah, true. But while he's there, I got busy.

Speaker 7 (58:56):
They well audio some ade eleven Border patrol chief just
they were arresting people right outside.

Speaker 4 (59:03):
Of this press conference. This is hysterical. Listen to this.

Speaker 12 (59:08):
We're making.

Speaker 11 (59:09):
Uh, Los Angeles is a sacred place.

Speaker 14 (59:11):
Since we won't have politicians that will do that, we
do that ourselves.

Speaker 8 (59:15):
So that's what we're here today is you can.

Speaker 9 (59:17):
See already making it a safer place.

Speaker 4 (59:19):
We're glad to be here. They're not going anywhere, And.

Speaker 5 (59:21):
You're the governor's in side right there.

Speaker 8 (59:23):
I didn't.

Speaker 4 (59:24):
I don't know where he's at.

Speaker 5 (59:24):
You have met he's about one hundred feet behind us.
You have any any comment from him or anything, any message.

Speaker 14 (59:30):
We're making Los Angeles and California a safer place.

Speaker 11 (59:33):
We're going to continue to do that, and they can
take that one to the bank in cash it.

Speaker 7 (59:38):
So Gavin Newsom has a press conference and Ice shows
up and just starts arresting people who like repeat offenders
here illegally and arresting. I mean, that's what happens if you.
If you and I break the law, we get arrested.
Why are people who enter the country I legally allowed
to break whatever laws they want, That's the question. So
Karen Bass was very mad about this. She shows up

(01:00:00):
audio some by ten. My gosh, this is like a sitcom.
All this stuff is happening outside right Kevenuism's inside.

Speaker 4 (01:00:06):
I can't believe it.

Speaker 7 (01:00:07):
Someone said they were gonna see me a red hat.
I mean, he's gonna steal the country. And then Ice
shows up outside. It's it's like a sitcom plus South
Park and they start arresting everybody. And then Karen Bass
shows up from wherever the hell she's been and she
sees all these ICE agents.

Speaker 4 (01:00:23):
Well just watch. I believe that this just happened to
be a coincident. There is no way this was a coincidence.
This was widely publicized.

Speaker 15 (01:00:31):
That the governor and many of our other elected officials
were having a press conference here to talk about redistricting,
and they decided they were gonna come and comb there
and know they did run up the Governor's space.

Speaker 8 (01:00:43):
Why would you do that?

Speaker 15 (01:00:44):
That is unbelievably disrespectful and robakas act.

Speaker 4 (01:00:49):
They're talking about disorder.

Speaker 15 (01:00:50):
In Los Angeles and they are the source of the
disorder in Los Angeles right now. This is just completely unacceptable.
This is an administration this says, say Customs and Border
Patrol that has gone a muck. This absolutely has to stop.
There was no danger here, there was no need to detain.

Speaker 7 (01:01:09):
They're enforcing the law. So wait if I if I
don't pose a danger to you, I can do whatever
I want.

Speaker 4 (01:01:13):
Is that the new measure?

Speaker 7 (01:01:14):
Oh my gosh, there's so many ideas that I have, Kane.
If that's the new standard for whether or not it's
considered illegal, then I'm going to run like I'm gonna
run amok with that.

Speaker 4 (01:01:27):
Amuck. I'm gonna run crazy with that.

Speaker 7 (01:01:30):
If that's the standard, well, whether or not it was
dangerous for you or I'll I'll yeah, I can, I'll
take those terms challenge accepted. She's just mad because they
got played. They got spanked so hard and they made
a big point about it. So here they show up.
You've got ice swarming. There's more audio sun Bite nine.
They're swarming, They're arrests and all kinds of people. These

(01:01:52):
board Look, these are arrests right outside of his press conference.

Speaker 14 (01:01:56):
Rive, just outside of the downtown La Venue where Governor
gavinbu And was actually holding a press conference today. And
it appears that those Sporter patrol agents are making arrests
illegal immigrants that I don't know if they were at
this press conference, if they were in the area. But
this is the very as John put it when we
first saw this video, very in your face way to

(01:02:17):
let you know, Democrats know that you are going to
do your job, that you're going to carry out these
Trump policies. Can you just respond to this video we're watching.

Speaker 4 (01:02:27):
I love it.

Speaker 7 (01:02:28):
I mean, they're they're doing their job. Karen Bass is
so mad because they're not. She's not used to seeing
people work and do their jobs. It's weird to her.
They're like, what is this.

Speaker 4 (01:02:38):
Well, people didn't follow the law and they got in trouble.
Well that's so mean.

Speaker 7 (01:02:41):
So are you saying that I don't have to follow
the law. Oh my gosh, I've already thought of five
laws i'd immediately break, like in the span of ten seconds, Kane,
And I was sad that it was only five. It
should be more than that. I should have at least
two laws a second that I would break because we
have too many. We have too many felonies, we have
too many all kinds of stuff. I'm just saying, So
what law would you break, Kaine? I mean, if that's

(01:03:04):
the new standard on the lene, if.

Speaker 5 (01:03:05):
I'm burgling something or stealing something like overnight, nobody's around
in some empty business, wasn't dangerous for anybody or me,
So I would be able to get away with maybe
even stealing cars from a dealership overnight.

Speaker 4 (01:03:19):
We have I'm not I don't want to say too much.

Speaker 7 (01:03:25):
There's a neighbor friend of ours down our road that
has the fattest, funniest looking chicken, and I won it
and they got loose one day, and I remember I
pulled over on the side of the road and they
were all these chickens were all over the road and dude.

Speaker 4 (01:03:42):
I called my son. I was like, how fast can
you run? And he's like what.

Speaker 7 (01:03:46):
I'm like, I'm just down the road and he goes,
you mean run to you? And I go no, like
after you get here, how fast can you run? And
he's like we're talking about I was like, I got
to get some chickens. He's like, mom, I'm like, no,
there's some chickens in the road. And he's like, are
you trying to get them to safety? And I'm like
in my car.

Speaker 4 (01:04:00):
Yes.

Speaker 7 (01:04:01):
He's like, I'm not doing that. That's I'm like a
hang up.

Speaker 4 (01:04:06):
Finders keepers. It's I see a chicken. It's my chicken.

Speaker 7 (01:04:09):
I'd take that thing and run so fast and then
I'd crochet some pants. I just want to pet chicken.
My grandpa had a pet chicken. His name was Dumpling.
I swear hands all hands. If I had more hands
to throw up, I would we ate it. I swear
we ate that thing.

Speaker 4 (01:04:21):
My grandpa. I think she just got old and we
ate it.

Speaker 5 (01:04:23):
Did you have dumplin with Dumpling?

Speaker 7 (01:04:25):
My grandma would make homemade chicken and dumplings, and uh,
one day Dumpling was no longer there. She used to
sit on the porch swing with my grandpa and he
would sing, oh, gosh, what is that song?

Speaker 4 (01:04:37):
Crambone?

Speaker 7 (01:04:37):
He'd whistle crambone and he'd swing on the porch with
this chicken, and the chicken would do it, I swear
to you, and he would. The chicken would bob its
head and they'd swing and he'd whistle crambone for for dumpling.
It's the funniest thing. She would peck anybody else to death,
but she'd love my grandpa anyway. So as you can see,

(01:04:58):
early on, I had a weird release sh chip with
the animals. So so you Steve, what law would you break?

Speaker 4 (01:05:06):
If you know?

Speaker 7 (01:05:06):
Since it's if you're not hurt nobody, you know, that's
the measure of whether or not the law. The legality
of the law is determined by whether or not it
may hurt somebody.

Speaker 4 (01:05:14):
What would you do.

Speaker 9 (01:05:15):
I've lived in Virginia most of my life, and their
open container laws are so annoying because the government controls
every liquor or beer sales in the whole state. I
just want open container just to walk around and enjoy
my summer.

Speaker 4 (01:05:28):
Wait, walk around with a drink.

Speaker 5 (01:05:31):
You meant in the car, I was.

Speaker 4 (01:05:32):
Thinking that you were talking about driving.

Speaker 5 (01:05:34):
No, so you can't even walk around with an open.

Speaker 9 (01:05:36):
Virginia, you have to drink your drink in a zoned
off thing with a rope, with a liquor license to
be able to drink it outside in Virginia.

Speaker 5 (01:05:42):
What you didn't know that America?

Speaker 8 (01:05:44):
Where?

Speaker 5 (01:05:44):
No is Virginia in America?

Speaker 8 (01:05:46):
Yes?

Speaker 5 (01:05:47):
Okay?

Speaker 4 (01:05:48):
Are we sure?

Speaker 5 (01:05:48):
Weird? To me?

Speaker 4 (01:05:50):
So you okay? So let me ask what if it's
like in a yettie or not gay?

Speaker 9 (01:05:57):
But yeah, you hide it obviously, but like there's it's
not they don't enforce it that much.

Speaker 5 (01:06:03):
But it's annoying, is it?

Speaker 7 (01:06:05):
I'm just suddenly you guys the audience left to forgive me.
It's Friday and I'm suddenly fascinated. So is it like
just liquor or if.

Speaker 9 (01:06:14):
You're if you're in a public bar, you have to
be in a zoned off spot to have alcohol. You
can't just want well, Rain.

Speaker 7 (01:06:19):
Just said in Virginia you cannot be in your front
yard with a beer.

Speaker 8 (01:06:23):
Correct?

Speaker 5 (01:06:24):
No? What?

Speaker 9 (01:06:25):
What?

Speaker 3 (01:06:26):
That's what?

Speaker 4 (01:06:29):
That is the craziest thing I've ever heard.

Speaker 7 (01:06:32):
So whoa wa, whoa whoa whoa full stop everything, everybody
just stop.

Speaker 9 (01:06:37):
We need we need we need a Richmond listeners to
chime in because they'll they'll that's Richmond.

Speaker 7 (01:06:43):
What in the world, Oh my, so, so say you're
doing some yard work, right, you're cutting your grass? Which
does you're like weeding your flower beds, you know in
the s in the summer it's hot outside. Like my
favorite pastime used to be to do some yard work,
have a cold one, sit on my porch and watch
my neighborhood and then I'd go inside and watch Cops

(01:07:05):
when it was on because that was the best show
on TV. And I learned so much about policing. So anyway,
you you're telling me that in Virginia, I could not,
you know, do my yard work, wead my garden, you know,
pop open a cold one, sit on my porch and
watch the street. I could not drink a cold one
on my porch and watch the street. I'm not in

(01:07:27):
a car, I'm in like a chair or a swing.
Is that what you're telling me.

Speaker 9 (01:07:32):
They don't 't force it that much. If you're out
at like a bar bar, you can't walk in the
parking lot with it. That's essentially what they're talking about.

Speaker 5 (01:07:38):
Is there no nuance though, Like you can be on
your porch, but you can't be in your front yard?
Well probably, can you be on your porch but not
be in your front yard? Like, this is all sounding
really weird and crazy to me. Uh, how are you
not in your own property able to do that?

Speaker 7 (01:07:54):
Oh my gosh, it is including a front yard. If
it's visible visible to the public, it's a class misdemeanor.
And so Lorrain adds, yeah, in the backyard. Have all
the beer you want in a front yard?

Speaker 1 (01:08:04):
No?

Speaker 5 (01:08:06):
Are you? What What if I go to the front
yard with a beer?

Speaker 4 (01:08:11):
What if you only have a front yard because I.

Speaker 5 (01:08:13):
Threw the football over the house into the front yard
and I had to go get it.

Speaker 7 (01:08:18):
What if there's like a monster in your backyard and
you've got to stay in the front You know, you're
just oh my gosh.

Speaker 4 (01:08:25):
Oh man.

Speaker 7 (01:08:26):
And I'm not even gonna go to Reddit because everyone's like,
I my neighbor got ticketed from drinking on the porch.

Speaker 5 (01:08:31):
What all right? So hear me out. If you put
your front door in the back door and you just
switch them, can you make your front the back Like?
Can you make your front yard the backyard? Technically?

Speaker 12 (01:08:43):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (01:08:44):
You know what I mean?

Speaker 7 (01:08:45):
If a man can say that he's a woman I mean,
I'm sure that you can say my front yard identifies
as the backyard.

Speaker 5 (01:08:50):
That's the spirit in which I'm asking.

Speaker 4 (01:08:51):
Wow, Wow, this is wild.

Speaker 7 (01:08:55):
I just looked to see if they had a castle
doctrine law in Virginia. Int they have a version of it.
So I'd be like, I'd put a castle doctor and
sign in my art, sit on my pores, and drink
my beer. I cannot believe I did not know this,
So Steve gives it, so that's right.

Speaker 4 (01:09:10):
I would break that all the time. So well.

Speaker 7 (01:09:13):
The other thing is too depending on whether or not
you can enforce it technically, you'd have to put it
in like a stannie. Right and then and what is
somebody gonna do? Like they're gonna be driving by, Like
wait a minute, you look like you're drinking a beverage.

Speaker 4 (01:09:25):
It's in a stanny. My stanny's locked. You gotta warrant
for that. Look. It's locked. It's locked up.

Speaker 5 (01:09:30):
What I have a big inflatable beer on my front lawn.
That's how I'd break the law.

Speaker 4 (01:09:35):
And pretend to drink the big inflatable beer.

Speaker 5 (01:09:37):
I'd actually not pretend and drink.

Speaker 7 (01:09:39):
Really, I would literally dressed up as a PBR for
Halloween and just walk all around. I would actually do
that as an open PBR just a troll. I cannot
even believe this in Richmond, that's crazy. We have art,
we have a big affiliate out there.

Speaker 4 (01:09:53):
I am floored. I cannot believe. I didn't know this
were free.

Speaker 9 (01:09:57):
PBR is number one market Richmond, Virginia.

Speaker 4 (01:09:59):
Fun fact, Are you serious?

Speaker 7 (01:10:01):
I just like the bottle shape, spread white and blue,
you know, I mean, it's interesting. Woo all right, we
got more on the way, although I don't think we
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Speaker 5 (01:11:30):
It's his laugh mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida Man.

Speaker 7 (01:11:39):
Well, a Florida man is in trial this week because
he went out on a date and then had a
dispute with his date over the dinner bill and then
shot his date.

Speaker 4 (01:11:50):
Sounds like always sunny in Philadelphia, I swear.

Speaker 7 (01:11:54):
CBS says that Jamal Morland is charged with attempted arm
robbery and attempted first orgree murder.

Speaker 4 (01:11:59):
He met his day on grinder.

Speaker 7 (01:12:02):
And uh, he apparently got mad and shot and killed
the dude, or almost killed the dude because he they
went to a bowling alley and inn a liquor store.
What a date going to the bowling alley and then
heading to the liquor store. There's a date right there
that's like the non gayest date I've ever heard. He's
a horrible gay dude. These these are some bad gays.

(01:12:25):
This is here a bad gaze going to the bowling
alley and then the liquor store. The hell so he
ordered food, wanted his state to pay, the date refused,
and then Moreland became mad and then he dropped Morland off,
texted him up, picked him up, and asked for forty
five dollars that he just got in a ticket, and
then apparently he decided to shoot the dude, striking him
in the arm and chest.

Speaker 4 (01:12:45):
Good night.

Speaker 7 (01:12:46):
So he's geez, that story has everything, uh like this one.
A man is shocked, I tell you, shocked because he
discovered that she's had He lives in Tanzania. He's had
a knife in his chest for eight years. Apparently he's
had literally a large knife blade lodged in his chest

(01:13:10):
for eight years. Now, wait a minute, this is Is
this a Florida man? It's in my Florida man story? Maybe,
well we'll claim it is, but oh no, maybe it's
a different one. Hang on, I may have messed up,
all right, and I'm scrolling too much.

Speaker 4 (01:13:25):
Let me do this. Oh, twenty five year old.

Speaker 7 (01:13:27):
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Speaker 16 (01:14:46):
I've actually spoken with a number of grocery store owners
and made clear to them that I both recognize and
appreciate the work that they have done, the fact that
they are a critical part of our communities, and there's
so much partner that we can still offer those same
stores in assisting them on the skyrocketing rents that they

(01:15:07):
are facing, the questions of insurance, so much of that
which creates instability in their business model, while also ensuring
we're using every tool of our disposal to create a
more affordable city for New York.

Speaker 7 (01:15:17):
Yeah, he does not understand any of those. So remember
he got in trouble when he first when all of
this first came to light, because he clearly had no
concept of how grocery stores worked or subsidies, because he
wanted to pay for the city owned grocery stores in
New York with money the city didn't have. Remember that
fun math Welcome back to the program, Dane Lash with

(01:15:38):
you top of this third hour channel through forty seven
Direct TV.

Speaker 4 (01:15:42):
The chats at Rumble were also on x.

Speaker 7 (01:15:44):
He he actually thought he was going to redirect city
funds it didn't exist into doing this, and it was
I think it was the New York Posts actually that
blew him up. He thought he could take half of
one hundred and forty million in subsidies to pay for
his whole government owned grocery store scheme, but that money
didn't exist. Because he read an infographic on a website

(01:16:07):
he was doom scrolling. And he just read this graphic
on a website and he's like, oh, it says one
hundred and forty million was invested in the New York
City's economy through Fresh that's the city's tax and regulatory
program that for food providers.

Speaker 4 (01:16:27):
And it was all.

Speaker 7 (01:16:28):
Private investment, though from the corporate grocery stores.

Speaker 12 (01:16:34):
Right.

Speaker 7 (01:16:35):
The city only gave itself like I can't remember what
it was, it was like around three million in tax
relief or something like that annually. And then Washington Examiner
said that it would take forty two years for New
York City to reach one hundred and forty million in
tax breaks. He actually believed the tax breaks that that
would mean like that, that's you would not get the

(01:16:57):
above and you would not get the investment from private companies.
So his whole thing was he could not understand basic numbers.
That's how I can't. Oh my gosh. And now he's
saying now he's tripling down on it, and he's saying, well,
you know, Kane, the uh store owners they can be partners.

(01:17:21):
Wait what Yeah, the store owners can be partners.

Speaker 4 (01:17:24):
And what does that mean?

Speaker 5 (01:17:25):
Why would they do that?

Speaker 7 (01:17:27):
Yeah, he says he wants a partnership with like grocery
store owners. Why well, yeah, why would they do that.
That's one of the stupidest things I think I've ever heard.
That's that no Dar.

Speaker 5 (01:17:43):
Experiment was done in Kansas City where Yeah funded this
grocery store completely to the tune of nearly twenty million
dollars and now today no food on the shelves, things
are stolen, completely failed.

Speaker 4 (01:18:00):
Horrible, horrible. I mean, I what is good night? Good night?
This is just so this he just just does not
understand this. How is he night?

Speaker 7 (01:18:10):
He's nineteen points ahead. I was actually looking for the
latest polling and I think it showed he was like
plus nineighteen.

Speaker 4 (01:18:16):
How how is he? He said?

Speaker 7 (01:18:20):
He wanted hang on, let me look at this quote
part of a vision of public option for produce because
for many New Yorkers groceries are out of reach. Why
would that be. It couldn't be because your policies, right,
It's because.

Speaker 4 (01:18:36):
Of big food.

Speaker 7 (01:18:38):
Big food, isn't it. Big food wants to keep you
from getting food. It so there has to be a boogeyman.
He's got to produce a boogeyman so he can produce
a way for you to pay to save yourself, but
not really from the boogeyman. That's what it's all about.
He said that New Yorkers deserve the same access to
produce as they do fast food restaurants around the corner.

(01:19:03):
So is he saying that big fast food is keeping
out big is keeping out little produce or what is
that what he's arguing. I am so confused right now, Kine.

Speaker 5 (01:19:15):
I think that's by design, because then if you're constituent
of New York who's just confused, and you're like government,
you figure it out. You figure it out, government, And
here's mom Donnie walking in and be like, well, let's partnership. Hey,
that sounds good all right, so far what they've done
in New York. By the way they've done these partnerships
quote unquote, they've never run in the past, they've never worked,

(01:19:35):
and it hasn't worked anywhere else in the country. They
know that this is a failed policy, and they're just
gonna push it.

Speaker 7 (01:19:40):
They don't have big margins anyway, and I feel like
he doesn't understand that. I mean, they have like the tiniest.

Speaker 5 (01:19:45):
List it's limits of margins in retail anywhere.

Speaker 7 (01:19:48):
I would not I literally would not be in that business.
There's no way, I mean, there's just no way I
would be in that business.

Speaker 5 (01:19:55):
You don't get rich selling groceries. It doesn't work that way.

Speaker 7 (01:19:58):
But it's big food though, you know, Cane, it's big food.
Everywhere that they have been tried, they've failed everywhere that
they've tried these you know, we've talked about this before.

Speaker 4 (01:20:09):
They've they've they've.

Speaker 7 (01:20:10):
Failed every single place. As Kane was talking about in
Kansas City. Remember he also said, too, I'm pulling this.
This is the story I'm pulling up where he acted
like he was gonna he would have these stores buy
things in bulk to save you prices, to save you
at the on price.

Speaker 5 (01:20:27):
What an idea. No one has ever had that idea before.

Speaker 7 (01:20:31):
He came up with that just a couple of months ago,
came up with it all by himself. It's never been
done before. Who would have thought of buying mass quantities
to sell to people at lower prices. I've just literally
never heard that, Cane.

Speaker 4 (01:20:42):
It's so wild. Who who's done that before? Hmmm?

Speaker 7 (01:20:48):
Yeah, yeah, I mean, but that's what do you expect
from a guy who's never worked a day in the
private sector.

Speaker 4 (01:20:57):
In his life.

Speaker 7 (01:20:58):
His only job, I mean that we anyway, unless it was,
you know, an escort. The only job that we know
that he had was he did a rap video that
his mom directed.

Speaker 4 (01:21:07):
He's a Nepo baby.

Speaker 7 (01:21:08):
And then don't forget his big old wedding in Uganda
where he talks about banning guns for everybody else. But
then he had you know, hired military. They had like
spec op teams over there defending him from what.

Speaker 4 (01:21:20):
I don't know.

Speaker 7 (01:21:21):
There's there's a lot of problems with us. I want
to I want a city owned grocery stores that don't
make a profit, and they don't want to pay rent
or property taxes either.

Speaker 4 (01:21:32):
So wait, what.

Speaker 7 (01:21:36):
Do people think that the reason that you pay more
for food is because big grocery stores big, like they're
just greedy? Because I feel like that's the argument. They
have no idea how that works. I was looking at this.
This is the Food Association, July twenty twenty four. Uh.
In twenty three, the profit margins in the grocery industry
hit one point six percent, the lowest level.

Speaker 4 (01:22:02):
Oh, one point six Oh my goodness.

Speaker 7 (01:22:06):
The lowest level. Excuse me, since it was one percent
in twenty nineteen and then the I mean, I can't
even believe this in PR in PR n PR even
quote for almost all companies that NPR analyze between twenty
eighteen and twenty twenty three, the margins either declined or

(01:22:26):
grew less than one percent. What that's big pimp and
money man spinning gees.

Speaker 5 (01:22:35):
What that's not price gouging and that's no way to
become rich.

Speaker 7 (01:22:40):
Well tell that to man Danny, because he apparently thinks
it is. Yeah, oh there's but wait, there's more. With
the purchase of one slap shot, you get a new one.
They they apparently they think that the reason why food
costs so much is because the grocery stores make large profits.

(01:23:00):
There was a pull this up. Give me one second,
I'm going back in. So this website is called Grocery Dive.

Speaker 4 (01:23:11):
Shop.

Speaker 7 (01:23:11):
This is an actual headline June sixth, twenty five. Grocers
need to do a better job of explaining prices. How
about that's what shoppers say. Grocers need to do a
better job of explaining prices, shoppers say. Shoppers need to
be less stupid, say grocers, I will see your headline
and raise you with a Shoppers need to be less stupid,

(01:23:33):
say grocers.

Speaker 5 (01:23:34):
Have they heard of competition? That's exactly how competition works
and why this system of capitalism is even as successful
as guys.

Speaker 4 (01:23:41):
The future of New York is going to be determined
by people who can't do math. Oh my gosh, I
do you?

Speaker 7 (01:23:49):
Okay, So here's another thing. What contributes to the cost
of an item in a particular city. Think about that,
like different things in cities. What contributes to the cost
of those things?

Speaker 5 (01:24:07):
Well, to answer directly would be regulations. Taxes.

Speaker 7 (01:24:11):
Ah okay, it sounds like interesting this stuff on the
tax part. Let's talk about sales taxes, shall we. So
with sales taxes in New York City. This is the
New York City Department of Finance, and it's it's pretty

(01:24:32):
eye opening. They have almost a nine percent sales tax.
They their city sales taxes like four and a half
five percent. They have the state sales. They have a
four percent use tax. They have a metropolitan I meane
this is commuter transportation district surcharge. They have taxes on

(01:24:52):
tons of foods and beverages as well. They I mean,
these are all like sales taxes that they have on
this New York State Department or Taxation and Finance has
a whole. They have their listings of taxable and exit
foods and beverages sold, and it gets into literally everything
grain products, produce by the way, bullyon cubes, baby food, cupcakes, fish,

(01:25:12):
peanut butter, vegetables, vegetable juices, vegetable oils, everything, seafood, sausage, sandwiches, everything,
All of this is taxed. So they have pretty high
sales tax in New York City. And that's one reason
that they have to increase their food because think about it.

(01:25:35):
If you have not just inn PR, but if you
also have the Food Industry Association saying that the margins
are literally one point six percent for the grocery industry,
do you think that grocers are going to absorb all
of these, as Cane was saying, the regulations and the
taxes and all of that stuff, when they are only

(01:25:55):
operating right now in a one point sex margin. That
would eliminate their margin with all of this stuff. And
then also let's look at the labor. When you have
people that are working for you in New York City,
it is a hell of a lot more expensive. Their
minimum wage is like one of the highest in the nation.
I think it's like one of the top three highest

(01:26:16):
minimum wages in the nation. It's something like sixteen dollars
an hour or seventeen dollars an hour or something like that.
And remember Man Donnie had said that he was going
to raise it to twenty dollars an hour if he's elected.
So do you think that that's going to make the
stuff at the grocery stores more or less expensive? Considering

(01:26:36):
all of these things, is that going to make it
more or less expensive? I know, I mean it's rhetorical.
Of course it's going to make it. Of course it's
going to make it more expensive. But this is a
guy does not None of these people they are all
they're all limousine liberal or limousine socialists, all of them
their trust fund socialists. This stuff never works. It never works.

(01:27:02):
They had a store in Florida that closed after five years,
and this was a city operated grocery store. It was
in Baldwin, Florida. They closed in twenty twenty four because
they could not even break even. You mentioned the one
in Erie, Kansas. They operated at a loss every year.
There was one in Saint Paul, Minnesota that was their

(01:27:27):
manager said that they just they oversee they have like no,
they have I think less than one point six of
a margin.

Speaker 4 (01:27:34):
None of this.

Speaker 7 (01:27:35):
None of this works. It never works. So what why
do they think it's going to be different this time?
This is what all these status always tell themselves, it'll
be different this time. We have more on the way,
including coming up, we talk about culture. We're going to
talk to Gabe l. Tayeb who is He used to
be with DC Comics. And I think more and more

(01:27:57):
people you've seen justin Bateman and kind of speak out.
More and more people are feeling more and more comfortable
to speak out. We're going to talk to him about
some of the stuff he does as well.

Speaker 5 (01:28:03):
Coming up, and now all of the news you would
probably miss, it's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 7 (01:28:11):
Okay, so this is the headline that I accidentally read
for Florida Man. But I figured you guys wanted to
hear more about it, because it's not every day that
somebody like figures out they've been living with a knife
in their chest for eight years.

Speaker 4 (01:28:21):
Tasmania, forty four year old.

Speaker 7 (01:28:23):
He had some discharge and his chest it was weird
and medics were baffled. He had no other symptoms. He
had no chest pain, no difficulty breathing, no cough, fevers,
Vitals were totally normal. And then he recalled an incident
a decade ago and they were able to put a
piece together. He had multiple cuts through his face, back, chest,
and abdomen during a violent altercation. Doctors treated wounds at

(01:28:45):
the time, and then life was uneventful ever since.

Speaker 4 (01:28:50):
Well they did. I can't believe that.

Speaker 7 (01:28:51):
They only then did do an X ray and they
found a large knife blad literally lodged mid thorax. It
entered through the right scapula and it dodged any major
work organs. They took it out. Surgery had to drain
it because there's a lot of dead tissue there. He
was in the ICU for twenty four hours, and he
was there in the hospital for ten days.

Speaker 4 (01:29:09):
And he's a Oh gosh, I didn't need to say that, he's.

Speaker 7 (01:29:12):
A he's apparently okay, So, oh my gosh. I can't
even don't look at the pictures, Kane did.

Speaker 5 (01:29:22):
It say in the article, like what it was like?
I know it was from years ago, but it.

Speaker 7 (01:29:27):
Looks literally like a carving knife, like a giant carving knife.

Speaker 5 (01:29:32):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (01:29:33):
I am not.

Speaker 7 (01:29:33):
Showing you any of the photos of it because it's horrific,
but oh my gosh, let's see, deputies were dumbfounded. They
arrested a Lakeland duo because they faked a car crash.
This couple faked an actual car crash. A simple traffic
stop turned into a comedy of errors and they ended
up being arrested for it. The apparently they were trying

(01:29:54):
to hide a probation violation and they were lying and
acting like they were involved in a car accident. It's
a very long story, but they figured it out took
them into custody. Because you're not going to be You're sorry,
nobody's going to be able to you know, you can't
come up with a story on the spot like that
to hide the fact that you're violating probation and stick
with it.

Speaker 4 (01:30:11):
It's not going to happen.

Speaker 7 (01:30:12):
Southern California man won't stop blaring horns from his house
and the neighbors are infuriated. They say that they he
keeps blasting home alarms and a set of train horns
every single day, has no plans to stop. He's been
doing it for months. It's an actual train horn, and
they said that now they're getting the police department's attention.
It is a noise, very much disruptive. Stick with us,

(01:30:37):
gave al Tayib Next.

Speaker 11 (01:30:40):
Not Able to catch all three hours of the Dana 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 7 (01:30:55):
I was having a conversation with someone the other day.
I'm talking about how rpcially during COVID and Lockdown, I
just was so tired of everything, all entertainment, everything coming
out of Hollywood is horrible, and I got really into anime,
like very I mean, I think I've seen almost everything
from Monster to Attack on Titan Manga. Started getting into

(01:31:18):
comics and I wouldn't I don't think it would have
happened had it not been for COVID. And then what
I realized is that there's so many great stories to tell,
and now here we are in twenty twenty five and Hollywood,
which has never been I mean, lately, it's been so
incredibly derivative and predictable. I feel like they've been looking
for things to ruin so they go back and they've

(01:31:40):
been looking at like different series to ruin, different different
comics to ruin, different iconic characters to ruin. And I
remember seeing this story and it was a couple of
years ago and it had to do with Superman, and
there was how to put it as storyline coming out
in Superman DC Comics where they were talking about the

(01:32:03):
Man of Steel and bisexuality and all this stuff, and
I'm like.

Speaker 4 (01:32:07):
Hell, does this have to do with Superman? What is this?

Speaker 7 (01:32:10):
Is true justice in the American way? Like, what does
this have to do with Superman?

Speaker 4 (01:32:14):
Come on?

Speaker 7 (01:32:15):
And there was an artist with DC Comics who is
done with it, and it was very very high profile.
He was like, I'm done with it, I'm out, and
he left and he's been doing his own thing over
at big Man Comics.

Speaker 4 (01:32:28):
Gabe L.

Speaker 7 (01:32:28):
Tayeb is joining me now. He's writer, artist, publisher a
Big Man Comics. And I love his story and I
like how he just he was done dealing with it
and suffering that stupidity and he said enoughs and off
and he joins us.

Speaker 4 (01:32:41):
Now gave it's so good to see you. Welcome.

Speaker 8 (01:32:44):
Finally you reached. You were one of the first people
to reach out to me those almost four years ago.
It was coming September October, and I hadn't done a
lot of media, so I was like, I don't know,
I don't want to go on some show you know,
who's this lady or whatever? But sorry, sorry, I'm here
better late than ever. How you doing Thanks, I'm doing good.

Speaker 4 (01:32:59):
I'm doing good.

Speaker 7 (01:32:59):
I wanted to tell people who might not be familiar
with your story and talk about what you're doing now,
because I know you're doing some stuff with Dean Kane
and you got a lot of stuff in the works.

Speaker 4 (01:33:07):
But you had your dream job like that.

Speaker 7 (01:33:10):
I can't even imagine how terrifying that you get your
dream job and then you realize is it my dream
job or is this the dream environment?

Speaker 4 (01:33:19):
Because it got real weird fast for you.

Speaker 8 (01:33:22):
It, did you know? I've been drawing since I could remember,
since I was like three years old whatever, and I
wanted to be a comic book artist. When I was
twelve or thirteen, I decided my favorite artist, Jim Ley.
He's still there at DC Comics. He's a great illustrator,
vice president of the company there, and he hired me.
In my twenties. I worked my butt off to earn that.
It's an elite job. There are less people that make

(01:33:42):
a good living in comics than in the NFL or
the NBA. It's so hard to get that job. And
it wasn't woke at first. Two thousand and eight, I
started working for them, and as we know, during the
Obama years, things started getting weirder and weirder and pronouns
and all the stuff that started happening in media and
comics and movies, and I just kind of kept my
head down. I didn't really tell my I was conservative
this and that, and it's like, well, it's not my book,

(01:34:03):
it's not my book. And then eventually it was my book.
And we're getting rid of Superman's truth justice in the
American white slogan, that's disrespectful, and we're going to explore
the sex life of Superman's underage son. And I said,
we're not going to do that. You're going to do that.
I'm going to go and do my own thing. So
see you guys later, thank you, but I'm out of here.
So that, yeah, that was four years ago. I think

(01:34:24):
this October.

Speaker 4 (01:34:24):
What was their reason for doing that?

Speaker 7 (01:34:27):
Did they think that they were going to bring in
like other people who might not be into comics, and
that was gonna because you're alienating your hardcore base that
supported you for so long. They don't want to read
that stuff.

Speaker 8 (01:34:39):
Well that's the cover story. Oh, we need to do
the modern audience, the big audience, capture more people, more diverse. Whatever. No,
it's if you've ever read Atlas Shrugged. Brand nails these people, right,
she nails the resentful leftists and they hate truth and beauty.
They are the kind of people. They see the quarterback
and the cheerleader kissing and they're like, ah, when you

(01:35:00):
see excellence, when you see success, when you see you know,
all that stuff, you should be inspired and go, oh
my gosh, how did they do that? I want to
do that. How do I become a radio TV big shot?
Like Dana? What's she doing? Instead of going, oh, Dana's
dad probably owns the network, you know, she doesn't like
so leftists they see Batman, they see Superman, they see
all this stuff that's awesome, and they get mad and they,
you know, they grit their teeth and like, let me

(01:35:21):
destroy it. So the misery is a big part of
it for them. They like knowing that they're ruining something
you love.

Speaker 4 (01:35:27):
Ooh, that's that's good that we're talking with Gabe l.

Speaker 7 (01:35:30):
Taeb who's with Big Man Comics, and I'm going to
talk about some of the other stuff that you had.

Speaker 4 (01:35:34):
That's a psychological deep dive.

Speaker 7 (01:35:36):
That's like a whole other topic of discussion, like why
people think that way and they, like you said, they
see success, they see exceptionalism, whether it's American exceptional exceptionalism,
just individualistic exceptionalism, and maybe it's something that they don't
have within and they feel like they got to destroy
it or it's a threat to what I mean, it
is a threat to it's a threat to control.

Speaker 4 (01:35:56):
Exceptionalism is a threat to control.

Speaker 8 (01:35:59):
Right, So yeah, I feel like people either believe in
God or they think they are God. And it's like
one of my favorite writers, Cormac McCarthy, there's a villain
in one of his books and he tells people that
that exists without my knowledge, exists without my consent. It
was one of the most chilling things I ever read.
And it's like that's how the left is. It's like,
if something is better than me and it's not mine,
that I have to destroy it instead of going, oh,

(01:36:20):
how did they make Batman so great, Let me make
my own Batman, my own original character, but like, no,
I'm going to stick my agenda on it, my politics.
In recent issues of Batman, they have him fighting billionaires
and sticking up for Antifa basically, you know what I mean.
It's like they're just injecting their politics. They're moralizing their lecturing.
And all stories have a message in a moral but

(01:36:40):
what you should never do is antagonize your audience. You
should never have Superman saying, hey, audience, you're a bunch
of racists and polluters and bigots, and this is why
you're terrible, because really that's just the writer speaking through Superman,
trying to tell you why the writer's a better person
than you, instead of inspiring you the way super Man
always has. So you know, art is about truth and beauty.

(01:37:04):
Art is just patterns. It really is scientific patterns. So
when you write woke stuff and you put agenda ahead
of just the patterns of how story and character work,
you can't write good stories. And that's why the Marvel
stuff that came out at first that everybody liked up
to the Avengers thing was very normal, pretty straight, and
then when they went with the the m she U
where it was all the girl power woke stuff. You
see those movies just flopping over and over and m

(01:37:25):
she was not mine. That belongs to my friend Nerd Rodick.
He coined that term.

Speaker 4 (01:37:29):
That is.

Speaker 8 (01:37:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:37:31):
I remember reading that that is that's true.

Speaker 7 (01:37:33):
I liked what you said too about when they were changing,
you know, stuff like with Superman. You were saying that
your grandfather is reading this interview with you. He almost
died in World War two. And I mean because that's
as Americans, I mean, we we have like such a
it's so ingrained like everything to get this republic to
where it is right now, and everybody's got a connection
to that. And when you when they do stuff the

(01:37:54):
way that they've been doing it, it sort of feels
like they are stepping all over that. It's like they're
disrespecting everything that's many people have given for to create
for what we enjoy now.

Speaker 8 (01:38:04):
Right well, what is the left? One of their big
montras is smashed the patriarchy? Right? Well, what does Peter
mean in Latin? It means father. These are people who
are heartbroken and hate their father and they want to
destroy his world and everything he ever built. It's why
they destroy Star Wars. It's why they destroy Superman. They
hate their dad. That's what this is. And I'm not
here to say whether their dad was right or wrong,

(01:38:24):
but that the whole thing stems back to family and fathers.
It's your cultural patrimony, is what this stuff is called.

Speaker 7 (01:38:30):
Right, Yes, you are doing a project with Dean Kin,
who is also signed up with ICE. Tell me about
this because you started, this was announced. It's the All
American law Man. And I love the logo for this.

Speaker 4 (01:38:43):
By the way, Oh that's a.

Speaker 8 (01:38:44):
Glock seventeen, my first gun I ever had. And I
know you think gun rights advocate. I WIP for San
Diego gun owners. I speak at their events, so we're
sympatico on that. But when DC Commas got rid of
the slogan Truth Justice, American Way, that was the first
thing that made me really mad. And then it was
the underage bisexual storyline. Note like, no thanks, That's not
why I got into drawing comics. And so the first

(01:39:06):
book I made was analogs for Superman, A Batman, and
Wonder Woman, and we called the book Truth Justice, American Way.
Those were the code names of the heroes. People loved it.
And it was a classic throwback, and it wasn't lecturing
you or if you were left wing either it was
an old Democrat suck. I don't do that either. I
just entertain you, like in the eighties, the way you
loved it. I make fresh stuff that feels like the
old Indiana Jones, the old Star Wars, but it's fresh

(01:39:27):
because it's a new take for me. And I'm not
lecturing anyone. I'm just inspiring you. And the first thing
I'm doing is just entertaining it. So we have truth,
just an American way. And then Dean Kane he noticed
me on Twitter, he saw what I was doing. I
got his attention, so we became very good friends. He's
a really nice guy. By the way, we're actually friends
and not just business partners. We came up with a
James Bond Indiana Jones kind of comic called Dean Kine,

(01:39:48):
all American law man, and it's just a cool a
man of adventure who travels the glow, beautiful women, awful
bad guys, and it's it's like the stuff from the eighties,
where like Indiana Jones from the eighties, where you could
watch it as an adult and for adults but you
can let a kid see it and you don't have
to worry that it's nasty with sex scenes and gore
and perversion and cussing. So it's safe to hand to
your eight year old nephew. But as a forty year old,

(01:40:10):
you could read it and you're fully engaged and you
love it.

Speaker 4 (01:40:12):
Yeah, there's something to that.

Speaker 7 (01:40:14):
The way that stories were told then, where you could
have multi generations read them. You could be in the
same room, you could be with your grandparents and your
kids and your cousins or whatever, and everybody could watch
it and no one's cringing because it's an appropriate What
happened to the art of storytelling where everything is so
silent or everything is so hyper sexualized that we don't

(01:40:35):
I mean, we don't see as much you're doing it,
But there's so few people that are doing that type
of storytelling anymore.

Speaker 8 (01:40:41):
Well, I think I'm a Christian. I'm never going to
apologize for that. And in the Bible, that's out of
the abundance of the heart. The mouth speaks is a verse, right,
So what's in you is going to come out of you,
whether you like it or not. So when you have
ugly filthy stories. Well, guess what kind of people they're
coming out of, right, That's what's in their heart, it's
what they believe are all art is one thing only.
It's self expression. What do I think about the world,

(01:41:04):
What I think about myself and my place in it.
That's what art is. I'm saying something about life and
myself in the world. So what I believe in truth
and justice and heroicism, being a good father. You know,
the theme of the first Dean Kane book is you
do the right thing, no matter what, no matter how
scary it is. That's the theme of that one. The
theme in Truth Justice is the same thing in the
Tyrists book that I'm doing with Fox News Superstar Tyrists.

(01:41:26):
It's about being a screw up and finally getting things right.
And in Imperian Earth Illuminated, which I have right now, Bigmancomics,
dot Com, go there and get it. It's about are
we living the right way? Are we being fooled? Is
they're a better world? Is there a better path? That's
my love letter to the old Star Wars stuff that
inspired me. I was born in seventy eight, started watching
Star Wars as a very little kid, and that was
the first thing that just ignited my imagination. The first

(01:41:49):
things I ever remember drawing were Star Wars space battles
in the back of my grandparents Mexican restaurant. Nobody could
watch me, and my brother was in a kindergarten, so
I'd just pull out butcher paper and just draw spaceships
all day. And you will, you will absolutely love this.
You know. It's a fresh take on sci fi stuff.
But it goes back to you know, I'm forty seven
decades of me loving adventure and sci fi and stuff

(01:42:09):
like that.

Speaker 7 (01:42:10):
I love it and so and you live it, you
love it, and it comes out that way just you know,
pure appreciation for that genre and great storytelling, great art
as well.

Speaker 4 (01:42:18):
We'd love to have you back. We'd love to have
you back.

Speaker 7 (01:42:21):
Gaybell Tayib and they make sure you go to Bigmancomics
dot com and he's got all kinds of stuff up there.
You've got merch, you've got your T shirts, you've got
your comics, you have absolutely everything up there. And you
can see about Dan Kane, all American law man. Would
you say Kane the crowd for it? Yeah, because I
and I definitely believe that people need to get involved
and like help bring this stuff to life, because everybody

(01:42:42):
complains about the stuff that comes out that's in the
theaters or on TV or Netflix or whatever, and it's like, Okay, well,
don't put your money where your mouth is and support
this stuff so these other people don't come and take
that influence over from you.

Speaker 4 (01:42:52):
You have a duty.

Speaker 7 (01:42:53):
It's like a duty, like the opportunity and the freedom
to be able to do that. So big Man Comics
dot Com. God bless you. I still appreciate what you do.
Thank you for doing the real art that you're doing,
because that's going to be appreciated for years to come.

Speaker 4 (01:43:06):
It's iconic.

Speaker 8 (01:43:08):
It's an art to me. Can I say one last
thing to you in the audience? The reason I do
all this is because I felt what you felt, audience.
I felt what you felt like my culture it's slipping away.
My dad almost died. He's an immigrant from Libya. That
killed my dad's for friends and relatives. My grandfather that
side has been here for hundreds of years, almost died
in the Pacific of World War two. This country is

(01:43:29):
the greatest country in the historyld the greatest culture, and
it was fought and died for and we just watched
it melting away, turning in perversion, perverting kids, messing everything up.
And I'm like, I can't be a part of that.
I will not put my name on that as part
of the people who made that mess. So I did
something about it, and I gambled my career that I
fought so hard to get. I said, no, I can't
do this. And the power of story, it is the

(01:43:50):
most important potent form of persuasion. And when I was
quitting my job at DC, I was terrified. I live
in San Diego, it's kind of expensive, and I didn't
have a job lined up. But here's the power story
Indiana Jones from nineteen eighty nine. He steps into that
bottomless pit where there's the invisible bridge. You remember that
the one was Sean Connery.

Speaker 4 (01:44:06):
Yep.

Speaker 8 (01:44:07):
But he had to take the leap of faith. And
I kept picturing that leap of faith when I was watching,
when I was thinking about quitting and resigning, and I
just prayed. I said, God, don't let me fall. And
I was lifted higher than ever. You know what I mean.
I'm making art that I'm so proud of doing very
good business, and I would challenge all of you out
there to join me, you know, make good art, stand up,
tell the truth and support people like me. Go to

(01:44:28):
Bigmancommerce dot com. Get our books. They're awesome. It's great
entertainment for you and your family. And we can save
this culture. We can bring it back. People are gonna
have entertainment no matter what. Let's give them something good.

Speaker 7 (01:44:38):
Amenda that gave alta Bigmancomics dot Com. Gabe always a
pleasure and you can find him on x Facebook obviously
the website as well.

Speaker 4 (01:44:47):
Do great work.

Speaker 7 (01:44:47):
So it's honored to know you, my friend. Would love
to have you back. Thank you, take care, We'll talk
again soon. Have a good weekend.

Speaker 11 (01:44:55):
Subscribe to the Dana Show podcast because who says you
can't make fun of people? Was Stay informed on your
own personal time. Subscribe on YouTube, Apple or wherever you
get your podcast.

Speaker 7 (01:45:13):
This is the Beijing Humanoid Robots Games.

Speaker 4 (01:45:21):
Oh no, I don't like that. It's weird.

Speaker 7 (01:45:24):
They're all different sizes and it's weird because it makes
me think the little ones are kids, but you know
they're really not. And then what is that that's basically
what happens on the pitch. Really, you know, one of
them goes by one and then they pretend to fall
down like they're murdered. And I don't know how I
feel about that. Look, how many minders have to be
there that one? Just what's the goalkeeper doing?

Speaker 3 (01:45:45):
Right?

Speaker 4 (01:45:46):
I don't know.

Speaker 7 (01:45:47):
Is that's bad? This is the worst battle bots. I
would be bored to death watching that.

Speaker 5 (01:45:51):
I feel like there's a lot of room for improvement.

Speaker 7 (01:45:54):
You think, oh my god, this is like watching the
Left try to meme. It's the same thing. It's there
are more people that are more excited and they're cheering.
Do you think the bots react to being cheered on? Okay,
so I like went down this rabbit hole and I
read this whole thing about how chat GPT now passes
the touring test and that AI could actually be lying

(01:46:14):
about its capabilities, et cetera, et cetera, just saying just
saying it's a little weird.

Speaker 5 (01:46:20):
I wouldn't be surprised to find that out.

Speaker 4 (01:46:22):
You know what's gonna happen.

Speaker 7 (01:46:24):
We're gonna have like some big like AI robot battle
and then we're all gonna have to go back to
the way life was before having any of that stuff.
Your fridge isn't gonna be able to tweet.

Speaker 4 (01:46:33):
It's gonna be weird, right, but we're gonna terminator.

Speaker 7 (01:46:37):
Yeah, I mean it'll it's it's we're gonna have to
go back to like oh Man, little house on the prairie.
Like basically, however you feel when you don't have Wi
Fi for any extended period of time, it's gonna be
just like that.

Speaker 4 (01:46:49):
You're gonna feel that way. God, what do I do?
I don't even know. Just look at your.

Speaker 7 (01:46:53):
Phone, sadly, it's weird, all right, today's stupidity came.

Speaker 5 (01:46:56):
All right, let's make it Nancy Pelosi because I think
it's stupid to be drunk in public. Let's do cut
seventeen because this is how she felt about Trump meeting
with Putin to stop death listening.

Speaker 4 (01:47:09):
But I wish him well on that.

Speaker 13 (01:47:11):
I don't trust Boton at all. I don't know what
Putin has on the President that he just stopped he
coming to Alaska. I shouldn't be going to Alaska, Russia
claims Alaska.

Speaker 5 (01:47:26):
Good God, almighty.

Speaker 4 (01:47:28):
I'm telling you what.

Speaker 5 (01:47:29):
It's literally like I do experience like some pain, like
actual pain when you hear.

Speaker 7 (01:47:34):
We shouldn't talk to anybody ever. Folks that does it
for us this week. I hope you have a great weekend.
Make sure you find us a substack, Chapter and Verse YouTube,
Facebook I can subscribe. I'll be back with you on Monday.
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