Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Is there a universe?
Speaker 2 (00:02):
Sorry, what is the.
Speaker 3 (00:05):
Date?
Speaker 1 (00:05):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (00:06):
No, no, we don't have any date. We don't have
any date. We just conformed after this productive meeting with
President and then with all our colleagues, the partners, who
confirmed that we are ready for trilateral meeting and if
Russia proposed to President of the United States bilateral and DAN,
(00:28):
we will see that the result of bilateral and DAN,
it can be the trilateral. So I said always so
Ukraine will never stop on the way to peace, and
we are ready for any kind of format. But on
the level of ludus, thank you so much.
Speaker 2 (00:45):
Well, nothing's changed. I mean, ultimately, uh uh. We were
talking about this all day yesterday. It's dominated the news cycle.
All of the European leaders that are in We're in
DC yesterday for this heist, these high stakes meetings that
they were having with everything having to do with Russia
(01:07):
and Ukraine, and then if they can ever end the war,
which I think there are people that they just don't
want to end it. But ultimately it's at some point,
you know, these European leaders have to step up. The
EU can't sit here and call shots if they're not
going to do anything. The EU can't call shots if
they're going to run defense for you know, member nations
(01:28):
that don't want to meet the bare minimum of what
they're supposed to owe for NATO, and NATO's not this
cudgel that everybody can use because it's the United States. Ultimately,
it's all us. So welcome to the radio program, Dana
Lash with you. We are at the top of this
first hour, and we're gonna get into some of this.
We're also going to get in We've got some domestic stuff,
(01:50):
we've got some oil and gas, we've got some culture
for you as well. But you know, he did ultimately
end up putting on a suit jacket, I will say,
if you're watching that video, so apparently when he first arrived,
he didn't. He was just in a T shirt apparently,
but then he later put on a jacket, and I
think Trump liked the jacket at least, even though it
didn't have a tie. I think he at least did
(02:12):
appreciate the jacket, and he'd talked about that this, I mean,
will whether or not Trump is successful in actually broker
in this remains to be seen. One of my favorite
bits of audio though. This is audio sound bite nine
(02:33):
Georgia Maloney. She rolls her eyes at chance Floort merse
she is if Maloney has a famous eye roll, watch
to work on that.
Speaker 1 (02:42):
And let's try to put pressure on Russia. Because the
credibility of this efforts, these efforts we are undertaking today
are depending on at least ceasefire from the beginning of
the serious negotiations from next step on. So I would
like to emphasize this aspect and would like to see
a ceasefire from the next meeting, which should be a
(03:06):
tridateral meeting wherever it takes place.
Speaker 2 (03:08):
Well, we're going to let the president go over and
talk to the president. She rolled her eyes out of
her head when the German Chancellor. That's not the first
time that she's done that either. It's like they are
all of these memes, and it's usually when Macrone speaks
or when the German Chancellor speaks. You can tell that
she's not a major fan of them, because she's not.
(03:31):
I mean, she's a conservative for Crane Loud, but she's
not a major fan of them. But it's funny to
watch her react in real time to that. I always
immediately whenever they get together, my first thought is where's maloney.
I want to watch what I want to watch her
facial expressions, That's immediately what I want to do, because
she's hysterical with She's so expressive. She does not have
a poker face at all. She's very, very expressive, and
(03:54):
so you know, whenever, immediately it's starting to get stupid,
her eyes are going up to the ceiling, so they
will see how successful all of this is. But you know,
ultimately I don't think that it because there was more.
I know there were more bombings today. Russiall launched a
missile attack on central Ukraine, and this was hours after
(04:15):
the meeting that Trump had with Zelenski. And I don't
what I'm trying to figure out, what is the what
is the point with some on the right to run
this narrative that Putin somehow is the winner from just
(04:38):
a simple beginning negotiation. Someone explained this to me, Kine,
Why the hell I've heard two of the stupidest editorials
this morning, and I've been mad ever since.
Speaker 4 (04:50):
They're factions of the right that still want war?
Speaker 2 (04:53):
Is that what it is? Are they just like I
just don't like Trump so much that I want.
Speaker 4 (04:57):
Putin to win that's probably some of that too.
Speaker 2 (04:59):
I mean, there's I would you know, I'm a constitutionalist.
I would never consider myself a cult of personality for
any lawmaker.
Speaker 4 (05:08):
Makes no sense.
Speaker 2 (05:10):
But at the same time, that's irrelevant to the fact
that I want the United States to be successful and
I feel like this, you have a better chance here
than you ever did with Biden. So why the hell
would you cheer Vladimir Putin? That makes no sense to me.
And they and so here's the defense, like, well, we're
not cheering Putin, no, but you're writing like they have.
I mean, I can't even look at Drudge Report anymore.
(05:30):
What happened to Drudge Report? I don't know, like Russia
keeps but well, of course they do. They're in a sport,
but not I mean, there are like a million there,
they are, not a million. But there's there's this this
faction that I don't know, this faction that I've seen
where they're very I don't know, they're they're celebrating, They're
(05:51):
they're celebrating Putting, like, oh, he really got one over
on Trump. And I'm scratching my head thinking, how okay,
so we bomb parts of Ukraine. Nothing that they have
touches what we flew over his head in Alaska? Nothing?
I mean we Oh do I want to say this
on air? Well? Hang on, let me test it with
Kane hang on? Yeah, no, no, no, I'm just gonna
(06:13):
My first thought was we literally with a B two?
Can I say that?
Speaker 4 (06:21):
Of course you, I mean you can, But do you
really want to?
Speaker 3 (06:24):
Well?
Speaker 2 (06:24):
I mean it's very descriptive. Did you not? How did
you not think that?
Speaker 4 (06:28):
What?
Speaker 2 (06:30):
How did you not? When I watched, I was like,
I know what that looks like.
Speaker 4 (06:33):
Yeah, I'm uncomfortable.
Speaker 2 (06:34):
Now, Okay, maybe if Kane wants you guys to know,
Kane will tell you, or he'll be selfish and keep
it all to himself. We'll just put it onto it.
We'll put it onto him and see how this goes.
We'll do that. Yeah, I'm just you know, I mean
it does have to do some tea, that's for sure.
That's for sure. So, I, uh, I don't know. I
(06:56):
and Lorraine says she noticed that does the Lenski lost
the jacket and unbuttoned the top of his shirt for
the press or outside of the White House. I mean,
you gotta look the part. I don't care if it's
all black. I actually prefer I like the black type,
black shirt, black jacket. I like that look. I mean,
you know, we're tired goth kid. You know, it's a
nice look. But you know, he that's fine if he
did that when he went and met with Trump, and
(07:17):
that's fine. Dressed the part. We talked about this yesterday,
so I I mean, well, we're gonna keep our eye
on this. We'll have more on it as well, because
they're their discussions are going to be ongoing for some
time in the meantime the takeover of the DC police.
Do you know a number of states have committed their
national guard troops to this effort. How nice is that? That's
(07:38):
so nice? No, none of them are. Not a single
one of them are. Is it gonna say democrat you're
here here? Not a single one of them are Democrat.
It's all. It's all Republicans that won law and order,
Republican governors, residents that are in the highest crime areas
in DC are pushing back against this narrative that there's
(08:00):
no crime. They have been talking to the press, the
press that will talk to them anyway, and they said
that they actually like this. They like the fact that
their streets are getting cleaned out. They like the fact that,
you know, if they go to the grocery store after
they get off work and it's dusk turning into dark
and they want to get their groceries out and go
into their house because they have on street parking or
(08:22):
off street parking, they they can they can do it
without getting run up from behind or mugged or assaulted
or carjacked. I mean, the polling speaks for itself. Now,
the question is, at what point does the poll do
Democrats start to look at the polling and go ooh,
maybe we should back away from this narrative that they're
(08:42):
that crime is good. That's I mean, boys on women's teams.
Crime is great. There's no inflation. I mean, that's Democrats, right,
that's what has been happening. The data they have already
shown a dramatic drop in carjackings down eighty three percent.
(09:03):
This is new data. Washington Examiner has it new data, right.
Carjackings down eighty three percent, robberies down forty six percent,
overall violent crime down twenty two percent during the first
week and one. Because I know it's important to the left,
one of the victims Ibrahim Hassan, who is attacked earlier
(09:28):
this month by a mob of teams while he was
working at the mall in Northeast. He said that the
surge is of these federal agents actually is making his
helping his anxiety about becoming a victim again. He's been
terrified to go to work. He was just had the
snopp beat out of him by a team of a
mob of teenagers. And so they've even been suggesting problem
(09:50):
areas to federal authorities. So it's spreading, its ongoing, but
they've seen a precipitous drop. And this guy when he
was talking to the Washington Examiner was saying that they
started to see an increase in this. They would see
teenagers that would like come in. It would start with
like small groups of teenage boys and they would come
(10:13):
in and they would kind of scope the place out,
and then they'd come back and maybe it was like
a couple of more with them, and they would scope
the place out again and maybe try to see what
they could take. I mean, it was very organized and methodical.
And then later on that's when the mob would come
in because I guess they were testing to see what
their reaction would be if only a small amount of
things were taken. And they said that, I mean they
(10:36):
it was horrible. They were throwing bricks everything. And this
is just one example. How many times have we heard
stories where you have like packs of wild teenagers that
just start reading these stores. Some kids either as beat
and these parents do too, honestly, but they're seeing a
major drop and this is this is incredibly significant, a
(10:57):
major major drop in crime already. Well yeah, with the
first week, no, these criminals, I hope they don't try
to wait out law enforcement and then try to do
these shenanigans again. That's the thing. So we're gonna have
more on this. Also, the uh do you guys remember
this story of them gonna pull this up real quick, livetime.
(11:20):
You guys remember the story of the restaurant where this
influencer walked in and was demanding a free meal. Okay,
well she ruined the chef's life, This influencer who only
had like a couple of thousand followers. You're not an influencer,
you're your own fan. Stop. And she walked in expecting
this free meal from this restaurant for quote unquote exposure,
(11:42):
and the chef was like, no, we're not doing this.
This is stupid, and she bad mouthed them online and
his life is ruined. He got fired. They the restaurant
didn't have his back, which was kind of crappy, to
be honest. This whole influencer culture, this guy's story gets
worse and worse, so he ended up getting fired. He
(12:03):
was getting harassed, and he was the one who was
in the right. An entitled influencer shows up wanting a
free meal, doesn't get it. I mean, I would go
after this girl for defamation because you know she's broke
and she don't have it if she's begging for free meals.
So interesting story. We're gonna we'll come back to this.
In the meantime, we got to get movin. Are you
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Speaker 5 (13:08):
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Speaker 4 (13:28):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Dana's quickfive.
Speaker 6 (13:34):
Ow.
Speaker 2 (13:34):
This sounds really gross. Pregnancy robots could give birth to
human children in a revolutionary breakthrough women. Yeah, well, it's
what women are for. Hi. Yeah, So now they said
that robots could carry babies. Of course, well, China acts
like they're doing all this stuff, but that's very real.
But they said that they want to design a bot
(13:56):
with an artificial womb which will receive nutrients through a
hose and it's abdomen and could carry a baby for
about ten months. That sounds heinous. Yeah, let's not. Let's
not do this. This is also we have women. Why
would you? Oh man? I could go off on some
psycho in a litical deep dive here, but it's headlines.
(14:18):
Let's see. Oh wow, So in Matthew Perry's case, they're
going to have the kutaman queen ketamine ketamine ketamine queen
learn how to pronounce drugs. Jana to plead guilty in
the death of Matthew Perry because apparently she supplied him
with the dope, and so now they're going to hold
her partially responsible. Let's see here. Also, Ronald Reagan Airport
(14:41):
air traffic control tower was evacuated as flights circled. I've
been hearing all kinds of stuff about potential shortages with
air traffic controllers. I wonder if stories like this helped her,
because people look at this and go, Collie, that sounds stressful.
I't want to go into this, but apparently that's what
ended up happening. They had to. It was mysteriously evacuated.
It was a flight from Detroit. They were forced to
circle the area and then they didn't get a signal
(15:03):
back from air traffic Control about landing, and then somebody
said that maybe the fire alarm had gone off. There
was no I mean, it's like all still so vague.
Nobody knows what's happening. There's no you know whatever confirmation,
and media contacted the FAA to get further info. But
apparently they said, well it you know, apparently it was
just a heated argument that led to a fist fight
(15:25):
and that's all we know. Wow, that sounds super secure.
It's the last so the fat jabs. Now they're saying
that they could push up retirement age as life expectancy rises.
Is it though? I mean I don't know, like does
it doesn't it cause other issues in addition to just
(15:47):
like melting the fat. I don't know. Hm, we'll see.
I feel like there's further studies warranted. Stick with us.
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Speaker 7 (16:57):
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Speaker 6 (17:12):
Well, thank you very much Donald mister President for hosting
us today in this important meeting. And I think it
is an important day, a new phase after three years
and half that we didn't see any kind of sign
from the Russian side that there was a willing for dialogue.
So something is changing. Something has changed thanks to you.
(17:35):
Thanks also to the starting in the battlefield, which was
achieved with the bravery of Ukrainians and with the unity
that we all provided to Ukraine.
Speaker 2 (17:48):
Well, I mean she seems pleased with it. I mean
there was some I think there were some positive things
that came out of all of that yesterday. And welcome
back to the program, Dana lash with you. You are
listening to the radio program. You can watch us do
radio channel three forty seven Direct TV as well as
X and you know, et cetera, all that good stuff.
The U. There were some encouraging things. You had the
(18:13):
EU President or Slavonderland who was there. You were just
hearing the Italy's Prime Minister, Georgia Maloney. You also had
Alexander Stubb from Finland, Emmanuel Lcron out of France, Kir
Starmer from Britain, and who else, Oh, the NATO Secretary
Secretary General and a few other world leaders. The German
Chancellor were also there, and they I think that there
(18:39):
were I still think that we're going to try to
see what the Article five like memes. I think that's
something that they're still probably having to hammer out. And
that's something that Steve Woodcoff was putting out there in
the public even you know, days before all of this
was happening, kind of getting people like used to the
(19:00):
idea of what Article five like language to cover the
security That's what he said, he goes, He said that
we got to an agreement that the United States and
other European nations could effectively offer Article five like language
to cover a security guarantee. So, you know, because Putin's
red line was NATO membership, and so if they don't
(19:22):
have NATO membership but they have like NATO like security guarantee,
well what does a NATO like security guarantee look like?
Because Ukraine just wants us to fight their conflict, that's
what that is. They want us to fight their conflict.
They want to get in a NATO so they can say, oh,
Article five is triggered, you guys have to come fight
for us, and absolutely the hell not just no, that's
(19:46):
just we do not have to attend every fight to
which we are invited. I know that that there is
a Neocon push to do that, but that's I still
need someone to actually lose the date what our interests
are that would be threatened in that regard. So that's
what that his whole art Article five like, and that's
(20:07):
what they've all been all been kind of talking. I
still don't know what that means. So what security assurance says? Now,
remember article five? This is what Article five says. Quote.
The parties agree that an armed attack against one or
more of them, it's the mutual defense one or more
of them in Europe and North America, shall be considered
an attack against them all, and consequently agreed that if
(20:27):
such armed attack occurs, each of them, an exercise of
the right or the individual or collective self defense recognized
by Article fifty one blah blah blah blah blah, will
assist the part of your parties so attacked by talking,
by taking forthwith individually and in concert with other parties,
such actions as it deems necessary, including the use of
armed forced to restore and maintain the security of the
North Atlantic area. So it is Article five like protection,
(20:56):
which I don't know what that means, but we'll see.
It's all about this disputed territory. Now, what would happen
then if that's if it's an Article five like protection, Well,
what happens if there's another incursion? And would wouldn't there
for there to be a peace agreement? Isn't this something
that Putin would have to agree to? And do you
(21:18):
see Putin agreeing to this?
Speaker 4 (21:21):
That's the Whitcoff said, Putin already agreed.
Speaker 2 (21:24):
To the Article five, like to the Article five Like yes, yeah,
I don't know about that. I mean maybe, But then
that kind of contradicts a lot of the stuff that
we heard when they came out that they didn't really
come to a serious I mean they didn't Trump didn't
walk away, and they held a press conference. I think
if it had gone completely sour, they would have not
held a press conference.
Speaker 4 (21:44):
But wouldn't you think Putin if this is what Whitcoff
put out a couple of days ago, that by now
he would have refuted it if it.
Speaker 2 (21:52):
Wasn't true, No, not necessarily. I don't think Whitcough answers
to the press.
Speaker 4 (21:57):
No, I mean putin putent.
Speaker 2 (21:59):
Do't if that's all. The only person I've seen saying
that it's been totally great upon is wick Cough Right.
That's the only thing I've seen a lot of European
leaders say yes, we would like Article five like protections
to be included, but so far Wickcoff is the only
person that I've seen that's kind of, you know, kind
of put this out there in that way. So we'll see.
But what that would look like, I mean that security
(22:22):
guarantee that remains to be seen. So we'll we'll circle
back to this. Also a couple of other things I
saw this too. Trump administrations unveiled a massive oil and
ghastase expansion. This is one that Biden tried to kill.
It's he a Daily caller. I thought this was a
very interesting development, something that needed to be done. This
(22:44):
is all a part of potus trying to h or
moving to unleash domestic energy, which we need to our production.
The It's part of the one big beautiful bill you had.
The Department of the Interior, they released a long term
offshore leasing schedule earlier today all about boosting American energy
and they said that it's a schedule for offs oil
(23:08):
and gas lease sales in the Gulf of America and
Alaska's cook Inlet. So they're going to hold four lease
sales by next August and ten offshore lease sales by
twenty twenty eight, according to the Department of the Interior.
And the Biden administration clamped down on offshore gas and
(23:30):
leadukays know this and acting this last minute drilling band,
et cetera, et cetera. So this is good. You know
what we need though, we need more refineries. I mean
that's great. You can have all the LEAs you can
expand all the leases you want. Doesn't mean nothing if
we don't have more refineries. I'm not quite sure why
that hasn't been brought up by Energy and DOI. That's
a significant thing. So this is good, This is all excellent.
(23:54):
I'm very pleased with us, But I would love to
see some regulation blasting as it pertains to because how
are you going to refine all this stuff? You get
your career, how are you going to do it? You know,
we have a limited number now, and every time we
seem to move towards expansion or exploration of expansion. Deems
shut it down. They shut it down under Biden. So
(24:17):
we'll see another development. And this is an interesting one.
I'm not sure how I feel about this. I found
this out last night. We were at a fundraiser for
the guy going for Armine Mizzani, who's the mayor of Keller, Texas.
He's going for Giovanni Carpiglioni's seat. Giovanni Carpiglioni guy slept
around on his wife and was a really bad lawmaker.
(24:39):
He was a moderate squish for Rhino and he's leaving.
So now we got this special election. So I met
this dinner and then I see this, this headline pop up.
So I Missouri has some really has had a series
of really good attorneys general. Right. You had Eric Schmidt,
who's now a senator. He's he's been a great senator.
(25:00):
And then Andrew Bailey, who we've gotten to know very well,
Missouri being my homestate, became the uh AG in Schmidt's place,
and he's done really, really well. Very aggressive. Schmidt was
very aggressive, Bailey's very aggressive. They're one of the aggressive,
you know, the two of the they were two very
aggressive ags. Bailey's been very good. It was announced yesterday
(25:24):
that he's going to be co deputy director alongside Dan Bongino,
tapped by Pam BONDI. I really like Andrew Bailey and
I think he's a gem. But I don't know what
I think of this move. It seems like a demotion
a deputy code director. I'm sorry, by somebody who does
not have the legal background. I just don't get it.
Speaker 4 (25:45):
Yeah, I understand, and I look at it like.
Speaker 2 (25:48):
Like, what the hell are you gonna do? Is co
deputy director? You're ag you can be literally the tip
of the spear on so many things, and he has
been so everybody knows his name because he's amazing.
Speaker 4 (25:57):
Absolutely agree with you.
Speaker 2 (25:58):
Why do you have to be a co deputy?
Speaker 4 (26:02):
I look at hiding me as the role of the
FBI isn't it is to gather the evidence, do the investigation,
and the gather the evidence and that's where it ends.
So what I like about the move is that Andrew
has and knows the evidence that's required in order to
make something work, in order to so it's almost like
the assembly line worker that's a mechanic who designs it
(26:25):
that way. So that four years down the road, when
your car has to be taken to a mechanic, the
mechanic's like, oh, thank god, a mechanic design this because
I actually can fix it. This is what I think
Andrew would do best. He would have the evidence, understand
what's powerful and what isn't in that category, and be
able to effectively help the FBI in their efforts of
gathering and investigation.
Speaker 2 (26:45):
I feel like if you, I just I feel like
it's a demotion for both of them because it's like, oh,
you're not good enough as a deputy. Here's a code deputy,
and then we're going to take our brightest ag and
we're going to shove him down to a deputy.
Speaker 4 (26:58):
I mean can see that, I can see that perspective.
Speaker 2 (27:02):
I'm all about maximizing every piece on the board. And
I'm sorry, but that's how I look at a lot.
It's I like these people, I like how it's human chess.
How can we maximize this position? How can we maximize this?
And I just I just don't. I just don't see
how this is a This isn't even a parallel move,
(27:23):
This isn't I don't know how to say lateral move,
thank you. This isn't even a lateral move. I don't know,
because he's been such a great ag and he's led
I mean, you remember all the stuff that he's led
on when you had Joe Biden. Oh my gosh, he's
been amazing. So now he's going to be a co
(27:44):
deputy director. I mean, how many damn deputy directors do
you have to have? What that says to me is
that somebody doesn't feel confident about the leadership with the FBI,
and they need someone basically to drive the ship and
somebody else to act like the avatar. That's what it
reads to me. Maybe, I mean, or you could put
qualified people in the positions in the first place if
you're worried about their legal background, don't. I mean, I
(28:07):
don't even necessarily think that you have to have that
sort of illegal background as a deputy director of the FBI.
That's why he seems entirely overqualified for this position. The
rumor was Jannine Piro wanted it and she turned it down.
Speaker 4 (28:20):
Yeah, it's fair to say he's overqualified for that position.
Speaker 2 (28:22):
Absolutely that The rumor was Pierro wanted it or no,
they wanted Piro in it, and she said, no, I'm
not doing that. And she's better as US attorney in
DC anyway. I mean, she's very good. So I don't know.
And then my other concern is, well, who's going to
replace Bailey as AG And apparently it's Catherine Hannaway, And
(28:45):
I don't Catherine Hannaway. I had a couple, I don't know.
We kind of danced, I guess during the tea party days.
She's an old school Republican out of a Missouri and
she was viewed in the tea party days as a
very big time moderate, big time moderate. She was not
(29:07):
a tea party favorite during that during those days, the
early tea party days. And I feel like, I don't know.
I was hearing from some folks that it was Andy
Blunt that was calling the shots. And I don't know
how many blunts got to be involved in this stuff.
If it's not Roy Blunt, then it's Matt Blunt. I mean,
how many blunts do we got. There's a Snoop Dogg
(29:30):
joke in there somewhere. But I don't know how I
feel about all this because I don't I just don't
know how you go from a Bailey to a Hanaway,
you know what I mean. I mean, she's an attorney,
but is she aggressive like Bailey? Her record, from my view,
does not support that at all. It's like a I'm
(29:51):
not being mean, I'm just calling it as it is.
If people want to get mad at me for being
honest about it, then maybe have a different narrative for
me to observe. She's not the fighter like Baileia's. So
we've kneecapped, at least with regards to attorney general. I
feel like wenecap because I've known all these people. I
know every single one of these players, and I was
(30:14):
really shocked at that replacement. I mean, my jaw hit
the floor last night. I was at the table. I
had people from Missouri colony and texting like did you
see this? Did you? Kane actually texted at first, and
I kid you not. Like twenty three minutes after, I
got like a series of texts and my phone started ringing,
And I was really shocked to see the replacement because
(30:37):
that's not a name that's come up, and I mean,
at least to that level for a while. She's been
around in Missouri Republican politics since ninety eight, long time,
so I uh, I don't get this move. And I
also know that he was not interested in running for governor.
He's got little kids and he wanted to stay in Missouri.
(30:59):
So what does this mean. This means he's going to
go to DC. This means you're going to I mean,
I just I'm not questioning what people do privately, I'm
questioning the strategy of this, especially you know, if you
are wanting to make the move to run for a
higher office. I don't see how stepping down to do
a code deputy position how that helps you.
Speaker 4 (31:18):
I wonder if Trump saw his work with China on
the legal side of things, and maybe he.
Speaker 2 (31:24):
Shove you in the closet as a code deputy.
Speaker 4 (31:26):
You know what I mean is that there's some investigations
that can go on that probably his expertise going through
that already would be helpful for something that Trump hasn't
mentioned yet. I'm just it's all speculation at this point.
Speaker 2 (31:39):
But why can't Bond he do the hell? Is she
there for anyway?
Speaker 8 (31:43):
Then?
Speaker 2 (31:44):
Cook? Well, then why can't she do it? Let the
dude cook, bro I mean, she's there for a purpose.
Why do we got to be poaching and kneecapping ourselves
with our really good ags and shoving them in the closet.
Speaker 4 (31:55):
Yeah. I know that you're right, But what FBI doesn't
do any of the process accuting. They only do the
investigating in the.
Speaker 2 (32:02):
That's her job. That's her job. That's her job. Do
your damn job. Don't be poaching other ags. Now I'm
questioning her ability to do this. And I had questions
in the get go. Now I'm wondering why the hell
we got to bring Bailey in. Now you're gonna have
two different attorneys general. The one is DOJ and now
another is co deputy. I'm sorry. That is such a position.
(32:22):
That is such a demotion, That is such I mean,
it is a demotion. I'm sorry. That's how I look
at it. I'm just shocked. I was just shocked by it.
We have more on the way as we rolled towards
our second hour. As we do so our partners, Angel Studios.
You can join the Angel Studios Guild and you can
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Speaker 7 (34:05):
Get the load down on the latest news with the
side of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to the Dana
Show podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.
Speaker 9 (34:16):
Like SAMs through the Hour Glance.
Speaker 4 (34:19):
So are the days of the United States, and we
had our b a big beat Bobby Challenge today. Get
fifty pull ups.
Speaker 2 (34:28):
One hundred pups.
Speaker 4 (34:29):
You try to get under five minutes. How'd you we
got close?
Speaker 9 (34:33):
You were right behind me.
Speaker 6 (34:35):
We had a couple of marines here.
Speaker 2 (34:38):
One b three minutes, a couple of beep four minutes.
Pretty impressive.
Speaker 1 (34:43):
It was President Trump who inspired us to do this.
Speaker 4 (34:47):
This is the beginning of our four challenging Americans.
Speaker 9 (34:50):
Get back and shake, eat better.
Speaker 2 (34:52):
But also you need to get out exercise and we
have a challenge. There's another cabinet member we hopefully show
it looks like a class. I hate workout classes. Looks
like a workout class in a way. Now I want
to do my own thing. But that's the circuit that
they're doing. So that's uh. You have SECTEF and HHS there.
(35:14):
It's kind of weird to see our government officials say
something nice yeah, unlike yeah, the guy the morbidly obeseky
war makeup and heels. Yeah, but it's a nice change
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Speaker 8 (36:17):
We are in conversations with our attorneys to make sure
we're defending Colorado's elections. Look, mail ballots are secure. They
cannot be hacked because they're a piece of paper that
is increasingly more important as Trump has made our elections
less secure since taking office again, He's disbanded much of
the federal government's work on countering foreign disinformation, and it's
(36:40):
obviously taking cues about democracy from a dictator Putin.
Speaker 2 (36:45):
And this is so stupid. I mean, he's obviously taking
cues from Putin. This is so goofy. Welcome to the program,
Dana Lash with you top of the second hour. You
can watch us do the radio show on Channel three
forty seven Direct TV. I had some painty waste who
tried to have his pre minstrel dys fork disorder at
me in an email because he hated my microphone and
(37:07):
because I look down. Someone tells short Stack that I
have a four and a half foot screen in front
of my face. This isn't Fox, and I'm not like
everyone else, and I don't require a prompter to do
my job. So you're welcome. M next time I'll charge you,
so welcome. For the rest of you with more than
one brain cell to rub together, Welcome, Welcome to the show.
You can find us also on X the chats at Rumble,
(37:30):
all that good stuff. So there's a couple of things
to dissect here with the mail in voting. Are the
mail in ballots and good and bad? There's reasons to
like and reasons to hate, and then also the acknowledgment
that I don't know if it's ever going to go away.
That's kind of a problem. So let's start with the obvious.
This woman is full of excrement. Absolutely what she said
(37:53):
was the most was one of the dumbest things I've
ever heard anybody say. I literally had people mail to
my home, mail in ballots, fraudulent mail in ballots for
other people to my address. I had to go and
deal with the Elections Department of Elections through your Secretary
of State. Not just for Texas. I also got a
(38:15):
mail in ballot to vote in Missouri in twenty sixteen.
We moved here to Texas in twenty thirteen. So don't
tell me that they're secure, because I know firsthand that
they're not. Someone asked me, are you going to share photos? Yeah,
I'm going to put my home address in a photo
online for you. It was not an easy thing to
(38:38):
reconcile either, by the way, because apparently someone had voted
from my address fraudulently in twenty sixteen for Hillary Clinton
at this address, and then they just kept using this
address to vote in and so we had to get that.
We had to strike their votes. It was crazy, but
we had ballots for other people that were fraudulent. They
registered to this to our home address, sent to my house,
(39:00):
and I could have voted in Missouri in twenty sixteen.
So what she's saying here, and this is what's her
face again, she's whatever, Colorado's secretary of State. They are
not secure at all. And I don't know where this
whole thing. Well, she's taking cues from a dictator. Can
you just be smarter. I'm so tired of hearing this
absolutely specious, brain dead talking point. It's not creative, and
(39:25):
you sound stupid that it's just dumb. It's a dumb
thing to say. Stop it. Well, it's taking cues from No,
he's not I but I actually differ a little bit
from Potus on mail in ballots, and I'm going to
get into that. But this idea that these are secure
is an absolute lie. I mean true, the vote on
covered mail in ballots that were parked in somebody's you know,
(39:45):
like tons of them parked in people's houses in Houston.
I mean, there's too many examples all over the country.
It's just simply not factual. But here's the reality of
these mail in ballots. First off, that this I don't
know if it's here to stay, but it has been
increasing because and I think Republicans did contribute some of that,
(40:08):
because there's been different ways to look at it. Right,
you're not guaranteed either straight voter integrity and honesty with
the old way of voting. Now that's not an argument
for meil in ballots, but I want to make sure
that people understand that even the old school way is corruptible.
There's a story of Lennon Johnson. This was in goodness,
(40:34):
It was a Democratic Senate primary in Texas in like
nineteen forty eight, and they stuffed the ballots to put
him over the top in that race. That's fact. It
was box thirteen and they made sure that they had
enough ballots to put him over the top. So that's
a true thing that's happened. You know, don't forget what
(40:55):
happened in Florida in two thousand with the hanging chads.
It's the only reason why we all know what those
dots are is because of that. And that was old
school and that had to that was determining a presidential election.
And they how many months did they take they had
to go through and painstakingly examine every single card by hand. Now,
(41:16):
the mail in ballot has been growing, and this is
where I actually like this approach to it. So in
Florida they started doing it different. They threatened, and I
think DeSantis was one of the people who started it.
They threatened Democrats, Okay, you want mail in ballots, We're
going to get so good at it that you're going
to want to outlaw it. And that's what they started doing.
They started doing that, and Republicans they went from I
(41:39):
think in Pennsylvania twenty four percent of the vote for
mail in ballots and that was in twenty twenty to
thirty three percent and twenty twenty four, and then they
started outpacing Democrats with mail in ballots in Arizona. So
when you're getting these people to vote that early, first off,
(42:01):
you've got to look at voters in different tiers. You
have your hyperpensity voters, you have the different gauges of
how devoted and active they are in terms of party politics.
And when you get those people to go out and
vote early, you immediately lock them in. They are off
the chessboard. And there there's a good strategy to that,
(42:23):
and there's a good point to it, but not every
single state does mail in balloting in a way that
assures residents of another state of its integrity. And this
is one of the criticisms that a lot of people
had in twenty twenty because of you COVID and everything
(42:44):
else and everything kicking off everybody and going into the elections,
people were very nervous about you know, what did that
look like? How can you trust the integrity of this vote?
Because the states each run their voting, But if you
want other states to accept your state's voting result bolts,
then you need to keep to the agreement that everybody
has with each other, and you need to prove that
(43:06):
you are doing everything that you can do to make
sure that it is that the integrity is upheld and
that it is as pure as possible. Now, I have
some friends who think that Georgia handles THEIRS or I
don't actually like George's law. I think that THEIRS are
too loose. Some people think that they're too that they're
really strict. And Georgia, you ask for an absentee ballot,
(43:29):
and then you have to provide a photo idea like
a valid photo ID, and you have to do it
X amount of days before the actual election day and
all of that stuff, and then the outer everything has
to be completed and has the date and all that
stuff because or it's rejected by the county elections office.
But I still think that it's a little I still
think that that's loose. I mean, eleven days. Come on.
(43:50):
I don't oppose absentee voting. If you know, there are
people who you know travel or have health issues or
college or military whatever, but that should be an exception,
not the rule. And if we have to make it
easier to have a national day of voting where everybody
gets the day off to go and vote, then maybe
that's something that we should consider. But Republicans have got
(44:13):
to get better at mail in ballot it's not going
to go away, and in the areas where it's prevalent,
Republicans need to outplay Democrats. And we've already shown that
we can do that in Arizona and in Florida and
in Pennsylvania. We've already shown that we can do it.
But we have to have some pretty strict rules around it.
You know, you can't just show up and drop an
(44:33):
envelope in a box. You know and not even have
it signed and not even have a stamp a date
on it. You can't be doing that stuff. That's the
stuff that was happening during COVID, right, So these are
all things that I think, These are all things that
we have to deal with. And one of the other
(44:53):
realities too. And I was reading this, This was the
thing that was done pulling this up. It was done
a study of voting patterns pre and post COVID. And
when you do the vote by mail stuff, the voter turnout.
So the voter turnout actually it only slightly increased, and
(45:16):
it didn't slightly increase in favor of Democrats necessarily. So
that's what I'm saying. We could totally game this like
all get out, and that's I think, what Well, that's
what Republicans in Florida have done. Now Democrats down there
want it. They don't want mail in ballad in anymore.
They're done, and there are still I mean this this
(45:37):
I don't know. I think that we have to go
about it a smarter way. And just because it's a
paper ballot does not mean that the integrity. I mean,
you can you can fill out multiple paper ballots. You
remember Caina, and what was it in Saint Louis. They
had I can't remember, some councilwoman that was busted in
a burger king in North Saint Louis and she was
sitting at a table with a bunch of social security
(45:59):
fake social security cars and they were filling out mail abouts. Yeah, yeah,
it is the thing.
Speaker 4 (46:03):
Also, we've got reports where they've run them through the
machine several times. So the paper ballot, although one vote,
it was counted several times because of how many times
it was put through the machine.
Speaker 2 (46:14):
So yes, yeah, yes, So this study that they did
on this, it was universal vote by mail has no
impact on partisan turnout or vote share. It's actually a
really legit study. The dude's not he's not a leftist
who did it. And it's not like you know, partisan zelotry.
It is. I think you need to know the lay
of the land and you need to know the facts
(46:35):
of it so you know how to game it. That's
how I look at it. Oh okay, so then we
can really tip the skills in our favor. Then if
it doesn't favor Democrats necessarily, that's the thing. But you
got to remember, I mean, even the paper ballots like
I said, LBJ Man, they stuffed that when he was
running for that Democrat Sentate primary as a Democrat primary,
and they were still stuff in the ballot box. And
then you saw what happen in Florida. So absolutely, there's
(46:56):
no guarantee for any of it. That is the only
guarantee is turnout. That is why you have to completely
and I've said this over and over again for over
a decade. The only way to guarantee is to have
crazy turnout. And what makes me so livid is that
so many red states, some of the lowest voter turnout
(47:18):
is in red states. In Texas, for instance, the county
that I live in, Ted Cruz lost and we live
in the largest red urban county in the country, and
it is the last large red urban county in the country.
And Ted Cruz lost it to Beta O'Rourke. And this
(47:39):
was when was this kne was this tween twenty twenty
is when O'Rourke ran against CRUs He lost it. But
he lost this county to better Orrock by over two
thousand votes. And it's not because there were more Democrats
that voted. It's because I think Republicans didn't turn out
it is the most it's the reddest district for a reason.
(48:00):
There are way more Republicans in this district than Democrats.
And I went and I look all of this stuff. Folks.
You can go to your Secretary of State website. They
by law they make this available to you and you
can literally break down the votes by district, by county,
by city. And it's not that we had more Democrat voters.
I also ran this with the I crossed it with
(48:23):
the census, and I was the latest available numbers looking
at the influx of people moving into terrn County, et cetera.
It's not that we had more Democrats moving in. That
was a myth. That's a myth that Republicans who are
lazy and want to sit on their asses tell themselves
as a way to excuse their apathy. It wasn't that
more Democrats moved in. Republicans didn't go vote. Two thirds
(48:45):
of the Republicans didn't go vote, almost two thirds. I
should say, that's insane. You know, the special election in
twenty twenty in Georgia Marjorie Taylor Green's super red district,
they had the lowest voter turnout that they had in
like a decade. There are like no Democrats that live
in that district, but they Republicans didn't show up, So
that is always the problem. Republicans' biggest threat to themselves
(49:10):
with voting isn't Democrats. It's themselves that's the issue. It
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Speaker 4 (50:08):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for data's quick five.
Speaker 2 (50:14):
Okay. So this study says that apparently one out of
what three people are considered highly sensitive, meaning they feel
things more deeply than others. I have a different word
for it. Our review of thirty three studies thirteen thousand
people found that higher sensitivity is linked to more symptoms
(50:35):
of anxiety and depression. They say, it's not a disorder,
but it does shape how people experience mental health. I
think there's something to that. I think there's some people
that are way more empathic, empathetic, but empathic than others. Yeah,
so I think that, you know, they may take it personally,
or they may feel slighted because they observe something that
(50:58):
other people didn't. Stopping panties for real, to stop, like
you know, it's not stop taking everything that everybody does
seriously because it's not worth it. It is not worth
it just to shrug it off and let them, you know,
let's just got to go through life. I know that's
very bob new heart of me about Okay, let's see. Oh,
a law to help sex abuse victims is creating an
(51:18):
insurance crisis for public schools and local agencies. Well, rather,
people are creating these problems, not the victims, thank you.
A new California law opened gates for victims of childhood
sexual assault that consue public entities that said fail that
fail to keep them safe. And now apparently there's yeah,
well that's what happens right at AFO. You don't do
your job, you don't protect your students. Think, guess what
(51:39):
this sort of stuff happens without penalties, it will continue
to happen. Sadly, you can't appeal to someone's morality to
do their job and make sure that people are protected.
But you can if there is a financial penalty. How
sad is that MSNBC is changing its name because they
were going to joke about this letter, because they think
that you're not going to know pm NBC. It's gonna
(52:01):
be called ms now miss now that's what I sugh.
Are you gonna no, I'm not gonna watch it. I
don't care. It just sounds goofy, But they're they're trying.
They're they're separating, and I don't know. I I just
don't think that's gonna assist them because I think that
the reason that they even lasted this long is because
(52:22):
they had that veneer of respectability with the NBC on it,
not that NBC is, you know what I mean, gave
them a little bit of a legacy. A forty year
old man got stuck in a slide at a school
playground in Vernon, Illinois. That's what you get. He got
stuck in the slide Northeast Elementary School. The fire department
responded because the dude got trapped at four thirty pm
(52:44):
on Saturday. He was literally wedged in the middle of
the slide and they had to get him out.
Speaker 6 (52:48):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (52:48):
They gave them an oxygen and it was really hot outside.
They had to set up ventilation. It took him thirty
minutes to free him. Took him dumb epis, Oh my gosh.
I mean, you know you should know. Look at you,
look at the slide, look at you again, and then
make the determination as to whether or not you're gonna
go down there. We got more in store. Gavin Newsom's
(53:10):
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Speaker 7 (54:16):
Keep your finger on the pulse with a Danas Show
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your podcasts.
Speaker 10 (54:28):
Also, Americans were unaware how these blue states said jerry
mander their state. So much so ironic that these Texas
Democrat House members went to Illinois, which is one of
the most jerry mander states in the entire country. And
when you look at California, Illinois, Massachusetts, New York, they've
squeezed out all Republicans they can possibly squeeze out what
(54:50):
Texas is doing. We're just drawing fair maps as allowed
by law, and it will ensure that at least five
more members of Republicans will be serving in the United sitates.
Speaker 2 (55:01):
So I don't know, Welcome back to the program, substack,
Dana Lash chapter and verse finals YouTube Facebook. So the
uh this situation, the drawing the maps, all that stuff.
What we're doing fair We're gonna get into. I'm just
so damn tired of talking about it because these people
have prolonged this for so long and have dragged it out.
(55:25):
We want property tax relief. I am all for like
having another civil war. If I don't get it, and
I mean it literally, I will literally I have zero
problem with that. Remember, we choose to be peaceful. We
choose to be peaceful. It's a choice. We don't choose
violence every day when we wake up. We choose peace.
So we're not harmless. I'm just it's just you get
(55:47):
tired of it. We were talking about the mail in ballots,
all this other stuff I wanted to talk about. I
had a great song lined up. I wanted to talk
about the whole uh, Gavin news Because what is Gavin
Newsom doing? Like he keeps picking fights with Texas over
this stuff he's been He's picking fights with everybody. I
don't understand what the what he thinks the serves, what
(56:11):
purpose he thinks the serves and not I I don't
get it. He apparently has like a whole social media
team that runs it's the governor Governor k news Press office,
so it's verified. You know what he said? He told
one person who criticized him, quote, your husband keeps poop
(56:35):
and porn in his pockets? What that is his official account?
That yes, not even making this up, that is his
actual official Governor knew some verified No, yes, I mean
you pulled up I am that's his actual If you
(56:58):
don't believe me, hold up here it is. I'm giving
to you right now.
Speaker 4 (57:00):
Leaning all the way in I'm trolling is basically what
you're saying.
Speaker 2 (57:04):
That's not even like funny or clever. It's just like cringe,
like what what are you doing? What do you think
this is? He has three people that run his comms team.
I had this, where's the story? At gosh? I hate
these gestures on this. I'm gonna take this whole new
computer Iowa, I'm gonna just shoot it. The mosburg uh
(57:26):
he had. There was this article that was quoting his
uh oh here it is. This is so funny. So
his social media person is some I don't know, some
chick and they said, oh, she's part of a team
of three. This is Camille Zapeida. She's the genius behind
(57:47):
a social media post. She's a part she's a part
of a team of three. Well, she can't wear clothing
that fits her. She's wearing like the slouchy stuff in
her little photo. I don't know. He has three people
that run this account. Three people came whole people And
then you have Izzy Garden. Oh, for the love seriously,
that sounds like a bad HGTV show. I don't know
(58:11):
what the genius is doing a lot of heavy lifting
here with us. I mean not kidding. This is actually
some of the I can't even some of them are
so cringe. I don't want to read them on the
show because it's just it. You just get secondhand cringe
and it doesn't help anybody. But they have this great
comms team. Guys, they're really they've had They've been calling
(58:37):
people Voldemort. Hang on, I'm just looking at all of
these different tweets of his that he has. Our WiFi
is we're having technical issues here, so bear with us.
So we've got the him making so they're making fun
of I mean everybody. They went after, no different conservative accounts.
(58:58):
They went after Casey, just Santa. They uh cussed out
Stephen Miller. They called someone Voldemort stupid. I mean, it's bad,
it's I I don't even understand what this is just
so it's pointless. It's embarrassing. It's absolutely embarrassing. It really is,
(59:19):
and I just no, I don't see any sign of
it ever ending. This is their this is their comms team,
and there. This account was the one that did the
caps lock like version of the stuff Trump does, of
Trump's style of posting. So they were talking about Texas
(59:40):
and jerrymandering, and they said, oh gosh, I don't want
to read this. It's so oh gosh, it's killing me.
I'm doing it for you guys. They went after who
are they going after? They were they They were saying
that final warning, Donald Trump, maybe the most important warning
in history, stop cheating, or California will redraw their maps.
This is all caps lock and all of it. And
(01:00:02):
guess who will announce it this week? Kevin Newsom, many say,
the most loved and handsome governor and a very powerful team.
Don't make us do it. Many exclamation points, thank you
for your attention to this matter. See only he can
do this. You guys just look stupid doing it. It
just looks thirsty. And then you have these leftists who
are like, we think it's so great. They're like they're
falling all over themselves to praise it. Three people, three people,
(01:00:30):
And they were talking about their comms team. They said,
this is the one check that I mentioned. She leads
a team of three. They troll forty seven by mimicking
his words in poor grammar. They don't back down. Imagine
going to college and this is what that's your job.
I troll Forkeavenuwsom. I don't even have my own byline.
(01:00:51):
I just troll for his press office as all I do.
It's embarrassing. What did they I mean? You could have
AI do this better? Probably you know that Cane. You
don't even need these three people. You could just eliminate
their jobs.
Speaker 4 (01:01:03):
And I think these three people may be a I created.
Speaker 2 (01:01:07):
They've gone after, they've tried to given people nicknames. They've
I and it doesn't even honestly doesn't even sound like
the stuff that Trump would say. It doesn't even sound
like the stuff he would say. This is what gets me.
The Free Press, David Mammont, who we're gonna have back
on the show. I can't say what the headline of
this was, but I was reading these tweets from Newsom's
(01:01:29):
press office and then I saw this piece over at
the Free Press from David Mammont. The subhead is brilliant.
Profanity was once a useful weapon, and now it's a
dull blade. Now I'm gonna tell you guys, I don't
have I don't have any vices. Really, I'm not. I've
never done I don't do drugs. I've never done drugs.
I you know, every now and then I'll socially drink
(01:01:51):
a driving dinner. I don't smoke. I don't, but I
you know, when you come from a family of sailors, yeah,
you get creative with your language. And so that's my
only vice. I should say. But now, because I hear
it so often on the left, I'm like, oh, no,
I don't want to do that anymore. I catch myself like, no,
(01:02:15):
that's a no, no Democrat word. M. I think what
he says here is brilliant, and he basically talks about
how the left is. They're they're ruining profanity like everything else.
They're ruining profanity like they're ruining everything else. And I
think that that's I mean, I think it's smart. That's
it's absolutely true. And he said, profanity of the streets
(01:02:40):
was you know, in those days, it was way it
was so much more aggressive, and uh, it meant something basically,
what do you say. Now they're throwing it out as
as a veneer. They're costplaying tough, and they think that
(01:03:02):
hijacking profanity is the way to convey that toughness without
actually having anything else that defines toughness, if that makes sense.
They're ruining it, like they're making it cringe. They're ruining
everything they try. They ruin comedy, they've ruined everything. They've
ruined music, They've ruined arts and entertainment, they've ruined government.
(01:03:26):
What have they not ruined? They are a plague up
on the earth, this ideology. And he's right, I mean
it was a useful weapon. It was a sign that
you went too far. Oh wow, wait that was a line.
Oh there's a boundary I crossed. Oh that person's upset
or joyfully just out of their mind with exuberance. Whatever.
(01:03:50):
Now it's I mean you have Beta or Rourke waving
around his noodle arms. I mean, if you he's like
the same portion and sizes his wife. I I just
I don't know. It ruins it, It makes it cringe.
And Kane, have you noticed have you have you sort
(01:04:13):
of now you kind of recoil and horror cringe whenever
you hear a salty word now, just because the Left
has ruined it so much.
Speaker 4 (01:04:22):
Yeah, yeah, it is. We always say that it's a
spice cursing. That's a good way to put you overdo it.
It's no good.
Speaker 2 (01:04:32):
It's the spice minage you overdo it. And it's exactly
I completely agree it's but now it's just and this
is what Newsom and his social media counter doing. They're
trying to act like they're so tough. They're trying to
act like they're so tough. Look, we're cursing at you know,
Dana Perino, or we're cursing at you know somebody, good heavens,
(01:04:54):
it's just it's so oh my gosh, it's just it's
just cringe. It's cringe. So I don't know, I don't
think that this is going to serve the purpose that
he thinks it does. I don't think that Newsome doing
this is going to attract any like independence or leftist
or progressives that are going to see him or hear
him talk like this or see the stuff that he's
(01:05:14):
tweeting and go oh, that's so edgy because it just
seems so contrived and forced. And that's the other thing
that Mammont you know, gets to. He's like, you know,
it was it was a spontaneous thing. It wasn't something
that was focus grouped and planned out and released at
a certain time as like some sort of toughness buff
(01:05:35):
That's not what it's like. That's not what it's for.
I don't know. It's so it's frustrating they're ruining something else. Now,
we got a lot more on the way as we move.
Our partners that help bring you the program. It's our
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Speaker 4 (01:07:08):
It's his laugh mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida man.
Speaker 2 (01:07:17):
This is so bad. A Florida man was arrested after
using sprinklers to spray disabled children. True story Antonio Roman
sixty one. Can I just say I've never seen a
much shot that says DGAF more than this guy? Is
he smirking. He's smirking sixty one years old. I get
(01:07:39):
what Caine says about hating old people. I mean, I
don't get it. It's still mean, you know, not all
of them are like that. He used a surveillance system
to activate his sprinkler system to spray his the disabled
children next door because he was mad about their bus
stop location. He did look at his little man. For
(01:07:59):
those watching the simulcast I swear to he's smirking. This
is so ignorant, What a mean person. He consistently activated
his sprinklers twice a day when the victims they were
they have to be literally loaded and unloaded from the
school bus that they can't go to like a bus
stop blocks away. They have to have help to get
(01:08:21):
on the bus. And so investigators actually surveiled his home
and they confirmed that it was directly aimed at the
school bus stop. So it was activated. Now can you
imagine getting, you know, sprayed, and you're soaking wet when
you're getting on the bus going to school, and the
dad had to start wearing swimming attire to shield his
(01:08:41):
children from the sprinklers. And when deputies made contact with
this guy, where the phony said he was upset about
the location of the bus stop, and he did not
like that it utilized part of his driveway for the
wheelchair ramp of one of the victims needed. Oh my gosh,
can I just have sixty seconds in the locker room
with this guy? It's all I need, all I need.
I don't even need that six Give me thirty seconds,
(01:09:03):
thirty seconds. I'll just take thirty that's it. He faces
charges of a stocking, battery on disabled persons, in battery
or yeah, battery on a disabled person and just regular battery. Wow,
what a jerk. Can you imagine? Like, I what a
horrible person. Now, if he felt that somebody was trespassing,
(01:09:25):
why didn't he talk to his neighbor about it? Why
did he? I don't know? And I bet he thinks
he's in the right this whole time too. That's just horrible. See,
these are the kind of stories that made me so
incredibly mad. Oh let's see here, Oh boy, oh boy.
So two guys got into a fight, and one of
over Trump and bankruptcy, and then one of them got stabbed. Okay,
(01:09:50):
because one of them stabbed the other. A Florida man
fatally stabbed his friend during a heated political argument about
Donald Trump's business ventures, and now he faces possibility of
dying behind bars because a jury convicted him of murder. Okay,
I have a real problem with his middle name, Donald
James Brown Henry. It's one word, the James. I'm not
(01:10:13):
making this up. That James Brown is one word, Donald
James Brown Henry.
Speaker 4 (01:10:17):
It's like Mark Wayne.
Speaker 2 (01:10:18):
So you have three first names in one last one
and the last one's the middle name. That's too many
names for you. At some point you have enough. Thirty
eight years old. Thirty eight years old, he was found
guilty of second degree murder for killing Sean pop. I
swear these names are made up and what authorities describe
as a shocking example of how political divisions can turn deadly.
(01:10:40):
So he's gonna have minimum seventeen, no parole. And apparently
they were arguing and they were doing they were smoking pot.
But I thought that, like totally, doesn't that space you out?
Or wait? Does aren't they all? Or is it tweakers?
The people who are always suspicious are paranoid. Sorry, Okay,
(01:11:01):
well maybe it was the paranoid marijuana. I don't know,
are sure there's different kinds I guess that make you
more paranoid. So he said that they were both arguing
over Trump going bankrupt. That's the statement. And then apparently
that enraged the mister James Brown Henry Donald James Brown Henry, and.
Speaker 11 (01:11:21):
Then the.
Speaker 2 (01:11:24):
Henry he became the antagonist, became aggravated, and he was
convinced that Pop was talking to him like he was stupid.
He was sharpening apparently a kitchen knife while all this
was happening. So let's just hold up for a second.
They're smoking pot, he's sharpening a kitchen knife, and they're
arguing over Trump's business. And so he took the knife
and plunged it right into the Pop's chest. The victim
(01:11:46):
walked outside and then collapsed. So he's absolutely he's totally
charged with murder because he did it. So seventeen years minimum,
no parole. It's wild, wild, wild wild. Let's see. Oh
we got a well, I'll have to tell you about
the jester who is actually arrested for felony assault tomorrow.
We have our third hour on the way stick with us,
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Live a better digital life with Webroot. Welcome back to
the program, Dana Lash with you. We're at the top
of this third hour and you can just make radio
Magic Channel thirty forty seven. Direct TV is a simulcast.
The chat is, it's rumble all kinds of good stuff.
(01:13:59):
So I gotta tell you a little sidebar for moms
and dads that are dealing with the back to school stuff.
So for my friends, my husband I got married very young.
So our kids, out of all of our friend group,
are the oldest of all the kids because everybody waited
until like they were basically in their thirties before they
started having kids. And we, I mean we started right away.
(01:14:20):
And I always hear them talk about, oh my gosh,
back to school, like going to high school, going to
which it is. There's always a list of stuff that
you have to get. There's things that you have to get,
you know, and there's specific items, and then everybody goes
to the same stores, and so you know you got
to go earlier. It's slim pickens. Nothing prepares you, though,
(01:14:41):
boy mom's out there, I know you're gonna feel me.
Nothing prepares you though, for when you have sons that
are going to college and they it's worse than the
high school, junior high going back to school stuff. Now
love the boys, they're great, the response. And I always
tell people, I don't think college is for everybody. I
(01:15:02):
think there's certain disciplines. And my son, he got scholarships.
I like it's be stupid to not take them. But
I also think his discipline is one that I would
suggest college for if you're going into a particular field.
You know, if you're going into certain engineering, you're going
into medicine, law, I think that's fine, and he's going
into one of the three. So to that point, boy moms,
(01:15:29):
at some point, your sons go from chatty Kathy's to
here is a one syllable answer to everything. And then
you have to take out your runs and basically try
to figure out from your runs what that means. You
have to use magic to try to figure out what
they mean from this one syllable word. It is the
(01:15:50):
most frustrating thing ever. And when you have a bunch
of boys that are like rooming together, it's even crazier. So,
for instance, I'm like, okay, well they don't think you
always think that you prepare your kids for everything, right,
And I feel like, you know, we've been doing a
really good job with that stuff. And then you get
(01:16:11):
weird questions like can I put this in the microwave?
Or can I use metal on a nonstick pot? You know,
things like that, and then you go full stop, what
did I not teach you? And so every year at
this time, for those who have left the house, I
go through this crazy list of I need to repeat
(01:16:32):
this as often as possible. Send them a list of
things that they need to understand basic just in case
I didn't cover this. You're like, oh my gosh, don't
put foil in a microwave. Oh my gosh. You know,
all this crazy stuff. And just my son's getting stuff
together and he's going to college and he's roomy. He's
got three other roommates and they have like a kitchen, right,
(01:16:54):
and they were talking about, you know, I guess what
stuff that they can make and things like that. And
like I said to my son, casual was like, we guys,
do you have plates and utensils? I mean, you can't
eat out all the time and you have a meal
plan with school, so that's gonna be helpful. But what
about inclement weather? You know what?
Speaker 6 (01:17:10):
You know?
Speaker 2 (01:17:10):
What? What was something? I guess we need plates like
you guess?
Speaker 6 (01:17:18):
You guess?
Speaker 2 (01:17:23):
Like I can't even tell you for someone who I
plan methodically everything everything out, if we go anywhere, if
we travel, if we do anything, if we Christmas, Thanksgiving,
I mean, my meals are planned out, everything I do.
I will go to a restaurant if we host like
a business thing, and everything is planned out. I mean
(01:17:44):
I will literally pre order things. I'm so type A.
And your days you know, away from like going somewhere,
moving in and you're like, I, yes, I need some plates.
I don't know. I'm able to see it with my feet.
I don't know. And I'm just thinking, how are you
gonna laugh when I can't even hardly verbalize it, and
(01:18:08):
it just gives I don't get anxiety. So I don't
know if that's what this is. But I am unsettled,
and I feel like, ah, is that I don't know
if that's I don't want to be like hunter drite anxiety.
I feel unsubtled. And you know, because of this instance,
because they don't know if they need plates and they
don't have any silverware, what are you gonna cook it in?
(01:18:28):
You're gonna use your hands? Like what are you doing?
Speaker 4 (01:18:32):
I think that's the difference between moms and dads, because
I think dads would be like, oh, you know what,
it's a good opportunity for the kid to learn a
little lesson. I'm not gonna sit there and like help
him out with dishes something basic like that. He's gonna
have to figure it out for himself. And guess what
he'll learn and it'll be fine and everybody will be
happy and he'll be a self sufficient individual.
Speaker 2 (01:18:53):
Well, I told him, I'm like, so you know, you
could get like, uh, melanie, you know, dishwasher safe melomy
that we don't have to get a nice plate that's
gonna break. And then I get, well, I guess any
plastic No, no, no, it's puffshoot.
Speaker 4 (01:19:08):
Some leaden plates.
Speaker 2 (01:19:09):
Oh my gosh, oh boy, moms, please, then you feel
me out there and the girls I don't even under
Oh the Lord did not give me daughters for a reason.
Oh my gosh. Because I've been watching all of my
girlfriends their daughters that are going to college. What is
up with the rooms? So one of our friend's daughters
(01:19:31):
was telling me about this site. I swear they don't advertise.
It's just the whole name screams cupcake, love, shack, fancy.
I don't even know, like three random words. We're gonna
throw it together. It's basically like if unicorns explode on sale.
That's what it is. Everything like we're ruffly and glitter hinestones,
(01:19:51):
and these girls rooms look like someone It looks like
the cupcake room in Willie Wonka's factory. I don't know
how else to describe it. Like they go in and
the ail like whole entire houses in their dorm rooms.
I don't get this. And they like the frilly curtains
and they feathers on the lamps, and multiple rugs and
(01:20:12):
things are hung on the walls. And you go in
the like my son's room and he has an anti
Comi poster taped to the wall, and like a couple
of hodgepodge things and that's it. It is super spartan,
very spartan, and he's I think he honestly, I think
that guys pride themselves on how spartan they can be.
(01:20:35):
Is that true? Is that true? Kane?
Speaker 4 (01:20:38):
There's a level of truth to that, I'll admit it.
Speaker 2 (01:20:42):
Like they move in and it takes a second, and
then they get messages from their friends that are girls
like can you help me? I don't know that, and they,
you know, they have to go and hang up things
with like feathers and boas and you know, ruffles, and
it's just so crazy. But the rooms could not be
more different. You go into some of these girls rooms
(01:21:02):
and it's like you walked into a boutique. It's like
not even a dorm. You it's like a Harry Potter tent,
you know where they throw a little tent down and
it looks a little tiny and you walk in and
it's like a whole thing. That's like the girls college
dorm rooms. It is the wildest thing ever. And then
you go into these, like the boys rooms, and they
just look like hobos, like the poorer hoboes. I like
(01:21:27):
there was a sliding scale of hoboes that were on
the other end of it, and I just like, how
do you live? How do you live? I don't understand it,
So I don't know. I'm just sitting here thinking they're
gonna burn this place down, They're gonna cook, and like
my son can cook because he does his own laundry.
I have not done my kids laundering forever because I
am not that mom. I'm like, I'm not gonna be
doing this for you. But I missed apparently the whole
(01:21:50):
you need plates and utensils and some other basic necessities
when you're moving out into your own thing for the
first time, and you just I just figure they knew that,
and they don't, right, Like I you know what it's
like to get a text like can you actually put
plastic wear in the dishwasher? No, you can't, not even
on the bottom rack. That's not words. This is gonna
(01:22:11):
melt to death, that's gonna die. Don't do it, you know,
like we just oh my gosh, And then to have
all of this happen and I'm I'm I'm juggling a
few things. You're gonna have, Please indulge me, give me
some grace because it is it's I don't know, man,
it's weird. I don't like this part of it. This
is the part that they don't prepare you for. It
was easier when they were toddlers, and you know, your
(01:22:33):
worst worries were like fevers and stranger danger. I feel
like this is way worse. It's a way worse because
it's like, now the danger is you. It's just like
you're gonna set your house on fire. Oh my gosh.
So I don't know. I just get little, little worried,
little worried boy mom's out there, but man, the girl
(01:22:54):
moms are. I don't. I'm so glad I couldn't. I'd
be like, do you really need another limp with others?
Do you really need this? Really need all these things?
And it takes some hours to move into like a
box size of a room. I know, y'all out there
feeling on that good heavens, it is wild. It's wild.
So I don't know. And I consider myself a maximalist.
(01:23:15):
And when I'm even going, that's a lot, you know,
that's a big thing. That's a big thing. So I
don't know. I'm a little all your parents with kids
going back to school, I feel you it gets worse.
It gets worse. I'm gonna tell you that it just gets.
Speaker 4 (01:23:29):
You know, throw your kids in the pool to teach
them how to swim. You didn't do anything like that, Like, well,
how protective are you? Because in this instance, I gotta
tell you as a dad, I'm like, you're on your own.
Speaker 2 (01:23:41):
You're the dad's day. This is not about hovering. I'm like,
what are you going to eat off of?
Speaker 5 (01:23:49):
You?
Speaker 2 (01:23:49):
Hobo? Don't have a plate. But what I'm saying is
you have plates, right, did you?
Speaker 4 (01:23:58):
Only he didn't either. He's admitting it. He's being honest about.
Speaker 2 (01:24:02):
But no, Steve, dear Heaven save us, please tell me,
Please tell me that when you moved out that you
at least had like some plates and some eating utensils.
You like when I moved to my freshman year dorm
anything you didn't.
Speaker 4 (01:24:15):
Yeah, well I had half meal plan.
Speaker 5 (01:24:17):
But when I ate it home, I had like plates
to wash and stuff.
Speaker 4 (01:24:20):
We didn't have a dishwash.
Speaker 5 (01:24:20):
We'd to handwash them.
Speaker 2 (01:24:21):
But yeah, okay, there's some hope. I mean, I just
it's just like the little things, like they like to
not know the difference between a blind and a shutterer.
I'm like, what do you want people looking in your
room at night, you got some recover them windows, you know,
I just, oh, my gosh, it is the craziest thing ever.
So I had to vent to you guys right now.
(01:24:43):
I know we always talk about me and potatoes, but
I'm over here like looking at my list. I always
make a list, even though it's not for me. And
then I'm looking at my list and I'm like, too
many things, they're done? What is happening? And it just
is And I'm you know, I'm not that mom that's
gonna be all up in there like just hard. I'm
not gonna cook for you, I'm not in your laundry.
I'm not cleaning your place.
Speaker 4 (01:25:01):
But I think failure is a great lesson, That's all
I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (01:25:04):
I also don't want to. I also don't want to
be somebody going to you know, uh, Walmart at like
ten o'clock at night because we don't have anything to
eat off of just and then they're gonna buy something
dumb that breaks or you know, I don't know, or
they're gonna think it's melamine and it's not, and they're
gonna set something on fire, you know, if they have
they didn't even know if they had a dishwasher. Like,
(01:25:25):
that's like the first thing that I'm sorry, I just
alert at everybody's dogs just then. But I'm like, how
do you not know this? How are these things you
don't know? Oh my gosh. Oh, I guess like when
we when we travel. When we travel, I'm that person.
I will literally Google tour the area and I don't
even need a map, I don't need GPS. I get
(01:25:47):
there and I'm like, no, we're going here and here,
And Chris is like, why are you an alien? You
are psycho? And but I know exactly where to go,
and I'll be like, yeah, we're going here, here, here,
this is where we're eating, this is breakfast, dinner. I'm
like reservation here, this, you know, everything is set. I
go in and there is nothing left to chance. So
it is just crazy to me, for I don't know
(01:26:09):
some of this stuff, but I know it's the life
of a boy, mom, it really is. So man, I
don't know, but uh who oh my gosh, and thank
the boy ma oh my gosh. Literally, so David, one
of our listeners out of Orlando, she says, I literally
just used a pot and spoon my first year of
college fun and spoon. That's like an instrument. Oh I
(01:26:36):
know that, but I know that, but I'm you know,
I'm just like, I can't. You're gonna live your life
even if it's stupid.
Speaker 4 (01:26:43):
That's the perils of being a great mom. The pair
the perils are being a good parent.
Speaker 2 (01:26:48):
And I had one. Another listener, Jules wy said, I
had to go shopping for my eldest fir's first apartment
because he didn't know he needed plates cook where I
think they think they go into the they're gonna go
into the apartment and open the cabinets, and.
Speaker 4 (01:27:01):
I mean the glasses.
Speaker 2 (01:27:02):
It's like mom's house. It's plates like home. It's not
like that. You gotta put that stuff in there. It
doesn't just operate into the cabinet.
Speaker 4 (01:27:10):
If you're eating pizza and instant rum and if.
Speaker 2 (01:27:13):
You're just gonna eat bad carbs and sodium.
Speaker 4 (01:27:15):
Right, that's what did you do in college? That's very
little meaning.
Speaker 2 (01:27:19):
And that's why everybody has the butt cancer cane. That's
why they all got it because that's all they eat
in college. Sh horrible, all right, it should be. It's
rising rates.
Speaker 5 (01:27:31):
You know.
Speaker 2 (01:27:31):
I'm always like for your health. All right, we gotta
get moving because I don't know what happened. I'm just
spassing out right now. We got other stuff we got
to hit as we move. My Oh, this is actually perfect. Okay,
So our partners at Berna Gun because a lot of
college kids under the age of twenty one, they live
by themselves and they're not old enough to carry a
handgun on constitutional so they still have to protect themselves
(01:27:53):
in some manner. This is one of the reasons why
you like to burn a gun because of the legal
flexibility of it. First off, if you're unfamiliar with what
it is, Berna Gun shoots chemical irritant projectiles that can
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They have rifles in that, but I think for this
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(01:28:16):
losing any of that deterrence. You're not. It's still easy
target acquisition, zero recoil. When you think of stun guns,
you got like one or two rounds in that at best, right,
But with the burna gun, you I mean good grief.
With the CL, you got fifteen rounds, so that's fifteen
round shock capacity per cartridge. They have different projectiles, different accessories,
(01:28:38):
but it gives you a way to protect yourself when
you are disarmed, either through private property restrictions municipal restrictions.
It does not care about gun free zone signs. There
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(01:29:00):
You can find it at Burner dot com slash Dana.
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when you.
Speaker 4 (01:29:13):
Are and now all of the news you would probably miss,
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 2 (01:29:20):
Whenever you have to go. We're not a cult, you
might be.
Speaker 12 (01:29:24):
So.
Speaker 2 (01:29:24):
Apparently there's a church in California. It's called the Alien Church.
Speaker 12 (01:29:28):
It's say an alternative California church that's about UFOs or something. Yeah,
like are aliens participatating in it?
Speaker 9 (01:29:41):
Is?
Speaker 1 (01:29:41):
That?
Speaker 2 (01:29:41):
What makes it's called the Alien Church, and they've got
aliens stressed up as like religious figures, and it's literally
called Alien Church. And then the stuff outside has aliens
on it. So yeah, it's kind of about aliens. I mean,
you know, something for everybody. I guess maybe it's all aliens.
I'm just saying it could be. Yeah, a hijack crane
(01:30:02):
caused a crash. Why is this so slow? It caused
a crash? Suspect is and how do you I'm a
hijacked crane that's actually a very This is in Louisiana.
This guy's facing multiple charges. He just decided on an
early Saturday morning to hijack this crane and it was
parked in a work zone and he manipulated the boom
(01:30:24):
over the lanes and multiple vehicles struck the cranes, cables. Yeah,
so he's arrested on more charges than I can actually
read out in the time that we have left. Oh
my goodness. So a dad was he died? He died
suddenly after buying venomous spiders online, which I don't ever
suggest anyone does. I'll explain more on this and tomorrow's
Quick five, but we have more show coming up, including
(01:30:45):
Louden County Drama.
Speaker 7 (01:30:46):
Stick with Us, 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 2 (01:30:58):
Welcome back to the program. Dane with you or at
the bottom of this third hour on this happy little
Tuesday in Dallas, Texas. You can listen around the country,
and if you're not listening terrestrially, you can watch us
do the radio show Channel three forty seven Direct TV.
So a lot of stuff to discuss, and of course
we've been recapping for the past couple of days the
(01:31:18):
Big Summit, I guess you could say all the European
leaders yesterday in Washington, d C. And that very interesting
meeting between Trump and Putin on Friday. And let's get
some more thoughts on this and some other stuff from
our friend Senator Eric Schmidt from my home state of
Missouri to show me state. And he's got a new
book out, The Last Line of Defense, How to Beat
the Left in Court, and I believe it's out today.
(01:31:41):
Today's the launch day, is it not?
Speaker 11 (01:31:42):
Sadday is the launch date. And as you know, Dana
in this great book. There's a blurb from the Great
Dana right here on the cover jacket, just you know,
talking about how we defended the Second Amendment and individual rights.
Speaker 2 (01:31:56):
So that's right.
Speaker 9 (01:31:58):
It's good to be with you again in an honor
of you got a little bit of the show Me.
Speaker 2 (01:32:01):
Hat on, so love the hat. Well, congrats on the book.
Well deserved for sure. I got to ask you about Okay,
I feel like it's a warshock test kind of with
the left and the right. I just want to go
back real quick to Friday and Potus meeting Putin, and
I thought that it was a giant troll the way
(01:32:24):
that they made him come and meet the president, because
he you know, flies in. He gets out on this
ridiculously long red carpet like Monty Python link length. And
this is after like last year, everybody was speculating, does
he have a limp? Can he walk on assisted? What's happening?
And it looked a little weird. I'm pretty sure that
I saw some thick soles and lifts in those shoes,
(01:32:44):
but whatever, you know, because he's sensitive about his height,
you know, so he then he meets Potus. Potis didn't
walk out to meet him. Potis just stood where he
was and made him walk out. Then as he meets him,
we have a B two that flies over ahead to
remind remind them of what they don't have in this
date that they sold us for just pennies on the dollar,
with all the natural resources there. If then he has
(01:33:05):
to climb up some steps on a stage, they get photos,
and then they walk some more. I don't think that
that's like rolling out the red carpet for the guy
more anymore than I mean, it looked to me like
he was going through an obstacle course. And I I
just wanted to get your initial thoughts on that meeting Friday,
because I didn't think it was an optical win at
all for Putin.
Speaker 11 (01:33:24):
No, I agree with you. And by the way, those
that B two that's flying over is from Missouri, so green.
Speaker 9 (01:33:30):
Of course it is. So I love seeing that.
Speaker 11 (01:33:32):
And then you have all this, you know, the fifth
generation fighters lined up. It sort of reminded me of
like maybe you got a neighbor and maybe you're having
a bit of a property dispute or something like that,
and you bring them over and you show them your gun.
Speaker 9 (01:33:46):
You know you're gun safe. That's kind of like what
it was right.
Speaker 11 (01:33:50):
And just just sort of like, hey, this is this
is the arsenal right here, we've gotten next door.
Speaker 9 (01:33:55):
So no, I think it also was, you know what
the ink of the last three years. Joe Biden first
of all, never had the will to do that nor
the ability to do that.
Speaker 11 (01:34:04):
I think there's a lot of confidence and strength and
an American president who says, look, I'm serious about trying
to get to a peace deal. It's not our war
over there. We're trying to get to a peace settlement
between two parties. The two parties are actually at war
Russia and Ukraine. That was the first step, which of
course led to the second step, which took place yesterday
in Washington, and then now it's going to lead to
(01:34:25):
a third step, which is Ukraine and Russia being part
of a negotiation to end a war where a million
people have died and thousands and thousands of people are
dying every month still and what appears to be by
all accounts, a meat grinder. This is a stalemate. This
is a just sort of a war of attrition. And
so President Trump's doing what you can do when you
actually want to be a leader and he's trying to
(01:34:48):
find peace, and I think we should celebrate that.
Speaker 2 (01:34:51):
What do you make of the Article five like protections
that are being That's how the I guess the security
guarantee for Ukraine is being described by the administration. I
think it was Steve Wikoff that first floated in an
interview over the last weekend. What does that? What does
that mean to you? Is that something that concerned you
because you know that we could I mean, that could
(01:35:13):
kind of be a fast track to World War three,
But we don't know what the particulars are.
Speaker 11 (01:35:17):
Yet, right, and so I don't want to get in
front of the negotiations. I'm sure that's, as they said yesterday,
a very sensitive part of what they're talking about. I
think the Press Secretary today clarified that does not mean
US troops on the ground.
Speaker 9 (01:35:29):
I think that's a very important thing.
Speaker 11 (01:35:32):
I think, you know, ultimately, Europe having a much larger
role in the defense of their own continent is a
good thing. And the only president again that's forced that
issue is President Trump. I actually went to the Munich
Security Conference in February, and normally it's you know, some
of more neo conservative members that.
Speaker 9 (01:35:47):
Go over there.
Speaker 11 (01:35:47):
And a lot of people tell the Europeans what they
want to hear and not the truth. And I told
them the truth, which is, look, we need to we
need to focus on the whole land, and we need
to pivot to China in a much more meaningful way.
Speaker 9 (01:35:57):
And that means you guys need to step up.
Speaker 11 (01:35:59):
And you've got a present it now that is getting
them to the five percent defense spending, which never would
have happened under anybody else. He was ridiculed four eight
years ago. And here we are now living in a
different world. And you saw that kind of respect, I
think from the European leaders as they came to Washington yesterday.
So we'll see what these negotiations kind of play out
and what those security guarantees really mean. But I think
(01:36:19):
he is intent on having a justin lasting peace, So
we'll see.
Speaker 2 (01:36:22):
That would be that that's I mean, I think that's
what everybody wants, and I think that, you know, hopefully
we can get we can get to that point. Talking
with Senator Eric Schmidt from the Great Show Me State
of Missouri, he's got a new book that is out,
The Last Line of Defense, How to Beat the Left
in Court, which we're going to talk about because you're
also you got to beat the left in Congress, and
that's the other big question, those recisions packages and cutting spending,
(01:36:45):
because I don't I do not envy the job that
you all have to do, because I just I just
don't have the patience to deal with some of them
people on the left. And that's the attorney and you
you're used to this stuff. What does that look like?
Are you? Are you optimistic you know this fall that
we're be able to get some of this stuff in
and maybe I know some people have floated, like the
pocket recisions, I don't want I know, you can't really
(01:37:07):
give the game away with that one, but I know
there's more recisions packages coming. Are you optimistic that we're
going to start, you know, chiseling in some of these
other cuts?
Speaker 9 (01:37:16):
I hope so.
Speaker 11 (01:37:17):
And this is coming from I actually was the senator
that handled the recisions package on the Senate floor for
sixteen or seventeen hours, and we beat back all the
Democrat amendments and we held, you know, was it probably
shouldn't have been as hard as it was at times,
but we held the Republican votes necessary to get the savings.
And so The result of that is something that Republicans
have talked about for decades. NPRS now defunded from federal
(01:37:39):
tax dollars, so is PBS in about eight billion dollars
now is clawed away from these ridiculous spending that you know,
like guatemal and sex changes and DEI and Burma and
Sesame Street and Iraq, all this stuff that no one
would support, no one ever voted on. That we were
able to get done. And so I was proud of
that and certainly something you know, to work with the
White House on that, and then the Republican Senate and
(01:38:01):
then the House passed it as well. So my hope
is that we will have more of those I think
what I hear about most and sometimes, as you know
we've talked about on the show before, the conversations in
Washington are so detached sometimes from what normal people talk
about in places like Missouri, and what I hear mostly is, yeah, like,
what are we spending money on that nonsense? For So
(01:38:21):
in addition to saving the money, it's also about restoring
some trust right that we actually would go up there
and do the right thing on these things, because a
lot of times what people see is just all the
nonsense and they don't see that kind of accountability.
Speaker 9 (01:38:34):
So I hope we do more of it. It's certainly
something that I would sign up for.
Speaker 2 (01:38:37):
True. I wanted to ask you something about Missouri because
it came out yesterday. AG Andrew Bailey is not going
to be going to DC. I guess as the deputy
co director of the FBI, And I got to be honest,
I'm a little nervous about it because you were such
a great AG and then we really needed you in
the Senate. I'm really nervous about losing a good AG
because I just remember how you and then he threw
(01:38:58):
out the Biden ministry. I felt like our attorneys general were,
I mean, the tip of the spear. And I you know,
I get nervous about twenty twenty eight because I have
no idea what's going to happen. And I'm just I'm
a little nervous about it. So what are your thoughts
on it? And if you know anything that consued the nerves,
share it with us.
Speaker 11 (01:39:17):
Well, Look, Andrew did a great job, and I think
you know he's described as sort of his call to
service in the FBI.
Speaker 9 (01:39:24):
There's a lot of reform that needs to happen internally.
I think he'll do a great job.
Speaker 11 (01:39:28):
And I'm not trying to shamelessly move into a segue
into the book, but honestly, it's why I wrote the book,
because I feel like in that time period, you got
to remember. So the fever broke in November of twenty
twenty four, right, That's how I see it. But in
this long fever dream before, it's easy to kind of
lose sight of all the crazy things that were happening.
I mean, this was a time of lockdowns, of compulsory
(01:39:49):
COVID shots, of open borders, of DEI struggle sessions, and
a censorship enterprise so vast that it was the biggest
ufront at the first Amendment we've seen in American history.
Speaker 9 (01:39:59):
And so President Trump's out of power.
Speaker 11 (01:40:02):
You know, the historic comeback is further away down the road,
but it kind of fell to some relatively unknown figures,
and I was in that place and decided that I can't.
Speaker 6 (01:40:12):
Like.
Speaker 11 (01:40:12):
We sued fifty plus school districts for mass mandates. We
brought the vaccine mandate lawsuit to the Supreme Court and
we won. We brought the student loan debt forgiveness case
the Supreme Court, and we won. We brought that censorship
lawsuit and we exposed this censorship enterprise before Twitter files,
before the congressional investigations. So what it shows is is
that if you're willing to stand up and you're willing
to fight, you can win. And that's the playbooks. So
(01:40:34):
no matter what age you are, in any particular state,
no matter if you remember of Congress, I think what
President Trump has taught us is that you've got to
have that fighting spirit.
Speaker 9 (01:40:42):
If you do it, people will follow you.
Speaker 11 (01:40:43):
And I think more than anything right now, data people
are looking for authentic leadership. People can spot a phony,
and they also know that people that just show up
to the ribbon cuttings. That's the easy part. The hard
part is when on the peak day of Omicron, are
you willing to sue those school districts to set our
kids free? The five year olds don't have to wear
a mask all day long? Are you willing to take
(01:41:05):
the slings and arrows when people call you a conspiracy
theorist because you think there might be a censorship thing
happening in this country and then you expose it. That's
the kind of courage we need right now in this country,
and it's why I wrote the book and people can
get it on Amazon right now.
Speaker 9 (01:41:17):
The Last Line of Defense. It's lessons learned, but it's
also the playbook for the future.
Speaker 11 (01:41:21):
So whoever's assuming these roles, we kind of know how
to fight and win now.
Speaker 9 (01:41:25):
And that's what I wanted to pass along.
Speaker 2 (01:41:26):
Yeah, and I'm glad that you have, because you know,
I feel like we're going to we still have midterms
to get through. But I always look very far ahead,
and I always look at how Democrats are gaming. I
see the people that they're putting up. You know, they
got Gavenusom out there trying to attack you know, Texas
on Jerry Mandarin, and then you have these Democrats fleeing
to Illinois. I got to say, you know, when you
you're right next door to Illinois, you know all about
(01:41:46):
Jerry Manderin, you know what those districts look like. It's comical.
Speaker 9 (01:41:50):
I think it was.
Speaker 11 (01:41:51):
That was hilarious when when the Texas Democrats we're going
to protest redistricting, what state were they going to flee to?
Illinois like the most Jerry man hundred state in the country.
And I think again, this is sort of makes the
point the Democrats have been doing this forever. Like there's
plenty of states that have thirty nine forty one percent Republicans,
(01:42:12):
you know, registered Republicans in the state, and not a
single congressional representative in that state. And so when Texas says,
you know what, our populations change, we got the ability
under constitution in the redistrict.
Speaker 9 (01:42:23):
We're going to do it.
Speaker 11 (01:42:23):
Missouri, by the way, is probably going to be embarking
on this to go from a six to two map
to a seven to one map. The Democrats have done
this for a long time. We're playing within the rules.
The difference is what the Democrats are trying to do
is break the bust up the rules. If they're ever
in the position we're in right now, Dana, you know this,
they will pack the Supreme Court. They will add DC
in Puerto Rico to the Union to get you know,
(01:42:44):
four additional votes in the Senate. There's nothing they're not
willing to do. So we need to sort of wise
up and fight back. Again, why wrote the book Last
Line of Defense. This is a new era we're entering into,
and if we've got the courage, we know we've got
the tools, we can go do this. We just have
to have the spine go do it.
Speaker 2 (01:43:00):
And my last question for you on this, which completely
relates to the book, because you were I mean you've
you were an AG and then you know obviously Senate,
so you've seen this fight with the mail in ballots,
especially for COVID because potus were marked on you know,
we got we got to look at the mail in
ballot thing. I could go either way on it. I
like the idea of gaming where it's allowed gaming the
system to the point where democrats are like, oh gosh,
(01:43:21):
we've got to ban this now. But I also realized,
you know, going back all the way to you know,
the forties when LBJ was stuff in ballot boxes, you know,
with actual pay, and then the hanging Chad fiasco in Florida,
So you know it. I think the way to fight
it is by overwhelming with turnout. But I kind of
wanted to get your thoughts on the mail in ballot
stuff because I don't know if it's going anywhere, and
(01:43:42):
COVID allowed for so many states, yeah, to just reduce
their standards and their requirements and just kind of anything goes.
What's your your take on that last question.
Speaker 11 (01:43:52):
Yeah, I think federalizing elections of some of the Democrats
have talked about for a long time, and I think
we should resist some of that. But as far as
mail in balloting goes, look, we actually I talk about
it in the book. Mark Elias during COVID was suing
every state that had election integrity measures in place, So Missouri,
for example, if you want to if you want to
have a mail in ballot, you have to request it.
(01:44:13):
There's a signature verification that goes along with it. If
you're disabled or that, there's accommodations made for that. If
you're a son or a daughter, you got to make
you know, there's a limited pool of universe who can
actually request it and send it back in with a
verification signature. That's not I don't think what President Trump's
talking about. What President Trump's talking about is place is
like in Georgia, they entered into a ridiculous settlement with
(01:44:34):
Mark Elias and that group, and what they did was
they just mass mailed out ballots to everyone, and that's
what creates the ballot harvesting. You don't have to request it,
you don't have to have a signature verification, none of
the protection measures that used to be, by the way,
pretty bipartisan. Now that left it's all about power and control.
So I think raining that stuff then would be a
very smart thing to do. So you leave it for
(01:44:56):
people who can't like it, either home, they have disabilities or.
Speaker 9 (01:44:59):
Something like that.
Speaker 11 (01:45:00):
Yeah, you cut down on the dropboxes because that's what
we saw right, mass mail in balloting with the dropboxes,
that is ripe for fraud.
Speaker 2 (01:45:06):
Yeah, definite difference between the absentee ballots which have restrictions,
and then what they are wanting this anything goes, you know,
dropbox harvesting, ballots, mail and ballots, Eric Schmidt. The book
is the last line of defense, How to beat the
Left and Court. It is out today. You can get
it where books are sold, get a copying, then get
another copying and send to a friend. Senator always a pleasure.
Thank you for fighting on behalf of our constitution for
(01:45:28):
Americans in Missouri and elsewhere. We appreciate you. Congrats on
the book.
Speaker 9 (01:45:32):
Thanks.
Speaker 7 (01:45:32):
Dana on the go and need a quick news fix
with a fun twist, follow Dana's Absurd Truth podcast for
bite size and formative episodes perfect for your busy schedule
on Apple or wherever you get your podcast so loud.
Speaker 2 (01:45:46):
In schools suspended boys that were uncomfortable with a biological
female student in their locker room. So see this like cosplay,
it's cutting both ways. Stonebridge High School, they're getting suspended
two boys because this female who is pretending to be
a male, demanded to use the boy's locker room at school.
(01:46:07):
And they launched an investigation Title nine into the students
because they were on video asking why there was a
girl in the boy's locker room, and so as a
result of that, they got to punish these boys. They
said that the boys are responsible for sexual harassment and
sex based discrimination. I hope that their attorney drags the school.
(01:46:31):
They were suspended for ten days, they had no contact order,
they were not allowed to be in any of the
same classes, simply because they were filmed asking why there
was a girl in the boys locker room. We are
attacking these young The left is attacking these young men
because they're like, you're a girl, you don't belong in
the boys locker room. They didn't even say that, they
(01:46:52):
were like, why is the girl in the locker room?
And she was the one who filmed it, and I
think she's the antagonist. She's the antagonist, and she's trying
to prey on these boys. This girl's not the victim.
She's the problem. And so is this whole ideology. We'll
have more on this tomorrow. Today in Stupidity, Kane, all right.
Speaker 4 (01:47:11):
Cut sixteen wand in Rhode Island, there was a drunk woman.
That part's not surprising. What's surprising is who she claims
she is the entire time listening to.
Speaker 9 (01:47:20):
This, buddy, you're gonna regread this?
Speaker 2 (01:47:25):
Yeah, you never read it?
Speaker 6 (01:47:28):
How many?
Speaker 4 (01:47:29):
How many cheap.
Speaker 2 (01:47:33):
Che you're also drunk?
Speaker 4 (01:47:37):
Attitude girl arrest?
Speaker 2 (01:47:39):
Yeah, ag with an attitude back of a cop car.
All Right, folks, that does it for us tonight find
us at subset, chapter and verse. You two Facebook like
and subscribe. I will be back with you tomorrow