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September 4, 2023 95 mins
NOTE: This is a best-of Dana Show podcast

Kamala Harris has a Freudian gaffe about climate change and population. Jill Scott changes the words of the National Anthem to include slavery. A clip goes viral after a white woman criticizes a Hispanic birthday party in her boujee Manhattan condo. A women’s health CEO repeatedly refers to women having periods as “menstruators” on CBS This Morning. A female passenger believes she was sitting next to some sort of ”reptilian man” in a green hoodie on a plane. Carol Roth joins us to explain “You Will Own Nothing”. The CDC offers chest-feeding advice to trans men. Writer/Creator Sean Salter joins us on his new project “Silence Dogood”.
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:00):
When we invest in clean energy andelectric vehicles and reduce population, more of
our children can breathe clean air anddrink clean water. What gets me is
she acts like we can't do thatnow, Like are we really struggling with
having clean air and clean water andthings like that. I mean, I

(00:24):
didn't think that was I didn't realizeit was like such a big deal,
is it population? I mean,it's like we're we're not living in alleys.
We're not like urchins living in alleys, and you know, not,
what is the point of saying thisstuff? Oh my gosh. Now,
guys, I'm just gonna let yougive you some insight into the mood today.
Welcome to the show. It's Monday. It's your lovable Cromudgeon who is

(00:47):
done with the what was it gonnasay, my antibiotic allergic reaction. So
we're actually normal looking today. Wedon't look like sloth from the Goonies.
We're not all of raged out onroids and everything else. So just thank
you for the kind prayers on that. People were like I could tell that
your eye looked puffy. I'm like, thank you so much. Just so

(01:10):
guid here's so sweet. Oh butI just gotta tell you. So,
I was trying to kind of turnthings off for the weekend because there's a
couple of things that we're trying tolike everywhere, we got a lot of
stuff in the background that we're tryingto kneel down and get, you know,
ready, and so sometimes you kindof have to compartmentalize and take a
break from certain things. And Iwas trying to just shut down over the

(01:30):
weekend with following headlines incessantly, althoughsome of the twenty twenty four stuff has
got me wound up, but justbecause I hate everything. So you have
to realize that I hate the theaterthat is just for the sake of theater,

(01:52):
to eat, to delay, delaythe inevitability. Does that make sense
because they feel like it theater forthe sake of theater, And I cannot
stand that. We're gonna talk alittle bit about that. We've got a
bunch of other domestic stuff to getinto as well, including we got foreign
policy. I've got some culture.We got lots of stuff to hit.

(02:14):
So welcome to the program, theMonday edition of the radio show, which
you can listen to Coast to Coast. You can stream YouTube, Facebook,
direct TV channel three forty seven.You can go and smart off in the
YouTube discuss be nic or learn.I'll beat you to death, but we

(02:34):
got we're always good discussion, goodpeople Facebook. I mean, you can
find us everywhere, so to getstarted, and I do highly encourage you
to check out the newsletter over atsub Stack, chapter and verse because there's
a lot of good stuff that comesout of that regularly. Right, So
to kind of get started with us, Everybody and their brother sent me this

(02:55):
this clip over the weekend, wellactually within I guess the twenty four last
twenty four hours messages Instagram, Facebook. I mean, I think if if
you guys thought I would see itin smoke signals you sent it to I
saw it. You know, Idid see it, and I thought that
was a weird remark. She says, the United States, we've got to

(03:17):
reduce the population to fight. Doyou realize that that's a whole gaff or
not a gaff, But that's alie. So here's one of the things
that always just thrown me when Ilook back up on my life. So
when I was in college, themost valuable class that I ever took in
college was logic. Everything else wastrash, garbage, absolute flaming turd.

(03:42):
It was horrible. All the otherclasses were stupid. I literally had a
class about women in Renaissance France thatwas a part of a women's studies because
it's such a racket you have totake these stupid electives. And I was
miserable the entire time. Anyway,there was I took two years of this
of logic because I took the firstclass. It's like math with words,

(04:04):
and I so enjoyed it. Eventhough the professor was weird. I kept
taking it. And the professor wasthis crunchy dude. He wore a corduroy
even in the summer. Who doesthat? Who was corduroy in the summer?
He wore corduroy in the summer.He drove a Volvo. It was
you know, it was pooh Browna Volvo. So, I mean he's
checking off every box possible, right, This is sort of the quintessential Saint

(04:29):
Louis progressive right, Birkin stocks,check, corduroy, check, driving the
Volvo all the check had a nota canoe? What am I thinking of?
Kayak? Had a kayak on topof his Volvo almost all the time.
Even when it was cold outside.Do people do that in the cold?

(04:49):
I don't know. Had the kayakall the time? Literally, I'm
not even kidding hints this guy hada bumper sticker on said volvo that was
expertly placed. By the way,I'm pretty sure he used a leveler that
said I'd rather be kayaking. I'mnot kidding you. What did he kayak
in Saint Louis? What is helike on the Merrimac? Do you get

(05:10):
on the Who's all like, where'dhe go? I don't know, Like
where do you kayak? But Imean there's a lot of rivers, But
I'd agress anyway, And he wasthe guy my first semester with him when
I was a freshman. It wasa class that was teaching ethics and olive
damn. He was teaching Peter Singer. Peter Singer is an abortion of intellectual

(05:30):
thought. In case you were wondering, it's the best way to describe it.
If you see your kids come homewith a book and it's anything Peter
Singer, it's trash, you betterbe that classes saus So. Anyway,
I at first I didn't like him, and I thought, oh my gosh,
this is nut eating tofu hint weaving, you know, fruitcake. I
just can't even deal. He wasa very soft spoken man. He wore

(05:50):
wire room glasses. He had avery short haircut for a hippie, but
he was one of those neat hippies, like a Frank Lloyd Wright hippie,
you know. Anyway, so thefirst semester passed without event, and it
was you know, you had tosay the right things in the class,
and it was just really weird tolearn Peter Singer, who just had no
regard for human life or humanity.But then it got interesting. But when

(06:13):
I had him for logic. Hisit him for two classes, ethics and
logic, and the logic was fascinatingand pretty much so a lot of what
I do now was based on thatclass that I learned. I mean,
at least it helped me acquire therudimentary skills to break apart stupid arguments.
And it was such a valuable classthat I just kept taking the next level

(06:34):
and the next level until I tookall of them. And even though he
was he was a super far lefty, he did appreciate logic to the point
where he prided himself on being logical, even if it undercut his personal ideology.
So his vanity was greater than hisobsession with ideology, which I thought
was interesting. So long story short, now I have this, I have

(06:59):
this teacher, and a lot ofthe stuff that I'm I recognize now in
politics is from that class, theonly valuable class ever. Should it should
be a required course. I don'teven never know what happened. He'd probably
be appalled learning what I've become,you know, because a lot of people
think that being a conservative commentators worsethan being a meth dealing prostitute. But

(07:21):
I'd agrass So this comment from KamalaHarris, she's calling on the US to
reduce population. This was one ofthe things that he had touched on in
ethics, and he actually gave usIt was the world hunger myth, and
it touched upon this myth that's beenperpetuated for the past what thirty forty years

(07:44):
about overpopulation. There isn't actually anoverpopulation on planet Earth. In fact,
there has been a decrease in population. And so that book and several others,
you know subsequently that I read,gets into some of the stereotypical things
that you think of overpopulation, thethemes of overpopulation and it destroys them.

(08:07):
Case and point they win. Andthey looked on one of the books that
I read, they looked at populationnation by nation. So what's one of
the things that you always hear about, like with Italy, what's a common
stereotype with Italy? Big Italian families? Right, big Italian families. They
get together every Sunday, they havetheir meal after church. But that's slowly

(08:33):
fading away. Not that they don'tget together on Sundays, which they do,
but the big aspect of the bigItalian family, that's changing because people
are having fewer children to the pointwhere they can't even keep up with the
current population level. Like in Japan, it's incredibly bad. They're going to

(08:54):
have a huge population of older people, but yet not enough younger people to
sustain it. In the economic system, the United States is barely keeping status
quo, but in a lot ofthese other nations, particularly a number of

(09:15):
European nations, it is woefully,woefully under the rate required to maintain population.
But there were some interesting things.There's been a several books written in
the past twenty years that looks atyou know, countries like Pakistan or countries
like India that actually do not onlymeet the requirements to maintain status quote,

(09:35):
but they exceed them. But thisidea that there's overpopulation is a lie.
It is an absolute lie. Lookat the birth rate of every nation.
It's a lie. They're lying toyou. You know why they're lying to
you because they think that you're tooeither too busy, You're too wrapped up
in trying to make ends meet becauseyou have to paid Joe Biden's taxes.

(10:01):
You know, you want you topay for everyone else's grad school, college
tuition, so you you got tokeep up with that. But then you
know, at the same time too, while they're a lyned to you,
they know that you're too busy,they also simultaneously think you're too stupid to
follow along with this. I mean, it's the whole purpose of you know,
how they approach government. They wantedto be too big so you can't

(10:22):
follow everything. So she says thisgaff. We got to reduce the population,
she says, she meant to sayreduce pollution. Yeah, but what
have you heard hand in hand aboutpollution and climate change? Population? Have
you not? Is that not somethingthat you have heard frequently. So that's

(10:46):
why I think this is totally sassined. I don't believe her. Do you
believe her? It's not dude,she meant it. I think she meant
it hand in hand. She wasat Coppin State University in Baltimore. She's
talking about in a clean energy economy. Now, the official White House transcript
acknowledges and corrects her error, butthey said that in the transcript, population

(11:09):
is crossed out and pollution is addedin brackets to denote what she intended to
say. Do you believe this,because if you do, let me tell
you about a fantastic piece of realestate that you can get in on the
ground level. It's a bridge thatI've recently come into possession of, very
famous bridge. You might have heardof it, the Brooklyn Bridge, right,
It's yes, it's that famed bridge. I own it and I will

(11:31):
sell it to you, right.I mean, I'm all about being generous.
I want everyone to have a pieceof American iconography. I got that
to sell to you. But that'swhat this is. I honestly think a
lot of the climate changes reducing thepopulation. I'm not a conspiracy theorist,
but I was raised by one,so I don't know, right, and
then I have to come to workevery day with one who like an own

(11:54):
stock and tinfoil. Surprise, hedoesn't have his hat on. Now it's
under your clothes, isn't it.You're just wrapped up under your clothes and
positive it's kine. By the way, I think he's made of tinfoil.
At this point, she was meaning, oh my gosh, before because I
got a whole bunch of other stuff. Please, for the love, I
excellent. I know. Steve's like, we got five minutes. That means

(12:15):
you need to shut up. Canwe play really really quickly? Where she
did the burden bye? She saidit again this weekend she said it again.
What is it? The burden ofwhat? What did she say?
Unburdened by what is ben? Yeah? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Oh
for the love, can we justhit this real quick because she said it
again, guys, and it iswith this understanding, this vision to see

(12:37):
what can be unburdened by whoa thatrev has dedicated Jesse Jackson. That's like
uh, calling a prostitute, youknow, chased, calling him reverend It's
like, hey, whore, youare chased? Same thing, right,
does she not know how often shesays that does she get paid by the

(13:00):
unburned by what has been lobby.I'm curious. We got a lot of
stuff to hit. We're just notI actually have not even gotten into everything
else. So we got to talkabout some of the twenty twenty four stuff.
I have something very well ungracious tosay coming up. You probably don't
want to miss it. It's notgoing to surprise some of you. Just
please know that when I talk aboutpeople, I know them, especially when

(13:22):
I'm very caustic. I've known themfor a long time, and I can
say these things. And now allof the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's quick five quicknoteon a derailment in Pennsylvania from WPVI.
This is the Channel six ABC affiliateWhitewash. A CSX freight train derailed Montgomery
County early this morning. According toofficials, the crash happened at about four

(13:46):
or fifty am. The forty carCSX train was operating on Norfolk Southern tracks.
I'm so how don't you so happythat all of the nut eating,
camp wearing, tree hugging, weirdyou know, smoking like stuff smoking hippies
were able to get rid of thepipeline so we could have the safer transport

(14:09):
of rail yay. So investigators arethere on scene. They're looking at any
kind of carcinogenic chemicals because apparently therewas one that I can't pronounce because it
has a million consonants. So yeah, there you go. Also a couple
of other things to hit. ARussian nuclear enrichment plant explosion, one dead,
hundreds injured sounds a kind of achernobylesque. A British Columbia maas fired

(14:35):
from the job he saved a moosecalf on the highway. How are you
firing a dude who saved a moosecalf? They said there was a black
bear standing there. The black bearwas looking at the move I would have
done the same thing, and Iwould have taken my dismissal privately. And
a duck went for a ride ona Cedar Point roller coaster that reaches ninety
three miles per hour. The duckssurvived. Was its name Howard Well.

(14:56):
I think culture is is a reflectionof our moment and our time right and
and present. Culture is the waywe express how we're feeling about the moment,
and and we should always find timesto express how we feel about the
moment that is a reflection of joy, because you know it comes in the

(15:20):
morning. We have to find waysto also express the way we feel about
the moment in terms of just havinglanguage and a connection to how people are
experiencing life. And I think aboutit in that way too. So I

(15:41):
also did that when I needed toget a word count met at the end
of a book report when I wasin school. Well, I think it's
culture, which is about how weyou know, I mean, it comes
in the morning, so we uhdon't do each other. Yeah, that's
the Vice President of the United States. Is she prepared for anything? It's

(16:06):
culture for the love Come on.So this was at the Essence Festival in
New Orleans that was happening during someIndependence Day celebrations. Now, welcome back
to the program. By the way, Dania lash with you if you thought
that was unfortunate. Oh, doI have something special for you. People

(16:30):
are very particular about how the nationalanthem is sung, are we not.
I still say the greatest rendition,one of the greatest ones I've ever heard
was Whitney Houston or she did it. Oh my gosh, sweatband and all.
She went out there and just rippedthe roof off. Was it a
roof on this stadium, I don'tknow, but she did. If there
was one, it's gone now.It was amazing. That was like one

(16:52):
of the most destroyed. It wasamazing. If you can't do it like
Whitney, then just do it regular, Okay. If you're not, then
just don't do it. Don't dothe I can't stand that when you have
like a jazz run in a onesyllable word. Stop. You don't need
to complicate it, right. It'slike overseasoning food. You don't need to

(17:15):
sometimes you just let the food shine. Right. It's like, oh,
if you overseason meat that you're grilling, you gotta let the meat shine.
You gotta let the melody shine.And the anthem is actually one of the
most difficult songs to sing because allthe octaves, all the different ranges everything
else. It's like you have tohave a very varied voice, and it's
it's difficult to sing beautiful song.And when it's done right, it's stunny.

(17:38):
As you know, Whitney did.Even Chris Stapleton, he sang it.
It's Chris Stapleton he's not Whitney,but he did it in his way
while still allowing the song, themelody, and the meaning to shine its
great right. So you don't haveto be have the the vocal chords of
Whitney Houston. You can still doit your way. But the one way

(17:59):
that you don't do it is bytrying to butcher it on purpose with different
words so that you can make awoke example. And that's what Jill Scott
did. She is getting a lotof pushback, which she ought to,
because this was ridiculous. I mean, it's sad because of how she did
it, but it also is ridiculousbecause I don't know. I mean,

(18:22):
she's been around for a while.She ain't no Whitney. Oh I said
it. She ain't. And thiswas her singing the national anthem, but
she changed it. She didn't sayLand of the Free. She said blood
built this land. Oh she reallyredid it. And well, if you
want to listen to some of it, all right you are, yeah,
okay, kay made me listen tothe whole thing. You did Payback Payback

(18:48):
sees listen to this? Oh boy? Oh say can okay? That wasn't
anything special? You don't need tolike turn your how to work the blood
the stream that is place. Doesn'tsome on you god shid chee. Who's

(19:33):
Oh my gosh, she's going builtthis lip where sweet stress. Okay,
I'm done. I can't, man, I can't. I'm gonna like So

(19:56):
that was the her version of theanthem. So she changed the words of
it entirely, and I just Imean, if you don't want to sing
the anthem, don't sing the anthem, but you don't have to be an
ass about it as she was.That's some capital B stuff right there.

(20:17):
That's ridiculous. I mean, you'resitting here telling people that they are experiencing
a suppression that they have not experienced. You're trying to borrow from history to
drive a division that enriches you today. That's what this whole grifting cottage industry
has become. I mean, it'sit's it's insane. I'm gonna tell you

(20:42):
what. There's no country that's perfect. But I'll be damned if I compare
the United States to in the othercountry and act like my country is lacking
because it is not. Try tofind find one better, find one better,
my gosh, I mean, atleast if you're going to go up

(21:02):
and do something like that, goodgrief, it's I'm embarrassed for her.
I'm embarrassed for and that's just shameful. I mean, she decided to preach
division, preach division, I meanconstantly. I'm so tired of people doing

(21:25):
this. And the people that preachdivision the loudest are the ones that make
the most bank off of it.They get the attention if you preach you
know what, if you preach unityand peace, it doesn't get as much
attention. That is something that iswith the nature of humanity. And there
are actors out there, and I'mtalking about performers, operatives, everybody.

(21:47):
You got all of these people thatit's easier for them to play into the
division than the unity because it elevatesthem. You get to look like you're
doing one better, you're pointing somethingout, you're raising the alarm, the
attention is on you. You getto look like the contrarian thought leader when

(22:07):
you're just pushing division, never offeringany solutions, preaching about an oppression you
didn't experience, and that wasn't experiencedby only one demographic throughout human history.
Humanity is just awful altogether. That'swhy we had to have a savior.

(22:32):
But with this, there is justsomething in human nature where we gravitate towards
strife. We do. I'm alwaysamazed when people say, oh, we
don't need any more division, nomore of this, no more of that.
But yet they promote it, theypropagate it, they publish it,

(22:56):
they celebrate it, they make moneyoff of it. And even if it's
not directly in the form of adollar, it isn't directly in the form
of influence. I was watching thissound Kane about this to the top story
at Daily Mail. I have alove hate relationship with that horrible fecal storm

(23:18):
of a entity. It's like,though, one of the biggest papers in
the world, and it's the onlypublication where you can look like you're reading
about current events, and then theyhave all the garbage on the side,
you know, all the celebrity gossipon the side, so you get to
look like you're really look, Iknow, I'm reading this thing about what's
happening here with trade and South Pacific. Oh it's crazy, and really we're
looking at the garbage like who's slapBrady? But the top story on Daily

(23:44):
Mail woke up, looked at theTop Story and Daily Mail, and it
has to do with some lady ata very expensive condominium thing. I just
I'm gonna make some people mad.I can't trust you if you pay a
million dollars for a condo, ICan't'm sorry if you're not. If you
don't need to live in Manhattan andwork in Manhattan and you're paying a million

(24:08):
dollars, I just can't. Idon't. I don't get it, Like
why I don't have your house tobe touching other people for a million dollars.
Anyway, So there's like really bougiecondos, right, and it's just
you know, complex, and ithas its own pool. So this lady
was there. I didn't want toplay them because it's so but it's it's
just to further my example of howpeople are obsessed with this stuff. Top
Story, Daily Meal, and thisvideo of this woman losing her mind because

(24:32):
a family was having a birthday partyat the pool has gone viral. But
was that all it was? Dana? Well, I mean in a normal
person's world, it would be.But because we have to share this planet
with progressives, all of this otherstuff has to get thrown in, Well,
she's white and the family that she'smad at is Hispanic, so apparently
it's all racist. Well, shesaid Mexican party at one point. Well,

(24:55):
I mean I've got a lot ofHispanic friends, and I have Italian
friends, and I've got Irish friends, and I am part Irish. I
got a lot of different some parts. I'm sorry, some people had better
parties than others. Sorry, canI just say it? It's true,
It's completely true. Some of y'allhave boring parties and some some people's cultures.
Just do you have better parties?Sorry, you just do so.

(25:19):
But the progress progresses are like,oh, there's got to be an element
of that in there. Now.I watched the video because I hate myself,
so I watched the video to I'mlike, oh my gosh, I
can't you know, is it gonnacome up and be a story? All
she said was there what they werehaving, like a Mexican party or something
like that, And then she wasfighting with the family. The family was
fighting with her. I suspect everyoneexcept the kids involved were drunk, and

(25:45):
uh, it's like a viral videoand now everybody's talking about it. And
then it prompted her they found outthat she's I don't actually know what her
job is. It sounds something bougieand dumb. If I'm being honest,
it's uh, she was an artsultan, oh a spatial something and funktua
expert. I don't know. Apparentlyit's all about like if you, however,

(26:10):
you have your furniture in your house, makes you happy. I don't
know anyway. So then then thisis why I think they were all drunk.
The family and her started arguing overor mez like the fashion label.
I don't even know how that's likepart of the vision. I can't we
can't even play it because there's anF bomb literally every other millisecond, And
they were arguing over you didn't evenknow what brandis sandals these were. So

(26:32):
that's why I don't think the family'sentirely innocent, either because they were helping
to drive it, but because welive in a garbage society. Uh well,
immediately she's the well that she's awhite Karen, so she's immediately there
you go, convicted and penalized.The family was arguing with it. It
sounds like everybody was just they werea bunch of drunk blockheads. That's what
it sounds like. And everybody's beensharing this and they're all, oh,

(26:55):
you gotta give your hot take,because are you really participating in the conversation
if you are not giving a hottake? Do you exist if you don't
have a hot take to offer?It's the question of the times, is
it not? This is the topstory. There's cocaine in the White House,
but that's the top story. It'sHunter's cocaine. But we're gonna pretend

(27:18):
that we don't know whose it is. But this is the top story.
I was really I gotta say,I did find it amusing that they were
talking about like brands of bracelets andsandals about died. It was so funny,
that's really. But you know,because everybody has a phone, everyone
thinks that what is happening to themis the most important thing. Oh my

(27:38):
gosh, someone got mad at meat the pool. I'm gonna make a
viral video. And then this placethat this chick worked at, I know,
some gallery master's gallery in Denver.Oh my gosh. Like she hadn't
even worked there and over a year. Right, so this comes out and
they're like, oh my gosh,we gotta hurry up an issue a statement
about somebody who hasn't even worked herefor a year. You mean the gallery

(28:02):
who wasn't at the pool, whodoesn't have a relationship with this woman,
who hasn't had anything to do withher for a year and a half,
is gonna have to issue a statementsaying that they condemn her. What did
she ever go through a fast foodplay? Did she go through a Starbucks?
Did they need to issue a statement? Yes, we did serve her
an ice smoke a frap with almondmilk the other day, but we condemned

(28:23):
this behavior only of her, notof the people with whom she was arguing,
who are probably just as guilty.Only her. Don't don't load us,
jeez, I hate her, Ihate everything. Where's Smod? Damn
it? Where's Smod? I justwant a big flamy rock to come and
hit this one like it's a cueball. Come on, all right,

(28:47):
we got a lot more to getinto as we get moving, because we
got days of these United States lesTazuni like Sam's through the holly glass,
so are the days of the UnitedStates. I'm not here to declare victory.
I'm the economy. I'm here tosay we have a plan that's turning
things around quickly. Uh what,Oh, I don't really think that's how

(29:15):
that works. Those are the jobsnumbers. Jobs numbers are out and Biden
he's uh, you know, he'sthis week he's been trying to promote his
successful bionomics, Right, he's beentrying to I'm confused by his statement because
he started this week positioning himself asthis savior for the economy, right,

(29:40):
I mean that's what he went outto. He went out in his remarks
were based around this premise that hehad saved the economy and he created thirteen
frillion jobs Kane with an f frillionreal numbers. Yeah. But you know

(30:00):
what though, when you look atwage loss and when you look at the
inability of wages to keep up withwith i mean the cost of products with
inflation consumer price index, and Ithink what they said the average loss of
wealth specifically related to the middle classwas like thirty three thousand per household.

(30:26):
Yeah, and that's the average.That's the average. Wow. So that
is that's what Bidenomics is. That'sthere is. He can't declare victory in
the economy because there isn't any victoryon the economy. It's I mean,
you feel it, you see it, and it's gradually Well, it's not

(30:48):
getting better, that's for sure.We got a lot more on the way.
Second hour coming out. Don't missstick with us because periods make human
life possible, potentially one of themost natural bio logical processes of life.
And yet history and society has builtup this stig. But that makes menstrutors
feel so ashamed. It makes usfeel like there's something wrong with our bodies.

(31:11):
We're taught that period of blood isthis contaminable, like disgusting, and
I think that It always breaks myheart to hear so many stories every day
of young menstraators who get their periodsand never heard about it. The irony
of sitting here talking about, oh, we don't want to shame why I'm
on for having their periods, andthen also shaming them by calling them menstruators.

(31:32):
This chick is so unaware. It'sa year of like realizing stuff.
Me and my friends are just likerealizing things. Kane's gotta go die for
it. In the meantime, Welcometo the show, Dania. Last year
with you your lovable curmudgeon. Prettyrowdy today, No I got these vibes.
Do you gotta? I have thosevibes, this vibe right here,

(31:53):
And I feel like this year isreally about like the year of just realizing
stuff, and everyone around me,we're all just like realizing things like whoa,
I got the same vibe from that. So she's so this. If
you're listening to the radio program,which you've been listening Coast to Coast,

(32:14):
you can stream it or you canwatch the simulcast on YouTube Always Discussion their
Facebook channel three forty seven Direct TV. This is a women's health CEO and
her company has their own pads forparaouds. Sorry, guys, I have
to live through this, so yougotta go with it with me. And
they wanted a period positive gender andclissive brand. I'm gonna say this one

(32:34):
more time, y'all. Dudes,if you are bleeding down there, please
see a doctor. Don't buy apad. Okay, it doesn't It doesn't
mean you suddenly have you know,do put it all a drain. That's
not what that's now, what's goingdown? Okay? That means you are
injured, my friend, you areinjured. So she's she keeps calling them

(32:55):
men's straighters. Men's straight, whileshe's simultaneous saying that we shouldn't look at
it us like our bad that youknow what, just because there's there's the
thing about having dignity, right,Can we stop pretending that having dignity is
a negative. There are a lotof things that are completely biological, natural

(33:16):
acts, but that doesn't mean youdo it all out at the dinner table.
You know what I'm saying, Like, what in the world? Why
did this? Why do you haveto? Are you just we have too
much damn free time for people tobe so obsessed. Let me find my
next cause my next pet. Causegood heavens stop it. So she we

(33:37):
played audio somebody to eleven Wood doesthis tend So this is her company?
And she keeps, Oh my gosh, this is an actual thing. Yeah,
she continues. August to me isthe result of spending years in the
space identifying pain points, whether theybe around sustainability. Like I grew up
painting pads. Most pads have enoughplastic for like three to five plastic bags.

(34:00):
Right, so very scratchy, verycomfortable, but also think as much
period positive, gender inclusive brand.So we are August wanting a gender inclusive
name on the back it says we'rehere for everyone who menstrates, and I
think, especially in this age oftransphobia, it really means a lot to
us to be proudly a gender inclusivebrand. But everything about the trying to
be super how we designed to beas comfortable as absorbent as possible, but

(34:24):
also as sustainable as possible. Sowith the water what, I'm not sure
what's happening here when I get todo a fun little this somebody actually had
this idea, is that, well, what makes your pad brand different?
That's her only thing. We're foreverybody. Well, couldn't anybody use pads

(34:44):
and make them for everybody if youwanted to play pretend here you just just
roll with me for a second.Yeah, but we put it on the
box. That's your big thing.Uh huh. So you're not like any
different, you're not any better.You're just pre tending that you are.
Like you're pretending that your product productcan actually be used by many and women.

(35:07):
Because again, dudes, if you'reblabing there, seek help, see
a doctor. Stop it. Ohman, Chicks like this don't help,
you know what I mean, Theydon't help. Like, as women,
we are fighting this battle against beingerased by progressives who want to patriarchally,

(35:28):
which I'm making up. They wantto in a patriarchal manner, appropriate the
female sex, and all these thirdwaivers like this broad are helping them.
It's a pod, it's for everybody. I mean, this is just can
you imagine being on shark Tank.So here's the boy Max our product different.
So wait, you're a pad?Uh huh So you're like the always

(35:49):
are the tampax pads? Always petYou're like those like the things with the
wings and the stickies and all that. You're like that. Yeah, but
we're different. How are you different? Are you made the same way?
Uh? But how are you different? Or for everybody? What do you
mean everybody? We're eclusive? Well, couldn't everybody use the product that the
products that exist already? Yeah,but we put it on the box because

(36:14):
you think people are so damn stupidthat you're gonna have a man pretending that
he's bleeding from his nether regions inthe isle at the supermarket looking at all
the products, going well, thisone says it's for all. Maybe it's
been as shaped. I don't know, you know why the aliens haven't revealed

(36:35):
themselves to us because this stuff.Would you imagine you were an alien on
a planet and they all go bananasokay, and you got the lady aliens
that are pretending they are the dudealiens, and the dude aliens pretending that
they are the lady aliens, andthe dude aliens that want the alien feed
the baby. I mean, ohmy gosh, would you really at that

(36:57):
moment go, this seems like thebest They seems stable. This is the
time I'm going to reveal my existence. Would you choose that point in time?
I wouldn't. She brings us anamazing segue to this video. So
I know you've seen this video.We've watched this video. I am still
shocked at how high this chick's voiceis. One thing, she sounds like

(37:17):
Miss Piggy, she does, solet me break it down. So there's
this video where this chick she's onthe plane and she is sitting next to
some dude who is in a greenhoodie. And there's another video that comes
out later and you can see thisguy in a green hoodie and she freaks

(37:39):
out on the plane, freaks out. She says that he's not human,
and apparently one of the dudes thatwere sitting three This is the story.
This is the internet story. Aguy who is sitting three rows behind says
that the guy in the green hoodiewinked but vertically, like like sliding doors

(38:05):
as opposed to a window. Sothat's so. Now let's play this video
because it's crazy. This is notI'm telling you, I'm getting them,
and there's the reason why I'm gettingthem. Very upset. Don't either believe
it or they cannot believe it.I didn't get too, but I am
telling you right out fact, thereis not real. He's not real,

(38:30):
and you can sit and you canOh my god. She's like, really,
now, Juan says that those gummieswere hard? Does that do you

(38:51):
actually freak out? Can you refreak out on gummies? I don't know.
She really believes that, She's saying, Now, I have a theory.
So there's a multiple several different waysto look at this. Okay,
the first way, let's just lookat it. The first way we could
say, and it's it's like anOkham's razor. Maybe she's high as a

(39:15):
kite. Who knows. Maybe asWan said, she had some horrid gummies,
so, you know, and theywere she had way too many,
and she could just be freaking out. Maybe she took him because she gets
anxiety when she flies. Who knows, there's some people like that. I
have friends who who freak out whenthey fly. And she just you know,
was helping herself. It didn't looklike anybody was getting off the plane
with her. Also, it justlooked like it was herself, So I

(39:37):
don't know, maybe just you know, maybe she that, and then maybe
she had a drink or something withit, who knows, And she's just
gray like so crazy. You don'teven want to add the Z in there
for fear it might draw her attention, so you just say it could be
that. And this poor dude whowas pictured in a later video with his
green hood up, he just tryingto hide from the crazy lady. Could

(40:00):
or maybe he's a lizard. Dudewho winked, who winked vertically and everyone
she's like all freaking out over it. And some other dude who was sitting
three rows back. I don't knowhow he would have seen, but maybe
he saw. I don't know.And she's like she sees it because maybe
it's like I said, they onlydon't want to reveal themselves to us.

(40:23):
Or maybe it's neither of those things. Maybe it's a roar shock test,
a snapshot of where we are mentallyas a society. We so badly want
to be distracted that we are willingto entertain the idea that there's a lizard
sitting on that plane, and thatthat's not because she had too many gummies,
it's because he's a lizard, andthere's a cover up. Someone's hiding

(40:47):
something. Now it's easy to thinkthat there might be because we have been
duped. I mean, there wasthe thing we just I mean, there's
a story that I have here lateron then that I was going to discuss,
how like, for instance, youknow, there's this list of side
effects that now has been made publictheir foyer requests and all that stuff,

(41:07):
and oh my gosh, look atall this stuff that's that's related to the
Corona virus vaccine and death was apparentlyalways known to be a potential side effect
and all this other stuff, andeverybody hit it, just like everybody was
hiding that natural immunity or trying todeny natural immunity existed, or how the

(41:28):
press now with this case that we'regoing to be talking about here shortly,
which is an injunction of Missouri v. Biden. How you have a judge
that has put a stop to thegovernment reaching out to social media technological companies
so that they are not conspiring orcolluding to suppress speech from ordinary, average,
every day Americans. And you havethe press saying, well, that's

(41:51):
you know, this is just abunch of paranoid writings that want to rewrite
the First Amendment because they're paranoid.That's how it's being presented in the press.
So I get it. We havebeen lied to and we haven't believed
it, but we've watched them really, really earnestly try to get us to
believe it. We have been liedto six ways to Sunday, over and
over and over again. I getit. So when something like this comes

(42:15):
out, you're kind of primed tomore easily entertain the idea that maybe it
was Mark Zuckerberg and that green hoodiesitting on the plane. It could be
speaking of which he's launched threads.Have you seen this? It's you.

(42:35):
Basically, if you're on Instagram,you just sign up with through Instagram.
Does it for you in a coupleof clicks, and it's they're calling it
a Twitter killer? Is it?Though? You know how many times they've
said this. I'm so tired ofhaving different social media things open because I
don't want to have to see thesame damn annoying operatives on another platform.

(42:57):
Kay Lee, Why why would wedo that? I mean, I I
looked at it to see I'm notgonna use it. I'm not posting on
it. As much as I hatethe new tweet deck preview, but I'm
not going to post on it.So we're gonna we'll talk a little bit
about that. We also have thetwo stories that I was talking to you
about the side effects that whole thingthat came out, and also the latest

(43:22):
with the tech case. Because youhave the media that is lamenting free speech.
Wait until you hear how they've coveredsome of this. I mean,
I'm sure you can imagine, butI got more, and now all of
the news you would probably miss.It's time for Dana's Quick five. Man.
I really wish we could sit hereand go over what we were discussing

(43:42):
on break, but we can't.All right, so we have Oh,
of course I have this. Ofcourse, what is up with me in
these headlines lately? Uh So itstarted off with the UFO hunting Harvard scientists
and debris from an unidentified object thechrist in the Pacific in twenty fourteen or
could be artificial in origin. Butwait, there's more. So apparently they

(44:04):
say this. One house investigator warnsthat UFOs are beyond control in our military
or space? Are they? I'vegot some questions, very interesting, just
saying and you remember that Las Vegasfamily that called nine to one one Do
you remember this whole story? Theysaid that they were ten foot tall aliens
in the backyard. Well, nowthey're threatening trespassers because people are trespassing on

(44:24):
their property and they're overrun with ufoslos. I mean, they are absolutely overrun.
They said that they had the policehad to actually install cameras on the
roof of their home because so manypeople are just sending on their house.
Is that not a crazy? Wow? But also why haven't we heard more
about that? Just wondering that wasare going on the plane with the Let's

(44:49):
see the anti child trafficking film fromJim Jim Caviezel, Sound of Freedom ten
million dollars in pre sales before Julyfour. That's a pretty impressive opening.
That's according to some of the latestbox office numbers. This uh for the
most part, faith based based ona true story titles about a former Homeland
Security agent, Ten Boward. Hetook rescuing abducted children around the globe into

(45:12):
his own hands. And so that'sa I mean, it's a looks like
a pretty it looks like a twentymillion dollars six days start, and that's
pretty impressive for an independent project likethat. So it's doing quite well.
Also, states are suing the EPAover the damaging environmental impact of residential woodburning

(45:32):
stoves. Attorneys general from ten statesare accusing the EPA failing to review and
enjoy emission standards all the sixty daynotice of intent. They're fighting with the
It's Alaska, Illinois, Maryland,Massachusetts, Minnesota, all the you know,
the usual suspects that are filing suedover this. Also from the BBC,
Threads, the Instagram a Jate thewell, it's all by Facebook now

(45:55):
because Facebook on Instagram. So Threadslaunched rival Twitter this morning. And all
you have to do is just likesign in if you feel like it.
Do you really want something another thingthat you have to update. I wouldn't.
I'm just saying Texas is Heartbeat Act. According to new numbers, saved
ten thousand babies. Texas Scorecard hasa study that was done by researchers at

(46:17):
John Hopkins and they found that itwas about actually over nine seven hundred ninety
nine more births. Stick with usmore in store and make sure you sign
up for the newsletter over its substackchapter and verse two accompany the radio broadcast
and of course the simulcast Welcome backand this. I was reading some of
the reviews of my friend Carol Roth'snew book, You Will Own Nothing.

(46:40):
I love the cover of this book. I think this is one of my
favorite book. Covers your war witha new financial world order and how to
fight back. What gets me aboutand why I'm so amused with some of
the you know, the meaner progressiveStatus Commune reviews that they're saying, oh,
well, this is just fear mongering, except it's not. And literally

(47:00):
everything that she has said is goingto happen. It's happened. It's happened,
like oh you just have to haveeyes. Oh my gosh, joining
us right now, our dear friendCarol Roth, who she says she's a
recovering investment banker and she has abrand new bestseller out, You Will Own
Nothing, and that's your war withnew financial world order and how to fight
back. Carol. Congratulations, Anduh, I mean, I mean you've

(47:23):
all you've been right. And Iwas just, you know, I was
perusing some of the write ups aboutit, and everybody's it's like there's a
stark divide. All the people thatcan do math are like, yep,
this is right, and the peoplethat want to deny the mathematical reality or
say, well, this is fearmongering. And you know this is from
someone who doesn't like masking, andyou know thinks that evs are bad,
and that's not what your point isat all. I mean, you're talking

(47:45):
about everything that all of these largerentities are doing in order to essentially control
American wealth. So first of all, I have to thank you for lending
your name to this book. AndI think part of the reason why you
like the book coverage. I'm goingto show the we're actually watching the front
awesome, but Dana Lash it's lovethe back. So it was super cool.

(48:07):
But yeah, so I Actually Ididn't even know. I stumbled into
that one review. I think thatyou were referencing. Someone sent it to
me this morning. I had nevereven heard of the outlet. This outlet
is so credible that instead of linkingme with the two books that I actually
wrote, they linked me with thechildren's book about their Carol Ross. So
it's tests I wrote like you willown nothing and go to bed, sweetheart,

(48:30):
and something like that, which makesno sense. I love it,
and it really made you know,it was really just annoying to me.
It was clear they didn't read thebook, because the whole point of this
book was to take the conspiracy elementout of it, and they just scammed
through and they saw, oh,well, she mentioned Glenn Beck and took
her Curlson, so that must bebad. And it's like, okay,
but I also mentioned Joe Biden andthe Fed and you know, all of

(48:52):
these things that in their own words, you've skipped over that entire scenario.
And there was no sort of argumentsthere. It wasn't like, oh,
you know, they don't the WallStreet is buying up houses. You know,
here's let me try and explain whythat's a good thing. That one
out of every five houses going toa corporate investor instead of a single family,

(49:13):
when it's the largest asset on householdbalance sheets in the US. It
was just like, oh, well, you know she likes these people,
so it's bad. Yeah, youimmediately have to be discredited. It's it's
trying to it's like this quasi guiltby association. Well, she mentioned this
person, so she must be asbad. Our friend Carrol Off her new
book You Will Own, Nothing reallygets into I mean, it's it's it

(49:35):
is a scary vision of the future. It's not a vision of the future.
It's a scary observation as to whatis going to happen in the future
if we continue on the path thatwe are on now. And Kanaan and
I were just talking on break youknow, for instance, just about I
saw the headline about, you know, whether the fight's gonna consider increasing rates
again because government can't stop spending,and we're talking about trying to control inflation,

(49:59):
and they're thinking about maybe pulling thetrigger sooner rather than later. And
we're in this horrible cycle of thegovernment's continue continuing to spend. No one
can afford anything, Our wages aren'tkeeping up with that. With that difference,
how high are the rates going togo? I mean, where's this
going to But by the time twentytwenty four gets here, we're gonna have
anything left. So you know thatthe FAT has an interesting scenario where they

(50:22):
have to balance making sure that thebanking system doesn't collapse as well as trying
to control inflation. And the realityis that inflation on a year over a
year basis has been coming down becauseit was at such a high level before.
Plus we've gotten an assist because therehas been a concern over a global
slowdown. So the price of oilhas come down, and so that's been

(50:44):
a huge part of this entire story. So you know, this could potentially
go go up some. I thinkthat they will probably maybe go up a
little bit more than pause again.But I think the wild card really is
the price of oil. You know, we had a very mild winter last
year, and so that meant that, you know, Europe and in the
US, we didn't have this thismassive desire and demand for oil over and

(51:09):
above sort of the norm. That'syou know, not a strategy, that
was a gift. Nobody did anythingto fix that cycle. So if we
had a cold winter this year,I think all bets are off, so
we're just going back and betting onthe weather. But the thing, you
know, going back to this thisconspiracy element and what you were talking about.
You know, things like the factthat our public debt to GDPs at

(51:30):
one hundred and twenty five percent andthe IMF has said that the sort of
place where that becomes unsustainable is likeseventy to eighty percent. The fact that
the Treasury and the CBO have saidwe're on an unsustainable fiscal path, Like,
are they conspiracy theorists too? BecauseI've cited where they say that it's
clear that the FED has not heldthe dollar stable for the good of either

(51:54):
the US or the global economy,and that has caused the reserves to go
down on a global basis, dedollarizationon the reserve level. That you know,
some of the Brooks countries are lookingto start a new currency. This
this is in the news everyday,mainstream media, corporate press. So where

(52:15):
is the conspiracy element? Joe Bidenon the White House's website said to the
Business round Table in a speech,there's going to be a new world order
out there, and we've got tolead it. And explains the historical cycles
were in and the fact that we'vebeen in the pole position for about eighty
years, but that that doesn't lastforever. And before you know, as

(52:36):
it was Britain, and before Britain, it was the Dutch. Like,
this is not conspiracy, this isa history. So the idea that they
don't want to address these issues andjust brush them under the table and try
to label it conspiratorial is almost asconcerning as the things that are being perpetrated
against us. Yeah, completely,that is, And you're right. I

(52:58):
remember we were actually talking about someof that those brick nations with their own
currency and the effect that that's goingto have. We're talking with our friend
Carol Roth, who's new book YouWill Own Nothing, Your War with a
new financial world Order and how tofight back. One of the things that
we talked about. I think itwas like maybe one of the last times
she was on, last time youwere on, was the FED Now that
FED bass system that's gonna you fasterpayment. You know, they act like

(53:22):
it's going to be this huge helpthat that I think goes into effect this
week, so it's coming into effect. I'm not as concerned about that as
some of the other people are.And I think we talked about this last
time, because I do think that'smore of the settlement and payment. We
already use wire transfers in ach.But I am very concerned about the central
bank digital currency, which they dida pilot program with the New York FED

(53:45):
and twelve different financial institutions that hasbeen completed and they put out a report.
It was at the wholesale level,but I said, oh, this
is fantastic. And so once wego down that rabbit hole, then you
get into a retail. The Gseven come out with Coordinated Retail Phasing CBDC
principles. So these are not theactions that you take if this is something

(54:07):
that nobody's thinking about and is entirelyoff the table, and that's really scary,
you know, both from a directbasis, just that the further centralization
of the currency, the potential fora too big to fail meltdown, and
all of the potential attacks that aregoing to happen because we have no decentralization
within that system, but also interms of our agency and our freedom and

(54:31):
what they could do to manipulate andcontrol the currency. And you know,
particularly as we marry it with likethings like social credit, which we have
seen on an informal basis throughout COVID, and how that impacted our livelihoods.
A lot of people think about socialcredit and that freedom of framework, but
they don't think about the economic freedom, the property rights and how that was

(54:52):
violated, whether it was your socialstanding, whether it was taking your job,
whether it was shutting down your business. If you were in Can part
of the Trucker convoy, they frozeyour bank accounts. So you know that
kind of a social credit implementation.You said something that on Twitter. Now
not only do you not have accessto social media, but maybe they shut

(55:13):
off access to you accessing your moneyand being able to pay for things you
need to live. So there wasa headline about Nigel for Oars just this
morning. There was like one ofthe first stories that I saw his bank
closest account because he retweeted Ricky Gervais. Of all the things he retweeted,
which you know, he's like,I could think of like a million more
comedians that are probably more controversial thanRicky Gervais. But that's apparently what did

(55:35):
Nigel fars his bank his bank closestaccount yeah, one that he had been
with for a very long period oftime ostensibly. And so now you have,
you know, these these infrastructure institutionswhere you don't have a lot of
free choice, and they're really partof, you know, making sure that
you can participate in sought society nowweighing in on whether you're part or right

(55:55):
think or wrong ringk and the implicationsaround that. Not to mention, you
know, we talked about the homeyou know, as we have these corporations
who are now competing with you tobuy a home and rent you through the
America Dream. One of the conversationsI had is imagine that with social credit.
So not only have they taken away, you know, your opportunity to
generate wealth, but now you're undersomebody else's purview, who, by the

(56:19):
way, is probably backed by oneof these big banks that's you know,
uh touting ESG and whatever. Andnow you do something that is you know,
quote unquote bad social credit, doyou lose your housing? I mean,
these are things that I don't thinkpeople have thought about. If you
had talked about this ten years ago, I might have thought it was far
fetched. But having done this researchfor you own nothing and going through the

(56:40):
last three years. I don't thinkwe can dismiss that anymore. And to
your point, we're talking with ourfriend Carol Roth or new book You Will
Own Nothing, which is out thisweek. I don't remember if I told
you that out today. I don'tremember if I told you this before.
When we sold our last house asthe first house we bought when we moved
to Texas, and this was ayou know, a number of years ago,
and this was the first time I'veever seen anything like this, and

(57:01):
this was before everyone was talking aboutBlack Rock buying up properties. You know,
we had Texas a very competitive,you know, housing market because everybody's
coming in from California. We hadall these offers on our house and it
was weird because the highest offer theythey were going above what was offered and
no strings, nothing. But itwas a company, right, everyone else
was a family, and I wasnot familiar with that, and you know,

(57:23):
I, you know, I'm notlike into Trump levels of real estate
or anything. And I know whatI know and I know what I don't.
But I thought that's kind of weird. I've never seen it, and
it freaked me out, and Ididn't want to sell it. To them,
Hey, well, so this isa thing that you have to do
and you have to fight back.So the reason why you're not familiar with
this is because it didn't exist beforetwenty ten, before the Fed manipulated monetary

(57:45):
policy and gave all of this cheapeasy money to Wall Street. It and
you know, droves and on pallettes. Basically, they drove up every asset
class. They didn't have anywhere elseto put their money, so they went,
oh, maybe we'll buy homes.That sounds great, and so that
enabled this transfer of wealth from MainStreet to Wall Street. And now you

(58:06):
have these companies. They're coming andthey're buying up more than one out of
every five homes in the United Statesas at the end of last year.
And they don't want to fix itup and you sell it to the next
person. They want to wrench youtheir mere country. They want to take
that generational wealth opportunity away from you, and they want to transfer that to
Wall Street. And these companies they'vegot tens of thousands of homes. One

(58:30):
of the things I did in thebook is I just went to their financial
filings, the ten k's and theannual reports, and I just showed their
language again. Apparently that's a scaremonitoring of you. Conspiracy theory according to
the reviews. But I told youwhat they said, and they said they
go after the middle class because theyhave the jobs and the ability to pay.
And this is a golden opportunity anda once in a generation asset class.

(58:53):
I mean, it's it's unbelievable.And so this is a fantastic way
for you to fight back. Ifyou own a house. Yes, I
want you to get the best prizepossible, but maybe don't get that extra
couple of thousand dollars and don't sellit to a corporation. That's a great
point. I mean, it isamazing all of the different ways that they
are I mean conspiring too. AndI love how you put it. I

(59:15):
mean, you can rent the AmericanDream. You don't get to own it
because you own nothing, but youget to rent the American Dream. This
is a must read book. I'mso happy that you wrote this book,
and I'm so grateful that you're sharingyour expertise on this with everyone else and
coming on and sharing it with usas well. Carol Roth, you will
own nothing. Go and get thisbook. If you have not purchased it

(59:37):
already. Get a couple of copies. Give it to someone who's mathematically less
inclined than you, because we havean economic illiteracy and epidemic of illiteracy as
it relates to economics in this country. Carol Roth, congratulations, thank you
so much. Good to see you. Yeah, thank you for your support.
And remember the elites want you toown nothing, but Dana and I
want you to own everything. Soget them platify back. Absolutely. Thank

(59:58):
you so much. You will ownnothing out today, Go and get the
book. Our friend, Carol Roth. It's his laugh mission to make bad
decisions. It's time for Florida man. So this was a fifty eight year
old Florida man in Boca Raton.He was arrested this was Friday night because

(01:00:20):
he was this is so weird.He's in Palm Beach County jail on ten
thousand dollars bond. And he sawa group of four kids walking down the
street. He was hiding in thebushes. This guy, this weirdo,
Brian Would, fifty eight years old, was hiding the bushes wearing a black
shirt, was shorts pulled down inhis underwear up and as the juveniles walked
by. I guess he came outof the bushes and said, you aren't

(01:00:44):
real, you're demons, and thenhe pulled down his underwear. Oh my
gosh, So the juveniles, thekids obviously became frightened and they ran into
a KFC. And then not longafter, the Boca Raton police responded to
a nine one one caller who's thekids basketball coach? The kids basketball coach

(01:01:07):
came to meet with them, orcame to stay with the kids and wait
for the police, Charles Coughlin,And so the coach told the officer that
he found Wood less than a halfa mile away where he made the emergency
call. The fifty eight year oldwas found and taken into custody. Now
Wood says that he said he saidhe admitted to talking to the juveniles the
kids, that he said he didn'tpull his pants down, which we all
know is a lie. So Imean, is that how he thinks you

(01:01:30):
solved the demon problem? Just,oh my gosh, this is a good
grieve. I would totally do thissix ways to Sunday. I don't know
if y'all saw this or not,but this, uh Florida, man,
it's a video of a Florida manlegit wrestling a black bear who tried to
get at his dogs on his porch. The man Walt Hickcocks, which is

(01:01:54):
that's a that's a cowboy name I'veever heard one. He at least one
of the man is dogs was onthe porch with him. He's hanging out,
I mean, nice evening, youknow, He's out on his porch
and it was Daytona beach and oneof the man's dogs out on the porch
with him. A black bear decidedto come on over and then a second

(01:02:14):
predator burst through the door and that'swhen he lost his mind and blocked the
entrance and he was able to gethis dog, get his dog back in
the house, but he was wrestlingwith this bear. On video. They
had Florida Fish and Wildlife come out, So that's pretty amazing. I would
totally do that too. I completelyFlorida man caught a burglar sleeping in his
front yard. When you burgle ahome, aren't you supposed to leave it?

(01:02:37):
After Jackson County, Florida, Floridaman was prompted to call police.
He woke up to the very unusualsign of a Florida man sleeping on his
front yard. And this was likefive thirty in the morning. Deputy's got
a call from the victim saying thathe found a man in the yard.
And when the victim tried to makecontact with the suspect, the suspects started
frantically reaching inside of his vehicle,and the victim had armed himself with a

(01:02:57):
weapon for protection. When deputies arrived, they secured the suspect in the victim's
weapon, But then they saw allthe burglary tools and a mask in plain
view right there in his seat,right there in the car. And they
found also after a simple search ofthe vehicle, a crowbar, a lock
pick, loves masks, knives,bress knuckles, prescription medication not prescribed to
the suspect, and all kinds ofdrug paraphernalia, and of course the purpose.

(01:03:19):
Charles Carter has a lengthy record.He's taken into custody. Lesson right,
fell asleep? How you fall asleepon the job in the burglar stay
with us, third out on theway, Who are colluding? And you're
in the FBI or DHS ring thesewith tech. You're gonna get canned.
You're gonna be shown the door.We're gonna have zero tolerance for that because
it really strikes at the fundamentals ofa free society. I think that,

(01:03:43):
as you said it trial, Ithink good. That's and that's Rond Santas
in one of his remarks just overbecause he's been He's been everywhere, everybody,
all these candidates have and he thenit goes back to Florida and science
bills very busy, but he wassaying, big tech, this is it.
I mean, you're not going tohave the federal government colluding with these
companies to try to suppress people's speech. And as much as the media wants

(01:04:05):
to act like that didn't happen,that's simply not the truth at all.
There are too many people that wereaffected by it for them to be gasolate
into believing that it never happened.What is it? That's my truth,
But it's the truth. Welcome backto the show, top of this third
hour, and good to be withyou this Friday. As we round out
your week and head into this weekend, and Daniel Lash here with you.

(01:04:28):
Make sure you sign up for chapterand verse over at sub Stack. I'll
have a wrap up for the weekbecause it's there was a lot of crazy
stuff that came out over the week, and then well I'll send that out
to you. Always good stuff thatcomes out to that out with sub stack
every day, and if you're notlistening terrestrially or streaming the show, obviously
you can watch the simulcast Channel threeforty seven, direct TV, YouTube,

(01:04:49):
Facebook, all good things. Sowe're all trying to not talk about this
one bit of audio that we haveon the audio list. I know it's
a big story, but I almostlegitimately want to vomit. So because I
did actually have someone say you needto spend more time on the chest feeding

(01:05:11):
thing. I'll vomit. I knowI'm not saying that as like a you
know, I'm not. It's notan entertainment thing. I legitimately will will
puke. I can't deal with it. I have Okay, so let me
tell you this story so you understandmy perspective. It's not that I don't
think it's super important. I legitimatelywill get sick. So I have this

(01:05:31):
tick. I guess you want tocall it that. If I see someone
vomit, if I or if theyeven act like they're going to sometimes or
if they you know, I will. It's I mean, it is just
I can't stop it. I don'teven think about it. It just happens.

(01:05:53):
I'm gonna tell you a horror story. Okay. One time when my
youngest son was a little baby,and he was in his little baby Bjorn
baby carrier, right, and Ihad my oldest son, who was like
three and a half four at thetime. We were at the super walmart,
right. I had to go andget some groceries. I got the

(01:06:14):
youngest one some fries, or theoldest one some fries because he liked,
you know, he'd sit in thecart and he'd eat his fridge or sit
under the cart. When kids didthat, they are they allowed to do
that anymore, I don't know,eat his fries. And I'd go and
I'd get groceries. Well, forwhatever reason, he got sick and threw
up under the cart on himself.And I could not even deal with it.

(01:06:34):
I knew that I had had this. I've been like this since I
was a little kid. And I'msitting there and I'm looking at my youngest
son who threw up some fries onhis shirt, or my oldest son threw
up some fries on his shirt underthe cart, and I just threw up
on the baby that I had waswearing. I threw up on my baby,
all over my baby's head. Itwas horrible. That's like the third
That wasn't the first time that happened. It happened two other times too,

(01:06:55):
like later on in life, andI'd be carrying him and I'd be dealing
with a sick kid and somebody wouldif a dog vomit, I will I
can't handle it. It will happenwithout even me being able to control it.
Now you're like, Dana, whatdoes that have to do with this
story and this mystery audio that youdon't want to play? So the chest
feeding thing. So I had waita listener who sent an email and people

(01:07:20):
event you know, and they wereoutrage, did you see this story?
Blah blah blah, What are theygetting? What kind of noxious excretions are
they is the child getting? Andthat I got to stop there because it's
already happening, and the way thatthey were describing it in the email.
I actually had to grab my officetrash can. It was one of the

(01:07:45):
I was like, Oh, Ijust couldn't. Oh it is so nasty.
I cannot even get there to discussit, you know what I mean?
Yes, your mouth, like youreverything gets fuzzy, and you're just
like why is that? The soundgets quieter in your ears and then the

(01:08:06):
next thing you know, you're throwingup and falling on the floor because it's
so gross or is that just me? It is so nasty. I I
cannot believe that we are having thisconversation in this day and age. It
is I mean, it's one ofthe crazy and the CDC is the CDC
is encouraging literal insanity, like actualcraziness. Dudes cannot breastfeed kids. We're

(01:08:30):
not calling it chess feeding. Dudescannot breastfeed kids. It's the CDC has
been that's and they're using your taxto our tax dollars to do this,
which is the other thing. Itis the craziest thing they were They were
trying to say that whatever males aremaking is also no gosh like milk,

(01:08:53):
oh my ears ring, Give mea second. I'm not joking. I
can't even it's so nasty, guys, I can't. It's so gross.
I know it's like a professional radioshow, but I got my limits.
Okay mm hmm. Oh man,it's so gross. Cane. I'm if
you want to jump in here.My gosh, I just imagine get a

(01:09:18):
little hair in your milk. Oh, my gosh, are you this is
the your dad playd this mic.I don't like hair in my milk.
I'm gonna vomit on it. Stopit. Just saying, oh gody,
why are we? Why are we? We're talking about this because the CDC
it's tax dollars, So it's notmilk. Oh I know it's not.

(01:09:41):
No, it's not just let's nottalk about what it could be. It's
gross, but I just can't.I'm gonna need some in you almost we're
gonna be at that point. Imean, it is your it's your tax
dollars. Let's just talk about theeconomic of it, economics real quick.
The CDC, which is a taxfund identity, they're recommending that dudes jack

(01:10:08):
themselves up with hormones and everything elsechemicals so that they can artificially engineer some
weird liquid to come out of theirjazz. I don't know. To me,
it doesn't feel like this is anything. Actually not to me, this

(01:10:29):
is what it is. This hasnothing to do with the nutrition of an
infant. This has to do withyour satisfaction of having a kid ledge on
you. That's what it is.Let's be real. I mean you,
Oh my gosh, are you okay? Because see if you if you I
kid you not, if you doit, I will ask anybody you ought
to know this? You know this? Oh oh, this is what our

(01:10:57):
tax money's going to dose. Theythe CDC was, they came out with
us then they were encouraging it.What the agents, Yeah, that's what
their thing was. That's that's ourtax dollars. We've done what historical data?
None? Historical data are they goingby? None? Crying out low?
I mean, dudes don't have thatability, that's what I can't.

(01:11:21):
So and moms have been I meanunderstandably hitting back at the CDC for this
because the CDC they were telling peoplewill look at the Academic Academy of Breastfeeding
Medicine protocol and they were trying tobreak down how men who are men biological
men, even though if they wantto cosplay as women, they can you

(01:11:42):
know, have breast augumentation and canchest feed an infant? Barbar No,
they can't. Oh golly, that'sso. No, you can't you're a
freak. Stop it, stop it. That's this is not there's no,

(01:12:04):
you're not. The kid's not gettingany kind of nutritional value from you at
all. This is so ridiculous.This is absolutely abusive. This isn't about
feeding children. This is about youbeing a freak. Get mad, because
I'm much more concerned about the wellbeing of a kid than taking off some
grown ass man it wants to cosplayas a woman to the point where they

(01:12:26):
want to do this, We're notno. And you know the crazy thing
is is that the FDA, likeback in like twenty years ago, we're
telling women not to use this uhuh drug called domb paradone to increase milk

(01:12:48):
production because it was unsafe for kids. But that's what they're giving dudes who
want to identify as women. Whatkind of m I mean you have to
take estrad all, what progesterone,the don paradone, I mean, all
of this stuff to induce some kindof discharge that you want to call actation

(01:13:15):
and you think that's healthy? Areyou kidding me? How was that?
That completely defeats the entire purpose ofwhy women choose your breastfeed. This is
this isn't about the kids. Thisis about dudes who want to identify as
women and who are expanding there.It's a fetish. I'm just amazed at

(01:13:42):
this. And they act like it'sso self sacrificial. I mean, oh
my gosh. So I mean it'syou're using I mean, you're using babies
as as props, is what itis. But it is a fetish and
these guys are they're trying to redefinethey're fetish as an actual, legitimate,
some kind of nutritional practice and it'snot. And we have got to as

(01:14:06):
a society stop accommodating this ridiculousness.It's not this has nothing to do with
health, it has nothing to dowith nutrition. It's costs. It's fetish
costplay, and they're involving kids.And it amazes me. I mean,
we you know, we look backon ancient cultures and we're like, can
you believe that they participated in childsacrifice? That's what's happening today, and

(01:14:28):
that's what people are doing today continuallywith kids, whether it's abortion on to
men or whether it's this kind ofstuff. It is insane. And people
get so upset if you say theobvious, but it is I mean I
think it's it's freakish, and it'sand it's they're fetishizing feeding children and it's
disgusting. I mean, how isthat not criminal? How is it not?

(01:14:55):
Now? See, it's so gross. That's why I really don't want
to to I addressed it. DoI have to play this audio? I'd
be fine if you did not,because this week it's been about cocaine chest
feeding and if we played this,oh no, that's the trifect I'm not
really interested. Just to let youknow. It's it's audio from it's this

(01:15:18):
dude named Charlotte Climber, and Idon't really Oh my gosh, we're gonna
have to do it, aren't we. This is the last This is the
trifecta. It's somewhat news, butthis is the stuff that we're talking.
This was an actual Where was thisat? It was at a Q and

(01:15:38):
A that they were having an academicbased Q and A apparently. I mean,
we also don't forget we also hadthe Lady the Menstruator's thing this week
too. Listen to this. Thisis what we're dealing with. This is
crazy. I hate everything. Right. I have a really good friend here.
Her name is Ali Lingford and sheco wrote a book with at Least
Hope, the former president. Makesthe costume out the history of disinformation and

(01:16:00):
how it's been weaponized by the farright on social issues specifically and reproductive access.
And I've been thinking about this becauseI love this generation. I mean,
gen Z and younger are just theirtheir bettered form. They're smarter,
they're more empathetic, all the things. But every now and then, you
know, I'll see something that reallyconcerns me. And there was a there
was a TikTok video that went viralI think last year of this young man

(01:16:21):
who was under the impression that womendon't actually have a whole king. And
yeah, it's like these are thingsthat are very easily solved by just talking
to your kids and offering some contextor just or just basic sex. Right,
you know, Okay, well whata note to end on. Yeah,

(01:16:42):
and you helped it. I hateeverything. Where's smart? Where's smart?
This is the type of this isyou know, basic biology is contradicts
what you're doing on stage. Andnow all of the news would probably miss
it's time for Dana's quick five.So apparently now bud light is cheaper than

(01:17:05):
water. I always did think waterwas taste here. But they said that
twenty billion dollars Dylan mulvaney disaster,Dylan disaster, some stores reported a fifty
decline in sales. Yeah, theylike bottled water is actually more expensive.
Now then that's pretty amazing. Uh. SpaceX has a three hundred thousand dollars

(01:17:29):
flying car. It does kind oflook cool. It looks like a giant
Adidas though. It has a rangeof two hundred miles, and they said
that they're developed. FA officials aredeveloping policies for electrical vertical takeoff and landing
e VTOL, as well as regulationsat ground infrastructure. But you have to,
apparently to even operate that. TheFAA right now is proposing a rule

(01:17:51):
that if you even want a carthat flies, you have to become a
certified pilot, and that you haveto have a pilot's license to do it.
I think at some point if dowe really need the flying cars?
Though? Really, can you imaginewhat that airspace is going to look like?
I mean, if you've seen peoplewith drones, I mean have you
seen I mean, it's it's Ican't even imagine what that would look like.

(01:18:11):
I don't I don't even want to. I just can't exactly. Cruise
ship smacks into San Francisco's peer Twentyseven thousands of people were on board.
It remains docked. It smashed intothis pier yesterday morning. A spokesperson with
Princess Cruis tells kt VU, theChannel two Fox affiliate out there, that
they were awaiting clearance from the CoastGuard to see if the ship is deemed

(01:18:31):
fit to sail. As of lastnight, there was no departure time frame
confirmed. So apparently, I meaneverybody was okay. They had like thousands
of guests on it. Travelers wereallowed to get off the ship. Most
passengers didn't even know. They hadno idea there's anything wrong. Then nobody
felt anything. They're saying that there'sa new crisis at the border traumatic injuries
caused by falls from the thirty footwall. Maybe if you stop scaling it

(01:18:54):
then you won't fall, there's thethought. So this is the teaser video.
You can't see it obviously, ifyou're listening across the country and the
radio program, which you can listenacross the country radio, you can stream
the show. You can watch thesimulcast of the program as well, Channel
three, forty seven, Direct TV, YouTube, Facebook, and it's there's

(01:19:15):
so much garbage out there. It'slike very difficult, I think, for
especially when we've been discussing all ofthe books and schools and how everything is
just so engineered to be d EIand CRT and historically inaccurate and not fun
either because everything is so preachy andso you're lectured too, and it's boring.

(01:19:35):
My gosh, kids today, Ifeel so bad for you because everything
sucks out woud. It's so horrible, and a lot of it's coming from
like the old fuddy duddies in genX, Like what happened to gen X?
Why is this? Is this boomersstuff? No offense Boomers, but
what is happening here? And soI was pretty stoked when actually sounds really

(01:19:55):
mean. I'm going to say it. A friend of mine who lived in
LA and worked in it worked fora very famous company and when he announced
he was leaving and he was leavingLA behind and he was done with all
of it. I mean, itsounded like he was having an existential crisis
kind of, but he was donewith LA and done with all of it.
And I was so excited because youknow that he was leaving it,
and I knew that there were goingto be greater things on the horizon for

(01:20:16):
him, but he just was sodisillusioned by all the wokery and everything else.
And I think that was he waslike one of the first people out
of the wave of people that wereleaving LA, one of the first creators,
one of the first artists to likefinally say enough is enough and leave.
And so now after this cocoon stage, he's come out with what he's

(01:20:39):
been doing a lot of really coolstuff, but he's come out with a
really good it's like a thirteen seriesgraphic novel for I would say young adults,
really for all ages, and it'scalled Silence Do Good and it's a
really cool concept on Ben Franklin,and it incorporates AI, and it's kind
of matrixy and it has a reallyit's a really good premise because we're really

(01:21:01):
kind of rolling towards this world anywaywhere where everybody's online, everybody lives in
a quasi virtual reality. Now asit is, AI is becoming incredibly prevalent.
A lot of people are gonna beout of jobs. We've seen the
you know, the war robots andthe robot dogs and the fighting robots and
all of this stuff. I mean, my gosh, So now we have

(01:21:23):
we have Ben Franklin ripped from hisown timeline, and I think it's a
really cool concept. And we're goingto talk to my friend Sean Salter about
this. And you can find himat Salty Draws and he is an award
winning winning creator and writer and illustratorand he left the what he calls the
People's Republic of California and he's beenin the business for decades now. Uh,

(01:21:44):
and he joins us now via Skype. You have like the coolest studio
ever. By the way, Ihave to say welcome. It's good to
see you, thank you, thanksfor having me. Of course, I
love the concept on this because youstarted correct me if I'm wrong on this,
because you kind of started, youknow, feeling this out years ago,
really even before AI exploded within thepast, you know, fifteen months
now now companies are like, ohmy gosh, we're trying to catch up

(01:22:06):
to the AI revolution. And that'skind of what this is because it's been
Franklin. I mean, it's ait's a world that's it could be ten
years from now where everything is reallydominated by software and AI and algorithms,
and we all respond to that.It's this artificially constructed world and you have
been Franklin, who is you know, the protagonist and now we're trying to

(01:22:30):
have another revolution, so to speak. Very interesting timing. By the way,
I'm bestial day tell me about this. It's just a really exciting project
that I've been working on for avery long time, kind of on the
side as I work on all theother stuff that you know that I work
on. And really what it whatit is for me is I love American
history and I love I'm a conservative, and I lution not only with what

(01:22:58):
the what the Welke Left is doingit. Even on our side, we're
not really telling stories yet. We'relecturing, we're preaching, we're doing data,
and we're doing logic and reason,which is great. But I'm like,
I want to have fun and there'sa I wanted to hearken back.
What's that? Where's the whimsy?That's what you're Yeah, Like I wanted
to do something like what Jared Tolkien. It's very there's morals there, there's

(01:23:21):
a good story there, there's valuethere, but it's fun and it's a
world you can get lost in.And that's what I'm doing with this and
this is a it's I love obviously, I love the artwork for people who
don't know you did you did?There? Are you did? My logo?
You've done a lot of the alot of the stuff that people are
used to seeing. You've You've donethat talking with our friend Shawn Salt Our
Salty Draws is the website and SilenceDo Good is the the series of graphic

(01:23:45):
novels and it's you have what thirteenthirteen issues that are coming out correct,
Yeah, thirteen issues. It willmake comprise of four volumes. That's awesome.
And so this Ben Franklin, Sotell me about this, because I
mean it's everybody knows. Everybody knowsOld Ben Franklin, Right, everybody knows
Old Ben Franklin, the air bathingBen Franklin, the guy who's like somewhat

(01:24:06):
eccentric, you know, but alsoincredibly wise. He's sort of the temperate
member of the founders. He's theone who kind of, I mean,
you got to have everybody a guyin every group that kind of keeps everyone
back and is the wise counsel.That's sort of how he has always been
in historically, that's how he was. This is young Ben Franklin. This

(01:24:26):
is the Ben Franklin of when hewas writing under Miss Silence, Do Good
because no one at the current wasn'tpublishing his stuff, and so he decided
to be really you know, snottyabout it and send it, you know,
using these these pseudonyms and all ofthis tell me about this though,
because this is young Ben Franklin,He's he's kind of, for the lack
of a better way to put it, he's sort of like a superhero,
but an accessible superhero because his poweris wit and intelligence. Yeah, and

(01:24:50):
it takes place with Ben Franklin beingeighteen years old when he traveled to England
to secure a printing press for histhe newspaper that he was starting, and
he get stuck there for three yearsbecause the mayor of the city that he
lived in kind of renegged on thedeal. So this is saying was he
in England or was he kidnapped andtrapped in a VR program for three years?

(01:25:12):
Because that's sort of we're questioning kindof in this world, we're sort
of questioning. I mean, itis very existential. You're questioning existence,
we're questioning you know, where everyoneis so online and then this world,
everyone is so online, everyone engages, everything is online, everything is AI.
It's all virtual reality. What isreal? What isn't real? And
so through you know, without givingeverything away, like through a loophole,

(01:25:35):
he ends up time traveling yep.And really what it is is it's kind
of questioning what is man's destiny andpurpose in a life that is so virtual?
What is man's supposed to do?What are they suppoed to accomlish?
Because there's always that destiny, there'salways a purpose for each individually human being,
and that kind of might get lostin a world of AI and robots

(01:25:58):
and automation and so kind of floorsthat. But while also I'm attacking the
attacks on masculinity and the feminization ofyoung young boys, that'll that'll be a
story that gets explored as well asseeing really cool stories in American history like
George Washington crossing the Delaware. Ilove that, and I love the celebration
of masculinity as well. Really,I mean, anymore, all you have

(01:26:20):
to do is have a strong malelead, and that's considered toxic anymore,
it's gotten a little ridiculous. Sohow did you draw on Because I know
you're a big fan of history,so when you're creating young Ben Franklin,
I mean everything that we know.I mean, we know that he was,
you know, devote, He hada great work ethic, He was
devoted to his work. We knowthat he was very sarcastic, and he

(01:26:42):
was very witty and very creative.What did you all what did you draw
on or in order to really bringthis character and fully well rounded to life
in the series. I mean reallyjust his writings and biographies about him.
He's such a rich character and there'sso much there and we have so much
to pull from of just what weknow and what we can read from you

(01:27:06):
know, his own journals. It'sreally just pulling from that and then imagining
what that would look like as aneighteen year old before he has all the
knowledge and the wisdom. So we'regonna see it Ben Franklin. That's not
necessarily that astute scholar, but moreof a of an eighteen year old kind
of figuring it out and growing intothat character that we know and he and

(01:27:30):
also because you don't, you don't, I've noticed you don't really make him
anachronistrict throughout the entire series. Imean, he actually fits into if that
makes sense. He's sort of hedoes. He sort of comports to the
time that he is in. Hedoesn't always stay like year old young Ben
Franklin from the days of your likehe becomes like a modern dude. Yeah,

(01:27:50):
And a lot of that has todo with just making it relatable,
because it's about who he is asa character, not necessarily the dressing of
that fancy victor, you know,pretorian type world. Why did you choose
him to as the vehicle for this? He's just I look at him as
the most prolific American founding father.He's a very interesting guy. I figure

(01:28:12):
with a sci fi story, itreally works because he was a scientist.
He was an inventor, and Iwant to explore all that about him,
his inventive side. In the series, he literally invents a turkey robot because
he loves turkeys. As we know, he wanted that to be the national
bird, and so why wouldn't he, through steampunk technology, invent a little

(01:28:32):
turkey robot? Friend? I lovethat. I remember that story. He
wanted the turkey to be can you. I'm so glad it's the Eagle,
But I did love his defense ofthe Turkey. I mean it's kind of
like our Valedictory or our solutatorian birdin a way. I mean it really,
I mean it is so you haveSo this is just to let everybody
know where they can go. Theycan go to Salty Draws and they can

(01:28:53):
check this out. It's It's Silencedo good time travel agent. The one
of the most prolific Founding fathers,and I love I love the concept of
it. It's sort of like,well, let me ask you this too.
Are you going to have are yougonna bring the other are you gonna
have maybe in the future, ishe going to ever be joined by some
of the other founders? Are theyever going to find themselves in a similar
position and have like that? Inthe next issue, he's actually going to

(01:29:15):
be on a boat behind George Washingtonas they crossed the Delaware. There's gonna
be a lot of crossover and ayoung Ben Franklin's going to meet a lot
of people in American history. That'svery sure. What do you hope that
that people take away from this series? What was your goal in doing this.
I honestly, I just wanted tobring some non woke and pro masculine,

(01:29:38):
pro America entertainment that isn't luxury orpreaching. It's just telling because there's
so many good stories in our history, and then there's a story happening now
in our history, and I justwant to bring that to people in a
fun, entertaining way. We're talkingwith Sean Salter Salty Draws is the website
Silence Do Good Time Travel Agent.I love the I love that you're bringing

(01:29:59):
back the whimsical nature of telling storiesbecause that's what ultimately hooks people in and
then you get them with everything else, you get them with the rest of
the content. And I worry aboutkids today. I feel like we had
it because we're gen X. Ifeel like we had it. We just
we lived in the best time ever. We grew up in the best time
because we had just enough technology,Like the Internet was going when I was
in high school. I like wehad email and all that, but we

(01:30:20):
didn't really have like social media andnone of that stuff. And I'm so
glad we didn't have any of that, and we had the best of all
of the world's just enough of everythingright, and now it's I feel like
everything's been ruined. Everything is sosanitized, it's soulless. What is that
going to do to the imagination ofkids? Like, how does that,

(01:30:40):
I note that affects development. I'msure there's psychological arguments for how that affects
development, But as an artist,how does that concern you? Because this
also impacts the future of what youdo and who comes after you. Well,
I've always looked at technology as atool. I think the bigger enemy
of a child's imagination is the modernday professional educator. That is the murderer
of a child's imagination. And Ithink that's the issue that we have to

(01:31:03):
worry about. Like everything's a toolat the end of the day, and
it's how we use it. Andit really is those morals and those values
that we put into children when they'reyoung that actually allow them to have that
imagination. But public education and evenprivate education is murdering children's imaginations. And
where kids learn and grow the mostis at play. And that's really what

(01:31:25):
I'd love to bring back to forkids. It's just like, let's have
let's learn through play, Let's learnthrough fun, not you know, it's
just it's so top down and notworking. I agree with you so much.
I totally agree with you, andwe just we don't allow any time
for that, and everything is just. And also people are afraid to freely

(01:31:45):
be creative. I mean, youknow this is a creator. I mean,
I don't want to tell everybody whereyou worked. I mean that's you
know, but you I mean youworked at it's making headlines. Let's just
say you worked with an entity that'smaking a lot of headlines right now.
Yes, And all of that isif you can be free to express what's
going on in your head in anartistic way. How are you actually I
mean, are you really fully creatingart? Are you really fully engaging?

(01:32:08):
And that has to be incredibly difficult. I mean, Andrew Clayvin says it
best. If you can't live yourtruest self and just be who you are,
your soul dies, A little bitof you, a dies inside.
And that part is the creative part. And that's what Hollywood is doing to
so many creatives is that they haveto fit this little mold, and it's
killing and murdering creativity. And sothat's why films like The New Willy Wonka

(01:32:33):
has no magic. They have allthe special effects and it looks so cool
and then you watch it and you'rejust like you feel dead inside because the
people that are creating it are kindof dead inside. Oh that's a good
way to put it. Yeah,that's why. I mean, everything seems
like fake. Want to be likegreat value, whimsy and fun, and
it's not. It's just so staleand awful. We need more stuff like

(01:32:56):
this, So this is awesome.Salty Draws is the website now. People
can pretty order because you're in themiddle of it's all being created now the
thirteen issue series that you can Peoplecan go see the teaser video. You
can go read see some of thepanels, read learn more about the characters,
see the story. But I highlyencourage everyone to go check it out
because it's such a good concept.Uh, and it's so whimsical and it

(01:33:16):
really I just it's very nostalgic forme to look at a lot of this
stuff because I'm like, this ishow it's supposed to be. Like there's
God love you for being gen X, Sean Salter my good friend. Always
so good to see you, anduh, this is this is cool,
very very cool. Thank you somuch to see you too, of course,
take care of We'll talk again soon. Salty Draws is the website.

(01:33:36):
You can go and check it out, and we have uh a lot.
I mean, it's a it's agreat series and I and it's so not
woke. I just I didn't wantto tell everybody where he worked out,
but he totally, he totally workedin Hollywood, very prolific artist in Hollywood,
and it was killing him to workout there just because they they as
he was saying, any kind ofalluded to, I mean, you you

(01:33:57):
don't have the freedom to be expressiveand creative and everything has to be d
EI and CRT and all this stuff. I am, I can't draw to
save my life. But I honestlyfeel like, I mean, I think
those people are really hurt first andthe worst. I honestly do believe that.
Make sure that you go and signup for the newsletter over at Substack,
chapter and verse. All kinds ofgood stuff that comes out on that

(01:34:18):
regularly. And in the meantime,today's stupid, all right. The National
Defense Authorization Act. The bill givesservice members biggest pay raise in decades,
bands the Pentagon from doling out taxpayerfunded sex reassignment surgeries and the rest.
But Hakeem Jefferies says about it ofthe National Defense Authorization Act is that it

(01:34:39):
is woefully irresponsible that extreme maga Republicanshijacked a bipartisan bill that is essential to
our national security. Oh my god, this guy. Well then why did
they clutter it up with all thisDEI stuff and trans surgeries and everything else?

(01:34:59):
Like, why did you do that? Then? Folks that does it
for us? Tonight, have awonderful weekend. Sign up for the newsletter
over at Substack, Chapter and verse. I'll be back with you on Monday
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