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September 2, 2025 108 mins
Craig Collins sits in for Dana. Chicago holds a rally over the weekend against federal law enforcement as at least 35 people are shot. Trump calls on drug companies to prove the successes of the COVID vaccine. CBS shamefully edits an interview with Kristi Noem to whitewash the truth about MS-13 gang member Kilmar Abrego Garcia. Gavin Newsom’s Press Office tries to pick a fight with Dean Cain. Governor Tim Walz over the weekend discusses the possibility of Trump's death and implies “There will be news”. Jasmine Crockett unveils yet another accent to try and pretend she’s from the streets. Chicago residents are pleading for extra help after another weekend of violence. Nine former CDC directors are speaking out in an op-ed in The New York Times, saying RFK Jr. is endangering the health of Americans.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is the Dana Sholl My name is Craig Collins
filling in. They thrilled to be with you. A bunch
of stuff to talk about out there in the world.
Let's get you started right here. Let's play a little bit.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
Of this audio.

Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is Jade Vance talking about how people. For many
years now, I have thought that certain things that are
happening would be bad. Donald Trump does them, and they're
doing much better than we thought.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
Many years now that Donald Trump's tariffs are going to
cause inflation. They didn't cause inflation during the Trump administration.
We keep on defying economist expectations. They keep on saying
inflation is going to be three, four or five percent.
It ends up being two percent, which is exactly where
you want it. So we're very sensitive to this. We're
obviously monitoring this stuff. But I think the evidence is
that what these tariffs have done has caused a lot

(00:46):
of capital to flow in our country, a lot of
new facilities being built in our country. And you know,
we don't see the evidence yet. And I've been skeptical
from the very beginning that President Trump's tariffs are going
to cause prices to rise. What they're going to do
is cause people to come back into our country. And
the final point on this will is the President said
this better than anybody. You know what your teriff rate
is if you build in the United States of America.

Speaker 4 (01:08):
It is zero.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
You don't pay a tariff if you build in the
United States. So why not employ American workers, build your
products closer to the people who are going to be
consuming those things. That's the whole point of President Trump's
economic vision is more for America, more in America, more
by American workers.

Speaker 1 (01:26):
Yeah, that last part is the part that's most important,
the part that's missing all the time when some people
like to talk about this discussion. But it's very obvious
that if you build more here in the United States,
which is the whole goal, that things get way better
for all of us. Things are cheaper, things are easier
to deal with, etc.

Speaker 2 (01:45):
Etc. So this is the kind of thing that, of.

Speaker 1 (01:47):
Course, when you're hearing it, when you're talking about it,
when you're thinking about it, you're saying to yourself, Yeah,
I'd love to see more of this because it'll create jobs,
because we'll do all kinds of things that benefit our
society and not just maybe and I remember this too, here,
I'll say something about this for anyone that thinks that
parts of this are just so untrue. Trump himself even

(02:09):
said there might be short term pain for long term wins,
and that hasn't happened to the degree that he thought
it would, or that some claimed it would, which I
think is also really fascinating in all of this. All right,
let's move on. This is audio of Mayor Brandon Johnson.
He is speaking at a Labor Day rally, telling you
how great Chicago is and how much they're going to fight,

(02:30):
how much they're going to prevent anyone and everyone who
is not them from doing horrible, terrible things that he
claims some people are going to try to do, people
like President Trump if they send National Guard troops to
make Chicago better. Oh just one note too, by the way,
before I hit play on this audio, fifty three shootings
over the city. In the city over this weekend, fifty

(02:51):
three people were shot. This is fairly normal for Chicago
to see every weekend, especially in the summertime. But hey,
things are great there.

Speaker 2 (02:59):
According to Brandon john the.

Speaker 5 (03:01):
City of Chicago no militarized force in the city of Chicago.
We're gonna defend our democracy in the city of Chicago.
We're gonna protect the humanity of every single person in
the city of Chicago.

Speaker 2 (03:19):
No, yeah, that's great, let's do that.

Speaker 1 (03:21):
Let's do everything we can to make things as good
as humanly possible for everybody. But well darn it, the
people who live in the city of Chicago. I'll tell you,
as somebody who has been there, lived there for years,
I've been there, was a weird thing. I lived there
for like fifteen years of my life. I just recently
moved to Texas, and I will tell you that if

(03:43):
Chicago got safer, especially the communities in Chicago that are
uniquely dangerous, if they got better, I would be thrilled.
Most people would be thrilled that live there. So it's
such a weird defiance because even for people who actually
say that they would do or they like the plan,
they like the idea of the way that it's coming

(04:03):
out from the Democrats, they don't actually understand what would
occur if things truly got better in their city, and
how much happier they'd be. I think the biggest win
if you're looking at say, you know, Washington, d C.
For example, the biggest win will be inevitably that what
happens there and how much better it gets will demonstrate

(04:26):
to the people how this is actually a good thing.
And I can't help but continue to say this, especially
filling in for data. Any opportunity I'm given to talk
about any of this stuff, I will, And so this
is something that I've said often over the last couple
of days being in on this show. But the simple
truth is that I'm not afraid of the military men
and women who serve this country. I'm not afraid of

(04:48):
them hurting innocent people. I'm not afraid of them being
given in order that's horrible that they follow. It's just
not a thing that I'm scared of. And so if
we were to see something like that occur in our society,
I think the American people would do the right thing
and stand up. But I don't think it would happen.
And the biggest part of fear mongering, as the Democrats

(05:09):
do about this topic is to convince you that the
men and women of our military would do something bad
that they cannot be trusted. Essentially, more or less, that
is what they're saying. They'll tell you they're not saying that,
but there's no way that they can't add that component
to anything else they do. To be Nazi Germany, you
not only need the leader that they claim that Trump is,

(05:31):
but you actually also need a whole bunch of people
who are willing to do things that were horrible and
beyond any level of rationality obediently to listen to that
leader and our society, our country is simply not going
to do that.

Speaker 2 (05:45):
It's just not going to happen, all right, some other
things out there.

Speaker 1 (05:49):
Trump has issued a fresh warning to India after the
Putin meeting. This is after a Putin meeting between India
and Russia. What's interesting about this to me, and I
think probably the most fascinating part of it for a
lot of people out there, is that these tariffs are
the main way in which the President of the United
States is trying to negotiate anything with anyone, not just trade,

(06:13):
but literally anything. Tariffs is at the forefront of the
discussion and the way the President uses them, even as
it's going to be debated in courtrooms and the Supreme
Court is going to have to decide if he has
the power to do this. But the uniqueness of this,
and you know what actually is even more important, or
I think is more significant. I remember when boot President

(06:35):
Biden excuse me, was talking about how Putin better not
invade Ukraine and they were going to be economic sanctions
and all kinds of things that happened. It seems that
the way that Trump wields tariffs is so much more significant,
so much more impactful than anything that, say, someone before
him was trying to do. And I also find that
to be uniquely interesting. What is it about the way

(06:56):
in which Trump says I'm going to do this and
then actually lives up to that that makes people behave differently?
But yes, he wants India and Russia to stop cooperating
in certain ways. He wants a lot of countries to
stop providing things like gas to Russia or buy gas
from Russia, I should say. And so in order to
do that, he's got to throw these tariffs out there

(07:19):
as the main source of demonstrating a defiance that hopefully
gets us what we want. Finally, one last thing that
I think is interesting before we take our first break,
Trump is called on drug companies to justify the success
of COVID vaccines.

Speaker 2 (07:33):
This is fan freaking tastic.

Speaker 1 (07:36):
This is one of my favorite things that I've seen,
because I believe and this is me honestly saying this,
and you might think of this as naive. I don't
really care what you think of this. Ev I've always
believed that after everything that happened during COVID, because of
the scope of it, the size of it, that we
would be capable as a society, not that we would

(07:59):
actually do it, we'd be capable of demanding answers from
a very very unwilling participant, not just China, but any
of the pharmaceutical companies. We'd get to demand answers from
them because of the size of it, and because of
how many Americans would stand together and say we want that.

Speaker 2 (08:16):
Now.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
What's unfortunate, and this is the thing that I think
a lot of us would have expected or I essentially
predicted along with you, is the reality wouldn't actually occur.
We wouldn't all do that. But you put Trump in
the White House, and he's at the forefront of saying
certain things. And this is amazing, and hopefully this causes
more demand for more transparency with what exactly happened and

(08:39):
why they said certain things things that I think they
probably knew were not true. A lot of us believe
that they knew were not true, but at least definitely
didn't end up being true when you fast forward to
the world in which we live right now. And so
I find it to be probably the most important aspect
of that topic not going away. The most important thing

(09:03):
is that we all have to equally want the thing
that the President is now going after. And I do
love people on the left who call this a distraction,
but like always just doing that and saying that because
it appeals to his base and he doesn't want them
focused on whatever the things are that they.

Speaker 2 (09:18):
Say are negative.

Speaker 1 (09:20):
Now he's doing that and saying that to me because
it's so important in society, and he's honestly at the
forefront of having helped the pharmaceutical industry create the COVID vaccines,
not control them the way that Biden chose to control them,
but at least create them.

Speaker 2 (09:37):
And so even more so.

Speaker 1 (09:38):
He's the appropriate leader to say, give us justification, give
us information about this. We deserve it, we need it.
And he's got a I think scheduled meeting today at
two o'clock where you can announce further things, which I
am thrilled at all. Right, we will take a break.
We have more coming up. This is the Danish show.

(09:58):
My name is Craig Collins filling in back.

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Speaker 7 (11:00):
How is September the worst month of the year for
the taxpayer? Government agencies have to spend every single dime
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for another cr In the last forty eight days. The
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Speaker 8 (11:20):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
That's right, it is time for the Quick five on
the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins Fillyan thrilled
to be with you. D Lash, Dana Lash Radio and
x on Twitter are great ways to stay connected. A
Graham Green, the Dancing with the Wolves star who was
nominated for an Academy Award for his fantastic job in
that movie passed Away. That is something I think that

(11:46):
happened last night. Graham was seventy three years old. Certainly
a valuable person in the world of acting, in the
world of entertainment, so definitely a deserving mentioned here. I
will tell you it's always odd to me to talk
about the excuse me, the famous people who pass away,
mostly because there's always somebody in your life, somebody that

(12:09):
you saw on television, somebody that you know sang music,
somebody that did something that impacted you more than a
stranger is typically capable of doing it for you. I'm
not saying Graham Green is that individual for me, but
I think that's one of the big reasons that we
all discuss it so much, is that these known entities,
these famous people, do have such a unique and outstretched
impact in one way or another, whoever it might be,

(12:30):
on your life. So if Graham Green is someone that
truly impacted you, I am sorry to tell you the
news that, unfortunately, at seventy three.

Speaker 2 (12:36):
Years old, he passed away.

Speaker 1 (12:39):
It's telephone Tuesday, the top day for phone calls all
year long, apparently is today. Ahole lot of people will
be making all kinds of phone calls to all the
companies that you you know, need to make appointments with
before the end of the year because your insurance is
about to expire.

Speaker 2 (12:54):
All that stuff.

Speaker 1 (12:55):
Salespeople will start to make the grind toward the last
quarter end of the year kind of pushed. So today,
apparently telephone Tuesday, a loosely observed day where a whole
bunch of people are going to do all kinds of things.
You might also, you know, reach out to friends and
family on a day like today after the long holiday,
if you haven't talked to someone, maybe you'll get a
little bit nostalgic. But anyway, and this is maybe mostly

(13:18):
to the chagrin of any and all gen Zers who
don't like to talk on the phone for the most part,
don't like to talk on the phone, because today you're
getting the phone calls.

Speaker 2 (13:26):
It's not texting Tuesday. It is phone call Tuesday or
telephone Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
The ceo who stole a hat from a kid at
the open is sorry. This was hilarious to me, hilarious
because of the defense that the Polish CEO used. So
if you don't know what's happening, and if you didn't
see the video, which did go very viral, there's a
dude in the stands standing right next to a little
kid when a tennis player tries to take his hat

(13:51):
off and hand it to the little kid. To the
young man, the jerk standing just to the side of him,
pops his hand out real quick, matches it and puts.

Speaker 2 (14:00):
It away in his bag. Does all this stuff like
super fast?

Speaker 1 (14:03):
Just a complete jerk the way that an adult should
not behave around a child who's getting a sports memorabilia
thing from a famous athlete. And so then on social media,
as he was getting attacked for it, he was joking
about it.

Speaker 2 (14:16):
I think that he made statements.

Speaker 1 (14:18):
Of if you went faster, you'd have the hat, not me,
which is just the weirdest second option in all of
the you know parts of this, to be like, you
know what, all right, I stole something from someone, Let
me be proud of that. And then finally his company
put out a statement saying that he was sure at
least he thought the kid was trying to pass the
hat to him, which is the funniest thing I've read

(14:40):
in a while, not just that he thought the athlete
was trying to give him the product, but that the
child who was reaching his hand out also desired for
this you know hat that was evidently being given to
a kid to actually go to the adult man ceo
standing to the next to the side of him. Now,
I will say this. I do think it's uniquely weird.
And I mentioned this about the other story, the one

(15:01):
that it's CEOs who are getting in quote unquote trouble
with the general public, because I think there is a
lot of like jealousy and a lot of anger with
people who are wealthy and people who are not in
our society, and I think that is driving some of this.
I think if the guy was, you know, not doing
all that well in his own life, it might be
a less serious. He'd still looks like a jerk, but

(15:23):
at least people wouldn't blame his wealth as some part
of the problem here.

Speaker 2 (15:27):
So I just think that's interesting.

Speaker 1 (15:29):
I think that there's probably other stories that are not
as viral that you don't know about. Were someone who's
not a you know, CEO of a big company, I
did something to be a jerk in some way, and
someone is not discussing it. Even the whole scandal for
the other CEO who was on the kisscam, the astronomer
guy that wound up having to quit his job, I
think that if he were just like a low level

(15:50):
salesman at that company, it might not have risen to
the level that it did. With people being so mad
about it and obsessing about who at the company did what.
It just seems very weird. SEMs to be a byproduct
of this that I think is important, even if it
doesn't really matter all that much. And I'm not trying
to say leave the CEOs alone, because who cares you
do what you want?

Speaker 2 (16:09):
The guy was a jerk and still a hat from
a kid.

Speaker 1 (16:12):
Finally, one last thing jobs rock stars had before they
were famous. This list went very viral. I think it's
actually pretty cool. Ozzy Osbourne had a brief stint at
a slaughterhouse cat cutting cow carcasses before he became famous.
Many others. K Cobaine was a janitor. Axel Rose managed
to Tower Records, which is probably thrilled.

Speaker 2 (16:33):
He got out of that business and did what he
did after.

Speaker 1 (16:35):
A sales associate. An adult shop was Corey Taylor's gig.
And then finally, Debbie Harris was a bunny at the
New York City Playboy Club and that about makes sense
for her. Oh and Courtney Love was a strip, which
I think people have talked about before because also why
not that makes sense? But again, these are just some
of the jobs that famous people had, specifically in rock music.

Speaker 2 (16:58):
Before they became famous. Gives us all hope.

Speaker 1 (17:01):
Anybody doing a sales associate gig at an adult shop,
I can hope that they're going to be the next
big thing. All right, quick break a lot more. Craig
Collins filling in on the Danish show.

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Speaker 9 (18:15):
Keep your finger on the pulse with a Dana Show
podcast delivering timely news with insightful analysis whenever you want,
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your podcasts.

Speaker 1 (18:27):
They don't learn their lesson. This is the Dana Show.
My name is Craig Collins, filling in, thrilled to be
with you. A bunch of stuff out there to talk about.
This is Christinome putting up on social media a demonstratedly
edited video showing her response to a CBS question and
then what they aired. As far as the CBS question goes,

(18:48):
this was about Kilmar Abrego Garcia. No matter how many
times media has caught red handed in this situation, no
matter how much money President Trump successfully gets them in
lawsuits to give him, they still want to do this.
They still want to change things and claimants for journalistic reasons.

Speaker 2 (19:05):
But here we go.

Speaker 10 (19:07):
One thing that we will continue to do is to
make sure that he doesn't walk free in the United
States of America. This individual was a known human smuggler
MS thirteen gang member, an individual who was a wife
beater and someone who was so perverted that he solicited
nude photos from minors and even his fellow human traffickers

(19:28):
told him to knock it off. He was so sick
in what he was doing and how he was treating
small children. So he needs to never be in the
United States of America, and our administration is making sure
we're doing all that we can to bring him to justice.

Speaker 2 (19:40):
That is crazy. I want to play it one more time.

Speaker 1 (19:43):
So the first piece of audio is the audio of
what CBS actually aired, the question about kill mar breg Garcia.
The second very long, very contextualized answer as to why
you would never want that person in the United States,
it did not air. And so it's insane that this
is the kind of thing that a lot of these
places are being caught doing. It's so easy in society

(20:05):
right now to do this. By the way, we all
have a phone, we all have the capability to record things.
Of course, people that are going to take interviews from
places like the White House, I have capabilities to do
this sort of stuff, and News seems to be woefully
unprepared for the reality that they're not the only arbiters
of any sort of narrative, that everyone else can demonstrate

(20:26):
the truth themselves, and that there are social media platforms
like x like Twitter that you can go on and
tell people the truth and it won't be censored by
people in charge. Because of Elon Musk one more time,
I want to play it the difference between what aired
on CBS and what she actually said.

Speaker 10 (20:41):
And the one thing that we will continue to do
is to make sure that he doesn't walk free in
the United States of America.

Speaker 2 (20:47):
Again, that's the entire answer.

Speaker 1 (20:50):
They aired as if for some reason with no motivating factors,
Christy Nelm is like screw kill mar Brago Garcia, the
innocent man from a part of this country that doesn't
deserve this level of scrutiny that he's getting as they
continue to call him and pretend he's that. But oh
wait a minute, if you actually aired the whole answer,
this is who he is to a lot of the

(21:11):
people that have seen all of the different court cases
and whatnot against him. The actions in courtrooms, or at
least the filings of certain things that his wife did
and then sort of took back which was weird, or
actually really just tried to avoid when asked questions about this.
But again, this is the unedited answer that CBS deemed

(21:32):
inappropriate to put on television and totally fine to cut out.

Speaker 10 (21:36):
This individual was a known human smuggler MS thirteen gang member,
an individual who was a wife beater and someone who
was so perverted that he solicited nude photos from minors
and even his fellow human traffickers told him to knock
it off. He was so sick in what he was
doing and how he was treating small children. So he

(21:57):
needs to never be in the United States of America,
and are administration is making sure we're doing all that
we can to bring him to justice.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
You know, it's really sad about this too, to be
honest with you, a CBS was the same is the
same organization that begrudgingly, finally years later admitted that the
Hunter Biden laptop was real. They're the first ones to
do that of the main legacy media liars.

Speaker 2 (22:19):
I guess you could call them.

Speaker 1 (22:20):
The people who do not tell you the truth. And
don't really care to tell you the truth anymore. But
what I thought was so interesting about it is that
they demonstrated a willingness to at least sometimes accept the
reality around them and behave accordingly to it. But then
this again, is a totally different version of that. It's
the exact opposite. It's the screw you guys, we're going
home kind of thing. We'll do whatever we want and

(22:42):
how dare anybody ask us any questions? And well, it's awful,
all right. Another story out there that I thought that
I saw that I thought was interesting. Gavin Newsom and
his press office account tried to pick a fight with
Dean Kin, the guy who played Superman in the Loess
Lane Dean Kane TV show with Terry Hatcher. It was

(23:03):
a dumb fight, for sure. Dean Kane put up a
photo on I think Instagram and some other places that
said that he got hurt somehow. He hurt one of
his arms. He said, small mishap, will heal fully and quickly.

Speaker 2 (23:15):
So happy. It's college football weekend.

Speaker 1 (23:18):
It's a weird post for someone to be like, I'm
going to attack this guy now, you know, like a
person who may or may not even be all that
famous anymore. I'm not saying that you don't recognize Dean
Kane if you see him somewhere, but he's not a
guy who's doing a lot of current acting in things.

Speaker 2 (23:35):
I'm not trying to take a shot. I'm just saying.

Speaker 1 (23:37):
And he's putting up a photo saying that he got
injured and he's going to heal, and the press office
for Gavin Newsom was like, yeah, this is the time
to go after him, so they put up on social media.
Turns out, arresting innocent Latino kids and farm workers is
harder than playing Superman. That was their response back to
him being injured. And this is real dumb. By the way,

(23:58):
Dean Kane did go with Ice on a few of
the things that Ice had to do because he wanted
to raise awareness for it. You can do whatever you
want with your platform. I don't care what people do
with their platform. I think it makes more sense when
you're a Dean Kane who's not acting anymore all that regularly,
or maybe not trying to be more political, because now

(24:18):
it doesn't matter if people hire him or not.

Speaker 2 (24:20):
He doesn't care. He just wants to tell the truth.

Speaker 1 (24:22):
But I think it's interesting again that this has caused
so many on the left to be so angry at
him that he suited up and went with Ice officers,
who are the villain to the left. It's not anybody
in charge anywhere. They want to blame the person that's
actually executing the order, which, by the way, let me
get to that in a second.

Speaker 2 (24:42):
But first let's finish the Dean kne thing. A.

Speaker 1 (24:45):
Dean's response to Gavin Newsom's press office was hysterical gaslighting
from these idiots injury had nothing to do with ice duties,
just a simple home mishap. What frauds and phonies and
he just essentially made fun of them, which is hilarious.
But let's talk about that other idea for a second.
So the left right now is dealing with a unique challenge.

(25:06):
I think that democratic leaders are dealing with it. I
think that the loudest and the most annoying of the
pundits and the people who scream things into televisions are
dealing with it. And it's the fact that several of
the issues they've committed themselves to a side of the
elon It's truly a dumb side. The men can play
women's sports men can use women's bathrooms, all that kind

(25:27):
of stuff. It's just so stupid and the wokeness of
it is so ridiculous. But they can't turn back, they
can't get back to a sensible place because they've gone
too far. It actually reminds me of quite a few
different things out there in society. One of my favorite
ones is the movie Tropic Thunder, which you may or

(25:47):
may not have seen, and a character in Tropic Thunder
that goes and I probably shouldn't say it this way
on the air, but I'm not afraid of it goes
full more on goes full idiots, full retard is what
they say in the movie, and that if you're acting
and pretending to be someone who has a mental you know, incapability,
you can't go so far that it makes no sense.

Speaker 2 (26:09):
You have to have redeeming qualities.

Speaker 1 (26:11):
They called it the Forest Gump rule, where you can
act as though you're someone who has some limitations, but
not too many limitations to ruin a movie that's essentially
in a different way, what has happened to the left.
They've they've gone so far on so many issues that
they don't know how to come back.

Speaker 2 (26:29):
To the table.

Speaker 1 (26:29):
They don't know how to turn around their full you know,
idiot move, and so instead of doing that, they're trying
to pick a fight with who they deem to be
weaker people. They don't want to fight necessarily with Trump,
although they do that all the time. So he's probably
the exception to the rule. But the system that they're
trying to fight, you know, the same way Trump is.
Trump's enemy is the deep state, right, Trump's enemy is

(26:53):
people who you know, are in control of things and
do bad things with that level of control, that level
of authority, whether you believe that or not. As fine,
that's who the Republican voter believes. The ultimate enemy to
be of their party is bad behaving people in positions
of power. The left continues to target the people who

(27:14):
act because.

Speaker 2 (27:16):
Of the leadership of their party.

Speaker 1 (27:17):
So the left attacks the ice agent instead of saying
that it's the a person ordering the raid who is
the only person they should be targeting and fighting. They
want to shame the people at the lowest level of
the totem pole to try to get them to stop
listening to the people above them. It's really an interesting
tactic because again it demonstrates weakness. I really hope I've

(27:38):
done a good job of explaining this. I've really attempted
to do here. Probably need to map it out a
little bit better. But when you're weak, when your positions
aren't strong, when you know people don't support them, the
only way to win is to turn the every man
that's living next door to the person who voted for
you into the enemy, because you can't reach any higher
than that, because the higher you reach, the more you

(27:59):
have to have a conversation about substance, a conversation about issues,
a conversation about policy. And they don't want to do that.
They want to say that the Orange Man is bad
and anyone who voted for the Orange Man is bad,
and you need to attack those individuals so they are
too afraid and stop voting for the Orange Man because
they can't win the other way.

Speaker 2 (28:20):
And it's really fascinating.

Speaker 1 (28:22):
But again, that's to me, the biggest takeaway of trying
to attack Dean Kine, for you know, helping Ice is like, oh,
this guy, this horrible, terrible person, he needs to be blamed,
and so does everyone who is, you know, actually upholding
the law, which is all that Ice is doing. Ice
is removing people who are legally in this country in

(28:42):
all different kinds of ways, because again, and I can't
state this more clearly, they are illegally here in the country.
They have broken a law. Whether or not you care
about that law is not up to you and I.
It's up to the people in charge. And if you
want to fight that power as a political party, you
should do it by targeting the people in charge, not

(29:02):
trying to get people to bully and harm ice agents
and make fun of Dean Kine when his arm is broken.
This is just, again a very weird thing that exists
in our society. It's the same reason I'll say this
part too before I take a break, that the left
often targets children with conversations. They want kids to be
capable of getting, you know, sex change operations, which is

(29:24):
truly an insane thing to say out loud. It's the
kind of thing that a few years ago, if you
had said to someone, they would have committed you.

Speaker 2 (29:30):
But now it's.

Speaker 1 (29:31):
Actually a byproduct of the political talking points of each side.
But they want that, they would like to see that happen.
And I don't know why they want to see that happen,
but mostly because they think that that'll create a voter
for life. This person will never vote for anybody but Democrats.
So who cares if they mutilate and change their body
in a way that they can never reverse. We got
one more voter. Let's bring in all of the people

(29:53):
across the border, regardless of what we know about them.
There might be some murderers and some drug traffickers that
get in. Ah, that's fine, because we're bringing in a
whole lot of voters. And that's all we care about.
That's all we want. We want power at all costs.
That is the democratic version of a conversation, not the
conservative Republican one, regardless of what regular mainstream news media
tells you, and well what they edit out of their videos.

Speaker 2 (30:14):
All right, quick.

Speaker 1 (30:15):
Break, A lot coming up. This is Greg Collins filling
in on the Data show partners that.

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Speaker 1 (31:24):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Greg Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you a bunch of
stuff to talk about. The best week ever in the
history of college football is officially in the books. This
was a lot of very good top teams playing each other.
I'm only going to do a very quick piece of
information about this. Alabama got slaughtered and that was hilarious.
It won't be if you're an Alabama fan, but the

(31:46):
fact that an unranked Florida State Week one came in
and are well, they played in Florida State but beat
Alabama thirty one seventeen.

Speaker 2 (31:53):
Ah, that was amazing. That was something to watch.

Speaker 1 (31:56):
Alabama is truly a team that has fallen off a lot.

Speaker 2 (32:00):
Texas did not look as good as people hoped they
would look.

Speaker 1 (32:03):
Arch Manning did not look as good as a whole
lot of people hoped he would look. They lost to
Ohio State fourteen to seven. Luckily, Ohio State's probably a
very very good football team with a very good defense,
so Manning might start to look better in the future.
And then finally, one of the other games that I
watched was Notre Dame Miami and Miami with a big win.
There a Notre Dame making some really dumb decisions on offense,

(32:26):
like not giving the football to their great, great running
back who probably should have run the ball more than say,
eight times in that game. But anyway, that was some
of the big stuff. LSU did beat Clemson a nine
b to four. That is a big win for Brian
Kelly and honestly, just a really fun weekend, probably for
the former Notre Dame coach, for him to have a
big Marque win with a program that hopefully is getting better,

(32:47):
and then also watching Notre Dame yet again lose. All Right,
some other things out there, just quickly before we take
a break that are not sports related for anyone that
doesn't care. MTV is going to start playing music videos again.
This is just temporary. MTV will be playing a twenty
four to seven MTV Classic thing on Sunday night, I

(33:07):
think this coming week. What's funny about this is that
people for a long time begged music television to go
back to being a television station that just plays a
whole lot of music videos. That was before YouTube was
a big thing. Now people just watch that stuff on YouTube.
So would they actually migrate back to cable television to
watch it. No, I think the answer is pretty easily

(33:30):
going to be a no there. But we'll see people
are happy about this because the heyday of MTV is
when they just played music videos and didn't really do
much of anything else. Another story out there that I
thought was interesting. This could be a four day work
week test for some companies at least. That's the claim
being made at studyfines dot org and online. A three

(33:53):
day weekend is over, but the good news is it
might become at some point a permanent thing. And a
new survey sixty nine percent of people believe if they
could do their job in thirty two hours a week.
Twenty nine did not think that was possible, and three
percent are of the annoying kind that don't know how
to answer any question they're asked. They're like, I don't
know to everything. Millennials are most likely to think they

(34:13):
could do to do the job in a four day
work week seventy five percent. That was very closely followed
by both gen X and gen Z, who are at
seventy percent. Baby Boomers were the ones who are the
least convinced. Only forty eight percent of boomers thought they
could handle a four day work week. Here's the thing
I've always thought about this topic. It's not great to
admit this to the company you work for. Now, if

(34:36):
you do think that you could get all your work
done in thirty two hours instead of forty, there is
no reason.

Speaker 2 (34:41):
For the company to keep employing you for forty hours.

Speaker 1 (34:44):
It doesn't mean they're going to shut down one extra day,
or they're going to have, you know, all of their
staff go home and somehow operate without anybody for that
one extra day. There's a really good chance that you
become a part time employee and they hire somebody else
to do some other job in the days that you're
not there, because that is truly what I think would
happen for a whole lot of companies, is that.

Speaker 2 (35:05):
They'll just make you work less. Especially with AI.

Speaker 1 (35:08):
Starting to become a thing that's getting more and more
significant in the workplace, it seems like a really bad
time to admit as a workforce how little you're actually
useful or how little you're needed compared to what they expect,
and saying that you could not show up one extra
day a week and everything would be fine.

Speaker 2 (35:25):
It seems to be a mistake anyway.

Speaker 1 (35:28):
People are saying this, and based on this information, some
companies may be willing to actually start trying this in
some way. But what that means they'll actually pay you,
I think is up in the air, because I don't
think that a whole lot of companies would be like now,
all this, every part of this sounds great to me.
Let's just go ahead and give you way less work
to do, or just way less time to get your
work done, and then keep paying you the exact same

(35:50):
amount of money.

Speaker 2 (35:51):
I don't know why people aren't saying that part out loud.

Speaker 1 (35:53):
In all of this, in the yes, we win the
conversation about work weeks, we'd lose the conversation as far
as sal and other things are concerned. I want last
silly topic for you, A palate cleanser before we take
a break, which actually on my own show, I bring
to you by a tequila company because I'm thrilled to
that Elbandido Yankee Tequila sponsors my palate cleansers, where I
talk about stuff that is not important because the news

(36:17):
makes you want to do shots.

Speaker 2 (36:18):
That is the real thing I do. In another radio place.

Speaker 1 (36:21):
A pancake soup recipe. I went viral in nineteen seventy five.
It is going viral again. Sounds disgusting, but people are
making pancake soup. Thank you, Internet quick break a lot more.
Craig Collins filling in on the Danash Show.

Speaker 6 (36:34):
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Speaker 1 (37:56):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in, Thrilled to be with few Dean Lash. Dana
Lash Radio on x on Twitter is one of the
best ways to stay connected to anything and everything going
on in the world. Dana, Let's play this. This is
audio from today. Earlier today, our President Trump, talking to
Scott Jennings, said that he is disappointed that Putin once

(38:17):
again attacked Ukraine, and he'll do something to help protect
and save lives.

Speaker 2 (38:22):
This matters.

Speaker 1 (38:23):
This is the exact kind of thing you want a
world leader to be doing. And this is the type
of thing that also flies in the face of Trump
is weak against Putin.

Speaker 2 (38:31):
Here we go.

Speaker 11 (38:32):
I'm very disappointed in him. He and I always had
a great relationship. Very disappointed. Thousands of people dying that
no Americans sead of dying, but they're Russians and the Ukrainians,
and this thousands and it's a war that makes no sense,
and it would have never started if I were president.
And that's what bothers me even more because the election
was totally rigged and it's a shame. We'll see what happens,

(38:56):
but now I'm very disappointed in President Putin. I can
say that and will be doing something to help people live.
You know, it's not a question of Ukraine.

Speaker 12 (39:09):
It's helped people live seven thousand people by dying every
single week, soldiers mostly, but seven thousand people. And if
I can help to stop that, I think I have
an obligation to do it.

Speaker 1 (39:22):
That is a great way to have that conversation. By
the way, that's a great thing to focus on. I
know it seems like I'm just kissing up to President
Trump if I say that, and you think that I'm
being overly biased, for I don't even care, but it's
true because there are people that push back in the
idea that we're doing too much to help Ukraine, specifically
that we're handing them too much free money, that we're
doing all these things. And so for Trump to say

(39:43):
the motivating factor is sort of irrelevant to which side
we think is innocent, to which side we think is guilty,
but just be a truly macro level.

Speaker 2 (39:53):
I want to protect people.

Speaker 1 (39:54):
I want lives to stop being lost in this constant
conflict that's been going on for years. The Trump often
says never would have happened if he were in the
White House when it first started. All of those things
feel like valuable components to if the United States is
involved in something on a world stage that many would
hope that we would actually stop being involved in. Trump

(40:14):
among them people who say that we need to stop
being the arbiter of certain justice around the rest of
the world. This is an exception because he thinks that
he has a unique capability of stopping the amount of
death as someone who's a person of faith. That alone
seems like a valuable way to try to pitch the
continued involvement of the United States in stopping the tragedy

(40:36):
that is the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, and the
consistent moments in which Putin says one thing and does another,
which people said he would do, and now he's doing
the Trump and Trump is not a fan of it.

Speaker 2 (40:46):
All right, Let's move on some other things out there
that I saw.

Speaker 1 (40:50):
Tim Walls to me at this point, if you even
hear about him or see any audio or anything by him,
he feels like the teenage girl that went viral for
saying something stupid, the hawktua type of person in society
that's still trying to cling to their fifteen minutes of
Fame's that's literally what I think Tim Walls is in politics.

(41:10):
He is the Hawktua of politics, and I feel exactly
perfect in describing him that way. Here he is trying
to make a joke he was about how he was
hoping that Trump would die soon, because media has also
been obsessed with the current health of the current president.
This is a very odd way to say. We're the
good guys and the other side are the bad guys,

(41:32):
but we kind of hope they die. There's not a
lot of people who get to do those things. So again,
there's no one who gets to do that. So again,
the Haktua of politics, who's still trying to be famous,
is trying to also hope once again for the death
of a man that someone tried to kill. And I'm
curious who that was. I know who the shooter was,
but I'm curious what else happened there. And honestly, it

(41:54):
seems like multiple times the left finds it amusing to
talk about the death of President Trump and how bad
that would be for society if there was any level
of question whatsoever as to how that occurred.

Speaker 2 (42:05):
But here's Tim Walls. He dooms scrolls through things.

Speaker 13 (42:08):
And although I will say this, the last few days
you woke up thinking there might be news, just saying
just saying there will be news sometime, just so you
know there will be news.

Speaker 1 (42:21):
He'll die eventually, is what you're trying to say there, Tim,
that's the joke you're trying to make.

Speaker 2 (42:26):
This is this is horrible.

Speaker 1 (42:27):
And again the people that are weirdly laughing, not a
whole lot of them that are laughing at this kind
of joke from Trim Tim Walls. But he's he's mostly
an irrelevant moron.

Speaker 2 (42:36):
Now.

Speaker 1 (42:37):
I know he's actually a politician in charge of stuff
in a certain place, but on a national stage, the
man is I don't think ever going to have another
shot at any sort of a job like president, vice president,
what have you. And that we're good, our country is
better off for that. But this is just so odd.
And again, this is the side of the aisle that
constantly says that they're the good guys to their voters,

(42:58):
and the voters walk around thinking that they they deserve
to be treated like the good guys, and the other
side is bad, horrible people.

Speaker 2 (43:04):
They hope for the death of someone. All right, a
couple other things out there.

Speaker 1 (43:08):
First, a judge has ruled that President Trump's use of
the National Guard and Marines in Los Angeles to push
back in a lot of the rioting and horrible stuff
that was going on there was illegal the federal judges
in California, so not terribly surprising this decision that a
judge there makes, I'm sure, like anything else right now,
where Trump is losing in a courtroom, this will get

(43:30):
escalated all the way to the Supreme Court and then
a definitive decision will be reached on this. But they're
saying that President Trump allowed the military to engage in
a role that is very similar to law enforcement, and
that they're not allowed to do that without the express
written consent from Congress. That's essentially explaining to you what
the legal ease of all this is. Did members of

(43:52):
the military do things that maybe law enforcement would also
be doing and trying to create barricades and prevent people
from a horrible stuff. Yes, more or less. The answer
to that is yes. Was it necessary to do that?

Speaker 2 (44:04):
Though?

Speaker 1 (44:05):
Seems to be the question that the Trump administration was
trying to answer in its defense of itself, saying that
this stuff was damaging federal property, that a lot of
what they were doing was uniquely dangerous, and to uphold
the law of the president, which he does have the
right to, you know, send assistance our military. It will
be interesting to see how this continues to be fought

(44:27):
and debated in courtrooms, because I do think it's fascinating.
And I played this audio earlier, but darn it, let's
go ahead and play it again. Brandon Johnson in Chicago
is the kind of moron who looks a gift in
the mouth and says, I'm not taking this.

Speaker 2 (44:42):
How dare you try to help me out at all?

Speaker 1 (44:44):
Because uniquely horrible in Chicago is the amount of damage
and danger and things.

Speaker 2 (44:50):
That happened there.

Speaker 1 (44:52):
There are a whole lot of people who die every
single day, every single weekend, a bunch of people who
get shot every weekend in Chicago. And so if I
were capable of having a president or anyone, send me
more assistants to do a job that my police officers
either aren't allowed to do or simply can't do on
their own. Then I would say, thank you, sir, please

(45:13):
give me all the assistants you want, because my goal
would be for the violence to stop. But a lot
of the leaders in Chicago seem to behave as though
violence is inevitable, they can't be stopped, or they don't
want it stopped, whatever it might be, and so instead
they cheer and you know, praise themselves for their failure
and say how they needed to fight and get the

(45:34):
people of the city of Chicago to fight with them,
to defy a president who might be able to create whole,
you know, communities that are far less dangerous than they've
been before.

Speaker 2 (45:45):
Here we go.

Speaker 5 (45:45):
Nos in the city of Chicago, no militarized force in
the city of Chicago. We're going to defend our democracy
in the city of Chicago, to protect the humanity of
every single person in the city of Chicago.

Speaker 1 (46:04):
Fifty three people shot this weekend protecting the humanity. You
did such a great job of that, you're crushing it
every day.

Speaker 2 (46:10):
You could also just yell out loud.

Speaker 1 (46:11):
We're going to have no safety in the city of
Chicago because they're not and they're not interested in that part.
But that essentially is what this ruling and everything else
is about. I don't think Trump is trying to take
military control of the entire country. I don't think that's occurring.
That's what the left is claiming is occurring. But the
military isn't being sent to places where there is no problem,

(46:33):
where there is no violence and horrible things.

Speaker 2 (46:35):
Happening, And Washington, d C.

Speaker 1 (46:36):
Is absolutely a template of how the world can get better,
things can get safer just by having a more significant
military presence. There's one other thing I'll tell you about this,
and we'll move on to one other quick story and
then we'll take a break. But whenever you talk to
local law enforcement in a place like Houston, Chicago, anywhere,
and they're trying to have sort of a public appealed

(47:00):
version of a popular with the general public version of
we're going to do more to fight crime, which makes
them sound like superheroes. They usually say police presence is
at the heart of that. Be in the community, more,
interact with the community, more, try to show that you're
a regular person. But also equally important, show that you're there.
That is something that law enforcement throughout the entire country

(47:23):
and in all these cities that have problems will tell
you is at the forefront of what they do to
try to prevent it. They just want to be around.
They want to be in the community and available and
have the community trust them so if something bad happens,
someone does tell them who did it. These are all
things they need to improve. If the military can provide
for you the manpower to be more visible, that would

(47:45):
lower the amount of crime that occurs.

Speaker 2 (47:48):
It's just that simple.

Speaker 1 (47:50):
The visibility of those who protect and serve our community,
whether they be police or in this case, with need
in specific places, the military, that alone causes less people
who are going to do bad things to do the
bad things. We should want, that we should desire that.
I'm not saying that I want military control of every
city throughout the country, which is what the left again,

(48:12):
will hear what I'm saying, what I'm speaking into this microphone.

Speaker 2 (48:15):
What I am saying is that I'd like the violence
to go away.

Speaker 1 (48:18):
I'd like a demonstration of the capability of preventing it
to be something that more cities in the United States embrace,
and then inevitably you would stop using them.

Speaker 2 (48:26):
The military wouldn't stay. They would be there for.

Speaker 1 (48:28):
An amount of time, things would get better, they'd leave,
and if things get bad again, they come back.

Speaker 2 (48:32):
That's how that works.

Speaker 1 (48:33):
And then they just demonstrate themselves to be a part
of the solution that you don't want to mess with
if you're somebody doing bad things. I don't know why
it has to be more complicated than that. And one
more time, I'll just say it for the cheap seats
in the back, so I can say it as many
times as possible. If you claim that all of these
things in our society right now are just slowly creating

(48:54):
the Gestapo, slowly creating a overly dictatorship type of atmosphere
for Trump and for you know, Republicans and the country
in which we live. You do not trust our military.
You do not trust the human beings that are the
men and women within our military. And you should because
I do profoundly, wholeheartedly, having known them and talked to

(49:15):
them a lot of them, not all of them, of course,
And there's no way that I think that the people
in this country who choose to serve in that role
would actually do something to the level of what they
need to do to be the Gestapo, and that seems
to be at the heart of this discussion.

Speaker 2 (49:30):
All right, we'll take a break.

Speaker 1 (49:32):
The other story I wanted to mention just quickly, a
kid in Houston, in Texas, where I live, was shot
playing ding dong ditch. He went up to a house,
he rang the doorbell, he ran away. Someone emerged from
the house and fired a weapon. Atom fired a gun
at him and killed him by hitting him in the
back as he was running away. This is uniquely sad,

(49:52):
uniquely a demonstration of how lawless certain places have become
in our society.

Speaker 2 (49:57):
And no, I don't blame the gun. I don't blame
the weapon for this.

Speaker 1 (50:00):
I think a kid playing a prank is the kind
of thing that you might wind up regretting, but not.

Speaker 2 (50:05):
To this degree.

Speaker 1 (50:06):
Of course, this is horrible as far as that goes.
But I just thought it was an interesting demonstration. You
have a bunch of discussions throughout the entire country about
how we make things safer, and right here in Houston,
in Texas, you have someone that gets shot playing ding
dong ditch. If our military were more visible in communities
that have these sorts of problems. I don't think a

(50:27):
person emerges from their house as a kid is running
away from the house with a gun to shoot and
kill somebody. I think that that's something you think twice
about and don't do. All right, quick break a lot
coming up. Craig Collins filling in on the Data.

Speaker 6 (50:39):
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Speaker 8 (51:42):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 1 (51:47):
That's right, it is the Danish show. I am Craig
Collins filling in time for the Quick five. A burning
Man has horrible headlines that are coming out of this thing.
A one, this is just a weird one. A Burning
Man attendee gives birth a found after quote showing no
signs of pregnancy.

Speaker 2 (52:03):
I feel like that's got to be impossible.

Speaker 1 (52:06):
But they said she had no signs of pregnancy, and
all of a sudden, there is a baby that exists
now that was born. Of all places, at burning Man,
this one even worse though, a body found in pool
of blood at burning Man. People have questions, they don't
have answers. This is not a thing I would attend
because it seems like a lawless.

Speaker 2 (52:24):
Horrible place.

Speaker 1 (52:25):
Meta created flirty chatbots of celebrities. Taylor Swift is among them.
These are people you can interact with via AI that
may seem like they're overly into you, very much unlike
the actual celebrity if they met you and would not
have this level of.

Speaker 2 (52:39):
Interest in you. This feels creepy.

Speaker 1 (52:41):
This feels like something they did intentionally and honestly, you know,
the genesis story of Facebook being a place that Mark
Zuckerberg created because he wanted a girl that didn't want
him back feels like it's best demonstrated through this story
of celebrities being overly flirty with people that interacting with
the AI version of them sounds like they're going to

(53:03):
get in trouble. And then, finally, one last one in
the world of weird and this is also AI. In
the next five years, people predict that you will be
able to talk to dead loved ones via artificial intelligence,
that no one will go to cemeteries anymore, because if
you want to interact with someone that you've lost, you'll
just fire up the AI version of them for a
quick chat. That also sounds horrible. I am uniquely against

(53:26):
this one. I have been uniquely against any version of
this for a while now because it would be the
hardest way to actually say, accept the fact that someone
in your life is no longer there by pretending they
exist via AI. This seems like it will be mentally
very bad for society, and yet they keep blazing toward
it and saying somehow it's a good thing, and it

(53:47):
seems uniquely again horrible. And then also not actually visiting
a cemetery that seems like the kind of thing that
also helps you not admit the fact that the person
that you cared about is no longer here, which is
a byproduct of going to the cemetery, you know, which
I think is emotional, but it has value. Pretending things
don't happen when they do happen seems like a bad

(54:08):
thing that our society keeps being more and more accepting.
Up all right, quick break a lot more. Craig Collins
filling in on the data show.

Speaker 6 (54:14):
Bernagun is, it's a great option to diversify your weapons array,
and it's great I think for college kids that are
going to be living on their own and also they
want to be able to protect themselves. But they can't,
you know, for whatever, they can't on a gun because
that's you know, you get federal law, but also for
people who you know are over the age of twenty
one who maybe because of local munions of private property restrictions, whatever,

(54:38):
they are disarmed and that makes it kind of dangerous
when you consider the crime rate as of late. This
is where burna comes in. It's a great way to
diversify your weapons array. You have different calibers. You carry blades,
bernegun shoots, chemical irritant projectiles that can deter threats from
up to fifty feet away, and when you look at
regular stun guns, you only have one or two shots
with those with Berna. With the CL particularly which is

(54:58):
their pistol, that's their smallest version, the CL stance for
compact launcher that has fifteen round shock capacity per cartridge,
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not losing anything. The SD is their most popular model.
The CL which is newer, is the smaller version of that.
These are legal in all fifty states. There's no permit required,
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(55:20):
fee other than the price of it, which is super
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it's accessible for everybody.

Speaker 2 (55:27):
Check it out.

Speaker 6 (55:28):
It's the cl stance for compact launcher at burna dot
com slash Danta. That's b y r na dot com
slash Danta Burner Ready when.

Speaker 9 (55:35):
You are makes some common sense of the crazy headlines.
With a Dana Show podcast, you're on the go guide
for getting up to speed on today's most important stories.
Subscribe on YouTube, Apple or your favorite podcast platform.

Speaker 1 (55:48):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in, thrilled to be with you. A whole lot
of stuff to talk about. I have a few very
inappropriate ways that I wanted to intro this topic, and
I've decided I did not do it much because this
isn't actually my show, It's the Danish Show. I don't
anyone get mad at me and somehow blaming her. But
Jasmine Crockett apparently has created an accent or a black scent,

(56:11):
whatever you want to call it during her years of
being in a political position of power in Texas, so
much so that someone recently put up a video of
the progression of the accent of one Jasmine Crockett, a
black woman who is a representative in our country of
the state of Texas, even though she doesn't seem to
represent most of what actually Texans believe politically. But here

(56:34):
we go just for you and for our own edification.
This is the difference between how she used to speak
and how she does now.

Speaker 7 (56:41):
Best.

Speaker 14 (56:41):
It is good to see in the new air.

Speaker 5 (56:44):
You know.

Speaker 15 (56:45):
No one could have told me that when I went
down to Austin now looks like a little bit over
a year ago, that I would be running for Congress.

Speaker 16 (56:53):
Maybe because these people they are crazy, because they always
talking about how Christian they is.

Speaker 7 (56:57):
You.

Speaker 14 (56:58):
I don't know how many am on this getting divorced because.

Speaker 16 (57:01):
They getting caught up sleeping with they co workers, daffas
and heterns, all the things. Yeah, you ain't gotta believe me.
Just google, Just go google it. Just do it again.

Speaker 1 (57:10):
I'm gonna play it because I know part of that
audio at the beginning was screwed up. One more time,
the difference between how she used to sound and how
she sounds now when she doesn't interview.

Speaker 14 (57:19):
All is good to see you in the new year.

Speaker 15 (57:21):
You know, no one could have told me that when
I went down to Austin now looks like a little
bit over a year ago, that I would be running
for Congress.

Speaker 16 (57:31):
Maybe because these people they are crazy, because they always
talk about how Christian they is.

Speaker 14 (57:35):
Yeah, I don't know how many am on that side.
I getting divorced.

Speaker 16 (57:39):
Because they getting caught up sleeping with they co workers, staffas.

Speaker 2 (57:42):
And turns I hear, I'm gonna stop for a second.

Speaker 1 (57:44):
So this often happens in politics with white politicians for
some reason, especially Democrats. Again, they have a different cadence,
a different way of speaking when they speak to certain rooms.
Hillary Clinton probably one of the more famous ones, talking
in front of, say a the church of black people,
all of a sudden, having a cadence that makes no sense.

Speaker 2 (58:04):
I understand.

Speaker 1 (58:05):
And yes, I know people who tell me they do this,
that you have one version of speak when you're in
front of what you think is a group of people.
This is more specific for anyone I've talked to that
does this that's black.

Speaker 2 (58:18):
When you think you're putting on your white voice, etc.

Speaker 1 (58:21):
This is something I've heard before, something you know, and
something I'm sure Jasmin Crockett would say in response to
this is what she was doing. She was putting her
white voice on or whatever she calls it for news media.
And then speaking more normally, speaking the way she'd actually
talk in the second clip. But what's so crazy to
me about that is the idea that politicians are so
inauthentic that they're proud of doing this. You know, whether

(58:44):
it is the Hillary Clinton's of the world or the
Jasmine Crockets of the world.

Speaker 2 (58:49):
Just be you a.

Speaker 1 (58:50):
Run is whoever you are, be whoever you're supposed to be,
and see how it goes. It is interesting that someone
feels as though they can't get elected for this reason
or that reason, and then once they do get elected,
apparently it magnifies their capability of staying in office to
go ahead and behave differently.

Speaker 2 (59:06):
But it is a question being asked on social.

Speaker 1 (59:08):
Media on the internet today, why so profoundly has the
voice and the you know, just cadence of so many
people changed. And again, this is more permanent with Jasmin Crockett.
I think that she's doing this all the time. Now,
all right, let's move on to this. This is a
southside Chicago resident talking about the horrible, crazy things you

(59:30):
see as far as violence goes in the city. Democrats
have rejected federal help. This young man, a black man,
talking to local news. I think this was a Fox
Digital report as well, about how bad things are and
how crazy stuff is, and how it might be nice to,
you know, have some more help in preventing some of
the awfulness here.

Speaker 17 (59:48):
Here we go southside. I mean, it's been russ so
you see a lot of crazy stuff. I mean I
remember being in the Family Dollar store that got robbs.
You know, they kicked in the door. They say, everybody,
get down. People there, And I was only twelve years old,
you know, and this kind of stuff that happens all
the time, but a lot of people who don't live
in these areas, they don't get to see it.

Speaker 2 (01:00:08):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:00:09):
What is very true, and I lived to Chicago for
a very long time, is that depending on what part
of the city you live in, you might be unaware
of the exact level of danger that exists. Yes, bad
things happen throughout the entire city. Yes you can be
a victim of something anywhere, but uniquely on parts of
the south and west side of that city, you could
be in a Family Dollar where people in masks kick

(01:00:30):
in the door and rob the entire place. What he
said is not something that even remotely would be questioned
in my mind, is capable because of just how terrible
things have gotten in some areas, and oftentimes if cops
in those areas or ask questions like why isn't more
happening to prevent this crime? I usually over the last
few years, the biggest concern has been because everybody will
turn on us. And he doesn't just mean the people

(01:00:52):
in the community, he means all of the leaders. If
a cop does what he thinks is good policing by
actually fighting some one who is demonstrating to be a
dangerous person, the chance that narrative can be warped by
media and the politicians would attack the cop for it
before they even get their day in court to prove
if what they did was right or wrong. It's so

(01:01:13):
high that there's such a tremendous likelihood that people wouldn't
do that, that cops would just stay away from certain
areas and decide that there's no support making me capable
of fighting this horrible thing that happens here or other places.
But again, I just think it's interesting that maybe the
win in the back and forth discussion as to whether
or not members of the National Guard need to be

(01:01:37):
brought into places like the city of Chicago is actually
talking about how bad things are. Fifty plus people were
shot this past weekend alone, So it does seem like
the kind of thing where you might actually want to
get some help, all right. President Trump is upset with
Vladimir Putin. He said the war makes no sense. He
said people's lives need to be saved here or protected,

(01:02:00):
and that's not happening. Putin continues to take aggressive action
after talking to Trump about something that seems closer and
closer to be an inevitable end out of the conflict.
Here's what Trump said to Scott Jennings on his radio
show More earlier this morning.

Speaker 11 (01:02:17):
I'm very disappointed in him. He and I always had
a great relationship. Very disappointed. Thousands of people are dying.
They're not Americans that are dying, but they're Russians and
the Ukrainians and the thousands. And it's a war that
makes no sense, and it would have never started if
I were president. And that's what bothers me even more
because the election was totally rigged and it's a shame.

(01:02:39):
We'll see what happens, but now I'm very disappointed in
President Putin. I can say that and will be doing
something to.

Speaker 12 (01:02:50):
Help people live.

Speaker 11 (01:02:52):
You know, it's not a question of Ukraine.

Speaker 12 (01:02:54):
It's helped people live. Seven thousand people are dying every
single week, soldiers mostly, but seven thousand people. And if
I can help to stop that, I think I have
an obligation to do it.

Speaker 2 (01:03:06):
You know what's so interesting about this too.

Speaker 1 (01:03:08):
I said before that it's a nice position for the
current president of the United States to take on. This
Nice is a weird word to use in a wartime conflict,
but it's true, it's a valuable position. Maybe is a
better word to use, because it's harder to argue that
then we're sending a lot of support to a foreign
country in a foreign conflict, and we'd like to keep

(01:03:29):
that money here at home.

Speaker 2 (01:03:30):
Trump is aware of that.

Speaker 1 (01:03:32):
He's actually one of the people at the forefront of
saying the US needs to be involved in less things
beyond our borders unless they somehow are being crossed by
someone like I don't know all the people who come
into this country legally. That's something we need to focus
on at the border. But nonetheless, what I think is
actually even more important about that position on this topic

(01:03:52):
is how mainstream media will ignore it. Mainstream media needs
Trump to be the boogeyman, the horrible person in every
room wherever he goes in all of the time. And
if Trump is saying something uniquely presidential and saying that
I just want to see less death occur in the world,
and we have an ability to influence this because of
the proximity we have to this conflict, I mean, our

(01:04:15):
involvement in it has been pretty long, going as far
as the amount of money and support we've sent to
Ukraine and the influence that Trump is trying to have
over Russia that other presidents had no interest in trying
to have by speaking nice or being willing to meet
in some way, shape or form. Although this is not nice.
This is standing up to someone who's doing things you
don't want him to do. But again, there's something that's

(01:04:36):
uniquely different than the narrative of who Trump is and
the reality of what Trump is saying in this interview,
and he has been saying for a while now, and
media refuses to take those things. They refuse to allow
anyone that hates Trump for whatever reason they hate him,
the Trump derangement syndrome individuals out there to ever hear

(01:04:57):
him say something that is presidential like that.

Speaker 2 (01:05:00):
There's a lot of examples.

Speaker 1 (01:05:01):
There's examples so often of these moments that you wonder
to yourself how none of them even a little bit
squeak through and get onto media in other places. And
thank God for places like ex Twitter for allowing this
to be a thing that actually does happen now where
you can see more of this information than if you
were you know, if it was still in control of

(01:05:22):
controlled by people on the left.

Speaker 2 (01:05:24):
It's just crazy.

Speaker 1 (01:05:25):
But yes, I agree with him that we have an
ability and he seems to have almost like a religious
calling to try to stop this, stop this conflict and
stop the death on both sides. And I know people
get mad when he humanizes the Russian soldiers that are dying,
not necessarily the decision making of the Russian politicians, but
the simple individuals themselves who are fighting in this. But

(01:05:48):
there's something uniquely religious about that. Again, I say that
as a Catholic. All right, let's play this audio. This
is comedian Graham Lean high late lean hand.

Speaker 2 (01:05:58):
Excuse me, don't even know if I got that right.

Speaker 1 (01:06:01):
Who was arrested at an airport like a terrorist, locked
in a cell like a criminal for comedic social media
posts about transgenderism. At least that's the claim. Police confirmed
five armed officers detained the fifty seven year old over
past posts of transgender issues, accusing him of inciting violence.
This is out of the UK, of course, and this

(01:06:22):
is a story that Fox News took unique interest in earlier.

Speaker 2 (01:06:25):
Today, I want to play a little bit of that audio.

Speaker 18 (01:06:27):
Comedian Graham Lenehan was arrested at he Threw airport in
the UK overpast social media posts he made on transgender issues.

Speaker 2 (01:06:36):
The fifty seven.

Speaker 18 (01:06:37):
Year old said that five armed officers arrested him after
he flew into the UK from Arizona, and a statement
police said the man in his fifties was arrested on
suspicion of inciting violence. This is in relation to posts on.

Speaker 2 (01:06:52):
X Holy craz being taken.

Speaker 14 (01:06:54):
To police custody.

Speaker 18 (01:06:55):
Officers became concerned for his health and he was taken
to hospital and responded to the arrest, saying I was
arrested in an airport like a terrorist, locked in a
cell like a criminal, taken to the hospital because this
stress nearly killed me, and banned from speaking online, all
because I made jokes that upset some psychotic trust strusts.

(01:07:17):
To me, this proves one thing beyond doubt. The UK
has become a country that is hostile to freedom of speech.

Speaker 1 (01:07:24):
Yep, that sounds true. That sounds uniquely true. This is
the world that democrats here in this country would like
us to barrel toward. I just wanted to play that
as as simply a warning. If it were anything else,
it would be even more terrifying. But this person who
made certain jokes again about cross dressing psychotic people, according
to him, was treated as though he was trying to

(01:07:46):
like bomb a part of the UK. It's uniquely scary,
uniquely crazy, and the kind of thing that seems to
be easy for a lot of society, not just parts
of it, to push back on and say this is wrong.
Of course, a whole lot of people won't even talk
talk about this story either, because the best thing they
can do to keep you an idiot that supports them,
a useful moron. Whatever it is, the word is that

(01:08:09):
you want to describe it as, or the phrase you
want to use to describe it, is to just keep
the truth from you as much as possible, And that
should make you mad, that should convince you that you
need to push harder to actually get the real information
from these horrible, terrible people. And I say that definitively,
like I'm usually kidding to some degree when I use
that type of language, but this is uniquely horrible. All right,

(01:08:29):
quick break a lot more Craig Collins filling in on
the Dana show our.

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Speaker 14 (01:09:38):
It's his laugh mission to make bad decisions.

Speaker 2 (01:09:45):
It's time for Florida man oh Man. We got a
lot of Florida men in the news this time. This
is the data Show.

Speaker 1 (01:09:51):
My name is Craig Collins, filling in d Lash Dana
Lash Radio on x on Twitter, Instagram. Scavenger hunt led
a Florida man to drive one hundred and six miles
per hour to a car dealership so that he could
find sixty dollars that was hidden there.

Speaker 2 (01:10:05):
This happens all the time. People go in social media.

Speaker 1 (01:10:08):
They claim to hide money in a unique spot and
the first person that gets there in this random spot
in public gets the cash. So a Florida guy jumped
in his vehicle when he saw the social media post
and drove so fast to try to get there, and
then thought that that would be an excuse when he
got pulled over by the cops. He's like, no, you
don't get it. I don't know if you're following quote
unquote social media influencer, but they hid sixty dollars at

(01:10:31):
the car dealership, so I got to get there. Luckily
for him, not only is he arrested, his car is impounded,
so maybe he needs another vehicle and they'll have to
go and check out that dealership for other reasons. I'm
not sure, but any or he at least needs the
sixty bucks to get the car out of a lock up.
A Florida man was accused of regularly throwing glass bottles
from his Miami high rise. He is now facing deadly

(01:10:52):
missile charges. What's uniquely interesting about this story, outside of
just the horribleness of it of a guy who think
it's hilary to launch glass bottles from a high rise,
is when people don't understand the actual level of punishment
for the thing they're doing, and then they find out.
That's the part I like the most. There's a viral
video of someone trying to tell a cop they didn't do.

Speaker 2 (01:11:15):
Anything wrong and leave me alone.

Speaker 1 (01:11:17):
The guy actually was I think driving a golf cart
on public roadways.

Speaker 2 (01:11:21):
It's not allowed.

Speaker 1 (01:11:22):
But then when you defy the cop and push back
and whip out your camera and try to turn it
into a whole thing, things get worse for you, not
better a lot of the time, meaning you commit more crimes.
This guy, who might not have assumed that his glass
bottles would be thought of as deadly missiles, is going
to be in trouble for a lot of stuff. So
Florida man who's unique piece of cramp does something that

(01:11:43):
gets him much stronger punishments than you'd expect, And I'm
okay for that.

Speaker 2 (01:11:48):
I think that's great.

Speaker 1 (01:11:49):
Actually, in that vein, there's another story about a guy
who was arrested by police in Florida. During the process
of being arrested, he slammed one of the police dogs
to the ground and also headbutted a patrol car and
not even a human, he had butted the car itself.
But I'm okay, and many others are okay with seeking

(01:12:10):
the death penalty on this case because you don't hurt dogs.

Speaker 2 (01:12:13):
He's a crappy jerk.

Speaker 1 (01:12:14):
But this guy is definitely gonna be in a lot
of trouble and a lot of things are gonna happen
as far as the level of crime he committed because
he didn't want to go quietly. And then finally, one
last one that I thought was pretty interesting as far
as a Florida man goes, and this feels out of
all four of these, this one feels the most uniquely
Florida just because of the degree to which this is crazy.
A Florida guy got arrested because he was flying fentanyl

(01:12:38):
into prison. He was using a drone to do it.
He would take the drone from his house where he
had the fentanyl apparently and fly it to the people
that he was selling it to who were locked up
in jail. And this somehow somebody cracked the case. Somebody
figured out what was going on here. You can't fly
fentanyl into a prison undetected.

Speaker 2 (01:12:57):
Just crazy.

Speaker 1 (01:12:58):
The Florida man actually, I think, doing this in California,
so he wasn't actually even in Florida when he was
doing it. But of course that Florida sticks hard, that
Florida stays. Although California not exactly a reasonable state in
a lot of ways themselves, this does sound like the
kind of thing that might just happen in a place
like California. Do But my favorite part about this is
when the guy was apprehended. I'm assuming he said, how'd

(01:13:21):
you figure out it was me? How did you chase
the drone? Attract the drone down to my location?

Speaker 2 (01:13:26):
Man? Oh man, we thought we had the perfect crime going.

Speaker 1 (01:13:29):
When you're flying fatan al into jail, all right, quick
break a lot more.

Speaker 2 (01:13:33):
Now at least he doesn't have to fly it. He's
there already. More coming up. Craig Collin's filling in on
the Danish show.

Speaker 6 (01:13:38):
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(01:14:23):
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Speaker 1 (01:14:36):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in, thrilled to be with you. A whole bunch
of stuff to talk about out there in the world.
I do think this is really interesting, though. Christy Nome
put up a post on social media demonstrating the significant
difference between how she actually answered a question and how
CBS chose to edit the answer from the Secretary of

(01:14:57):
the US Department of Homeland Security. Like the kind of
thing that media would claim they'd never do because they're
journalists and they care about the truth at all costs,
and yet it's exactly the kind of thing that media
continues to do a whole lot of all the time,
even after they give money out of Trump and pay
all kinds of lawsuit problems and settlements and whatnot. You

(01:15:17):
wonder if this will rise to that occasion. But I
do also love the fact that media continues to misunderstand
the power of everything else out there that's not them,
like X, for example, that is owned by Elon Musk,
which is a very good thing for us, and how
easy it is for someone like a Christy Gnome to
put out the truth after they put out a lie.
Fact Checking media is by and large the absolute best

(01:15:40):
thing that X can do and does do for our society.
And this is one way to do it. Because Christie
brought along the receipts here we go, and.

Speaker 10 (01:15:49):
That we will continue to do is to make sure
that he doesn't walk for you in the United States
of America.

Speaker 1 (01:15:55):
Okay, So once again that is the entirety of the
answer that CBS played. I'll play it one more time.
I'm to a question asked about kill mar Abrego Garcia
to Christino.

Speaker 10 (01:16:04):
And the one thing that we will continue to do
is to make sure that he doesn't walk free in
the United States of America.

Speaker 2 (01:16:10):
Now it's weird, is that wasn't the answer she gave.
Of course, here we go.

Speaker 10 (01:16:13):
This individual was a known human smuggler, a MS thirteen
gang member, an individual who was a wife beater and
someone who was so perverted that he solicited nude photos
from minors, and even his fellow human traffickers told him
to knock it off. He was so sick in what
he was doing and how he was treating small children.
So he needs to never be in the United States

(01:16:36):
of America. Our administration is making sure we're doing all
that we can to bring him to justice.

Speaker 1 (01:16:40):
Look, I know that those are allegations and that everything
will be hashed out in the courtroom at some point somewhere,
but that's uniquely horrible to say that it's potential that
Abrego Garcia had to be told by other human traffickers
that he was being too horrible of a person that
he had to pull back a little bit. That is
the kind of individual you definitely don't want in this country.
Of course, we all remember the interview that his wife

(01:17:02):
gave while he was being detained, saying that she wanted
him back, and then she was asked questions I think
it was by like Michael Strahan of all people, as
to what happened and why she would have filed any
sort of lawsuits against him for being a wife beater
and the wife decided not to answer that question, to
try to avoid it and move on from it, which

(01:17:23):
is uniquely horrifying too. But anyway, the hero to the left,
kil mahar Brago Garcia, hopefully at some point will be
sent out of this country for good based on a
whole lot of those reasons that CBS didn't even want
to air when talking to Christine. No, why do an
interview with someone if you have no interest in what
they're saying.

Speaker 2 (01:17:41):
I know the answer to that question.

Speaker 1 (01:17:43):
You probably do too, But nonetheless, it's just sort of
another crazy example, and we're too far along now in society.
We're too advanced for that same game to keep working.
You can go find a place where someone puts the
real information out there very easily. Another story that's gaining
a lot of tras Robert Muller, of course, famous for
the Trump Russia investigation stuff as the special Prosecutor. He

(01:18:07):
was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease four years ago. This is
the kind of thing that's not uniquely surprising. Although I
think some people are going to wonder about the convenience,
and I know I say that in a weird way.
The disease itself certainly not convenient, but the convenience of
being incapable of testifying in front of any sort of
political committee looking for information about the Russia investigation. Although

(01:18:30):
Muller did testify years ago onto something and seemed to
be someone who was uniquely disoriented then and just a
little bit after, I think he had done that. I
think he testified in like twenty nineteen, and then by
twenty twenty one, the claim is that he was diagnosed
with Parkinson's and now he is incapable of responding to
a subpoena to give us more information about the uniqueness

(01:18:52):
of that entire thing. Here's what I think the good
news is in a bad news story, because this is
not a good news story. I think that Muller was
actually in charge. I think that he was used as
sort of a puppet, which the Left loves to do
for a whole lot of people that it puts in
position to power, like say the former President of the
United States, and how puppety he was during that role

(01:19:13):
in the autopen's actual control and whoever was in control
of the autopens control of our country. So I do
believe that these special committees can still get to the
truth on this, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee
can still find out exactly what happened, but without Muller's
direct involvement. Now again, I will admit that there's a
part of me that thinks that this is a lie,

(01:19:34):
that they're doing it to protect someone from testifying when
they would uniquely be maybe incapable of lying as opposed
to incapable of testifying. But Parkinson's of course, is a
horrible thing. So I air on the side of believing
that we can still find the truth without that one
voice being involved. But it is interesting and it does
certainly beg the question of if the fix is in

(01:19:55):
or not. I wouldn't blame you for asking it, as
I'm sort of asking it too. Another story out there,
just kind of rapid firing some of the bigger things
in news today. A plane carrying EU's top leader was
targeted for it was targeted by GPS jamming. The belief
by the EU is that this actually was something that
Russia did. When you have the president of the EU

(01:20:16):
on a plane and she's trying to land, and she's
been an outspoken advocate for Ukraine and certainly a critic
of Russia and then all of a sudden, the GPS
gets jammed and the pilots actually had to land the
plane with paper.

Speaker 2 (01:20:29):
Maps, which I kind of find cool.

Speaker 1 (01:20:31):
Part of me is really impressed and actually very grateful
that parts of our society can still do things the
way that we all used to do them before. All
the technology made it so easy for you to drive
anywhere with GPS and you not pay attention to anything.
Thank god, the people in this airplane were capable of
doing stuff the normal way. And actually I have a
story that I might talk about a little bit later

(01:20:53):
where if you're under thirty years old, your ability to
read a clock that's not digital is horrendous. So those
two things going together make me feel very glad that
this crew is able to land this plane. Not that
I expect it otherwise, but you never know. But the
fact that the EU is now blaming Russia. Russia is
saying that they're not involved is interesting. Putin is the

(01:21:16):
kind of person that likes to make people disappear who
disagree with him, whether that's people in his country or
people in other places. So I would not put this
past Russia. I would not put anything past Russia. And
I think that's part of the value in talking about
things like this and demonstrating what the president may or
may not do in order to get Russia to actually
live up to the things it's been offering Trump that

(01:21:38):
it will do. I'll play some audio a little bit
later on of how Trump has said he's disappointed in
the actions Russia has taken, most recently to attack Ukraine
or in general, after conversations that he's had with Putin
all these times where he believes something's going to happen
and it continues to not happen, it makes it harder
to get to a point of peace. And also why

(01:21:58):
Trump is uniquely focused on doing that, which I thought
was interesting. Also this story, I do love this. Trump
has demanded the drug companies release data on COVID vaccines
to the general public. This is to demonstrate not only
the amount of people who say had an adverse reaction
to the vaccine, those who are vaccine injured, but also

(01:22:19):
just in general, to give us the amount of information
and the amount of lies that were told. The CDC
unhappy with some of the things that's happening here with Trump. Look,
I'll say it this way, the easiest way I can
say it. When you vote someone into a position of power,
that is all the things that President Trump is. Someone
who's outspoken in a way that people say is unpresidential,

(01:22:43):
someone who behaves seeming to demonstrate that he'll go after anybody.
It's not sacred. If you're someone who supported him or
not in the past. If you're someone who's making mad now,
he will say things negative about you. If you're someone
that's now doing what he wants, he'll also flip the
script and be nicer. Marco Rubio is often given compliments
from President Trump. Now that was not always the case

(01:23:05):
between those two men. But I digress. When you put
someone in a position of power, this is what you want.
And some on the left are going to say this
is a distraction, This is, you know, playing to his
base and getting his base to forget about any of
the controversies that the left is trying to create around Trump.
But I'll tell you that, like, I want this very much.

(01:23:26):
I want all the transparency and information to be more
publicly available. There has been some there are some court
cases that give us unique insights into just how failed
some of the vaccines were, how much more dangerous than
beneficial they were to a lot of Americans, but people
aren't paying attention to it, people aren't seeing it for
what it should be. So getting more transparency, some more

(01:23:48):
eyeballs are on it would be a good thing, I
will tell you, though, there's a lot of data that
demonstrates that, you know, the vaccine was unnecessary for a
vast majority of Americans, people that were either already immune
because they had some sort of interaction with COVID. And
remember they told you that you could get COVID without
any symptoms at all, which was always a weird thing

(01:24:10):
for them to say, but it was true, at least
they claimed it was true. But even more so than that.
And now, the way that the vaccine suggestions work, if
you're of a certain age and if you're relatively healthy,
getting the vaccine put you in more danger than not
getting it. And they know that, and Trump knows that,
and a whole lot of other people know that, and
we're just trying to make them say it out loud

(01:24:30):
differently than they've said it before.

Speaker 2 (01:24:33):
So that would be a very good thing.

Speaker 1 (01:24:34):
Finally, one last stupid topic out there, probably the least
news of all the news things, but I can't help
but mention it. Dean Kin, the actor who at one
time played Superman in the Adventures of Lois and Clark,
did wind up having a bit of a interaction a
back and forth with the Governor's office press office on

(01:24:55):
x on Twitter for Gavin Newsom. Dean Kin posted a
photo where it seemed like he had heard it arm.
Then Gavin Newsom's press office posted something saying that turns out,
arresting innocent Latino kids and farm workers is harder than
playing Superman, which is weird on multiple levels. One because
ICE is actually only arresting people who are not innocent
but in fact breaking the law by being here in

(01:25:17):
this country, which is a crime. I don't know how
to say that differently anyway, And they're probably doing other
stuff too. A Dean responded back by saying, hysterical gaslighting
from these idiots injury had nothing to do with ICE duties,
just a simple home mishap. What frauds and phonies, et cetera, etc.
This is amazing, and the keep the fight keeps going
back and forth. The fight picked with Dean Kane. But

(01:25:39):
you know, it's also interesting to me he's not exactly
a working actor right now. I'm not trying to bash
a Dean Gain, but he's not a guy who's doing
a lot of things, so it might not be so
bad for him that he's getting this level of spotlight
through his relationship with Ice or anything else. It seems
to actually somewhat be putting him back in the minds
of a lot of people who remember him fondly from

(01:26:01):
his role as Superman and a TV show that I
had to ask if I could stay up late to
watch because that's a show I remember as a kid.
All Right, quick break, A lot coming up. This is
Craig Collins filling in on the Dana Show.

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Speaker 8 (01:27:18):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 1 (01:27:24):
That's right, it is time for the Quick five. This
is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins, filling in,
thrilled to be with you. A guy saved a little
kid from a monorail at Disney. The guy in Pennsylvania
climbed onto the monorail at Hershey Park.

Speaker 2 (01:27:39):
Excuse me, I thought it was at Disney. It's at
a different theme.

Speaker 1 (01:27:41):
Park on Saturday and saved a little kid. I have
audio of this, just craziness of this. The video is
all over social media, very viral, and the video unfortunately
says it's a disney but here we.

Speaker 19 (01:27:51):
Go, Like the dad instincts kicked in and then they
were just trying to figure things out and how to
get up there as fast as possible. Absolute relief and
even I could feel it in him, the relief as
he got into my arms, and thank goodness, he came
straight into my arms and it went nice and simply
in that sense. They reach out to me this morning,
so we were able to talk. Obviously a lot of

(01:28:11):
banks and everything.

Speaker 2 (01:28:13):
Yeah, he's talking about the parents reaching out to him.

Speaker 1 (01:28:14):
The crazy part of the video, if you watch it,
the little kid somehow gets up on the monorail, has
no idea where to go, and a bunch of people
are standing on the ground is yelling at him all
different directions like go back, go forward.

Speaker 2 (01:28:25):
They don't know where the train is at.

Speaker 1 (01:28:27):
They're worried, and this dude climbed onto the top of
I think a food building and then climbed onto the.

Speaker 2 (01:28:32):
Monorail to get him down.

Speaker 1 (01:28:34):
Way better decision than anyone who was yelling stuff from
the ground to a child who definitely seems to have
gotten himself epically lost. But thank god, everybody's okay, everything's fine,
and the parents are uniquely grateful and not exactly great
parents at least that might be the belief of a
lot of people. I know kids can get lost occasionally,
but getting lost to that level of degree at least

(01:28:55):
would make you a question, how'd that happen?

Speaker 2 (01:28:58):
Where'd everybody go in that situation?

Speaker 5 (01:29:00):
All right?

Speaker 1 (01:29:00):
Another thing I mentioned this earlier, but there is audio
to play as well. The aunt of a woman who
gave birth at Burning Man, a Utah woman who didn't
know she was pregnant. According to the stories, the woman's
name who gave birth is Kayla. You might ask yourself
the question, how does someone not know they're pregnant. She's
a bigger lady, So that's one of the reasons I

(01:29:22):
guess whether or not it was also a very smooth
pregnancy up to the moment where you're waking up in
the morning.

Speaker 2 (01:29:27):
Giving birth is probably also going to be yes.

Speaker 1 (01:29:30):
But here is the aunt, her name is Lacy, talking
about the craziness of this of someone going to Burning
man unaware that they're pregnant and coming back with a baby.

Speaker 4 (01:29:39):
This baby makes me an ant, very very very surprising.
My brother and as wife, Kyla, this was their first
time to burning Man. Kayla woke up, wasn't filling. My
brother Casey ran out and said I need help. Within
minutes they had like an obgui n in his underwear helping.
They had so many of the right people so close.

(01:30:03):
There were no signs of pregnant. Seat we are at
the lake that we can before she was in a
swimming suit. She did not look pregnant.

Speaker 1 (01:30:10):
Okay, again, the trouble here is the unique build of
the human being to begin with, and how apparent it
would be that there's a baby in that human because
a lot of people would look pregnant at nine months.
I'm not trying to be a jerk. I know the
left is gonna get mad at me saying this part
out loud, But you were asking it to yourself, you
were saying it. I'm sure, how do you not know

(01:30:31):
you're pregnant? That's how one last one that's sort of
ridiculous out there. A poll found that people under thirty
are terrible at reading an old school clock not a
digital but an analog clock. Most gen Zers, like sixty
percent of gen Zers say they have no idea what
it says, which is bad for society. By the way,
ninety five percent of boomers can read an analog clock

(01:30:54):
without any issue whatsoever, because darn it, it's a basic
human thing.

Speaker 2 (01:30:58):
That we should all be good at.

Speaker 1 (01:31:00):
Eighty percent of Gen xers say they can do it instantly,
which is lower than I hoped. It would be a
millennials not doing great, gen Z doing even worse. It's
a bad time for my generation. I'm I'm a millennial.
Excuse me, not gen Z or anyone else who's younger.
Just put your watch to the analog function if you
have a digital watch, and force yourself to figure it out. People,

(01:31:21):
we need basic skills and humanity, all right, quick break
a lot more.

Speaker 2 (01:31:25):
Creig Collins filling in on The Dana Show.

Speaker 9 (01:31:27):
The Danish Show podcast. You're fast, funny and informative news
companion for those always on the move. Subscribe on YouTube,
Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.

Speaker 1 (01:31:37):
This is the Danish Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you. A lot of
stuff out there to talk about Dlash Dana Lash radio
and X on Twitter to stay connected to her at
Radio CRAIGC.

Speaker 2 (01:31:48):
If you want to do me.

Speaker 1 (01:31:49):
A favor and make me look a little more popular
than I currently do out of my four hundred plus
fans on my Twitter page, my X page that I
never use at Radio CRAIGZ. If you want to feel
just a little bit better about myself. Now I'm kidding,
let's do this.

Speaker 2 (01:32:03):
That was a weird way to do that. This is
a doctor that fears that Robert F.

Speaker 1 (01:32:08):
Kennedy Junior may change the Hepatitis B vaccine recommendations for newborns.
This individual, of course, is also someone who was recently
fired as a monkey pox zar because he sounds insane
and some of the things he says.

Speaker 2 (01:32:22):
But he was on ABC this week. Here's part of
his concern.

Speaker 20 (01:32:26):
I mean, from my vantage point as a doctor who's
taken the hippocratic oath, I only see harm cooming. I
may be wrong, but based on what I'm seeing, based
on what I've heard with the new members of the
Advisory Committee for Immunization Practices or ACIP, they're really moving
in an ideologic direction where they want to see the
undoing of vaccination. They do want to see the undoing

(01:32:47):
of mRNA vaccination. They have a very specific target on COVID,
but I do fear that they have other things that
they are going to be working on. Hepatitis B vaccine
is on the agenda for the meeting in September. I
predict that what they're going to do is try to
change the birth dose of hepatitis BE vaccine so that
kids don't get it when they're born. So if you

(01:33:08):
have a mother who is well connected to care, you know,
are hepatitis BE status, that may not matter very much.
But if you have a mother who's not gone to
prenatal care who comes into deliver, we have one bite
at that apple, so that child gets that important Hepatitis
BE vaccine.

Speaker 2 (01:33:23):
Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:33:24):
It's a weird sell to the American people to say
that babies need an std shut and that you're saying.

Speaker 2 (01:33:29):
That you might be wrong.

Speaker 1 (01:33:30):
I do like that at the beginning, I might be wrong,
but I also might not be wrong about what I'm saying.
And now I'm going to tell you how Robert if
Kennedy Junior is killing babies, because essentially that's what he's saying,
in some way, shape or form, whether it's actually the
case whether we should be loaded up with vaccines the
minute we pop out of the womb is a good
question to consider. And I love the fact that way

(01:33:51):
before they actually say what they're going to do, simply
when they're investigating whether or not they should do certain things,
what the byproduct was the risk is verse the reward
of making this medical decision or that medical decision at
any point in a person's life. All of that before
they actually get to the end result of the path
they're going down. The medical community is up in arms

(01:34:12):
and saying how horrible this would be if that committee
figures out that this specific vaccine is increasing the likelihood
of a bunch of bad things. There's a really good
shot that they also don't do it. And by the way,
I think I'm not sure about this. You could test
a mother before they give birth for hepatitis B to
know for sure if they have it. I feel like

(01:34:34):
that's a thing that could happen at some point, and
then you'd be like, Okay, now we know the answer
to this, so we know whether or not we need
to give this STD medicine to a baby again within
the context of their argument. And I'm certainly not an
expert in any of this, so I'm definitely aware that
greater minds than mine will look into all of it.

Speaker 2 (01:34:53):
But I'm happy that Robert F.

Speaker 1 (01:34:56):
Kennedy Junior, in the position of power he's in, is
not taking uni lateral control without asking experts to be
in a room. And here's what actually matters. And I
know expert is such a stupid word in the society
we live in now. I know Dana would agree with
me in saying that, But here's what's interesting. When the
left likes the well educated people that might be a

(01:35:16):
better term than expert for their opinions. When they agree
with the opinions that these people who have a resume
to claim to be an expert have, they do talk
about them like they're the definitive, you know, opinion on
any topic, especially in the world of medicine. But when
there's other doctors who also have really fancy degrees, really
good resumes on paper say they have a different opinion

(01:35:38):
based on all of their training, on the left calls
these people quacks and insane morons and idiots. And it's
amazing to watch that because if the decision to be
made by a committee of medical experts, you know, gathered
by Robert F. Kennedy Junior, is aligned with the things
that the left likes, they would refer to them as
experts if they're going to be any other way than

(01:35:59):
these are the crazy people that somehow this administration recruited.
But everybody seems to have different opinions on a whole
lot of things, even with advanced degrees.

Speaker 2 (01:36:08):
So I digress.

Speaker 1 (01:36:09):
I just think it's amazing that they pick and choose
which ones they like to believe it all right, this
is funny to me, even though maybe it shouldn't be
as funny as it is. Jasmine Crockett has apparently developed
a very ghetto accent, is what people are calling it.
Why she did this, I don't know. A Jasmine Crockett,

(01:36:29):
of course, is a black woman who is a representative
out of Texas. So if you think that this is
a version of someone actually say, toning down their type
of speech when they're in public and then eventually letting
the real version of themselves come out, that's fine. I
wonder why someone has to be that and authentic when
running for a position in politics In general, or it's

(01:36:51):
the opposite. It's a thing that people like Hillary Clinton
got in trouble for. Even Barack Obama was said to
amp up the way in which he spoke to certain
groups based on their ethnicity, which.

Speaker 2 (01:37:03):
It's just so odd.

Speaker 1 (01:37:05):
It seems so counter what someone would do if they
were proud of who they actually were. You know, if
Obama didn't speak the way publicly that he spoke to
the United States when he won the office of president,
he seemed to then be ashamed of who he actually is,
if he had some different cadence.

Speaker 2 (01:37:21):
And I'm not saying he did.

Speaker 1 (01:37:22):
I'm not saying Crockett is authentically sounding like herself finally
in the new version. I just think it's such a
strange and weird phenomenon that happens so often in this place,
because you would think, I would think that it would
be more powerful if you're someone who has a different
way of speaking, to be that person all the time.
It would be a calling card to your authenticity as

(01:37:43):
a politician, something that not many politicians can claim to
be on any given day.

Speaker 2 (01:37:49):
But here we go.

Speaker 14 (01:37:49):
First of all, it's.

Speaker 15 (01:37:50):
Good to see you in the new year. You know,
no one could have told me that when I went
down to Austin now looks like a little bit over
a year ago, that I would be running for Congress.

Speaker 2 (01:38:02):
No one could have told me that. Now. Let's hear
the crazier version of this speech.

Speaker 16 (01:38:05):
May because these people they are crazy because they always
talk about how Christian they is.

Speaker 14 (01:38:09):
You, I don't know how many, and M on that side,
I getting.

Speaker 16 (01:38:13):
Divorced because they getting caught up sleeping with their coworkers, staff.

Speaker 14 (01:38:16):
As ans terns, all the things. Yeah, you ain't gotta
believe me. Just go Google.

Speaker 2 (01:38:20):
You'll go Google. You'll find out all this stuff they
is and whatnot.

Speaker 1 (01:38:24):
I don't understand this, I really truthfully, here's the biggest
problem I have with this version of speech. You know,
when people don't do it all the time and then
occasionally do it. I do think that a byproduct of
people who authentically sound like this. And I'm not saying
what you look like. By the way, I've met white
people with challenges in the world of how they understand

(01:38:47):
or use the English language compared to the right way
to use it. I myself might even at times be
a person who makes mistakes. But when you do that,
and you do it authentically. That's really who you are,
you know what I mean, Like, that's the act you
when you pretend to do it, when you know the
right way to form a sentence and where is it
supposed to go and what sentences it is supposed to

(01:39:08):
be in, and you don't do it correctly. You're patronizing
people who speak differently. You're not being yourself. You're being
a strange version of a person that you are not
that you think will be more popular with the people
around you. So it's kind of uniquely racist. Now, it's
hard to call a black woman racist, so I'm not
necessarily doing that about Jasmine Crockett. But it is the
kind of thing that if you see, like a Hillary

(01:39:29):
Clinton walk into a room as she has done before,
I'm speaking to a microphone that's in a place where
a bunch of black people are, and her grammar falls apart.
It is the kind of thing that you walk your
walk out, scratch your head, going like that's kind of racist,
or at least that's how woke mainstream media would refer
to that.

Speaker 2 (01:39:46):
Again, I'm not actually trying to pull the race card.

Speaker 1 (01:39:49):
I want to be definitively clear about this that I
think that this is a joke, and I'm not being seriously,
you know, up in arms angry about some of this.

Speaker 2 (01:39:55):
And I'm sure if I'm ever to go viral for
something like.

Speaker 1 (01:39:59):
This, they'll take make out the part where I explained
the humor of what I was trying to do.

Speaker 2 (01:40:04):
But nonetheless, I don't care.

Speaker 1 (01:40:05):
I just find it so amusing that politicians can be
so inauthentic, so consistently, so easily detectably, and then think
they did a good job. But so, how does Jasmine
Crockett actually sound? As a question that seems to deserve
to be asked right now, Trump multiple times has called
her a very dumb person, not a very smart human,
and I just don't get it.

Speaker 2 (01:40:26):
I truthfully don't.

Speaker 1 (01:40:27):
And maybe some individuals, based on their race, as controversial
as is to say this, might feel that they're immune
to this type of criticism a Jasmine Crockett Barack Obama. Again,
some people might feel like, how dare you criticize me?
I'm a black person. You can't possibly say that about
me if you sound different in different rooms. I'm going
to ask why that's a basic question one other thing,

(01:40:49):
because I know the answer that might come from people
in my own life that I know that do this,
that I know that have done this before. They might
say that they're trying to be more appealing to white
people in how they speak, when they're putting on their
quote white voice.

Speaker 2 (01:41:02):
This is something I've been told before.

Speaker 1 (01:41:04):
I've been told like, oh yeah, no, I have to
do that in that crowd, in that moment, because it's
helpful to me. Again, this is where I contend that
the unique benefit of sounding like yourself all the time,
of being authentically you, whoever you are, is something that
Trump has shown benefits him. President Trump does not speak
like other people. He definitely goes on rants where you

(01:41:28):
start off on one topic and you're pretty unsure how
you got to a very different topic within a subset
of minutes. But it works for the President and it's
the kind of thing that most people here, you know,
he stands in front of. Actually, I love this. Here's
the best example I'll use for this. It is so
weird to compare the black accent of a black politician

(01:41:49):
in Jasmine Crockett to the you know rant that President
Trump does. But I promise it makes sense. I'm going
to try very hard to make it make sense. I
saw John Stewart clip on social media where he complained
that during an announcement about say an NFL thing or
the recent World Cup stuff, that Trump went on other tangents.

(01:42:10):
He's talking about other topics, whether it's reopening Alcatraz, whatever
it might be. There's these other discussions that Trump brings
up in a room of people who are just waiting
for him to announce something else that is unique to
that person. That is something that's incredibly rare to see
a politician do for that much time, like to not
give a crap at all about all the people around

(01:42:30):
him and answer whatever questions media is flinging his direction.
And what I find interesting about that is that's when
you walk away knowing that he's the kind of person
who is the same in both private and public. And
I think, if there's one thing, and there's not, but
if we had to say there was that made Trump
popular with his base or with a whole lot of
people in this country, it's that simple belief that he's

(01:42:53):
the same person behind closed doors that he is publicly
to a degree, to a large degree, should say and
that that's incredibly rare in politics. And Jasmine Crockett, at
the very least, is outing herself as another absolute phony
of a human being and maybe doing quite a bit more.

Speaker 2 (01:43:09):
All Right, we'll take one last break. We'll come back.

Speaker 1 (01:43:11):
We'll do some silly stuff. I'll try not to get
canceled over my racial thoughts.

Speaker 2 (01:43:15):
I don't care.

Speaker 1 (01:43:16):
And again, remember this is not the Dana Show herself.
I am a guest host filling in that you can
point all your anger at. Dana will be back next
week to take over her very popular, very awesome radio show.
All right, quick break a lot more. Craig Collins filling
in on the Dana Show.

Speaker 9 (01:43:32):
Brighten up your timely news consumption with a Dana Show
podcast where every update comes with a little dash of
not so serious. On YouTube, Apple or wherever you get
your podcasts.

Speaker 1 (01:43:43):
This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins,
filling in. Thrilled to be with you.

Speaker 2 (01:43:47):
A bunch of stuff to talk about.

Speaker 1 (01:43:49):
D Lash, Dana Lash Radio on X on Twitter, at
Radio Craigsey is my sad excuse for a social media page.
If you want to go to it, I continue to
talk about it for some reason.

Speaker 2 (01:43:58):
Okay, let's move on.

Speaker 1 (01:44:00):
Disney has a set of codes that you never want
to hear over a walkie talkie because that means something
bad is going on. This was confirmed via a Reddit post.
On today, I learned a place on Reddit where Disney
employees went to reveal what a bunch of these codes mean.
It started off because someone found out that the current
code white powder Alert means that someone decided to spread

(01:44:22):
ashes at Disneyland or disney World, which is uniquely awful
as far as the thing goes.

Speaker 2 (01:44:28):
A custodian who actually worked.

Speaker 1 (01:44:29):
At Disney for a long time jumped in to say
that he remembered that being a code Grandma, which might
have been changed because it's a tad dark or pretty dark.
But he also said that you shouldn't do this spread
ashes at Disney because what happens is they shut down
a ride, they send in custodians with hazmat suits on,
so him they have a little vacuum, they vacuum everything up,

(01:44:51):
and then they actually throw it out, so it ends
up in a trash can, which is where he apologizes
to Grandma as he's throwing the stuff out, because that's
all that Disney can do with it. So a simple
advice was do not dump ashes at Disney. It's not
a good move. They do not give you permission to
do it. You're on camera all the time, bad things
are gonna happen. This custodian also put other codes out there.

(01:45:12):
A code V means somebody threw up, a code H,
which is a weird term for it is somebody went
number two, A code you is that number one situation
you're expecting. Code BBP is a blood coat, which is
also an odd one. And then finally other people were
saying just the amount of things that you see happen
at Disney, you'd be shocked at how terrible this job

(01:45:33):
is compared to what you think it is. And if
someone calls you their most appreciated or most treasured guest,
it usually means they're trying to radio that you're a
huge well word I can't say on the radio, and
that you need to be taken out of the park.
So if they're like, I need help with our most.

Speaker 2 (01:45:48):
Treasured guest, this is bad.

Speaker 1 (01:45:50):
This is a bad moment for you and for whatever
happened between you and this employee at Disney. All right,
another thing out there I saw just rapid fire. To
end the show, real IDs are being rejected at airports.
TSA is complaining about quote sporadic scanning issues that are
making some real IDs not valuable for travel by the
way they told us they would be. This is something

(01:46:13):
that would frustrate a lot of people. You have your ID,
you went through all the hoops that you didn't want
to go through to turn it into a real ID,
and you still can't fly, and you're being told you
can't fly. That's uniquely a bad thing. So they probably
need to figure this out or just make real IDs
something we never ever have to get in any scenario whatsoever,
if they're going to have these unique challenges, because well,

(01:46:35):
darn it, that sounds terrible.

Speaker 2 (01:46:36):
I do have a real ID.

Speaker 1 (01:46:38):
It's because I recently moved from Illinois to Texas and
that's the only version they offered me.

Speaker 2 (01:46:42):
It is fine.

Speaker 1 (01:46:43):
I hope it works when I travel places, although I'll
bring the passport and everything else just to be sure.
Influencers share quote scary violent simulation on why you should
brace position before a plane crash. Hope nobody has to
go through this. That's a headline on the New York Post,
and it's a crazy video that a social media influencer
put up with. I think a lot of AI help

(01:47:06):
to show what would happen if you don't follow the
rules and your plane crashes. Now, even if you follow
all the rules and your plane crashes, unfortunately, I think
that it might not end well for you. Still, terrible
things may still happen. It's just a uniquely dark, uniquely
weird video, but it went viral on social media. This
was after some real plane crashes caused people to be

(01:47:28):
curious about this, which is also.

Speaker 2 (01:47:29):
Strange, but it demonstrates one thing to me. You go
viral for any reason online.

Speaker 1 (01:47:35):
And even though some things I would think would be
the kind of stuff I would not want to show,
I would not want to do that. I would not
want to dive into that world that darn it that
it can all make your money. Going viral is all
about the dollar. So this guy simulated via AI, what
would happen to your body if your plane crash?

Speaker 2 (01:47:53):
Will you were on it? And not? Good? Is the
end result?

Speaker 11 (01:47:56):
There?

Speaker 1 (01:47:56):
I could have told you all that and saved you
watching the creepy, realistically looking video.

Speaker 2 (01:48:00):
Of bad things.

Speaker 1 (01:48:02):
Finally, jaded gen zers are ditching the career ladder for
the career lily pad. This is where you jump from
one company to another company by finding a job that
is much better at the new company with the amount
of qualifications and experience you had from the old company.
It's also something that a whole lot of people have
done for a very long time, but they're calling it
the career a lily pad instead of the career ladder

(01:48:25):
because climbing upward in a company is no longer realistic.

Speaker 2 (01:48:28):
According to gen Z, all right, that's it. That's the show.
Thrilled to be with you as always. Craig Collins filling
in on The Dana Show.
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