Episode Transcript
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Did I hear that correctly? That'spart of the President's his un address.
He addressed the United Nations today forsome reason, You guys know how
I feel about that. We hadhad a nice little conversation yesterday and I
don't understand how you climate proof theworld. I mean, you're are you
talking about getting rid of the weather, because then that makes you the threat,
(01:57):
not any kind of weather event.Welcome to the show. It's another
day in hell with this administration.I know, Daniel last year with you
Tabatha's first hour. So I I'mnot really going to go over the United
Nations because I don't care. Idon't. I don't give a rats backside.
I would rather jump off my roofand break my legs off to Nubbins
(02:20):
than to spend You couldn't. Youcan't pay me enough to spend any part
of the show that I just didtalking about the U win because I think
it's I think it's a ridiculous organizationof people who like to get together and
pretend that they're doing things and they'renot. And they're on prime real estate,
(02:44):
not valuable that a lands, youknow, valuable that Atlanta is.
It's some valuable land right there.Sometimes I have to drive by it when
I'm in When I stay in manhattI'm always in Midtown, and on my
way to the airport, I endup having to go where the UN is
and I'm just like, my gosh, you know, it's like billions of
(03:04):
dollars. Probably it's like multiple blocks. I don't know why that fascinates me
so much, but it does,all right, So I don't care.
He gave a ridiculous, stupid speechto the UN blah blah blah, and
uh it's it's I know that thepoint or part of his point was he
wants to try to convince people somethingUkraine. I'm also tired of talking about
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Ukraine. It's a land dispute,it is. And let's just say a
whole bunch of unpopular stuff today.One two, it's a land dispute.
Disco sucks, Kale is overrated.What else? What else can we get
into? Huh? What else I'vegot? I've got, I got opinions.
I've got a lot of opinions.So I'm just seeing. I'm just
(03:49):
saying, just you know. So. Oh and then the Russell Brand thing,
we're gonna talk about that because hegot canceled a whole bunch of places
already. So anyway, I gotsome more clips from the Joe Biden's speech
that I'll play if I feel likeit later, because I just don't care,
and I don't think you either.You either, He said, he
did his old man's speech and thentalked about the climate, and that was
(04:11):
That's kind of pretty much it gotit? All right, We're good,
We're good. All right? Canwe move on? Because I just people
are canceling Russell Brand. He gotdemonetized on YouTube and he's being called a
predator, and there's all these accusationsand uh. This like there are women
(04:34):
who said that he's a predator,that he's sexually aggressive. I said yesterday
that he reminds me of a scheezyDudley Moore. Do you guys know who
Dudley Moore is? You know whoDudley Moore is. I don't know what
he was in I just know whohe was. He had the same haircut
that Ronnie Wood does from the RollingStones, didn't he? Yea, so
(04:56):
he did. That's like, whatis with that? That's like the Karen
cut, the John plus eight Johnand Kate plus eight cut for but for
men that's the men's John and Kateplus eight cut. So he had the
Ronnie woodcut from Rolling Stone. He'slike a skeeezy Dudley Moore anyway, That's
kind of his whole persona. Ialways I never really I never really actually
thought he was funny. I justthought he was kind of I don't know.
(05:18):
But that's irrelevant because he's being accused, and all you have to do
is be accused in our social mediaenvironment, and then you're convicted in the
court of public opinion, And asyou know, the court of public opinion
is the jurors in the court ofpublic opinion are the biggest morons in in
the world. They're always the stupidestpeople who are always the most eager and
(05:40):
the quickest to pass judgment. Andso some some have said, you know,
they always knew he was sexual aggressive, and he always said that everything
he had was consentual. I justI just think you kind of know who
he is. And also he mightbe tall, but he's skinny. I'm
pretty sure I could kick his ass. I think I could. I just
(06:00):
take and it wouldn't be like pullhim by, just kick him in the
jimmies and then hit him in theneck. I mean, it's like all
I gotta do. But that's likehis whole persona. So anyway, he
was he was dropped by his managementcompany last night. This like this headline
came in the middle of the night. YouTube demonetized him because he's been accused
of being a predator. But they'rejust allegations. All it is is just
(06:24):
they're only allegations. Nothing so farhas been substantiated by any kind of evidence.
It's like me too, two pointzero all over again. And I
said on social media, I said, you know, very conveniently this happened
after he started to espouse wrong think. Do you know, Kane, You're
going to enjoy this one particularly.So one of the headlines that I saw
(06:46):
this morning said that he knew thatthese accusations were coming, and so he
decided long ago to cultivate to groom, as it were, to cultivate this
whole online squad to fend him whenthese accusations finally came forth. That's the
newest line of attack, m sopremeditated protection. Yeah, that's what they're
(07:09):
saying, got it. I knowthey're they're trying to say that as a
defense for he spoke wrong. Hespoke wrong think. But I mean,
think about it. He you kindof knew he was always skizy. I
mean, he never lied about beingskiezy. Right. They had this video
clip that was making the rounds yesterdayof him on a talk show with Katherine
(07:30):
McPhee. I don't really know whoshe is, and I guess she's like
some singer. Yeah, she wason American Idol. I don't ever watch
that, you know why, becauseI like good television. She was on
a TV show. Actually I hatetelevision and I hate crap programming, so
I never watched that. Got youhate it today, but she did a
separate TV show as well. I'mgood for her an actress, but I
have to say, it's like sheseemed very common, she seemed very sensible
because they were trying to use heras their straw man for all of this.
(07:56):
I'll look how uncomfortable she looked.She was on with him and he
grabbed her and he was going tohave her sit on his lap, and
she was like, you guys aremaking so much out of this. She's
like, it wasn't that at all. I you know, I don't know.
I just it's weird because it's likeeverybody knows you that was his whole
persona. His whole persona was thathe was a man whore. And it
(08:16):
was kind of funny because he wasso skiezy and he just didn't care.
It's not like something you want toemulate. It's just it was just it
almost seemed like a caricature of anaspect of culture, of human culture,
and now it's being put up like, oh my gosh, he's like the
newest Harvey Weinstein, and it feelslike a feeding frenzy. And I do
(08:37):
get the impression that there are alot of people rushing to take a bite
out of him that are doing sobecause they think it's going to translate into
fifteen minutes of fame. Doesn't itseem like that, like he's being he's
having his life canceled based on allegations. And I've told you how I feel
about that. I think particularly,I think if women fall accused a man,
(09:01):
I think they should be dragged tenfold. Oh yeah, I think their
punishment, their penalty should be tenfold. Those are bitches that falsely accused dudes.
And you know what, I actuallyvolunteered to take care of the penalty
for you, like, just putme in a cage with them, because
I'm so tired of this stuff.I think these kinds. I think women
who engage in that false accusation behaviorthey set women back. They actually do
(09:26):
a disservice to women. It's aninsult to female them. But this is
all it's all allegation. It's allallegation, there's nothing. This is sort
of My friend Carol Roth remarked thatthis was kind of like the Chinese social
credit score stuff, that this isthis is what it's like. It's Chinese
social credit score. You just youdon't really need to have any kind of
(09:46):
evidence. You don't really need tobe convicted, you just have to be
accused of any kind of wrongdoing.And I just also think it came makes
this point that if there was somethingthat was really here, why are it's
only all coming out now? NumberOne, it didn't come out during me
too. It didn't come out duringthe Weinstein era when everybody was they were
(10:07):
going after everybody. That seems likethat's the time that that would that you
would have started all of that,and they didn't go to law enforcement.
You go to the court of publicopinion. And instead of going to law
enforcement. I mean, if aguy had done something to me and I
felt like it, you know,it crossed the line and it was legally
actionable, oh my gosh, Iwould have made his life a living hell.
(10:31):
I would have taken it to authorities. I would have gone to a
court of public opinion and try toget media attention for myself. I'm not
saying that every person in this situationis doing it, but I'm telling you
it just seems really weird to methat as soon as he started saying wrong
think, then all of a sudden, these accusations started to fly. I
don't even care if he's your cupof tea or not. I mean,
at one point, I think italmost seems like we're getting to this rubicon
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of every man who is going tobe accused at one point in their life
simply just because they were a man. They're a man, not because they
engaged in any kind of behavior.But it almost seems like at some point
every man will have been accused ofsome impropriety, mostly falsely by women,
just because there are men. Ifeel like we're getting to that point.
Does it feel like we're getting tothat point? This is the military,
(11:16):
the militant matriarchy, That's what thisis. Oh, if he gets out
of line, they're gonna pounce withthis kind of information. I just I
don't know. I also think too, I can I just be real.
I roll my eyes when chicks saythat somebody makes a sexual comment towards them.
I just maybe it's because I'm justa different kind of person. I
(11:39):
am very aggressive and if a dude, and I've been in situations political and
otherwise where you know a guy thoughtthat, even as a grown married woman,
someone thought they would be able tosay something sly to me, I
will literally absolutely turn you into averbal I will verbally eunich you it.
(12:00):
It just doesn't happen. It doesn'thappen like that. I can't remember.
I was at some kind of dinnerat one point and it was I will
say it was like a bipartisan thing. It was like some awards thing,
and I didn't want to go becauseI hate these stupid things. There was
someone at the table who had likemade a comment I can't even remember,
and I before I even said anything, I just ruined the man's life at
the table in front of everybody.I just didn't give a rat's backside.
(12:22):
And I just you know, Andmy husband is more than equipped to handle
things, but he also realizes thatsometimes the meanest person in the room can
be the woman and his kin knows. So I just, I don't know,
maybe I just look at it differentlythan that, like I always look
at it like, uh, youknow, you get to choose the energy
(12:43):
that I have. So how arewe going to act today? Right?
How are we going to act today? That's kind of how I look at
it. We got a lot tohit in addition to this, we have
this ongoing stuff, like I said, with the United nations. We gotta
get we got some stuff in Congress. I wrote this piece last night and
came out with it. It publishedthis morning. It is about It was
(13:05):
a deeper dive into the abortion commentsthat Trump made because it is really it's
blowing up, and I expanded onthis. We're going to talk a little
bit about it because we got toget over these hurdles. This is turning
into a major problem for Republicans.For ten years, Patriot Mobile has been
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now all of the news you wouldprobably miss. It's time for Dana's Quick
five. So a Saint Louis restaurantcalled Social Bar and Grill is stupidly accused
(14:30):
of racism because of their long listof basic rules that include no hoodies,
saggy pants, or sleeveless tank topson men. It's in su Lar,
literally right where I used to livein downtown Saint Louis. They enacted the
new dining rules and dress code earlierthis month, and all these people went
on Reddit to bitch and moan becausethey're total loser betas and they apparently don't
(14:54):
know how to dress when they exittheir house. If you cannot cover your
a double snakes when you go toa restaurant, if you can't wear a
shirt with sleeves, or if youcan't not dress like a basic bitch,
then maybe don't go out to eat, maybe stay at home in your hobbit
hole and shave your back. It'slike their dress codes better than the Senate.
I'm coming back to this right becausethis is it's like, is this
(15:15):
John Futterman? This mad over allof this so stupid, This is so
stupid. Shut up. This iswhy we can't have nice things because of
loser morons. Can you tell thatI've had a day? It's not even
like noon? All right, SoClorox, man, I'm gonna tell you
something. Dana is always prepared,always prepared. I went and I literally
(15:37):
was going to take a picture ofwhat was in my prepper pantry and then
pat myself on the back. ButI thought it was, you know,
maybe obnoxiously bragging. Clorox says thatlast month's cyber attack is disrupting their production.
As a result, the company Ididn't even know they had one.
The company is scaling back their orderprocessing, so fewer products are actually making
their way onto store shelves, sothey're not going to have a lot of
(15:58):
Clorox. And again, Danda doesn'thave that problem. I have like a
whole Clorox sexione my prob I do. So they said they ended there that
that cyber attack on August fourteenth,but they said their systems were breached and
there were all kinds of problems,and so that's uh, that's uh.
I still I don't have to worryabout that. You ask. The national
(16:19):
debt hits thirty three trillion dollars forthe first time in history. Meanwhile,
you have the moderate Republicans in theHouse that are trying to push for a
cr while the fiscally responsible Republicans inthe House are saying, no, we're
tired of kicking the can down theroade. We need to solve this issue
and we need people who are seriousabout solving it with us. So it's
(16:40):
a dangerous new milestone. Thirty threetrillion dollars. And this is what we
owe our creditors thirty three oh sorry, thirty three point oh four trillion.
It's growing. I mean, itwas hovering around nine hundred and seven billion
just forty years ago. And nowwhere I will say that the pandemic,
(17:00):
you know, and stupidly shutting downthe most powerful economy in the world,
contributed to that. But here weare also I am really into this,
I'm really into this. Headline twothousand rhinos free two good homes that have
space. Dude, right, Imean, I know they're kind of jerks
(17:21):
sometimes, but I mean, sowho isn't I heard of two hundred thousand
or sorry, I heard of twothousand right now. Services urgently in need
of a new owner. They foundone. They've they've been in a farm
in South Africa. They were purchasedby a conservation group. They're they're planning
to release them into the wild.It's the southern white rhino that's the largest
population of their kind. They wereput up for auction in April, starting
(17:41):
price at ten million. Nobody cameforward. Then they're like, okay,
we'll give them out. I wouldhave totally taken a rhino. I don't
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(19:14):
If you're looking for the number oneafternoon host in the country, you
found her. Download the podcast everyday to catch out the Danish show simply
put the twenty first century. Twentyfirst century results are badly needed. Who
needed to move us along? Thatstarts with the United Nations starts right what
(19:41):
man? What he just said isthe verbal equivalent of how John Futterman dresses.
Welcome back to the show, Daniellast year with you bottom of this
first hour, and make sure youstream. You can stream the radio program.
You can listen to the radio programterrestrially, and you can also stream
the radio show on a station youryou. You can watch the simulcast channel
(20:03):
three forty seven, Direct TV,YouTube, Facebook. We had a play.
I told her I had some clips, So he didn't really say anything
substantial. I don't think, rightnot. I don't think he like said
anything great at this and his speech, but I really don't know what the
point of his speech was, ifI'm being honest, Like, for instance,
(20:26):
can can I just touch audio subitenineteen? I don't. I don't
even know what this was? Whatis this? What? These do not
have their potential stifled a systemic discriminationat the lgbt QI plus people are not
prosecuted or targeted with violence because ofwho they are. These rights are part
(20:51):
of our shared humanity. They're absent. When they're absent anywhere, their loss
is felt everywhere. Kamala wrote that, didn't she When they're absent everywhere,
their loss is felt everywhere that they'reabsent because they're absence. So there's the
loss of them is there because they'reabsent. It's like you're trying to get
(21:17):
a get a paper done and meetthe word count same energy. I don't
even know what that. I don'tknow what that was, y'all don't even
know, don't even know. Buthe's there at the United Nations. And
then a bunch of other people Idon't care about covering are going to be
there at the United Nations as well. Nobody cares. That's where all those
world leaders get together and they pretendthat the tyrants that they are on security
(21:40):
councils, et cetera with aren't actualtyrants. Hmmm, all right, I
gotta touch on. I gotta comeback to this and We're bouncing all over
between some of the politics and alsobetween some of the culture, because I
can't stay talking about you know,the the I can't stay talking to the
(22:00):
President and the United Nations this awhole entire time. So I wanted to
real quick. I wanted to hitthis piece that I came out with this
morning. It's over a substack.It's what Trump gets wrong about the abortion
stuff, right, the abortion limitationlaw. And I we said that we
talked a little bit about this yesterdaybecause you know, he did this Meet
(22:22):
the Press interview and he was askedthis question that he didn't answer very well.
He was asked, you know,if if Democrats, you know,
or if Congress gave you got toyour desk a bill that would limit abortion
at fifteen weeks, would you signit? And he would went all over
the place, and he was like, I don't know, I don't know.
And then he went to to Sanctus, I mean, and he was
(22:45):
mad about that and said that hethought it was In fact, his direct
quote was that it was a theheartbeat bill. There quote. I think
what he did is a terrible thingand a terrible mistake. So here's the
thing in order. I think forthe pro life movement to be victorious,
they have to be free to restrictor to ban abortion as birth control.
(23:08):
I mean, we're there right now. You have twenty four states that have
moved to ban or restrict or areon the path to do so. Now,
obviously that was only obtained post Row. That was the Dabs versus Jackson
Women's Health case, and the Dabbscase undid the Row argument that a woman's
(23:29):
private decision to have an abortion wasenshrined somewhere in the constitution. Now,
the justification that the pro abortion groupshas used for a while, that's like
shape shifted throughout the years, andit's always kind of come back to this
right to privacy argument, which iscompletely illogical, and not even Ruth Bader
Ginsburg agreed with it. She thoughtit was wrongly determined and that it was
(23:52):
just a shoddy a judicial move.Now that the states have re assume the
authority on abortion restrictions, I thinkis a greater measure of victory towards protecting
life than the fifteen week bands thatyou see proposed by these empty headed politicians
who are unaware that a fifteen weeknational band would likely override the six states
(24:17):
that have already passed six week bands. Now, this all presumes that you
would even get a fifteen week bandpassed in Congress. So do people actually
think that Democrats would compromise on afifteen week band but yet still then allow
states by themselves to further restrict orabolish the practice. I mean, so
(24:38):
you would have Republican lawmakers then withoutthat guarantee, they would actually walk back
state victories from six weeks to fifteenweeks, because that, I promise you
will happen. So I understand thearguments that people make where they say that
settling on the fifteen week restrictions forabortion as birth control, like just going
(25:00):
defaulting too, that is, asa refuge from any kind of debate,
is a coward's compromise on life.And I think that that they make a
good point there, because you eitherbelieve in the sanctity of life or you
don't. I also understand, though, the argument made from the Pro Life
League legals, because they argue thatthe fourteenth Amendment specifically states all persons born
(25:22):
or naturalized in the United States.Thus, any sort of sweeping national effort
that you would if you would undertakeany kind of national effort to modify the
Amendment with wording you would have tohave it do so to recognize the unborn
life as the unborn life of anAmerican citizen, you would have to modify
(25:45):
the language to include that recognition.Now I don't I don't disagree with their
claim on the language in the fourteenthAmendment. But here's my question and concern.
How would amending the Fourteenth Amendment workwith today's Democrats? How would that
turn out for conservatives? Two thirdsof Congress, ratification of three fourths of
(26:08):
state legislatures? Or does anyone actuallytrust Democrats with a constitutional convention, you
know, the likes of which hasn'tbeen held since the Founders called one in
seventeen eighty seven, you know,where the convention could literally write its own
rules and very likely not just potentially, but very likely be influenced by special
(26:33):
interests. That people think that callinga constitutional convention is safer today or somehow
more easily managed than the current legislativeprocess that we now know. That absolutely
bewilders me because I do not possessthe suspension of disbelief that is required to
buy into that argument. I don't. Now, I will say states are
(26:56):
currently on track to do more inthe name of life than any lawmaker could
ever hope to deliver nationally, whichbrings us to that Meet the Press interview.
So he's asked whether or not.Trump was asked whether or not he'd
sign a fifteen week ban on abortionof Congress passed it. Now. Of
course he was asked this because Democratswant to use abortion as this get out
the vote tactic, just like theydid with twenty twenty two, and a
(27:18):
lot of Republican candidates are terrified toanswer this question because they know it's a
trap and they are hesitant to makethemselves some sort of poster child for Democrats
scare tactics. I get it,But there are multiple ways to answer this,
and Trump should have known better anddone better, and he did not.
He went rhetorically searching for some kindof deflection and then it came off
as unprepared and week. Now,three ways you could answer this. First
(27:44):
one you could say, well,if you mean lawmakers elected by the people,
if they delivered to me a billrestricting abortion as birth control after fifteen
weeks, the time period on whichthe majority of Americans Democrats and Republicans have
found consensus after years of polling.Well, then yes, Now, as
discussed, I don't necessarily think thatthat's the best path. I think it's
(28:04):
I think it's maybe better than justoutright blasting fetal heartbeat bills. Could He
could have also said, well,if lawmakers elected by the people to represent
their interests delivered to me a billthat includes the freedom for states to determine
their own restrictions are outright abolition thenyes. Here's the problem. Though,
when you start doing well, we'lldo a fifteen week nationally and then states
(28:27):
are free to do more, you'rerisking making the debate on limitations look like
a petty numbers game. Okay,so fifteen weeks, why not fourteen thirteen
too? You know, I meanyou have to realize how that potentially pits
momentum against pro life abolitionists. Nowhe could have said, quote, no,
(28:48):
because I support the right of statesto go further with their restrictions,
such as a six week band,than Congress would ever allow. Now that's
the best answer. But Trump can'tsay that. He can't say that because
it would indavertently give credit to DeSantis. So he didn't want to do that.
No governor from any state that's passedany of these limitations has said that
(29:11):
their way is the pathway for anykind of national approach. Everybody has indicated
that what works specifically in their statedoesn't necessarily translate nationally. Trump didn't speak
to that, though he specifically calledthe Florida Heartbeat built terrible again quote,
I think what he de Santist didis terrible and it's a terrible mistake.
He's trying to play to independence duringher primary, which is stupid. It's
(29:33):
way too early for that. Idon't know who's telling him to do that.
He didn't do this that early lasttime in twenty sixteen. Pro choice
voters are never going to back himeither, I mean, because they're just
never will. They'll always go witha Democrat. Pro life voters will feel
betrayed and don't think for a secondthat Independence are somehow too disillusioned to see,
or that they're not disillusioned and theydon't see that. He looks like
(29:55):
he's switching it up to grab forvotes, and a lot of people like
me are questioning his political acumen indoing this. I mean, why weaponize
yourself for the left to use youagainst pro life opponents. I mean,
this is the guy who was inoffice when Row was undone. I mean,
this is part of his legacy.Do you know how many politicians would
(30:15):
give a limb to define their legacy? Was something so historical, But he's
like sprinting away from it to runto the left of the Republican platform.
I mean, I know that personallyhe's never been very pro life, but
he's always been motivated by positive affirmation. So the accolades that he received from
(30:38):
the community that he lip serviced onthese pro life issues, it made the
arrangement work, and it did alot for pro life. But now he
said he would compromise with the dealthat makes everybody happy. Verbade him.
Quote, I would sit down withboth sides, I negotiate something. We'll
end up with peace on the issuefor the first time in fifty two years.
Just let me tell you what Ido. I'm going to come together
with all groups and we're going tohave something that's acceptable. End quote.
(31:02):
Except that's not how abortion politics work. I mean, is he banking on
support of his candidacy outweighing support forwhat many voters view as a wedge issue.
Or life issues, not being adriver in primary politics. Now we
(31:25):
have this issue. Catch the Danishshow noon to three pm Eastern on Direct
TV Channel three forty seven, LikeSands through the Alley Glance, So are
the days of the United States?Yes. Marjorie Taylor Green said that Senate
no longer enforcing a dress code forcenters is to appease Fetterman. Is disgraceful.
(31:47):
Dressco is one of society's standards.That's at etiquette and respect for institutions.
Stop lowering the bar. What doyou say to that? Well,
you know her platform, you know, really she runs on more and more
dingling, you know, picks,you know, on uh in the meeting,
the meetings over in the Congress.So again, I'm not really sure
(32:09):
why she cares how I dress,but you know, she really takes it
a different way. I need toknow why he has that hair on his
lip? What is up with that? Maybe if I have this stash,
(32:30):
they won't know that I dressed likea slob. He couldn't get into that
social bar there and c Lard andSaint Louis. He couldn't get in there
now he because yeah, he dressis like a slob. So he says
her platform runs on just hits verbatim. Kane, correct me if this is
wrong, all right, that MarjorieTaylor Green's platform runs on more and more
(32:51):
dingling in the meetings. Yeah,that's pretty much what he said. He
is it like a new rare Earthelement dingling picks? What is it?
Dingling pick? No, but it'sprobably not something we should be talking about.
I feel like he talks a lotabout dingling for a guy with that
kind of gustache, talks an awfullot about it. Just show I'm saying
(33:14):
what you all are thinking. Stopit. I'm the one who says it.
You know it's true, though,you know it right. I don't
know what I don't know what ishappening here, you know, if something
else can? I just be real. I got a question, what kind
of why for you to let yourhusband go out looking like right? Men
(33:39):
do not like to close shop.Therefore, most of dudes, or if
they do, it's very limited.They want to go into the store and
they want to purchase the thing thatthey have in their mind or the thing
that they saw, and they wantto get out. Therefore, it falls
upon the woman to make sure thathe is dressed properly and not walking out
(34:01):
in a wrinkled shirt that looks likehe stole it from a garage and cargo
shorts. I mean that's a Croc'soutfit. Okay, that's what that is.
You know, I'm right. Imean, he's you, especially if
(34:21):
he's going to the Senate. Man, you know what I'm talking about.
Ever, I hear you all.The butterfly effect just happened. I felt
a breeze because everybody was not intheir heads in agreement. You know that
I'm correct on this. It is. I mean, there's no way.
There's times where I've told my husband, you're not You're not walking on a
house looking like that. I'm not. We're not doing that. It's not
We're gonna switch it up, orI'll trick him into going and getting close.
(34:45):
I trick him all the time.Well now I can't because he knows
all my tricks now. But Ihave to trick him into going and getting
because he hates it. He hatesit. He's like the shorts guy,
and and he'll wear jeans and bootsif it gets below fifty degrees. But
he's like the guy who can wearshorts when it's you know, sixty and
(35:07):
chili outside. I can't live likethat. But you guys don't want to
talk about why is he? Imean, why are you don't know?
Care about your man? Make surethat he dresses nice when he goes out.
I mean, my goodness, Comeon and make sure your car's running
top shape? Done? He makesure he looks nice when he leaves the
house. Come on, you knowit's a given take here. I'm no,
(35:30):
it's not ignorant. Women should enjoythis job. I just I don't
know, but that mustache, man, I'd shave that off his lip and
asleep and then I'd feel like,I don't know, maybe he rubbed it
off while you were sleeping. Idon't know what happened. It just is
not on your lip anymore. AndKevin's because it's weird looking, all right?
(35:51):
We got we have more in storedhere on the way the big old
budget fight House Republicans. Oh they'restill at it because we're at twelve days
now. When government shuts down,I really hope it shuts down. I
hope they bring back the barricades andput barricades in front of the parks and
all that again. Sorry, guys, the trees are closed today. We're
gonna get into all of that.We have cancel culture, we have law
(36:12):
and order immigration. I don't knowif you've guys seen some of the video
on the latest numbers. Who boy, thousands of people. Bill Mulugon says,
in the past twenty four hours,over eight thousand illegal immigrants entered.
That doesn't get that doesn't include theguataways. We're going to talk about that
in more next stay with us.I can tell you that early this morning
an Eagle Pass, we witnessed oneof the largest mass illegal crossings we have
(36:36):
ever seen in the last two anda half years of covering our southern border.
We'll get right to this video.Take a look at this stunning footage.
Border patrol sources telling us just aftermidnight about two thousand, five hundred
migrants crossed illegally into Eagle Pass.You can see this lengthy line of them
stretching from shore to shore in theriver. This video perspective coming from the
(36:58):
Mexican side of the river and passnegress. One of our contacts over there
shooting this video as they essentially bumrushed Eagle passed last night and this happened
right next to the port of entrywhere the Biden administration is telling people to
cross legally. They don't care they'recrossing illegally because they're a little to no
fear of consequences. Take a lookat this second perspective, this second a
(37:21):
concert. I mean, look howit's secure that border is Kane, Look
at that secure border. If you'rewatching the simulcast, Jane's got the video
up there. I mean, thousandsof people coming right through the secure border,
thousands of them. That's in onenight, one night, Welcome back
to the program. Top of thesecond hour, Daniel lash with You can
(37:43):
listen coast to coast aerial shot thereif you're watching the simulcast, which you
can see in channel three forty sevendrug TV YouTube. Always good discussion in
their Facebook as well. That wasthe next morning they were lining them up
and grouping them up and putting themon busses. The Biden administration wants to
keep them in Texas as a wayto punish exis. And that's just at
Eagle Pass. That's just one ofthe many hotspots. In fact, some
(38:10):
of the numbers that I see thatthey have been I think what in the
last twenty four hours. This isCustoms and Border Patrol. And on the
simulcast bill Malugia, they had adrone out, I guess said, a
drawn out. They get footage ofall these people and trains, train cars,
all this stuff coming over. Theysaid that per Customs and Border Patrol,
(38:36):
in the last twenty four hours,border Patrol apprehended over eight thousand illegal
immigrants crossing in the last twenty fourhours. Now, wait when you combine
that with all the CBP ports ofentry, there were a staggering nine thousand,
(38:58):
seven hundred encounters across the border inone day. I'm gonna say it
again, nine thousand, seven hundredplus. Over that actually illegal immigrant encounters
across the border in one single day. It is the second highest day on
(39:22):
record. The highest day on record, according to Customs and Border Patrol was
ten thousand plus. That was inMay, right before Title forty two ended.
Well, I mean it sounds likethe the situation of the borders all
handled there. It's uh sounds likeit's a secure king. Nothing to see
(39:50):
there, just you know, noworries. It's all secure. If we're
to believe Alejandro Mayorkasa. Well,Kane, he is in government. I
mean, like why would he lie? You know, he's just like realizing
stuff. It's never gonna get old. I mean, that's that's an insane
(40:12):
amount of of people. Oh mygosh, that's insane. That's I mean,
in one day ninety nine thousand,over nine thousand and seven hundred.
I have you ever seen that.I started talking about that Italian island.
The uh this was in Lampa,Dusa. It's a small island off the
(40:36):
coast of Italy, and you know, not a very big island. It's
beautiful, you know, very verypretty. And this island it's it's right
in between it's in Italy, butit's right in between like Malta and Tunisia.
So uh, it's it's like southof it's like south of Sicily,
(40:59):
but it's like underneath Malta. Soit's right smack in the middle between North
Africa and Sicily, right, andthen Malta is like right between Sicily and
then this island, Lampadusa. Sothis is even crazier. So this island,
this I think I was looking attheir Okay, so six thousand residents.
(41:22):
Okay, so this small island hassix thousand residents in three days,
literally three days they had they countedover ten thousand illegal aliens that arrived on
the shores of that island in threedays. It's intentional. They said that
(41:49):
one day, seven thousand arrived inone day. Ninety nine percent of them
are young men. If you arefleeing conflict, if you are fleeing famine
(42:13):
and you are seeking asylum, doyou leave your family behind? I mean,
do you leave? If you're aman, do you leave your wife
and children behind? If anything,what we've seen throughout history is that when
there is legitimate war and famine,the people who flee are always the women
(42:36):
and children, and then the menstay behind in either fight or you know,
try to you know, get thingssituated something. It's always the way.
I mean when you look at Iremember in the I guess what,
late eighties, early nineties, andthis is about the time that that net
GEO cover came out that one Afghangirl, she had the piercing ice blue
(43:01):
eyes. She's Pashtun, Pashtun innorthern northern Afghanistan, and they were talking
about how they were fleeing different tribalfighting, fighting, and there was this
I remember watching this documentary on thepeople who were fleeing the tribal in fighting,
and they went into this refugee area, thousands of people and they were
(43:27):
all women and children, Like allof them were women and children. The
only men that were there were likethe men who were dispatched by neighboring countries
to help with the crisis, theflood of refugees coming across the borders.
That was it like all of themen were either fighting or they were trying
to like dealing with livestyle or something, trying to just basically, you know,
(43:50):
keep whatever the family had, youknow, to make money and try
to you know, save or savesome of it, to preserve it something.
But it was long story short,it was all women and children.
And that's where he that that onenet geo cover. That's where that guy
found that photographer found. She wasthe Afrighian girl. Was like in the
is in the nineties, like lateeighties, early nineties, and that cover
came out. My biology teacher actuallyhad it pinned, had it taped on
(44:14):
the chalkboard because it was such amean it was. She had ice blue
eyes, she was passion. Shewas in a refugee camp and all of
the people in that camp were womenand children. When you look at the
people who are claiming asylum, likein Lamp Lamp you doosa ten thousand,
they're all men. I mean,there's a video of it. They had
(44:37):
video of ten of like thousands ofmilitary age men. They're all young men.
There's not a woman in sight,and they're showing up on the shores
of the small island. So GeorgiaMaloney, who is the Italian Prime Minister,
everyone's been asking, well, whatis the response that Italy's have because
(44:58):
she's they called her far right,she's basically kind of you know, conservative,
She's wanting to set up a navalblockade. That's what it looks like
they might do is set up anaval blockade. They said. Since January
one hundred and twenty five thousand migrantshave invaded Italy. Illegal aliens have invaded
Italy with only one they said,only a thousand. Moving on to other
(45:20):
EU states, the European Union hasthis policy of just oh, if they
come, you have to take them. But the countries that are bearing the
burden are Italy. Italy is gettinghit Greece, I will say also,
but specifically Italy. And so here'sthe funny thing. So they're demanding.
(45:40):
The EU is demanding, you know, oh, you have to accept these
people that come in. Italy's bearingthe brunt of it. So the EU,
after Malonni and other lawmakers and Italyhave been complaining that, you was
like, okay, well we'll we'lltry to get other people, other countries
to accept them. But the FrenchInterior minister said France wasn't going to take
any of them. They said,no, France isn't gonna take any of
(46:01):
them because they're the EU invoked whatthey call they are voluntary voluntary solidarity mechanism.
They said, you have to immediatelylook at asylum applications. France said,
no, Germany's still taking them.They had suspended it, but now
they're taking them again. So they'veand it increases. So in the past
(46:25):
couple of years, it's doubled everyyear, the number of these illegal aliens
that are coming in. It's doubledevery year. So it was like,
you know, around you know,twenty five thousand one year, and then
it doubles to like fifteen. Nowit's like I think they said, since
like right now, it's been overone hundred and twenty six thousand, and
(46:45):
since June of last year, onlyeleven hundred of them have been relocated from
Italy to other EU countries, Imean, and most of them are coming
from Guinea, the Ivory Coast,Synegal and some others. And they said
that a lot of them and themajority of them are not eligible for asylum
in Europe. This is insane.I mean, there has to be a
(47:10):
serious self loathing in one's country todisregard one's borders and one's sovereign responsibility to
its citizens. And that's what itis. It's and it comes from within.
You're like, you're you're attacked,and it's like they people try to
emotionally blackmail you if you don't justaccept whatever lawlessness happens over the border.
That's the thing. No one hasever been a post to immigration. I
(47:34):
don't think anyone in any country hasbeen. But what everybody uniquely is on
the same page and opposing are peoplecoming into the country illegally. You don't
know who's coming in your country,you don't know where they come from.
You really don't even know how manypeople they're bringing in with them. And
especially when you look at these bordertowns and that these border towns are not
equipped to handle the influx, tohandle the numbers, and now you have
(47:57):
the administration telling them that that theyhave to stay in Texas, that Texas,
like Italy is doing, has tobear the brunt of this. Sweden
actually, after they started having alot of terrorist problems, they started refusing
the relocation of a lot of peoplewho have been immigrating illegally to these EU
nations. Angela Merkel never learned alesson, and I don't think Germany did
(48:22):
either. It's actually very dangerous andparts of Germany it's not like the way
that it used to be. Iwas talking to actually, I was talking
some of my friends. I havea friend that lives in Belgium and they
travel all over like that's their bigthing. Like every summer and during the
time between Christmas and New Year's that'swhat they do. They travel everywhere.
And they're like, it's you can'ttravel in and around Germany like you used
(48:45):
to. It's not the same.You can't travel in and around France like
you used to. It's not thesame. Especially if you're a woman,
it's very different because you have alot of younger men. They're very aggressive.
That's I mean, I've I've seenthat. I mean, if you
look at a lot of the travelguides also, will you know indicate this
(49:05):
too. In certain parts of thecountry. Sweden, they had like a
bombing problem. I mean they hadlike terrors. It's crazy. And then
they finally realized, Okay, wellwe gotta shut our doors here, we
gotta we can't be doing this.You're getting men. These are this has
nothing to do with big or treeor anything else. You have to stop
at some point and say, whyis it all young men? Specifically no
(49:28):
old men there. If you lookat any of the videos, any of
the photos, any of the images, and not just from coming across you
know, the southern border here inthe United States, but in Italy as
well, not a single person isan old dude. And there's there is
not a single female or child inthe group. This is surrender. And
(49:51):
I mean it is not wrong tosay it looks like an invasion. That's
what it looks like. It's crazy. And meanwhile, in the meantime,
crime is skyrocketing. This is aproblem with Western culture. We're going to
talk more about this and now allof the news you would probably miss it's
(50:13):
time for Dana's Quick five. SoMatt Gates is expected to run for Florida
governor. I don't think I win. That's a whole other subject. A
missing F thirty five fighter jet wasfound crashed in Williamsburg County, South Carolina.
Remember that was the big, giant, multi million dollars stealth jet that
(50:36):
we just straight up lost and wehad no idea what happened. The pilot
ejected and I don't know what.I don't know what. But officials found
the debris from it after the pilotejected it. And then of course US
officials are ordered a two day safetystand down for all United States Marine Corps
aviation. That's kind of normal,although this whole thing is very unusual,
(50:57):
considering it was a multimillion dollars stealthjet that was lost. But to have
a safety stand down after mishaps,that's kind of that's pretty normal. There
was a lot of speculation over that. But this jet, they said it
was they, I mean they theydon't know what caused the crash. They
have no idea. The guy ejected, I don't know, I don't know.
(51:21):
If it was short on food.Nobody knows. Nobody it's so weird.
But anyway, just you know,there there's the latest with that.
It's just thought. Elon Musk isflirting with the idea of charging everyone for
Twitter, like a lower tier underpremium. He's revisiting this idea too.
He said, it's to have everyonepay to use Twitter. He says,
it's like the only way to takecare of the bought problem. Although also,
(51:45):
you know, just verifying people Ithink would be a lot easier than
just making everybody pay for it,you know what I mean, it seems
like that would be the thing that'syou know, I don't know that that
would be the easiest thing to do. I think there's you know, I'm
full of solutions. There's an evenbigger housing crisis threatening China's economy. I
mean, every what doesn't threaten China'seconomy. Mostly it's the communists that threatened
(52:07):
their economy. We have a lotmore in store. Keep it right here
to catch up on all the headlinesin Crazy Wolkerrie, download the Dana Show
podcast and get Dana's perspective on TheDana Show. Under the new President of
the World Bank, change is alreadytaking room. Last month, I asked
the United States Congress for additional fundsto expand world bank financing by twenty five
(52:31):
billion dollars and the G twenty werallied the major economies of the world to
mobilize even more funding. Collectively,we can deliver a transformational boost to world
bank lending. Why why would wewant to? Why would we want to
(52:53):
do that? That's Joe Biden atthe UN. I didn't understand what the
holly was staying at first. Actuallystill I don't think I do. What
was he saying? It's like he'sjust it's like he's eating Quarry cereal from
SNL. Welcome back, Daniel lashwith you bottom of the second hour.
(53:14):
Why would we want it? Whyhe just gets for what is it even
for? Is it Ukraine stuff?I'm pretending to care. It's more it's
more of the United States doing stuffthe United States shouldn't be doing. It
came ac like you were going tosay something, well, yeah, yeah,
I mean the world is abandoning thepetro dollar as we speak, and
(53:36):
we're just like, okay, world, let's give you some of our dollars.
Then it makes no sense to me. I'm I'm pretty petty about stuff
like that. Like, oh,you don't you want to get away from
the petro dollar, then maybe youwant to use some of the uh wand
to finance your stuff with Ukraine.Then that's kind of how I look at
(53:59):
it. Oh you don't want hourdollars, then maybe you should go and
use some of your EU money togo and finance all the stuff that you
want financed. And that's how youwant to do it. That's just me
though, you know, you maythink differently, but that's kind of how
I look at it. Oh,guess who they just charged. Guess who
they charged today. His name rhymeswith shmey PEPs. You remember that guy
(54:27):
fed boy? Yeah, sidebar theFed Boys. It's like in sync,
but they're old dudes and they're andthey're led by Ray Epps, right oh
oh oh, just saying so theyhe's gonna to me. I don't know,
(54:50):
I like Lorraine was saying that,Oh, you know what a great
way to make it seem like you'renot a fed boy then by giving somebody
this one little misdemeanor charge. Ohhe's not a fed boy away because you
got this little, tiny little misdemeanorcharge. It was disorderly or disruptive conduct
on restricted grounds. One little bitsybaby post, little baby baby charge,
(55:16):
little bitty little bitty charge. It'sit didn't a dude get like six years
for not being there? How dareyou not be here at this riot?
You get charged? Everybody gets charges, everyone's charged. IM just saying so
it does seem like it's Shenanigans.It does. So he's charged with well,
(55:43):
they say rioting, but it's reallydisorderly disruptive conduct on restricted grounds.
One misdemeanor count. I mean he'sliterally on video going go go go.
And isn't he suing everybody for what? Is he suing for? Defamation?
Yeah? Fox news talker, Yeah, I mean, dude, he's like
(56:07):
legit, he's he apparently said,oh I thought I could calm the crowds.
It's really weird to calm the crowdsby like getting them going, yeah,
like going whoa. I mean,it's just I've never seen anybody try
to calm the crowds by rilling themup like that. But maybe it's like
screwing for chastity. I don't know. Maybe it's like that kind of approach
fighting fire with fire. Just it'sa great way to get more fire,
(56:30):
so they he's that's it. Hegets one little charge. Hmm, I
think that. I agree. Ithink it's so that they can shut up
all of the seems like a FEDboy remarks, doesn't it. I mean,
dude, he looks like a FED. Can I just be real?
(56:50):
I haven't really talked a lot aboutit because I think it's all Victorian freak
show sham, but that dude straightup looks like a FED. If you
were playing Where's the Fed allah wearsWaldo, he'd be the first dude I
pick out that guy right there?That's him, right, yeah, Where's
the Fed Boy? But I dothink sidebar, I do think that would
(57:13):
be a very good can uh likea It would be a nineties tribute band
of actual FED boys that are oldlike this, and they would do like
nineties boy band hits, just thecovers. Oh oh oh like that it
is not? Yeah, and onmy list? Can you imagine how awkward
the choreography would be the right stuff? Right? So he gets one misdemeanor.
(57:44):
One he was I mean he wasthere with a battle bag and everything.
Man, I've seen the videos.I watched the videos. How was
it that dudes who weren't even there, get charged and get like seven years
and this guy gets a little misdemeanorcharge and he was there. I don't
know, it's just weird, justsaying, you know, the worst thing
that's ever happened Kane in history,worst terror attack ever. Yeah, where
(58:07):
it's like, I mean, thenPearl Harbor, I mean, you know,
crazy, oh man, So he'scharged, he's going to enter a
plea agreement. He said that theconspiracy theories about him ruined his life.
Wait, you mean hold up thatpeople speculating that he looks like a fed
(58:30):
boy and is on camera like rilingpeople up. That them speculating about him
doing those things riled that that ruinedhis life. Not him doing things that
ruined his life, but people talkingabout it about what he was doing ruined
his life. Am I understanding thatcorrectly? Oh? Oh? Do I
(58:52):
understand that? And he just getsa disorderly conduct charge. That's it,
that's all. It is, disorderlyor disruptive conduct on restricted grounds. Well,
I mean, he's the images arepretty I mean there's tons of videos.
Yeah, he filed a defamation suitagainst Fox News Tucker Carlson because they
(59:19):
you know, because Tucker was like, it looks kind of sauce bro because
it does. I'm just saying,don't assume me for stating the obvious.
You litigious. I was gonna,I don't know if I could say that
word on air. All right,So a couple of other things here,
Yeah, so's he's charged. Wewere talking about the U situation with immigration,
(59:42):
and I need to segue into ourlaw and order because we've had we've
been talking about crime, we've beentalking about gosh, one of the other
him, I pulled this up.Forgive me for a minute. I've got
a lot of kind I got toomany things here. I got too many
things that I'm working with the Chicagomayor. You got this in your prep
(01:00:04):
Brandon Johnson, the Democrat mayor.Right, He wants to create city run
grocery stores to promote equitable access tofood because see Walmart and Whole Foods they
close because of crime. You know, Whole Foods, the bougie food store
where it's like five thousand dollars fora young coconut, which is like the
best coconuts make meringue with. He'ssaying that they need they need to promote
(01:00:30):
equitable access to food. Well,who's impeding the equitable access to food?
Pray tell mister mayor, who isit that is impeding the equitable access to
food? Is it the repeat violentoffenders who may rape or mug people if
they try to access food, oris it the food stores that are like,
(01:00:54):
well, no one's coming because theydon't want to get raped and mugged.
So we gotta go. Who isit, mister Mayor, that is
impeding the access to equitable access tofood? And that situation, so he
says that he has to they wantto target the food deserts. Sounds like
(01:01:15):
some Sam set up for a SamKennison joke. He says that the new
moves are quote to help repair pastimesthat have contributed to purposeful disinvestment and in
exclusion and lack of food access inhistorically undeserved communities. They so he acts
(01:01:38):
like Whole Foods was sitting around going, you know what, we don't want
minorities in Chicago to be able toget food. Let's close the store.
I'm not kidding you. That's howthey act, like this decision came about
we don't want minorities in Chicago beingable to purchase food. Closed the stores,
(01:02:00):
closed the doors. Yes, that'sa sound business decision, because when
he talks about repairing past harms,it's a little difficult to repair past harms
when you keep perpetuating existing harms.You know what I mean, Like it's
the same repeat offenders that are causingall the crimes. That's what I mean.
(01:02:22):
And as Kane noted, we talkedabout this adjustin Trudeau yesterday. They
don't want to blame their own policies. They want to blame the grocery stores.
No, it's not the mayor's faultfor not wanting to go after misdemeanors
and for wrist slapping these criminals.It's you rat bastard grocery stores for being
racists. Wait a minute, theyno one's coming to shop there because they're
(01:02:43):
all getting raped and killed and mugged. Yes, but you're a racist.
You should still open and keep yourdoors open. What I mean? He
goes, He actually said this,He goes, quote, all Chicagoans deserve
to live near convenient, affordable,healthy grocery options. You know what would
be great is if this mayor actuallybelieve that all Chicagoans deserved not to get
(01:03:07):
raped and robbed and mugged and beaten, and also could go to grocery stores
without being raped or mugged or robbedor beaten. It would be great if
he that was actually a priority forhim, but it's not. He's like,
forget about the raping and the beatenand the ribbing and the mugging.
The grocery stores though, like theyneed to be. It's racist for you
(01:03:30):
to leave and not provide access tofood. Well, some might argue that
it's racist for you to keep allowingChicagoans to be raped and mugged and beaten
and robbed because you refuse to enforcethe law and you encourage restorative justice.
That is coddling these criminals who thriveon the indulgence of the policies that your
(01:03:50):
citizens pay with their asses. That'swhat this is. And instead it's everyone
else's problem. Let's see, wehave a we have a rampant crime.
What could be causing it? Certainlynot our policies. Must be the grocery
stores. It's their fault. Damnwhole foods. I knew they were plague
(01:04:14):
upon the earth. I knew it. I mean, my I can't believe
I'm defending them, but my biggestcomplaint were the hippies. But you never
had to worry about anything, youknow. With the hippies, they just
smelled like patuli. That was it, right, that was it, you
know. And they would have hempgrocery bags that like shed like a jute
rug. I mean, that's it. I don't know, he says that
(01:04:43):
they I mean they're really wanting toThey think that the state should should dive
into this and actually like help makethis happen. They want state and federal
tax dollars for this initiative. OrI mean, it's crazy. You could
enforce laws and get the criminals offthe streets because that's why everybody's leaving.
(01:05:10):
And then you got I mean inWashington, DC, it's so bad.
We told you before that people don'teven want to walk out in the day.
Then you want to walk outside duringthe days. It's horrific, the
crime, I have to tell you. So over the weekend, we had
family weekend at my kids college andwe went out to eat. There was
(01:05:32):
a table city next to us andthey were from New Mexico. Now what
were you all talking about last week? But New Mexico and the governor and
Albuquerque one of the people the tablewas saying that the crime and Alibuquerque was
so bad they left, they movedout of the town. She was saying
that she used to be able towalk her dog, and that because it
(01:05:55):
sounded like she was an older woman, and she was an older woman,
sounds like she was an empty nusther. And she used to say that
she was. She would go outand she used to walk her dog and
all this stuff. And now sheand she got so scared because there was
so much crime. And she saidit was just like, you know,
people would you know, the copswould be called and they would arrest people
and they would have to release them, I mean, and then they just
stopped enforcing a lot of stuff becausethey were told not to go after misdemeanors.
(01:06:18):
And she said, it's got sobad she sold her house and moved.
Interesting, is it not. It'shis laugh mission to make bad decisions.
It's time for Florida Man. Soa Florida man. According to Fox
Study five, Orlando hid in aMcDonald's trash compactor after he fled a traffic
(01:06:44):
stop. According to deputies, Floridaman was found hiding in this trash compactor.
Danilo Melendez Junior was arrested after onseveral charges including possession of drugs blah
blah blah blah, wa meth,meth, meth, meth drug, meth
equipment, meth resisting erasma. Uh. They stopped him in the middle of
the night on Saturday, and hewas riding a bike that didn't have lights
(01:07:05):
of reflectors, and he was towinga homemade wagon. The story gets better
and better, and they said hegot he got agitated after they can you
is it still pulling someone over ifthey're on a unlit bicycle with a homemade
wagon. Just Uh, he totallytested. They tested the stuff that he
had and of course it had methall over it. Right before they were
(01:07:26):
going to handcuff him, he ranaway and he tried to hide in a
nearby trash compactor at McDonald's or asmy grandmother would say, MacDonald's. And
uh, that's yeah, they totallygot him. They didn't. He did
not get away. He didn't getaway. On that one, a Florida
man set fire to a car thatbelonged to an ex girlfriend who also happened
to be his cousin, say police, Melvin Centron is his name is the
(01:07:54):
man's name. Uh, he's hegot in trouble. Uh this they said
that it was he. There wasa ring doorbell camera that caught him.
He was apparently pouring liquid on thecar and it was gas and then he
ignited it. So officers came out. They found a four door Jaguar heavily
(01:08:14):
damaged by fire. Upon arrival,the car sustained have a damage obviously.
Blah blah blah. Let's get tothe good stuff. Police determined that the
victim is a relative of Centron.He kept saying it was his ex and
actually it was his cousin and theywere dating and they're weird. So there
you go. That's they just gotbetter and better. Oh my goodness.
(01:08:38):
That story also, but wait,there's more. I've been waiting to get
to this one. This has todo with sharks, says in Pensacola,
and the headline says, look atthem freaking teeth. Pensacola beach goers rescue
a shark that was washed ashore andit did have a crazy teeth. I
have to say, it looks prettycrazy. The people, Gosh, your
(01:09:02):
pop up ads make me hate yourproduct. I just gotta say. The
people, they saved it. Itwas a beached mako shark. It began
flapping all of that. They won. Rescuer tugged the shark's tail fin to
get them mako back into the waterand then was swimming away. But as
it they said, it was clearlysick or injured. And uh. One
(01:09:24):
of the women in the video,her name is Tina Fey, but not
that Tina Fey, and she kickon. Look at them teeth. It
did have crazy teeth. It's ashark. What do you think? Stay
with us now, really ask mehave foll our institutions and drive creative new
partnerships. Let me be clear,certain principles are in the national system.
Are saca SACKI sect they're sinkie sacked, that's what they are. M I
(01:09:50):
don't even know what he said.What was that? That was biden?
Okay, So he started off bymumbling and then he was like, let
me be clear, that's not howthat works. You and I think Lorraine
speaks of this language. Yeah,it's uh she okay, she thinks that.
(01:10:11):
He says. Now, even aswe evolve our institutions and try to
create new partnerships, let me beclear, certain principles of our international system
or SACROSANCT. Can we hear thatat just beginning again, because that seems
like a lot. That's a sceneI really ask you involve our institutions and
drive creative new partnerships. Let mebe clear, certain principles are in the
(01:10:35):
national system area SACRISANCT. Okay,he didn't. He skipped over a lot
of words. Certain principles are notSACI SANCD and drying to create into partnerships.
Let me be clear. I don'tknow what that is. I can't
understand what he says. It's kindof important because he's the leader of the
(01:10:57):
free world and he's at the UNit's kind of important that he be articulate.
Welcome to the show, Dan,I'll lash with you. You can
listen across the country. You canwatch the simulcast on YouTube, Facebook channel
three forty seven Direct TV as well. I kind of like the SACKI sanct
though that's my favorite Sank sacked whateverthat's I'm gonna go with that. It's
(01:11:23):
a it's a verbal typo, andit stays. He's just one giant verbal
typo. All right, So we'vebeen hitting a lot of stuff. Can
we one thing that we haven't touchedon since you know, everybody's in New
York for the United Nations, andVladimir's Alinsky is in New York. Okay,
he's visiting wounded Ukrainian soldiers at NewYork City Hospital ahead of the General
(01:11:45):
Assembly. Why are Ukrainian soldiers atStanton Island University Hospital? Did you see
that? Why are they there there? They're receiving treatment. Some are in
wheelchairs, others have prosthetic limbs.He toured the facility. They said eighteen
(01:12:11):
Ukrainian soldiers are receiving treatment at themedical center and have been since March.
Who, yeah, who is painfor it? They said that the executive
director of the hospital says that it'stheir privilege to help anyway they can.
(01:12:31):
These soldiers want to get back toserving their country. The Zelinski gave awards
to the hospital staff. I'm reallyconfused with us about this. Who's who
is pain for that? I Idon't know. Yeah, is there a
room with for with all the COVID? I mean, who knows? But
(01:12:56):
isn't it it's kind of weird thatthey are in a New York hospital right,
eighteen of them. I'm just Idon't. They're in They're in the
rehability they're homed in rehabilitation medicine,and I just are we bringing them back
(01:13:24):
to the United States? Are webringing Ukrainian soldiers back to the United States?
I'm curious. I think that's aquestion worth asking. They're receiving care
there, but I mean, Idon't know if Ukraine is actually paying for
it, because they have to keepasking for money so far. That's the
(01:13:45):
question that everybody's been asking. YourPost first reported it, and I mean
they just were very matter of factabout it. I just don't know.
Why wouldn't they be in a hospitalin Odessa or something. I mean,
I just think that's isn't that kindof a if you're if you're going to
the hospital for treatment, that's kindof a long haul to come all the
way to the United States. Zelenskitoward the facility, etcetera, etcetera.
(01:14:09):
Right now. PJ Media noted thatABC posted a story from March thirtieth which
said that a US based nonprofit wasgiving some prosthetic limbs to Ukrainian soldiers and
it's called kind Deeds. They helpedeleven and they said that they were being
treated at a Staten Island University Hospital. But that was back in March and
(01:14:31):
that was eleven. It's now Septemberand there's eighteen that's a long time to
stay. I just got a lotof questions, if only we had Kane
this entity right, like like ifit was a job where people could go
(01:14:53):
and ask questions, Yeah, investigateit, that's right, and then right
about the answers that they got,right about their findings, and maybe like
publish it right for people to read. I think we're onto something here that
sounds like a need that needs tobe filled. But you know, how
(01:15:15):
do you if well we had somethingthat did that certainly not getting met right
now, You're right, yeah,I mean, if only just really I'm
just curious about that. Instead,it looks like I mean they're getting to
mean they're I don't know, betweenthat and then all of the situations with
(01:15:36):
the illegal immigrants that are going inNew York and then Eric Adams, you
know, apoplectic over it, askingwhy in the world, like whereas they
need more money, they need moremoney, They're gonna they have to they
they they got to be able toto to deal with they said. In
fact, Eric Adams said, thesoaring cost of the crisis is going to
hurt low income New Yorkers. Screwyou low income Texans, though, what
(01:16:00):
do you think that they've had todeal with? He said that New York
City agencies may have to slash upto fifteen percent from their budgets. They've
already spent two billion, They're goingto spend five billion dollars more. Wow,
welcome to Welcome to what Texas andother border states have been dealing with
for forever. I bet you guyswanted to be a sanctuary city, so
(01:16:24):
provide the sanctuary. You can't bea sanctuary city and all but just name
only. That's not how that works. So one of the other things we've
been following is this Russell Brand story. His management terminated ties following sexual assault
allegations, and there were rape allegationsmade against him. He's denied it,
(01:16:49):
but he's already been suspended. Likethe way that YouTube put it, it
doesn't sound like it's temporary, right, correct me if I'm wrong on this.
It doesn't sound like he was justtemporarily demonetized. It sounds like he
was permanently demonetized. He had ashort video that he put on rumbles saying
everything everything was consensual. When hewas younger, I think everybody kind of
(01:17:15):
knew he was sort of like askeeezy Dudley, more like very aggressive.
And it's now when he stops beingpromiscuous and he apparently now doesn't, you
know, drink exorbitantly and do allthese drugs, and he's married and settled
down and he has kids. Nowit seems like just very interestingly that now
they're coming for him after he startedtalking about wrong think so he had,
(01:17:39):
he's now his main channel is nowdemonetized. His management company dropped him.
There were a couple of other thingsthat happened as well. Yeah, they
terminated all ties following the accusations.The management agency, Tavistock Wood said that
they believed they were horribly led byhim. What a ridiculous comment. They
(01:18:03):
said that he categorically and vehemently deniedthe allegation in twenty twenty, but we
now believe we were horribly misled byhim. They've terminated all professional ties now.
Four women accused him of raper sexualassault, a fifth accused him of
flashing her. They allegations were publishedSaturday. He's denied it. One of
(01:18:26):
the women says he groomed her andraped her when she was sixteen. She
said that she went to the literaryagent at Tavistock Wood in twenty twenty with
allegations. The Metro Police there inthe UK said they were aware of it.
They said they haven't written. Theysaid that they were aware of the
media reporting, but they haven't receivedany reports and they said apparently nobody made
(01:18:49):
contact with them to report it.But if you, I mean, so
you you come out and you accusea guy of rape, but you don't
actually go through the process of,you know, actually filing a police report.
And Kane's right, it is afascistic. It's a phascistic tactic to
cut off your your pay and toto hurt your career without any substantial anything,
(01:19:13):
you know, that substantiates it.I to me, it seems like
they went after him because he startedtalking about the vaccine and some other stuff
that they didn't like, and sothey decided that, you know, you
can't have a redemptive arc for thischaracter, so they decided to go after
him. I think it's lane thatall of it, it's it's a bunch
of accusations. And there are abunch of people now that are so eager
(01:19:35):
to take a bite out of himbecause they think that that's going to give
them fifteen minutes of fame if theydo so. I just it's very difficult
to take it seriously when people rushto the press and before they do anything
with law enforcement. I mean,if it's that, if it's bad enough
where you have to accuse this guyand ruin his life publicly, then it's
bad enough for you to go topolice and file police report and and produce,
(01:19:57):
you know, the evidence and gothrough the process. I mean,
and and if it there was where'sthis that let me pull this up?
There was a student, we pullthis up. This is a law I
had a law and order thing.There was one students, a former Yale
student. In twenty eighteen, hewas accused of rape and he was acquitted.
(01:20:23):
Apparently the accusation was not truthful.Oh shock, the thirty year old
he was, he's a former Yalestudent. He was acquitted in twenty eighteen.
He was kicked out of Yale.She falsely accused him. Now he
can sue his accuser for defamation overstatements that she made that's what a Connecticut
Supreme court ruled. The thirty yearold now has a one hundred and ten
(01:20:46):
million dollar defamation suit pending against Yalethat's been pending since twenty nineteen. He's
been fighting to bring his accuser intothe suit. The Supreme Court of Connecticut
granted his request June. The courtruled that the accuser should not receive qualified
immunity from her school testimony that sheaccused him of falsely accused him of raping
(01:21:09):
her to Halloween party in twenty fifteen, and they I think he absolutely should
be able to go after her.I think that her life should be ruined
just as she tried to ruin his. I mean, that's and in some
respects she she I mean, well, she violated him. He's been victimized
(01:21:31):
by this woman who falsely accused him. She violated him in a horrific fashion,
and he's had to been He's beendealing with the fallout of this since
twenty fifteen. I really do believethat the penalty should be double, if
not triply, applied to people whomake false accusations. If you're falsely accused,
(01:21:56):
your accuser should be doubly or triplypenalized in terms of sentencing, jail
time finds everything. I think ithas to be so terrifyingly punitive so as
(01:22:17):
to prevent other false accusations, becausethis stuff spreads like wildfire. It's like
the New Salem witch trial. That'swhat it's like. It's like the New
Salem witch trial. There. Imean, everybody's just gonna get in on
it, and they're all gonna beaccusing all I'm gonna be pointing fingers.
Oh my gosh, here we go, burn the witch. Here we go,
go after Russell Brand, Burn thewitch. That's what this is.
(01:22:40):
And now all of the news youwould probably miss. It's time for Dana's
Quick five. I love this,super serious headlines. Sore throat and then
congestion. Common covid symptoms follow apattern now doctor's day, like the common
cold. It's a cold. It'sa cold, that's what it is.
(01:23:01):
They say've gotten milder and it's shiftedover time to mostly affect the upper respiratory
track. Today. Golly, butit's a cold. It's cold symptoms.
That's what they're describing. Because that'sreally well, ultimately what it is.
So US autoworkers are threatening to ampup their historic strike strike if wage offers
do not improve. The latest thisis after we talked yesterday about UAW.
(01:23:26):
Their chief had warned that this isthis historic strike the top three that it
could get worse if the wage offersin ongoing negotiations are not raised. They
said the twenty one percent. TheStilantis that offered its workers what it called
a highly competitive wage of increase oftwenty one percent over four years, but
the UAW president said that's definitely ano go. They're wanting a lot more.
(01:23:49):
All three companies have been offering abouttwenty percent, UAW once forty percent
over the next four year contract.And a lot of it is because is
what evs are supposed to be expensiveto make. Apparently, hundreds of flying
taxis to be made in Ohio homewith their white feathers. It's a right
where they pioneered human flight. They'regoing to manufacture cutting edge vertical takeoff and
(01:24:12):
landing aircraft. This is this electricvertical takeoff and landing or e VTOL aircraft.
They say that around the world they'reentering main strain. There's a lot
of questions told about noise levels,charging demands. Are you going to fly
something that needs to be charged canso you neither? Can we stop with
(01:24:33):
everything electric, that's like having screensand social media access on everything like refrigerators
and all that stuff. Just stopit, just stop. We're going too
much. It's too much. Theoh boy, here we go, New
York Cities one thousand dollars. TrashCan of Tomorrow is ready for its debut.
It looks so stupid futuristic trash cansone thousand dollars each. These things
(01:24:57):
have been designed by Group Project LightweightPlastic. Im I mean I would have
been able to make I can't believethese things are a thousand dollars New York
Citi's invitation tweeted out and stead obsessedlike a millennial. They're a thousand dollars.
You can get it at like acontainers store for like forty dollars.
So stupid, stick with us morein store. Between Twitter, Facebook or
any of your social media. There'sa lot of information out there. That's
(01:25:19):
why your lovable cremmudgeon is here tohelp you make sense of it all live
or on demand. That danas show. Well, look, I would say,
I mean I think that if youlook at what's happened with DC Republicans.
(01:25:41):
They worked very closely. You know, look, Donald Trump, he
supported Kevin McCarthy very strongly for speaker. I don't think he would have won
the speaker vote. Donald Trump wasinstrumental in him earning that speaker's gabble.
And they worked hand in glove reallythroughout his whole presidency. They were on
the same team on every major spendingbill that came down the pike, and
(01:26:03):
they ended up together adding seven pointeight trillion dollars to our national debt.
Never in a four year period hasthat much been added than what they did
together. And so he said thatwe're different. We are different because in
Florida we run budget surpluses. We'vepaid down almost twenty five percent of our
state's debt just since I've been governor, all the debt all the way up
(01:26:27):
for all of Florida's history, we'veknocked off almost twenty five percent of it.
So it's a much different approach towhere we're doing it right. We
have the number one rated economy inthe country, we've got taxes, we've
expanded school choice, and we've deliveredin a way that has made the states
sustainable. So that is Florida GovernorRon de Santis pushing back against Kevin maccarthur,
(01:26:48):
who went out He said over theweekend, he went in to Santis
and said that we are different.Welcome back to the program, Danie lash
Bottom of this Third Hour. Theyare different. And it felt like McCarthy
and I, you know, I'vecalled balls and strives with him. You
guys know, I'm not in thisto make friends. That felt like a
(01:27:09):
weird mode of attack for McCarthy tomake. And I wrote about this.
I was trying to think. Idon't think. It was a piece that
I sent out Sunday evening and Imentioned the McCarthy uh comment. He said
that descantist was wrong to support thosein Congress who wanted to shut down,
(01:27:30):
and he said that, you know, they're very He was saying that,
you know, he's not the hehad said. Oh, I served in
Congress with Descantis. I know,I remember when they were in Congress at
the same time. Because Ron Descantiswas one of the founders of the Tea
Party House Freedom Caucus, and youwould not have gotten Donald Trump without the
(01:27:53):
Tea Party. And Descantis was oneof the founders of the Tea Party,
House Freedom Calls at the exact sametime that Kevin McCarthy wrote a book with
Paul Ryan and Eric Cantor called YoungGuns. They called themselves the Young Guns,
and they the subhead was a newgeneration of conservative leaders. That is
(01:28:16):
the book that Kevin McCarthy was writingat the exact same time that DeSantis was
founding the Tea Party House Freedom Caucus, and the House Freedom Caucus was pretty
much opposed to every single big spendingPaul Ryan plan that came out. There
(01:28:38):
was a lot of a lot ofpushback on a lot of those and created
a lot of tension in the Houseamongst more constitutionally minded limited government conservatives and
more moderate Republicans like the gentleman onthe cover of that book. Now,
Kevin McCarthy has been working very hardto rewrite his history on this. The
Pepperidge Farm Remembers, No, it'swe remember this. I remember this book.
(01:29:02):
In fact, I think Eric Cantorpitched it to my radio program Why
did it come on? And Iwas like, you know who I am?
Right, I helped found the TeaParty two point zero, right,
Like we kicked it off in SaintLouis, Like in the very early days
of the early months of two thousandand nine. Y'all remember this, right,
I'm like, you really, come, I'll talk about this. I
(01:29:23):
don't know, so I just youknow that at the exact Yeah, they
definitely are not the same. McCarthy'sright, they are not the same.
It's just a weird, a weird. That was a bad, I think
choice for McCarthy to make to pickat that. Now he is going to
have a problem on his hands withwhat's going on in the House, and
(01:29:44):
I you know, I don't Ithink he needs to focus a little bit
less on some of and being atool for primary in fighting, and I
think he needs to focus on makingsure that the conservatives in the House,
that his Republicans hold the line,because there I mean that, I don't
know if you've seen it. Themedia is really pushing the I mean,
they're already all in on the headlinesthat oh my gosh, here it is.
(01:30:08):
It's the it's these these House Republicansthat are House goop and open warfare
over doomed spending plan. That's politicothe Hill. House Goop pulls key vote
on stopgap bill amongst conservative opposition,chaos and acrimonious House Republicans pull bill to
keep government running quote multiple games afoot. Politico tries to save it with this
(01:30:32):
piece, which you know probably camefrom his team. McCarthy gets tough with
the right. They're acting like,oh, he's you know, he's he's
getting tough. He's but at thesame time they're making excuses for him.
Boxed in by conservatives as shutdown looms, et cetera. CNN tensions flare and
side house goop as moderates explore newplan to avoid shutdown. And it is
true the moderates are looking at acontinuing resolution Byron Donalds is one of those
(01:30:55):
who's pushing it, which kind ofsurprised me a bit. He and Matt
Gates, who I find to bemoderate on some things, have been in
opposition over this. Marjorie Taylor Greenopposes the stopgap measure because we're so done.
Taxpayers are so done consistently funding billionsto Ukraine, billions here, entitlement
spending here, not doing anything atthe border, not providing any kind of
(01:31:16):
security or relief from border towns orborder states, and expecting those taxpayers to
foot the bill. Unconstitutionally, ifyou want to talk about overwriting and commandeering
state sovereignty against tenth Amendment to makethem carry out federal decrees and programs.
I mean, it seems it's completelyunderstandable that there are a lot of constitutionalists
(01:31:38):
that don't want to continue funding that, and that's what going along to get
along is what the cr is.And so there are a considerable number of
conservatives that oppose it, and rightlyso. And this shouldn't be any different.
You wanted the House speakership job,you got the House speakership job.
Now you got to make the Housespeakership job work. And the media definitely
wants to make it seem like itis absolute chaos, and it might be.
(01:32:02):
They definitely it might be. It'snot as chaotic as what Democrats have
created at the border, but itmight be, oh, open warfare,
and it has everybody facing off everybody. I mean, they talk about the
centrist against the Conservatives and the moremoderate Republicans and oh my gosh, all
these Republicans and the Conservative Freedom Caucus, they're torching the plan and this is
(01:32:30):
going to be problematic for him.It's going to be even more problematic because
the Senate will blame any kind ofrefusal to pass it or to even move
it to debate, they'll they'll blameit all on McCarthy. The problem is
going to be you know, it'sagain, it's the poison pill that the
press puts on order of Democrats intothe narrative with this. If Democrats did
(01:32:54):
not politicize it, with the entitlementspending, so much of this would not
be an issue. It wouldn't benow if McCarthy has to rely on Democrats
to get any of this past toavoid a shut down. There are a
lot of conservatives saying that they willoust him, and I want to caution
them. If you're going to ousthim, you're gonna go with the King,
(01:33:15):
you best not miss. If you'regonna go and oust the speaker,
you better dan will have a replacementready to go. I am so tired
of this, Even from House membersthat I like, even from you know
lawmakers who you know make it thatI support. There's always a lot of
big talk from them, but there'snever any kind of follow up, Like,
(01:33:36):
if you're going to say that heneeds to be replaced, then you
better have agreement from someone to replacehim, somebody who can get the votes
somebody who's going to be able todo it. There have been chip Roys
that he didn't want it. Idon't think Thomas Massey wants it. And
to be frank, I don't thinkthat some of these more centrist Republicans would
vote for either of them. Theywouldn't vote Marjorie Taylor Green. They're gonna
(01:34:02):
have to vote for somebody who Ithink has the seniority, meaning has the
established relationships of working with these people, but probably isn't too far to the
left and too far to the right. Probably someone who's moderate. But I
don't know if they have anybody.You can't throw stuff like that out because
see, the people are tired ofhearing it. We're just tired of hearing
(01:34:24):
that is a threat all the time, over and over again. So I
don't know. I mean they're saying, oh, it's a revolt. They
have no plan to keep the governmentopen without risking you know, the House
Speakership, et cetera. McCarthy's tryingto resuscitate this plan that Byron Donalds is
getting a lot of flak four AndI think Byron Donalds has his own I
think he's got his own reasons fordoing this. Oh, you don't talk
(01:34:46):
too much about it because this pressperson may lose his mind. But I
think he's got his his own reasons. There's there's a lot of there's there's
a lot of intrigue, a lotof palace intrigue happening here. But looking
at just some of this stuff,like I said, this, pulled this
up, this latest. This isfrom Washington. It was new or posting
(01:35:06):
a Washington Examiner. There was aprocedural vote on this stop gap that this
was on the bill that we're justtalking about, that they had brokered.
They're trying to they're mulling over somechanges to it. So they delayed this
procedural vote on the cr so thatthey could try to get more conservatives online
(01:35:28):
with passing it. But I don'tI don't think it's going to happen.
They said they're going to the Defenseappropriations first and they're gonna try to they're
gonna try to remedy some of it. I'm gonna tell you you're not going
to get any of it passed.If you're going to be funding abortion on
demand, taxpayer funded abortion is birthcontrol on demand. If you're gonna be
funding trans surgeries, all this stuff, It's not going to happen. You're
and I then let the damn thingshut down. Tired of it. You
(01:35:54):
know, if we had a budget, we wouldn't keep doing this over and
over again. What did we tellyou the last what'd we tell you the
last time? What do we saylast year? We're gonna have another CR.
It's going to happen right or rightas the midterm, right as the
general gets going. Here we areThey said that the people want to reach
consensus. They have different ideas.It's a CR. CR steams for continuing
(01:36:15):
resolution, so it's thirty one daysand it includes border security minus C Verify,
some other security provisions, spending cuts. They want to keep Defense and
Veterans Affairs spending at fiscal twenty threelevels. They want to slash some other
domestic agency funding by eight percent.And the build that they have hammered out
does not include funding for Ukraine.But what they're fighting over is some of
(01:36:35):
the stuff with Defense and Veterans affairsbecause nobody wants to fund taxpayer funded abortion
on Demanda's birth control. They wantto have completely eliminated any kind of opportunity
for taxpayer funded genital mutilation surgery.They want more spending for the border,
and they think there should be morespending cuts. I think there should be
a hell of a lot more spendingcuts. You definitely get a big boost
(01:36:56):
at the border. Why does ithave to be minus C verify. I
mean, there's a lot of questionshere. So that's something that some of
the Conservatives. They want the spending. They said they wanted to see other
strict border security measures for their supportfor in order to get their support for
the cr So, I mean theysaid that the provisions in the measure as
is now are not enough. They'renot wrong, they are not enough.
(01:37:19):
I mean, it's just it's it'sit's basically just a little bit to say
that you've done something. It's justa band aid if that that's all it
is. So I get it.They don't. They don't. What's the
point. So, and then theylose that battle. Then they'll be told,
oh, well, you've got borderfunding in the last one, even
if it was just like a pittancethat doesn't really accomplish anything. You got
(01:37:42):
border funding in the last one.We're not going to have that debate again,
That's what they'll be told. Sothere's there's real reason for them to
be fighting against this right now.So we'll see McCarthy wanted the job.
Maybe he should focus on this alittle bit more and stay out of the
inner party fighting because you know,it doesn't sound too much. You're not
young guns anymore. Catch the Danishshow noon to three pm Eastern on direct
(01:38:08):
TV channel three forty seven. Youknow, like there's adult saying like history
is written by by the victors.It's like, well, yes, but
not if your enemies are still alivehave a lot of time on their hands
to edit Wikipedia history. History iswritten by the people who can harness the
most editors. Yeah, I mean, you know, the the losers go
(01:38:31):
to God, a lot of timeon their hands, and you know what
do they do? Edit Wikipedia?Literally, that's what they do. He's
not wrong. That's Elon Musk withBenny Mannett and Yahoo there. He's absolutely
right. That's exactly what they do. They they that's why Wikipedia is garbage.
It's not even admissible in a courtof law. It's so factually challenged.
(01:38:56):
And you have these people that Ithink just sit in their basement,
you know, these these basement rolls, and that's all they do is they
edit Wikipedia. And he's right,like there are like stories. The stories
are legend of people tangoing with Wikipediaeditors that are glorified home auditors. Men.
They really just like they It's likea were these people on Loved in
(01:39:21):
Life where they bullied as kids,because there they really wear it like as
like a badge of authorita. Youknow they are they are Wikipedia editors.
They fight over everything. I can'tI've said this before, but I will
never forget because there's so many thingson my page that are not even accurate.
It's ridiculous. And my publisher hadto fight to even get my to
(01:39:45):
get the inclusion of my third bookon that page because they kept saying,
no, we don't like this sourcethat she we don't believe that she's the
third book coming out. We don'tlike this source. And they made it
to where you had to have basicallyhave three separate liberal sources. And then
they came back and said, no, they can't be owned by the same
company. They have to be ownedby different people. And I had you
know, it was a big publisher. It was ridiculous. It was so
(01:40:09):
crazy they I mean, they hadto fight with them on everything. Like
they had. There was at onepoint they had my birth month wrong,
they had where I went to schoolwrong. There was a whole bunch of
stuff. They at one point hadthat I was born in DeSoto, Missouri,
because apparently when I grew up,there was a girl that had my
(01:40:30):
exact same name who was around myage living in DeSoto, and they literally
would not clarify that that was notme. It was a whole different person
who played different sports and everything.They literally would not actually like change that.
So there for like years they evenhad like my birth city wrong.
It was like, that's how stupidthese people are. It's so stupid.
(01:40:53):
So I just it's I. Sohe's right, histories written by victors,
yes, he says, but notif your enemies are alive and they have
a lot of time on their handsto edit Wikipedia. He is exactly correct
on that. That's whenever I seethe donate to Wikipedia, I'm like,
eat feces. It's not gonna happen. Go pound sand Wikipedia garbage, all
(01:41:15):
right. Make sure you sign upfor sub Stack, Chapter and Verse.
The newsletter a lot of stuff thatcomes out and subscribers get extra stuff,
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stupidity came all right, it isour Vice President, Kamala Harris. She's
talking for I guess this is theFight for our Freedoms event, and she's
talking about how the administration is allabout equity. Listen to what she says
(01:41:40):
here. Ours is an administration thatis always focused on equity. Oh,
are all people having the same experienceand if not, in particular what they
are entitled to, such as theright to clean water, the light,
the right to clean air, thenlet's address that. So environmental justice is
a phrase that we use to talkabout that we want to make sure that
(01:42:00):
there is equality and justice for allpeople. Good Lord, I don't want
the same experience as everybody else.I mean I want to have equity.
You have to actually implement. Youhave to tear others down in or discrimination.
Yeah. Thank you guys too foryour prayers for Rocco. He may
be coming home today. I'll keepyou updated. I'll have some stuff up
(01:42:21):
on Facebook as well. So wait, thank you for your continued prayers for
him. Have a great night.Back with you tomorrow.