Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
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(01:23):
the comedy Americans, maybe rema totalk about the hoss. Why does the
staff they all sound like airline attendance. Thank you, thank you, uh
huh, thank you, thank you. When someone says thank you like that,
(01:46):
you know what they're telling you.They're telling you to go do something.
I'm flattering to yourself. That's whatit sounds like. Ladies and gentlemen.
It is Thanksgiving Eve eve. Itis officially time for you to put
on your Thanksgiving pants. You've gotthe light, get her done. Welcome
to the show, Dana. Lastyear, I don't know about you.
But I get I mean almost vulgarlyexcited about eating turkey every year with Tater's.
(02:10):
We're gonna get into this because Iget so I get so excited over
food, and this is like theappropriate time to get super stoked over food
and the only time I will evercome close to girls shrieking. I don't
know what that is. So welcometo the program. It is Tuesday,
it is Thanksgiving Eve Eve, andwe are here with you as you are.
(02:34):
Maybe maybe you're like getting ready totravel back home and argue with your
family about politics over the holidays.You know what, just smile and wave
boys, smiling wave. That's allI gotta do, right, Just smile,
just smile. Do like what KeanuReeves does. He doesn't want to.
He protects this piece by going,you know what, you're right,
and then just smiles and leaves themalone. That's what you gotta do.
Just be like Keanu. So ormaybe maybe you're in the kids getting stuff
(03:00):
prepared. Canaan and I were justtalking about brown buttered rosemary and stage and
I know sounds like oh so deligious. Maybe you're in the kitchen doing that.
Maybe you're you're cleaning up your house, getting ready for company. Maybe
you're finishing stuff at work, whateverit is. We're gonna set your table
right, so you're gonna this isgonna be like one of the side dishes
(03:21):
at your Thanksgiving table. We're gonnagive you some stuff to talk about,
so welcome. You can listen Coastto Coast. You can stream the radio
program on YouTube Facebook channel three fortyseven Direct TV. Enter the YouTube chat
at your own risk. And uh, they're all getting ready for Thanksgiving too.
They don't got time for mess,So we're gonna dive right in first
and foremost. I sent the newsletterout and I was kind of joky,
(03:45):
but it was true because I wasmade of jokes. When I saw the
image that they used. Normally,I gotta say, like, normally,
you know how you you you seesomething and it's just so comical and your
brain like short circuits with the jokes, and you just you can't even think
of anything. Because I was thinkingof that when I saw this picture of
Joe Biden sitting in front of hisbirthday cake, because it was his birthday.
(04:10):
He's guys, he's eleventy hundred yearsold. Give him a hand.
Eleventy hundred cane. He reached thebig milestone eleventy hundred. And I saw
this because he's got a bajillion candleson his cake. They are burning the
ever loving tar out of that cakea mill I mean, and I would
thought, well, like the country, so too, has he set his
(04:30):
cake on fire? That was myfirst thought. My second thought was,
sir, you have a portal toHell on a plate in front of you.
I mean, yeah, they hadto have a fire extinguisher. He's
holding onto the table like as ifto keep himself up right. It's very
confusing. So they had the pressconference yesterday, folks, and they were
(04:50):
talking about how much they've saved youon your Thanksgiving dinner. Now, remember
how many cents did they save uson the hot Kane at the barbecue?
Like that was a big feat?Was that? Like seventeen cents? Wan's
got the Yeah, he Wan's gotthe portal the Hell cake that he's thrown
out there for the simulcast. Yeah, sixteen cents. Now, Kane,
(05:10):
please bring us some clarity to thisconundrum. Second degree birds off that thing,
right, I mean I feel theheat already. I feel the heat.
I mean that's a I mean whoin the hell thought it was a
great idea to put that kind offlame by president Daddy Shower sniffs mat kids.
Who I mean the man falls onflat surfaces upstairs, not moving.
I mean, he just falls.But how was little known? In fact,
(05:35):
there are no lights in that roomright now. It's totally dark.
That's just all the light from thefire that's on his cake. It's insane.
But when they said that they hadsaved us money, do you remember
how so they said it was sixteendollars for things for four to fourth of
July. Was that per hot dogs? Oh? Sorry, I mean that
was not per hot though, thatwas per fourth of July meal. Eh.
(05:58):
That wasn't even like per hot dog. No no, no, no,
no no e yeah no. Sothat was like per the food,
per all of the items. EO, you know what that is just like
now, no offense, but y'allknow what I'm talking about. That is
just like like a grandparent though tobe like here, here's the dime,
(06:19):
go by yourself. But they saidthat they're saving yeah, the sixteen cents,
remember they had said, and fourthof July they go playing a cookout.
This air ketchup on the news accordingto the Farm Bureau, the cost
of a foid of July barbecue.It's down from last year. It's a
fact. You must have heard.I think, were they trying to be
(06:41):
funny with us? Because I diedinside, I had to get revived,
died again, and then I'm finallyokay. And they said sixteen cents.
Yeah, hmmm. They got ratioedby community notes. It was beautiful.
So they literally whipped out a foodmenu for Oh did you see this yesterday?
It was one of the bright spotsof my day. Came they whipped
(07:05):
up a food menu. Prices arefrom someone's back saying, and they're they're
trying to talk about everything that they'vesaved you, all the money you've been
saved, all the money you've beensaved for Thanksgiving. This is I mean,
there's some serious shades of Fourth ofJuly savings here. So they said
(07:27):
the Thanksgiving this prices are down.They went into airline takats guys milk,
they said it is down by onepercent. Wow, savings. I mean,
everyone, do you remember what Itold you? Whenever I talk about
American financing, what I tell youthe average person is what ten grand that
they're in debt and they're putting itall on their credit card because it broke.
Yeah, it's more now, buthey, one percent on your milk,
(07:49):
guys, one percent on your frozenpiece. Okay, hold the hell
up, stop till everybody stopped forjust a hot second. I know we
got to get into the US.Can I ask legit, who's having frozen
peas? Who amongst you is sittingdown to frozen pea? Who who was
out there eating that on Thanksgiving?I'm gonna tell you something I don't care.
(08:16):
Don't be like, well, Dana, it's broached. My grandparents were
broke. You all people think thatthey know broke. I was born in
it. I know broke, right. My grandparents were broke. They lived
in an eight hundred square foot houseon the side of an abandoned mine in
the Ozarks. Okay, they knewbroke. They knew rocky terrain, they
(08:37):
knew how hard it was to girlharvest, they knew broke. And never
grandma never putting no frozen peas onthe table. That woman ain't never putting
no frozen nothing on the table.If she don't care. She had to
stay up all night and not sleep. Take a cat net. The next
day that woman was snapping some peace. She was not putting no frozen nothing
on the table. It is aboutwill, That's what it's about. So
(09:01):
I'm I mean, I was justshocked by this. So I cause that's
some of the stuff that they putout there. So they had cube stuffing
all this. I mean, didyou do you've seen this? Kinge because
it's like they're gonna you're gonna spendlike five hundred dollars for your basic grocery
items. Most everything except for him, I think is up since twenty nineteen.
(09:22):
Uh, it's insane. Here's thething. Yes, the government clearly
doesn't buy food to go to thegrocery shop. Saved ton cents on peace
can shut off. Everything on thatlist is way more expensive than it was
a year ago. Everything on thatlist there them. So it went down
for a little bit. Oh didit? Did it go down from it?
It went down? It went upby ten percent and went down by
(09:45):
one percent. Savings the savings cave. People have to understand the rate of
inflation is what is how things areincreasing. It's how at the pace at
which they're increasing, that's it's stillincrease. It's still increasing. This is
no, there's no lowering. Theyhaven't lowered anything. Nothing is one percent
cheaper than what they're doing. They'relying through their teeth. I mean,
(10:09):
I think I would if I hadher job. I think I literally would
set myself on fire and just distractthe reporters with that instead of answering questions.
Put it near Biden's cake. Yeah, I mean, I I mean,
they're still trying to push bidnomics.They're still trying to push this.
They said, what in twenty twenty, the average cost for ten was forty
(10:33):
six dollars the average cost And thisalso is they're carting on the farm beer
ow. I know she likes tolike situationally cite things. That's why they
cite these real They they bring outthese weird statistics. So in twenty twenty
it was forty six dollars ninety cents, twenty twenty three sixty one dollars and
seventeen cents the cost for ten.It has gone up so much. But
(10:54):
this is what they do. AsKine noted, they're like, oh,
well, yes, it's increased,you know, by and large by uh
ten dollars. Let's just get justlet's just say Turkey's gone up by ten
dollars. Let's just say that forargument's sake. Easy number. Oh my
gosh, it dropped ten cents.Look, we're lowering the prices this year.
Only look by ten cents, andthey act like that's a huge thing.
(11:16):
It's the same thing as saying thatbecause the government shut down the economy
and force everyone out of their jobs, and then when they reopen the economy
and everyone started going back to theirjobs, that they created all these jobs.
It's literally the same math. That'sexactly what they're doing here. Yeah,
that's bidenomics. Bidenomics says, welltwo plus two mighty equal seven today
(11:37):
tomorrow could be ten. I don'tknow, that's bid noomics. Can you
imagine teaching bidenomics in class? Youjust take Yeah, you take a cow
patty, and you put it ina book and then slam it real hard
a couple times and then open itup, and then that's what you study.
It's amazing. So enjoy the savings, guys. Yeah, sure,
everything is up literally almost double sure, but it went down. Your damn
(12:01):
peas went down by ten cents,guys, So suck it up, enjoy
it peas. Next year, couldbe bugs, and it'll probably be frozen
bugs, not even the fresh ones. Myself sick. That's possible during this
food season. So that's how theystarted. They literally brought out a food
(12:22):
menu. I love the weird things, can I just I'm not done with
it yet. I love the weirdthings that they put up, like for
Thanksgiving, prices are down on toys, like what we're talking about Thanksgiving frozen
peas. Who made this? Youknow the people who made this. Somebody
who didn't cook made this. Someoffice staffer who eats all their meals at
(12:48):
Starbucks made this graphic. They werethe ones who picked this. Frozen pie
crust. Oh my gosh, I'moh man, I'm on the struggle bus
right now. Frozen pike cross.It's literally the easiest thing to make.
Frozen pie cross. Oh my gosh, I'm dying. You know, it's
more expensive to buy the damn crustthan it is to make it, and
(13:11):
it tastes better when you make it. Someone who made this chart and gave
it to her and for her tostand up in front of the country with
this person never cooked a damn dayin their life. I bet you money
on it. Lots of sweet Koolacash. I would bet tons of money
on it. Oh my gosh,frozen whipping cream. They never They were
(13:31):
like, this looks like something you'rebig with. Oh man, help me.
The biggest one I have a problemwith is eggs. They say eggs
are down twenty two point two percent. Literally, this person's never bought bought
eggs. What the heck? Whereare they getting these magical groceries? No
idea? What's going on? Wait? Is this that the whole foods place
(13:52):
that I never go to because thehippies. No, it's not that funny.
It's like imagine like parting a seaat Woodstock. That's what it's like
to go. I can't do itbecause the pachuli number one. I mean
I can barely. I mean,maybe it's better. I just have a
problem with that. Like I goin and I'm like, it's too bougie
by half. It bothers me,you know what I'm saying, Like,
(14:13):
I just get bothered. I don'tneed my vegetables to be artfully displayed.
Get the hell out of here.I can't stand it. It bothers me.
But it is like parting the sea. It would stock every hippie if
your town doesn't have hippies. Thinkagain, they're all at Whole Foods.
We've we got to I have somuch, like I'm not even getting halfway
underway. We're also going to talkabout do you realize that this nation began
(14:39):
on the carcass of a failed socialistexperiment? And we're going to talk about
that with regards to the first Thanksgiving. Oh yes, it's a history lesson.
Buckle up, children. We gota lot to get into. We
got headlines, we got all thatgood stuff and things you just don't want
to miss. Now most people,you know, the way the Biden economy
keeps going, we're probably gonna haveto just like check the turkey out the
(15:01):
window all together. Although I thinkWi's Foods has some of that. I
mean, they got all kinds ofstuff. I don't know. If you're
fermid you should be familiar with WiseFoods because Wise Foods understands that if times
get tough, the literal last thingthat you want to worry about is where
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get free shipping visit Prepare with Dantam. Is deflation coming on the horizon.
(16:03):
The prices of things like eggs,chicken, and seafood have dropped and energy
prices have plummeted. Although people don'tfeel secure about their financial situation. Could
you be receiving an early Christmas present? Check out the Watchdog on Wall Street
podcast on Apple, Spotify, whereveryou get your podcast and now all of
the news you would probably miss it'stime for Dana's quickfive. So office landlords
(16:26):
can't get a loan, can't getloans anymore, They just can't, they
said office owners. The landlords arescrambling to pay back lenders, throwing in
more cash or facing default because everythingis crazy, everything I mean, and
any loan that they would get theinterest right on that I want to talk
about it because it's just going tomake me sick crazy. This is the
(16:47):
stupidest, stupidest headline ever. Givenwomen's federal lawsuit against Shark Ninja dismiss Now,
I gotta tell you, I thoughtthat this was a fight between two
influencers, the given woman and SharkNinja. That's literally what I thought.
And I was like, I don'twant to talk about this story because I
don't care about any of these stupidpeople. But that's actually not what it
(17:10):
is. Apparently that's a product.So this woman who is from Gibbon filed
a suit against this pressure cooker manufacturer, and the pressure cooker was called the
Shark Ninja, which I got totell you, sounds like something I don't
want my pressure cooker to be calledshark Ninja because those are things that will
kill you, both of them,and you're naming a pressure cooker shark Ninja.
(17:30):
It's a new ninja pressure. Idon't even understand they I they said
the failure of shark Ninja's safety mechanism. You know why, because you bought
something that's called named after two thingsthat will murk you, murk you to
death. That's why. Oh,let's see. Apparently, yeah, okay,
thank you, thank you, thankyou because you can't put your Christmas
(17:52):
decorations up now, and psychologists sayyou should thank you because mine that my
tree's going up. Aystap, Ihave literally everything. I'm not even Apparently,
psychologists say that people who put theirdecorations up earlier might be happier.
Kane just sounds like it. Yeah, yeapy, I am fahlah lah la
(18:15):
lah deck my halls. All right, So so you know what, that's
the insult that you tell people whenyou disagree with them, when you're sitting
around the table for Thanksgiving with yourfamily, be like, yeah, yeah,
deck my halls, just telling thatbecause then they don't know if you're
being festive or not. Stick withus, because the true Thanksgiving next our
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Looking for the drive through version ofthe Dana Show. Check out the
(20:08):
best highlights from every show and Dana'sAbsurd Truth podcast posted daily from The Dana
Show time. But that doesn't meanyou can go around saying, you know,
everything's perfect. And we recognize thatAmericans have had a rough few years,
especially when you think about COVID andwhat that did to our society and
effects that we are still working through. You think about some of the political
(20:32):
polarization that's going on. We're notout there saying that all of the work
is done we're out there pointing tothe good work that we're doing. And
what we found is Americans, evenwhen they feel that we've got a long
way to go for things to bereally the way we want them to this
country, agree with the steps thatPresident Biden is leading in from of how
to do the chiron that they hadfor that on CNN because it said what
(20:53):
did it say? That? BasicallyBiden was saying that the economy is great,
no matter what your feelings are aboutit, something to that effect.
It's like, well, people arefeeling what their wallets say, and then
they send booty juice out there atthe Transportation Secretary, the guy who literally
knows nothing about anything. Welcome backto the program. Your lustres has tests.
(21:14):
Stay in a lash here with you. I'm already like mentally eating my
Thanksgiving meal. We're here to entertainas entertaining. And like I said,
anybody gives you any grief over atthe Thanksgiving break, cause you have you
go on you tell them. AndI think my grandmother would approve of this
because she would always say, don'tsay nothing mean to nobody that you can't
(21:37):
say quietly in a whisper in church. Just tell them to deck your halls.
It's like I do be like mmhmm. That's I feel like,
you know, because sometimes you saybless your heart. I don't really don't
want to bless your heart, youknow, I just don't anyway. All
right, So this, uh,the him talking about yes, you know
(22:00):
the economy and you know what's happeningout there. It's people just got to
realize that. It's like we're realizingstuff. What a goofy thing to tell
people over as we approach Thanksgiving.I mean, your your bank account says
broke, but you're really not.Is that? What a goofy thing?
You know? He's renting like thisthirty four million dollar compound somewhere up what
(22:26):
is it Nantucket or something like that, up in that area where all them
rich people go. You got theHampton's and then you got that Nantucket area
and then some other swampy stuff upthere. I don't know. He's going
up there's renting the thirty four milliondollar compound for his griftin family, and
they're all going to go out thereand they have their Thanksgiving. Meanwhile everyone
(22:52):
else is We're told to rejoice andthe tensent savings on your frozen peas that
are actually more expensive now than theywere just a couple of years ago.
But rejoice, we've saved you tencents, ten whole cents. Yeah,
people aren't. People aren't buying it. They're not buying it. You know.
People are mad too because of theeconomic policy that this president has implemented,
(23:15):
everything from let's put the moratorium oncollecting rent money. We're not gonna
stop taking taxes, nor are wegoing to stop collecting mortgage payments from the
people that own property. Well,we'll put a we're gonna we're gonna put
a pause on leasing, charging peoplefor leases, or paying off people's school
bills. You know, as weapproach Thanksgiving, this whole collectivism thing once
(23:41):
tried, failed miserably. This countrybegan on the really began on the carcass
of a failed socialist experiment. AndI know it's been discussed before, but
I think, especially for the peoplewho never heard it, it's important to
re visit this history because every year, what do you hear? The pilgrims
(24:03):
were so mean. They were justpeople who wanted to leave and be able
to worship. They were devoutly religiouspeople, and when they came over on
the Mayflower, which was when Iwent and actually like read the proportions of
the ship. I was actually kindof shocked, like that's not the ship
that I would think that you wouldtake crossing the Atlantic. But whatever,
(24:26):
I mean, they weren't rich people. They actually had sponsors. They had
Dutch sponsors, they had sponsors fromHolland, they had business people merchants that
worked with them to sponsor their journey. And then the point of it was
that everybody, it was collectivism.Everybody was going to own everything. Everybody
was going to put in the work, and then everyone took an equal share.
(24:49):
That was how their society was established. The business people through whom they
got these sponsorships to come over here, they had established like a basically one
bank account form all. And sothey came over here. And everybody knows
the may Flower Compact and William Bradfordand how every one of the forty of
(25:10):
these forty pilgrims on board, everyone of these forty pilgrims, they were
all going to be equal, regardlessof their religion, regardless of what they
believed, et cetera. And theynearly died, I mean, his wife
died, They all starved to death. Practically, it was it was heinous.
I mean it was heinous, horrificconditions for which they tried to prepare
(25:36):
themselves for. But ultimately, whenit comes to facing nature raw in such
a way, nature typically prevails,and it did over many of them.
And you know, they were notbeing They weren't successful. They weren't successful
at all. When they first started. It was I mean, this was
the Bernie Sanders Biden dream. Howthey got started. I mean, they
(25:59):
had common ownership. It didn't matterhow much you worked, because you were
going to take home everything. Youwere gonna take home your share, regardless
of how much you put in.There was a thing Bradford had written,
and he said that, he said, quote for the young men, talking
about the collective work. For theyoung men that were able and fit for
labor and service, did repine thatthey should spend their time and strength to
(26:23):
work for other men's wives and childrenwithout recompense. The strong or men of
parts had no more division of food, clothes, et cetera. Than he
that was weak and not able todo a quarter the other could. This
was thought in justice the aged andgraver men to be ranked and equalized in
labor and food and clothes, etcetera. With the meaner and younger sort
(26:45):
thought it's some indignant and disrespect untothem. And for men's wives to be
commanded to do service for other menas dressing their meat, washing their clothes,
et cetera, they deemed it akind of slavery. Neither could husbands
brook it. There was rez mendid not want to go and get food
for other men's wives, and womenwere already busy taking care of their own.
(27:07):
Hell, they didn't want to haveto take care of another man,
another woman's husband. It created resentment. If you're toiling away in the field,
what incentive do you have to workharder if you were going to take
home the same as the guy whowas doing nothing regardless, that's the thing.
Collectivism created a safety net for thepeople who had the ability and really
(27:32):
the everything that they could need towork to work. They just didn't want
to, and it created a lotof resentment. And William Bradford saw all
of this and he saw how dangerousit was. He saw that they were
literally going to complete destruction. Imean they barely survived into spring. I
(27:55):
mean he lost his own wife theybarely survived. They nearly all starved to
death going into spring. It wasnot enduring. It was just scraping by
a very very harsh winter. Idon't know that the current generations now could
deal with it. There's so manyamongst us. I mean, my gosh,
they freak out if they run outof the peppermint syrup at Starbucks.
(28:18):
I mean, have you seen peoplelike in fast food places get mad if
their orders wrong? Can you imaginethese people lasting in these conditions to create
this new world? And so they'regoing into spring and they're realizing, as
William Bradford wrote about the collective farmingthing, that was a disaster. He
(28:38):
wrote in his diary that quote,our food stores were used up. People
grew weak and thin, some swelledwith hunger. So they begin to think
how they might not still thus languishin misery. He said that his answer
was to divide the commune and parcelsand assign each pilgrim family its own property.
Because they were struggling so badly,Bradford realized the only way to do
(29:02):
this, We're gonna throw everything outof the window, everything that we had
determined before we came to this NewWorld everything that we had determined when we
were on the Mayflower about collectivism,because this was a commune. It was
a hippie commune. The first,the first established living quarters here in the
United States was a hippie commune thatfailed, and almost everybody died as a
(29:23):
result. And so William Bradford thought, okay, this is not gonna work.
We have got to We've got todo something. And he realized that
if they went through another harsh seasonlike the one they just barely survived through,
he realized the whole colony was gone. So he and the elders they
(29:44):
got together and they thought, Okay, this is what we're gonna do.
We're going to introduce privatization private property, and everyone gets the same parcel,
the same sized parcel, and theycan, as he wrote, set corn
every man for his own particular,assigned every family a parcel of land,
(30:04):
and made all hands very industrious,so as much more corn was planted than
otherwise would have been when he didit this way, and families realized that
they could get more for what theyput into it. The privatization and the
opportunity incentivized industriousness, so they workedharder, and they worked smarter. And
(30:32):
Bradford noted, he said, quotethis had a very good success, for
it made all hands very industrious,so much so he said that the women
now went willingly into the field andtook their little ones with them to set
corn, which before would allege weaknessand inability. And he said that the
men worked harder, and that theyworked so hard, and that they brought
such a harvest that they actually hadextra that they could use to trade.
(31:00):
And he said that it became sosuccessful that they went on from parcels to
private farms, and then every familyhad surpluses that they could freely exchange with
their neighbors for mutual benefit and improvement. The First Thanksgiving was born of that.
The first Thanksgiving was born of avery radical idea that came about because
(31:23):
they saw that socialism, that collectivismwas not going to work. That it
fostered resentment and in an unwillingness toput in the time because you were not
going to get rewarded for how hardyou worked. Hard Work wasn't a virtue,
Caring about your task wasn't a virtue. It allowed everyone to skate by
(31:45):
with the same level of mediocrity andit nearly wiped out the entire first colony.
And so when they finally realized andnobody else was doing this, they
they didn't know what to call it. They didn't call it capitalism. They
had no idea what it was.They just knew it hadn't been tried before.
And it was so successful. Theyhad surpluses. They traded with each
(32:08):
other. If one family didn't havethis, they had this, they had
something they wanted. They traded.They went on from their single parcels to
entire private farms. And when theygot together they came about. And there
was only one witness to this inmy notes. All we know about the
first Thanksgiving extended to one man namedEdward Winslow, an eyewitness. He had
(32:31):
one paragraph, and this is fromthe Smithsonian, describing one Indian, the
Massasoit, showing up with ninety men. They killed five deer to cook with
what the English were preparing, andthen they feasted for three days. And
they were creating this feast the Pilgrimsbecause they wanted to give thanks to God
(32:52):
for getting them through a season andpreparing them well for the next. Thanksgiving
was born of gratefulness to be ableto not just mess up, but given
the opportunity to rectify an error,make good a mistake, work harder,
(33:13):
and have such a surplus that itallowed you to care for your neighbor willingly,
not by force, not by contract, not by understanding, but out
of sheer, genuine love in theheart. They wanted to care for each
other because they had the ability todo so, they were incentivized to work
harder. It made them grow,It edified their spirit. That is where
(33:37):
the first Thanksgiving came from. Andthey were able to trade and develop relations
with indigenous nations, and they feasted, as Edward Winslow said, for three
days one paragraph as all the descriptionthere was of it. And they got
(33:59):
through that first hard season, andthen they went through the next season much
more prepared, much more stocked,and with wisdom and bigger hearts. That's
what thanksgiving is. It's it's it'sborn on the back of one of a
(34:19):
really bad mistake. But they weregiven the opportunity to write it, and
they did. And it also showcaseseven if the intention is pure of heart,
the result fosters an evil and itcreates a resentment. People have to
(34:40):
be able to enjoy the fruits oftheir own labor. That is biblical.
It's even discussed in the New Testamentthat you are given things by God for
your enjoyment. And yes, you'recalled to be a good steward of your
fellow man. And this is oneof the things that the Pilgrims, who
were incredibly devout, recognized, andis exactly what they did after they got
through that first season. This iswhat Thanksgiving is about. This is why
(35:04):
we have Thanksgiving. This is whatthey don't teach in schools because it highlights
the failure of a system that hasbeen tried and has collapsed in every single
country, in every single nation,any point in history, anytime it's ever
been implemented, it has failed.Collectivism denies individual will, and even God
(35:31):
grant you that. That's the storyof the first Thanksgiving in America. We
have a lot more to come,folks. We have days of these United
States as well. Looking for aproactive solution in a battle against COVID nineteen.
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(36:40):
ten. That's Dana and the numberten. Don't let Fomo get the best
of you. Stay in the loopand ahead of the curve by following data
on Apple, Spotify, or whereveryou get your podcasts like SAMs through the
Ali Glass. So are the daysof the United States. Whenever you're asked
(37:01):
about the president's dismal job approval ratings, you say, we're not going to
look at polls. We look athis accomplishments. And yet when you are
asked about various domestic policy initiatives,you will say these polls very well.
People support what the president wants todo. If you look at the individual
subjects on the polling, they supportwhat the president's agenda is. So once
(37:22):
and for all, are only certainpolls valid in your eyes? The ones
that support your agenda? Or isthe polling data that shows that President Biden
has been stuck for two years atthe low forties and his approval ratings,
so are those valid? Okay?So here's the thing. I think it's
important to share that American people doapprove of some of the president's initiative.
(37:46):
I think it is important. Mmhmm, oh boy, she's yeah.
It's not working. Not working.You're not going to convince people the polls.
And in here we have a wholeother hour on the way. Did
you know, like yesterday was atrans day of visibility or something. I
(38:06):
didn't know they were invisible. Sickwith me friends over at Patriot Mobile,
the only Christian conservative cell phone servicein the country, and they want to
save you money because your dollar isstruggling to keep up with the cost of
day to day things. So atPatriot Mobile you get two things here,
actually you get a couple of things. There's a bonus. First off,
it's again the only Christian conservative wirelessprovider and has been for the past ten
(38:29):
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bucket of money. You're going tosave yourself a lot of money with Patriot
Mobile, and Patriot Mobile offers dependablenationwide coverage on all three major networks.
You're getting the best service without fundingthe communist left. That's the thing.
The money that you give them isnot going into some political pack that goes
and funds gun control, CRT,abortion on demand, taxpayer funded up till
(38:50):
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(39:14):
switch today. Today, on TransgenderDay of Remembrance, we grieve the twenty
six transgender Americans who were killed thisyear. Year after year, we see
that these victims are disproportionately black womenand women of color. No one should
face violence, I live in fearor be discriminated against simply for being themselves.
(39:39):
So wait, it's so this wasyesterday. This was the what is
it the trans or was it avisibility? No? I don't know what
the hell it was. I didn'teven know what was happening. We didn't
even came. We didn't even knowwhat was happening. I mean, did
you know that that that that wasthe thing that was going down tomorrow?
(40:02):
I mean, I'm looking at myI'm looking at my calendar thing right now.
Didn't Yeah it was yesterday. Butyeah, so welcome back to the
program. That's what yesterday was.Apparently that the trans thing of stuff that
day? Remember, did they haveone for now let me just scroll through
(40:28):
notes instead of looks at notes.I'm gonna have scrolls through notes. So
did they have one for Christian schoolkids targeted by transactivists to murder them,
(40:49):
you know, like in Nashville.I don't recall. I think everybody got
invited to that, to the WhiteHouse over that except like the actual victims
families, which is kind of wild. So it was a trans day of
whatever. But do you realize thatthey're like a tiny fraction of crime and
(41:13):
then most of it isn't it?Most of it due to like I think
like drugs and uh, drug crimereally is the most is most of it
and it's still like only a fractionof crime overall. In fact, one
could argue that they are less likelyto be targeted than other groups. I
(41:34):
mean, that's that's the that's reallyhow it le's the reality of it.
They're they're actually less likely to betargeted than other groups. I was looking
at some of the statistics on that. Yeah, it doesn't it doesn't make
sense that that that they need awhole day for that, that they're are
there. They had this like wholeWhite House thing for that. That doesn't
(41:55):
make any sense, but that's whatthey did. So that was KJP yesterday
with that. It was actually afterwe were on air that they had that
press conference. It's the trans Imean that nothing about the six kids though
(42:15):
Nashville interesting. Maybe this is youknow, I mean this kind of stuff,
What is that supposed to do?What are they trying to actually use
that as a way to distract becauseI think that even falls flat with the
communities that they're trying to pander to. I think they see it and don't
take it seriously. People are goingto be going into this election cycle so
fatigued because they just they're tired ofold dudes fighting from basements that can go
(42:37):
both ways. They're tired of ofof just any kind of trading eventsul.
I think they just want people wantactual solutions. This is the one thing
I hope Republicans understand. You havethe product, you got to sell it.
You got to sell the product.That's what you have to do.
You got one shot, man,this election is it? You have one
(43:01):
shot? When did they sorry,when did we even have a transgender Day
of Remembrance? When the heck didthat even happen? Like? Is that
new this year? Did they justcome up with That's a good question.
I mean I'm looking, yeah,I'm not looking at my notes notes notes,
(43:24):
Nope, not seeing it, notseeing it at all. I guess
that is that I don't remember seeinganything about this last year. I'm not
pulling up anything unless we just didn'tpay attention to it last year. Either
we're a day late today. I'mjust wondering. Got I got questions?
So the uh of those no mentions? Sadly again of the kids? Hmm?
(43:47):
All right, So the Israel,well, Israel is apparently voting on
whether or not there's going to bea hostage deal, and I think the
offer if you're tuning in, which, by the way, welcome to the
second hour of the program, Danalash with you, I think they're doing
(44:07):
it, actually what like right now? I think they're determining whether or not
they're going to approve this hostage deal. And the deal apparently gets into the
X amount, the number of hostagesreleased in exchange for gosen prisoners, and
(44:27):
then like several days of pausing theconflict so that aid can get in.
You know what I would do,Honestly, I'd say no to all of
it. They're going to keep thosehostages, and they're going to keep stretching
it out and stretching it out.And there are kids being held hostage.
They are Americans being held hostage.I still remain you don't negotiate with terrorists.
(44:55):
You don't negotiate with terrorists. It'shard to say that. I mean,
these are people's family and did thatalso hinges on whether or not you
believe Hamas will keep its word anyway? Do you, I mean, do
you honestly think that they would?This is the You can't negotiate with an
entity that has proven time and timeagain that they will not honor any agreement.
(45:17):
Like I've said, there was aceasefire in place on October sixth.
What happened to it? That wasone of many ceasefires that they had violated.
Every time a ceasefire ended, itwas because Hamas violated it. Israel
did not violate a ceasefire. Hamashas always violated a ceasefire repeatedly over two
decades now. So it's not them, it's not Israel Tamas. You're honestly
(45:43):
going to think that you can enterinto some kind of goodwill negotiation with a
terrorist entity that believes that this isn'tabout fighting for freedom. There's no occupation.
There hasn't been a single Jewish personin Gaza since two thousand and five.
Shut up, there's no stupid occupation. That's dumb term used by stupid
white Westerners who and Black Westerners whohave no idea what the hell's going on.
(46:05):
It's a bunch of entitled, selfindulgent morons who say these words because
they hear other people say them andthey think that it sounds smart. They
don't have to do the legwork ofeducating themselves about anything going on in this
part of the world, so theyjust repeat the stuff that they think sounds
cool. There hasn't been a Jewin Gaza since five. There's nobody that
they left. They pulled out unilaterallyleft. In two thousand and five,
(46:29):
Gaza held their first elections. Guesswhat Hamas won. Hamas is so powerful
and Hamas is so popular that they'reeven They even gained influence in the West
Bank, which is why they hadthe Palestinian Palestinian authority, and that's what
they call themselves. There's no suchthing as Palestinian. There's no such thing
as Palestine. There are Arabs thatare in the Gaza strip and other individuals
in the Gaza Strip. It isnot We're not making up and creating entire
(46:51):
ethnicities and people and countries out ofthe ether, especially when they're not supported
by thousands years of antiquity, it'snot gonna happen. But they got so
popular that the authority which rules thosetwo territories, essentially they suspended elections because
they knew Hamas was gonna was gonnawin to you eat a mass and Fata
under the PA and FATA the chairmanof Fatas also heads up the authority.
(47:14):
He wasn't going to be able tokeep power, so they suspended elections.
That's why. Because Hamas was sopopular, they were going to run all
the territories there. That's it,and I do discount. People need to
stop sitting here and acting like,yes, you have Hamas the militant group,
the terrorist group, but they're alsothe elected government of this territory.
They're basically patocompli, the elected youknow, the the the ruling authority in
(47:38):
West Bank as well. But youhave to remember the number of citizens that
were put a number of gosens thatwere participating along with Hamas in this.
Nobody talks about it because they're tooafraid of being peppered with accusations that they're
for genocide, which is stupid andspecious, but everybody's afraid to talk about
the number, the sheer number ofcivilians, people who maybe don't get the
(47:59):
members only jacket with Hamas running alongwith Hamas, in addition to the journalists
there running along with them, workingwith them, helping them, being culpable
in every way. I watched avideo. I watched the video. It
was one of the one of thebad ones that that showed that Shanny Luke's
(48:19):
body and her legs all contorted him. She's dead. They cut off her
head. Later she's in the backof that truck and this is apparently after
they brutally raped her. She's inthe back of the truck, her leg
is all bent out, and itwas a several minutes long video. There's
only a clip where a lot ofthings are obscured that that I think most
people have seen. And if youdon't wish to unsee things, then don't
(48:39):
watch it. But I watched itbecause I wanted to see what everybody around
the terrorists were doing. And I'veseen this in every single video. They're
like in there. They arrive inGaza and they have her on the back
of this truck and there are peoplethere are like men, there are even
women that come forward and they're spittingon her, on her dead body in
the truck. There tons of itthat when they first loaded her up and
(49:01):
left, they were spitting on her, and when they arrived, they were
spitting on her. And and youknow, you can't tell me that a
female who's you know, all kittedout is part of Hamas like that.
I mean, these these were andthere were there were younger people around.
I mean, this wasn't They didn'tjust like go into the Hamas h Q
men these there were a lot ofcitizens there as well. And you have
(49:21):
to keep this in mind so whenyou see and and everyone's so afraid to
talk about it, but that's thereality of the situation. There were a
lot of civilians that went along withthis a lot. That's one of the
reasons why they were making entry,for instance, into West Bank, even
if you were someone that had likethe permit to go in and work,
(49:43):
why they were making it difficult toenter because there have been people that have
been you know, had that hadthese passes, that had the documents that
were able to go in and theycarry out these terror attacks there because regular
citizens are also participating, which isanother complication and in prosecuting this conflict.
I mean, that's the reality ofwar. When things get to the point
(50:07):
where physical conflict is necessary, nuancedconsiderations go out the window. And for
all of the people who say thatit's heartless, it's heartless to acknowledge that
reality, I respond with this,where was your heart in all of the
(50:30):
instances that escalated us up to thispoint? Where was your heart all of
the times prior that Hamas violated aceasefire? Where was your heart when Hamas
was killing and shelling Israeli hospitals?Where was your heart when they were saying
that they could not abide by atwo state solution. They were going to
(50:52):
live and die by their charter,which doesn't recognize their neighbor to the north.
Where was your heart there? Becauseit seems like your heart only came
into play after October seventh, andyou just pretend that October seventh didn't happen,
that everything started on October eighth.Where was your heart then? With
(51:15):
your fake compassion and your crocodile tears? I question the soul of people who
act like this. I do.I think there are a lot of evil
people in this world. I thinkthere are a lot of people who have
been overtaken by sheer evil, andthey are the ones who are out there
promoting this nonsense. These people aren'tcompassionate. The people out there calling for
a ceasefire don't have a heart.They don't care about these kids. They're
(51:38):
just rhetorically using them a shields inthe same way that Hamas did physically.
It's disgusting and now all of thenews you would probably miss it's time for
Dana's Quick five. So I didnot know this, but there are six
states in which a dog a dogcan be legally a part of your family.
(52:00):
Over fifty percent of people think thattheir pets are family members anyway.
Apparently it's a growing trend. NewYork, California, and Maine think of
dogs as legal property. Of coursethey do, as an even surprise,
the New York and California does.But they said that there are a number
of states that or they you canactually like treat your dog. What does
(52:21):
that mean. I don't know.I think it's kind of I don't know,
really like you can have like custodydisputes and custody issues and things like
that. But yeah, they saidthat there's six states where you have that
interesting A truck stowaway hid beneath ahuge This is in Australia. Of course
it is, of course it is. I'm telling you Australia is like the
(52:45):
non American Florida. This dude's likelyto be alive. He hid beneath a
B double for a three hundred andninety mile trip in the Gold to the
Gold Coast. That's crazy. Hewas under they said. He's believed to
be under the influence of alcohol.He crawled under the metal racks beneath the
truck. He was going to hitcha forty mile ride along the New South
Wales coast, but ended up onthe Gold Coast. The driver said he
(53:06):
was driving. He was making afreight run. He stopped for a short
nap one thirty in the morning onFriday, and after a quick coffee,
completed his checks, he set offagain. He said. When it started
to get light, he said hecould see a piece of orange cloth under
the trailer, and yeah, hewent for a really really long, long,
really long way, and he saidthat he made an emergency stop and
(53:28):
got out of his cabin and that'swhen he saw the guy. And that's
crazy that this guy did this.So yeah, police called, he was
taken into custody. There was amassive brawl Austin, Texas. Austin is
a great town except when it's not. I was only one time on the
street, and I won't go backbecause it's not my jam. Man.
Remember Marines in a massive brawl outsideof Texas, This Texas bar. It
(53:51):
was what the Voodoo lounge, Ithink, outside in Austin. So they'd
shut the street down and it's justa bunch of college kids and girls in
dresses that don't fit, and everybodygets and fights. Dude, there's like
literally a whole YouTube account de votedto it. But somebody thought it was
going to be fun to pick afight with literally a bunch of Marines.
And this one marine eight punches,like my one Marine friend jokes he eats
(54:12):
crayons. This guy ate so manypunches and he just was like, oh,
that was a pun. I've neverseen a dude take somebody hits to
the face and be unfazed. Itwas wild that dude was arrested though,
because apparently he was the instigator.We have a lot more in store.
I got the most American optic evercoming up, but involves people coming into
the country illegally and bald eagles.Stay with us. Elevate your commute workouts
(54:34):
or downtime with the Dana Show podcast. Unleash the power of knowledge at your
fingertips by following Dana on Apple,Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome back to the program, folks. You can listen coast to coast.
You can stream the radio program.You can watch the simulcast of the
radio program Channel three forty seven directTV. We have some people who are
(54:57):
watching the YouTube stuff. Yeah,the YouTube You tube ads are insane,
like the simulcast ads. And wetalk about this for a minute because so
I can't explain this to how becauseit doesn't matter if you have uh YouTube
premium, it doesn't matter. Alot of people have been asking us about
this. So as a condition toeven like monetize, you have to accept
simulcast ads. And that's pretty muchall the control that they allow you to
(55:22):
have, except you get to choosehow frequent it is maybe sort of annoying,
super annoying, or you're gonna murkyourself annoying. That's kind of like
the three levels of annoying, right, Yeah, Well they put in the
word estimated in there. Estimated.I think there's a reason for them.
Yeah, because they're going to screwyou. So and so it's we picked
(55:42):
like the least because you have topick one. That's the thing. As
a condition of being a professional ormonetized account, you have to choose one
of those to have a simulcast,and otherwise you don't get to do it.
And so we picked the least invasiveone. And it's supposed to be
every thirty minutes. But that thirtyminutes estimated is there is user timing.
(56:07):
It's like so whenever a user joins, it's like thirty minutes from then.
Correct, that is what we youknow, that's what we are led to
believe. But yeah, technically,because we start the stream at the top
of the hour, that's I mean, we do that intentionally so that whoever's
connecting at that time, their ADshouldn't be seen till the bottom of the
hour, which is when we're ina commercial break. So that should be
(56:27):
you know, it should correlate,it should actually coordinate that way. But
YouTube is not doing it. There. The word estimated is doing a lot
of heavy lifting a lot of heavylifting. The estimated a lot of heavy
lifting. So yeah, well Iwanted to explain that for people because they
were a lot of people were asking, and it is super annoying if you're
watching something, especially if I'm givenlike good info and then an AD pops
(56:51):
up, and especially if it's astupid ad. Our friend Larry, who's
out in Vegas, was like,who is an AD for assault weapons?
Span? That's the other thing,Like you can choose very vague broad categories
and that's it. Like you couldchoose and it still doesn't mean they'll honor
that. Oh yeah, that's true, because that's situational. They may not
honor it at all. That's agood point. So you really don't even
(57:13):
have control over that. But Iwill totally take money from the gun control
groups and I will totally take itand then spend it to fight them.
So I'm fine with like making thembe total stooges and just you know,
pimping them out and making money offof them. They can just they can.
They can be stupid all they wantto, because they're not going to
plant seeds. They're just gonna makeme money, and then I'm gonna use
it to fight. So that's great, great cyclical look at that. So
(57:36):
I wanted to because a lot ofpeople were asking us about that, and
I thought, yeah, let's justlike really quickly, let's just you know,
we'll touch on that real quick.So a few got a few things
still that we need to hit becauseyou have the Israeli war cabinet that's trying
to figure out right now what they'regonna do with these how the hostage,
(58:01):
if they're gonna have if they're gonnabe able to get these hostages. I
don't know if they're gonna have aceasefire in there as well, because you
had there's been a couple of thingsthat like Hamas was saying, well,
the truce is close, and Cutteror Qatar they're handling the negotiations with all
of this, so which I haveto question. I have to really,
(58:25):
because we if they had to picka side, you know who's side they're
on, right, I mean,you know whose side Hamah Cutter is on.
You know, there's no details,like I think there's just been speculation
as to how many hostages might bereleased. I think that's kind of it,
and I don't think that they knowreally any other aspect of it,
(58:46):
because that's one of the things thatI had heard this morning actually, and
I read something separate that they weresaying, oh, it's x amount of
hostages or it's hostages of this age, and I don't there hasn't been the
speculation is all over the place,so there's really nothing confirmed on it.
But they said that Hamas delivered aresponse to the latest offer. Nothing is
(59:07):
really I mean, Israel's still goingforward, and uh that is I mean
they're I don't know, I'm notquite sure. I mean, that's that's
kind of everybody's sort of in thedark until there's an announcement made or until
if they if they have an agreement. They were saying that the prisoner exchange,
(59:27):
because they had gosen prisoners, thatit would involve women and children,
So they would give over women andchildren hostages that Hamas has, so they
would get more terrorists in return.So Hamas will hold onto the male hostages
and then you're gonna give uh.So let's the the way that the last
bit that we know about are themost perhaps likely offer, is they would
(59:52):
give up women and children in exchangefor some Hamas militants for some terrorists.
I don't say militant fighters because it'sa Fana word to say dog terrorists for
in exchange for terrorists. So Hamasgets gets a pause in fighting, Hamas
gets terrorists out there, and they'rejust they're keeping the men, the husbands
and the dads and the sons,they're keeping those hostages, and they're going
(01:00:15):
to give away some of the womenand children. That's even if you can,
you know, believe them at theirword, which nobody does. And
then the terrorists that they get inexchange get to go back to field of
battle and continue, you know,attacking Israel. Right, So really the
only kind of the only person doinganything, the only party doing anything would
(01:00:36):
be Israel. Again. Now youtell me how that sounds like a fair
deal. See, Hamas likes topretend that it's the one that's the underdog
right now, but they have womenand children. It's really easy when you
don't care about the lives of womenand children to pretend that you're the underdog
when you have them held hostage.But for a country that values life,
(01:01:00):
for a country that actually believes inhonoring women, and for a country that
actually believes in protecting children and notstoring, you know, anti tank missiles
amongst their backpacks in a school,as per video from foreign press. Then
they don't view themselves as having theadvantage because you have their most precious treasure
(01:01:22):
as hostage. Notice how none ofthese cease fired people or any of these
Hamas apologists have acknowledged that perspective,because that's the perspective. Hamas acts as
though they're the ones who are.They're the ones that are, they're the
underdogs, but they they have thewomen and children. They don't value women
(01:01:43):
and children, And I really thinkin reality they understand that they are not
the underdogs in some respects. Ithink some of them believe that, but
ultimately that's what they'll say in frontof cameras. But they know that they're
in the capird seat. They knowthat they have treasure from Israel, and
so long as they have that,they are in a very commanding position.
(01:02:06):
And you make the other country afraidof potentially hurting, you're hurting its own
treasure, you know. So don'tspare me the protestations about Hamas or Gosen
government. That Gosen's elected and supportedso much that they were going to sweep
elections in west Bank. Spare methe protestations about them being in any way
(01:02:28):
considerate or caring for people. That'sso stupid if you're dumb enough to believe
that optic. I got a bridgeto sell you for real, real cheap
too. It's a real cheap price, king super cheap. Yeah, I
mean, I mean, I wouldsay, unbelievably cheap. Fifty million.
You know, maybe you've heard ofthis big fancy bridge that I own.
Now some people call it the GoldenGate Bridge, but it's not. I
(01:02:51):
just call it the McDonald's Arch Bridgebecause it reminds me of the food.
You know, it's the arches,and you know I could sell you that
for fifty million dollars. It's actuallylike when you consider the materials in it,
what you could scrap it for,you know. I mean that's like
a fair price. I think I'llI'll send me the money and I will
give you in return the bill ofsale on the and the deed you get
(01:03:13):
the deed to it. I mean, really easy. It's very fancy,
very official, has a seal.See totally do it so we'll see.
I think they're supposed to. Ithink they'll have like some kind of they'll
have an update on all this today. They'll have uh, they'll have some
(01:03:34):
information on this today. So yeah, oh, by the way, all
the people are saying they're getting guncontrol ads make I already made a note
to myself of I'm going to useall of that to fight fund their opposition.
Yes, I will totally pimp youout and use it like what is
it, Sandy hook promise? Theyhad an ad. Lorraine said, I'm
(01:03:55):
going to take the money to usemade from that and I'm going to spend
it against them against the uncontrolled stuff. There you go, all right.
So a few other things to touchon is that as they as they consider
all of that, the I waslooking, do you know how quickly the
IDF is like going through Gaza andand and yeah, the the way that
(01:04:20):
they are triangulating and going through Iwas reading. I'm trying to find my
notes on this. So apparently oneof the groups that they have so they
have their they're saying it's the hammermeets the anvil, and so they're going
through and they're about to link up. So they're focusing on the south right
(01:04:42):
now. So the ones who camethrough the north are now heading towards the
south where they also have IDF therein South Gaza. And I read this,
I'm gonna make sure I'm looking formy notes on this, so bear
with me because it's for some reason, it's that point up. They said
that one of their units, it'sjust called the Rage, and they're apparently
(01:05:09):
the hardcore ones, and I thinkthat's the one that they sent in through
Gossa City and that's why everything isvery very quickly. I mean, think
about it's still going to be longbecause you're still going to have to go
through all of these tunnels. Ithink they've only just started. But they
have an elite. They have theseelite units, and I think I read
one piece where and it's actually aformer idea where they were saying that it's
(01:05:31):
called the Rage and they're the oneswho those are the those are the ones
who are having a day. Let'ssay like that, those are the so
like, if you're in Warhammer DarkTide, that's who you want, right,
you want the Rage, That's like, that's what you want. So
they this, uh, that's oneof the elite units. I think they
(01:05:53):
were the ones that were involved inthe Alshaifa hospital as well. But they've
made very precise, very quick workof going in, clearing out, securing,
locking down. Uh. I meanit's urban warfare, which is always
incredibly difficult, and especially when youhave that labyrinth of tunnels underneath. I
(01:06:14):
don't know if you've seen some ofthe latest videos, like the ones that
came out yesterday showing there was becausethere are multiple entries. Like you'll have
some tunnel entries like in Al ShifaHospital, but then like maybe like out
in the parking lot by bush,what looks like, you know, a
sewer door. You know, everybody'sseeing those types of like heavy utility doors,
right, and that's like the entrancefor a sewer system, except nope,
(01:06:36):
this one in a sewer system.It literally goes into a terror tunnel,
goes into it's wild, it's wild, all this stuff. So they
have been uh uh really, it'sit's been something to behold. Uh,
the way that they have been ableto go through. That's why it's like,
you know, Israel, they don'tit's not they really don't need funds.
(01:06:57):
That's why they wanted to buy guns. They don't need really, they
don't need funds. They don't needThey just need to be left alone and
to do what they need to do. The obstacle comes in everyone else nagging
them and telling them, don't dothis. Urge restraints stop, so get
out of their way. Let themTCB, Let them TCB. That's the
way it has to be done.Now we have Florida Man on the way,
and then coming up, we're gonnaget in a couple of other things.
(01:07:19):
Because Mayor Eric Adams in New YorkCity he did it. He slashed
that budget. It's done. Youknow. He said that the federal government
was gonna pay for all those illegalimmigrants coming in. We're gonna have to
We're gonna have to have a littlediscussion a on that. It's his life
mission to make bad decisions. It'stime for Florida Man. I got three
(01:07:47):
words for you, Florida Man.Possum. That's right, that's right.
So let's see what we got.This is clear water, literally, it
is. This is yesterday. Ithappened yesterday. So oh wait, we
had this one. This is it? Did I share this one with you?
Did we do it? Because it'sso amazing I wanted it again.
(01:08:09):
The guy who did a deuce ona possum. And then it's not he
got in for Okay, Okay,okay, okay, how did I forget
that? I saved it forever?Okay, I am not Okay, saved
this one really quickly because it's hysterical. Tampa Bay Times. They're talking to
a semi retired gator guru. Thiswas sent by Amber, who is a
Florida woman. She says this iseducational, which means it's not uh this
(01:08:34):
uh the alligator. Semi retired gatorguru says that you can check an alligator
sex by looking at his equipment hole. That's what he said. She dared
me, what do I get?I did it? What do I get?
I get a prize? Come ongirl, good boy, good Florida
(01:08:57):
boy. A Florida boy gets aYoung Hero award. He saved his grandma's
life by calling nine one one goodfor him in Orlando, Fox thirty five
in Orlando. When they got there, they said they were surprised to see
a little man. He's a littlekindergartener. He got a big reward.
Rosa Garcia had a medical episode.She was watching her six year old grandson
James. She couldn't breathe. Jamescalled nine one one. He was super
(01:09:19):
chill, and he says, Idon't know what's happening to my grandma.
He waited for paramedics to arrive.They gave her the care she needed,
and they said he remained so calm, and they were actually shocked that he
was so young because he was socalm about it. So good for him.
He got an award, he gotto go right on a fire truck
and everything. I mean, bestday ever, that's awesome. A Florida
(01:09:42):
man drove into a car drove intocar show's staff after he was being after
he was turned away from an eventseventy six years old, Steve, can
you make one guess as to wherethis happened in Florida? What area it
happened in? Seventy six years old? We hear it it did, Yes,
(01:10:03):
it was the Villages. A Floridaman has been arrested charged with aggravated
battery after he allegedly drove his carinto staff at the village's Cruise the Cruising
car show in Florida. And hedid it on purpose. Anthony Guerrera became
belligerent and aggressive and then the villagers, the village's resident, began throwing paper
(01:10:25):
at staff and then he drove intoa worker. He totally he got mad
because they let another group of carsin before his And that's why I man
and a road rage incident that startedwith a cup of coffee at Chick fil
A. Well, that was notyour pleasure. Florida man was arrested in
(01:10:45):
this road rage fit. There's likea video of them fighting on the ground,
which is actually hysterical but not good. Don't do it. This Florida
guy's facing three felony chargers. Someonethrew coffee at him Saturday morning at Chick
fil A on Palm Coast Parkway.Thirty six year old Donovan Matt he's gotten
an argument with the man a woman. Coffee was thrown and then he struck
their vehicle with his car, andthen they started brawling in the intersection.
(01:11:10):
Oh man, and there were blowstraded. Flacker County Sheriff's Office. How
to respond. I mean all thatover, you know, we'll just keep
your cool and don't be getting intoa fight, skinning up your knees,
showing your butt in the intersection ofFlorida over road rage. Just don't do
it. Third hour on the way, ladies and gents, you don't want
to misstic with us. I don'tknow. I don't know I'm making this
(01:11:32):
video, but like I feel likemy husband and I are doing everything right.
We both have good jobs. I'ma nurse. I'm a registered nurse
who work full time. He worksfull time. We just got paid this
(01:11:56):
past Friday, right, we paidthe margain, bought some groceries, put
some gas in the car. Guys, it is Tuesday, and we have
like two or three to last usuntil next Friday. Like, we don't
(01:12:18):
live in a big house. Welive in a little little ranch. It's
eleven hundred square feet, three bedrooms, one bath, us and our two
kids. And I don't I don'tknow what to do. Well, I
(01:12:40):
mean you got to vote differently.That's kind of how it goes. Welcome
back to the program. Dana.Last year, so this is on tech
Talk, and she had said laterin the video, she doesn't want to
get into the politics of the economy. Well guess what that is the economy.
It's politics. You don't want toget into it, but it will
get into you. Welcome to theshow, like I said, Dana lash
(01:13:01):
Here you can listen coast to coast. You can stream the radio program as
well. You can also watch thesimulcast YouTube Facebook channel three forty seven Direct
TV. Yeah, that's the issue, though. You can talk about why
you don't want to get into Youcan say I don't want to get in
the politics of it. I justdon't. But yet at the same time,
(01:13:26):
she votes Democrat because she's a Democratvoter. I mean that's evident later
on in the video. I don'twant to hear about politics. Okay,
Well, if you're not willing,if you don't want to hear about the
actual issue of the problem, thenwhy should you complain about it. You're
complaining about something that you don't wantto talk about. How does that make
sense? Because the politics inform youreconomic situation. People are paying more in
(01:13:48):
taxes because of the economic situation thatthis administration has placed us in. I
mean, we were digging out ofthe ridiculous lockdown that should have never have
happened, number one. And thenwhile that's happening, while we're trying to
come back, then we have taxespaying off people's grad school bills. And
(01:14:11):
that's what it was. The statisticsor public don't paying off their grad school
bills, uh, paying off allowingpeople to skip more to skip their lease
payments, but mortgage people who ownedthe property that the leases were being paid
on, they still had to paytheir mortgages, and they still had to
pay taxes on all of that.It was just the people that didn't have
to pay that they got to passthem pay. This is asinin. So
(01:14:34):
yeah, if you don't want tohear about the politics of it, then
you don't get to hear. Imean, and I also, she works
full time and her husband works fulltime, and they only have a couple
one hundred dollars left. You know. Also, at some point, you
know, you can sit here andtalk about you're going to ignore the economics
of the situation, but then maybelook at your budget. Of course,
(01:14:58):
we have inflation though too. Rightnow, dollars the average America, the
average dollar that you earn is notkeeping up with the cost of goods and
services as it used to. Sothat's why you have gas bills and grocery
bills, utilities and food that arethat are outpacing everything for price. That's
a real thing. So the uh, they're feeling it, they are feeling
(01:15:24):
it. I mean, that lookslike she has a nice house and all
this other stuff, and she's like, we don't live above our means.
I think a lot of people whoprobably do don't recognize that they do.
But you know that that's that's theyou know, the reality of the situation
here at what's the biggest thing isthat inflation, et cetera. You might
(01:15:45):
have been able to live at thatrate of spending and you know, the
the ratio of what you're bringing intowhat's going out before all the taxes,
before the inflation, before everything else, but now after you know you voted
for all this stuff, now youcan't. So you can sit here and
say because she said in the video, I don't want to talk about the
(01:16:05):
politics of it, well you can'tbecause that directly informs your current economic position.
Your situation right now is because ofthe politics of it. When I
hear people say I don't want totalk about the politics of it, means
I voted wrong, and if Iadmit it, then I look like I
can't really complain. But you gotto be able to talk about how you
(01:16:29):
got in that situation, so youdon't do it again. I mean,
but everybody's feeling this, They're allfeeling it. Now I'm gonna switch gears
here because the lawsuit, the thermonuclearlawsuit that Elon must said he was gonna
file against Media Matters. Well it'sdone. Very exciting, super exciting about
(01:16:55):
that. My only sadness is thatI can't donate anywhere to it. You
know, I really wish I could, because I would love to be able
to contribute a few dollars to thedestruction of Media Matters. Not gonna lie,
really would hope. I hope hedestroys them. I mean, you
have to think about this. MediaMatters created the rage mop, they created
(01:17:16):
cancel culture. They've been doing thisto We talked a little bit about this
yesterday about how Andrew Bryper and Idropped in with Mike Flynn on their offices.
But that's been there. That hasbeen their approach from the beginning Rent
cycle. Repeat. You overwhelm atarget with smears, you use your allies
to amplify the smears in the legacypress, and then you present the quality
(01:17:44):
of coverage as evidence of the smearsvalidity. Where does that formula sound familiar?
Oh right, that's what they didwith the Russian collusion stuff, with
fusion, GPS and Hillary Clinton.Now it shouldn't be surprised that this sounds
familiar because Media Matters was started bya bunch of Clinton toady's. So that's
(01:18:08):
the exact same tactic that they usewith the Russian collusion stuff, right,
They would overwhelm something with smears andthen they would recycle it amplify it in
the press. In this case,Fusion GPS was trying to sell discredited opo.
They were taking this stuff, cyclingit through the press and then trying
to say, well, because soand so wrote about it, therefore it
(01:18:29):
must be true, and then tryingto use it as evidence to get wiretaps
on political enemies. It's the sameformula that Media Matters, the same formula
that they were using against Elon Musk, who is not an anti Semite.
They're trying to they're trying to targetthe advertisers on X the way that they've
done to get like when they've gottenhost kicked off of CNN, They've gone
(01:18:53):
after people on Fox. They've goneafter it, They've gone after people's incomes
for just being in the conservative sphere. They've gone after me so many times
I can't even keep count. AndI hope that he does destroy them because
the perception I think of Media Mattersis varied, but the effects are not.
(01:19:15):
Because they have been successful. Imean they create a cancel culture that
lasts today. People have to realizethat one of the forms of distribution,
like previously, whenever you had anewspaper that was printed, you know the
distribution. The old adage is ifyou see a paper like lying on a
restaurant table, well, you knowit goes to show the The the adage
(01:19:36):
is that what three people on averageread that newspaper, Like, think about
it. You have a newspaper.You know, someone else in your house
besides you reads it. It's ina doctor's office. Other people read it.
They would say, on average,isn't that right? How they did
it came like on average like threepeople, three people would would read the
paper. So for digital distribution,you kind of have to rethink how this
(01:19:56):
is measured a little bit. Andso amplification is a of digital distribution.
And one of the things that MediaMatters does, particularly through all of its
allies through the Progressive press, isthe is the amplification of the smears.
That's amplification is a new digital distribution, and they just repeat it until it
(01:20:18):
becomes truth because it sounds familiar.Doesn't mean that it's true. It's just
that someone has heard it so oftenit sounds familiar. Maybe it sounds familiar
because it's true, and people confusethe two, and then it just becomes
phatocompoly truth. That's the whole point. It's a psia. That's what they
specialize in. And I hope thathe breaks them. I hope that he
(01:20:44):
makes them cry. I have neverwanted any entities utter destruction as much as
I want theirs, because they areabsolutely poisonous for discourse in the United States,
absolutely poisonous. Every accusation against aconservative youth ever heard has been from
these people. They act like theombudsmen of like the the person who weighs
(01:21:06):
in and makes the and settles disputesor settles in accuracies, you know,
for a paper. They act likethey are that, and that their passion
for doing so comes from their devotionto the craft of journalism. But that's
not true, because their passion fordoing this comes from their devotion to their
(01:21:27):
own political ideology. There's zealots.They are ideological zelots, and they they
never they don't they don't have advertising. They don't have to disclose their funders.
They got started by a bunch ofClinton Toady's and George Soros, and
in twenty ten he gave them anotherone million dollars, so they got They
got started in fact as a wayto push back against all the stuff coming
(01:21:50):
at the Clintons. That's how itstarted. They got started way way back
in the nineties, so it wasabout pushing back against the Clintons and it
grew from there, like the ideaof doing it. They had all these
people together, raising money and doingpress. But it wasn't until you know,
(01:22:11):
everything started going online that the websitecame into fruition. But the idea
for it began germinating back in thenineties and then it really took off in
the early aughts. Media matters,but the you know every so many,
so many of these fights and somany of the smears that you've heard,
they got their start there. Itmedia matters as like the four chan not
(01:22:31):
to install four chan, but it'slike the four chan of of media.
It really is. And the littleknown secret is that every newsroom, if
it's like ABC, if it's NBC, CNN, MSNBC, you know CBS,
whatever every newsroom culls from their content. They they would they all aggregate
(01:22:54):
from Media Matters content regard because they'relazy and doing research. Regardless that they
want to admit it or not,they do so they've never because they don't
have to make their donors public.You never, you don't know who's bankrolling
them. They just have billionaire donorsthat bankroll them, and they have never.
You have to realize litigating for whatElon Musk is doing going after defamation
(01:23:19):
libel, these are the most expensivecases to litigate. There's a very very
high bar, there's a whole bigdiscovery process. It is a very expensive
thing to do, and you've gotto go scorched earth because it gets super
expensive. That's why no one's reallygone after Media Matters before, because Media
(01:23:45):
Matters is bankrolled by all these richpeople, and the people that they go
after do not have that same capital. This is the first time they have
ever picked a fight with someone whocould outspend them. That's why I'm so
excited, because that what it's That'swhat it comes down to, and I
think Musk has proven that that's notthe issue for him. That principle is
(01:24:08):
on this, So I hope heeats their breakfast. I'm so excited.
And now all of the news youwould probably miss. It's time for Dana's
Quick five. All right, Sofirst up, they're making a suicide safety
net for the Golden Gate Bridge.You know, the bridge I own survivors
say may give them a second chanceat life. They're making a net to
(01:24:30):
catch people. Well, wouldn't thatjust make them go somewhere else? Right?
I mean yeah, Like one personsaid they were going to jump off
the bridge and their hands left theright. You know what you're going to
have happen. You're going to havepeople just doing this for fun, throwing
themselves off the bridge into the netfor fun. That's It's going to turn
(01:24:53):
into a recreational thing. I'm tellingyou. They said that. Uh like
they had some people like they interviewedthis guy who jumped and they said his
hands left the raili and an instantaneousregret for his action. I'm gonna come
back to this because I just you'regonna have people they don't think let's see,
(01:25:14):
uh, Mainam, Massachusetts are thelast states to keep stupid bands on
Sunday hunting. However, that actuallymight change soon. There's legislation in the
works to get that changed. Sothere you have it. Three were injured
after a light pole was knocked overby strong winds on Disneyland's main street.
(01:25:34):
Wa Disneyland. Wah, yeah,I'm just not gonna get into it.
Let's see. Oh oh there wasa woman and this is an old story.
No no, no, I'm notgonna do this. And that was
old. That was so old.Okay. So also what we have there
is a New York Post as anew dating phenomenon proves tradraditional relationships are over.
(01:26:02):
What They said that women are sickof the pressure to follow traditional timelines.
What women are you talking to?Like? Ugly women that can't get
a traditional relationship? Like, whatare you talking about? They said,
it's a dating report. Women arepushing back instead of from blah blah blah.
This is not new. Bored womenwho are bored with themselves in their
lives have been doing this since Iwas a kid. Stop. They said
(01:26:26):
that thirty one percent of women aren'tfocused adhering to traditional blah blah blah blah
blah. You boring broads. I'mso bored with them. You know why,
you're single because you're boring. Idon't know if it want to be
your friend you're so boring? Well, moving on it is I'm so tired
of hearing this, right, whois so self indulgent? The people are
ridiculous. Also, let's see herein Israel arrests and NBC journalist for glorifying
(01:26:51):
Hamas. Oh also apparently they werelike basically participating. Mirravad Aleza was right
there with them when they were doingall their stuff. So before you get
to be like, oh, well, it's a free speech, yeah,
but like when you're actually aiding andabutting terrorists and you're right there with them,
it's kind of a problem, isn't. It Just seems like that's kind
(01:27:12):
of an issue. I'm just goingto point that out, all right.
So coming up, we've got alot of stuff still to hit as we
wind down Thanksgiving Eve stick with us. Tired of the same old, predictable
commentary, Spice up your day witha Dana Show podcast where dynamic discussions,
compelling guests, and Dana's unique perspectiveof Wait. Download on Apple or wherever
(01:27:34):
you get your podcasts. This isa nice Thanksgiving song, is it not?
Welcome back to the program, Dana. Last year with you, now
I encourage you to go find especiallywhere we talked about the first hour,
the story the backstory of Thanksgiving,which we kind of done every year,
try to do differently, but youknow, just it's some good history,
(01:27:55):
very good history. I couldn't comein and one and one has noted that
it's already standalone on YouTube, Sogo and find it and I'll send it
out in a newsletter tomorrow too foryou email subscribers over a chapter in verse
now just FYI from the management.So my brother from another mother, Sergio's
in for me tomorrow. And thenobviously we have Thanksgiving because your girl bakes,
(01:28:17):
your girl gets prepared, and thenwe all come back together on Monday.
So I hope everyone's safe and takestime with their families over the Thanksgiving
holiday. I couldn't come into thisNicky Hayley audio SoundBite with that awesome song
by you two. I think it'sone of the best ones that they have.
I love it, and Ull thiswas awkward. This is when you
got out of the mouths of babes. Right. You can't you can't fake
(01:28:41):
kids, right, you cannot fakethem out, you can't. They just
don't go along with stuff, right. I love it when there's like these
moments of honesty where your narrative isjust mar So. Nicki Hayley was at
a campaign event and this is whathappened. When she saw a little girl
in the audience wearing something that sheliked. I love your hand. Thank
(01:29:03):
you? What if your guys?Oh, she's like, I love your
hat. She's like, thank youone of your guys, I'd love it,
and she yeah, it was acampaign thing. I I mean,
I I don't know if it waslike a stunt that you know, went
wrong. I'm not quite sure,but I think that would be kind of
you think it was. Oh,and then she just ruined it. Yeah.
(01:29:25):
They know who's going to be askingquestions at these events, especially ones
that are intimate like this one.Yeah. So yeah, of course she
got a free hat. I'm gonnasay, this is why I wouldn't run
for office if I was a candidateright now, and I are a politician,
and I had said, well,I'm gonna say something that it's not
popular. It really isn't popular,and my mi like campaign staff would freak
(01:29:46):
out, So I'll never run foroffice because I could never be honest like
this. Why aren't you giving freehats to people who can't even vote?
Dumb? I'm very Ron Burgundy aboutthis, Not Ron Burgundy. Who am
I thinking of the guy parks andrec Not Ron Burgundy. I can't remember.
I'm too busy thinking about Turkey.I don't have any brain space for
this. Ron Sponson, thank you. Different run very Ron Sponson about this.
(01:30:10):
Why are you giving uh? Whyare you giving your hats, your
campaign stuff to people who can't evenvote? Dumb? No, don't do
it. I love your hat notjust just stop, just stop. I
still think that she's running for VP, Nikki Hayley. I'm planning on not
getting heavy into the primary stuff untilafter Christmas because we're still fifty five days
(01:30:33):
out from caucuses. In Iowa,DeSantis came out yesterday and said he ever
he went to every county already,He's visited every county in Iowa. Can
we just stop for one second aboutthe counties in Iowa. There's a lot
of them. Pull up a mapof the counties in Iowa. Came.
I have never seen who did this. I have never seen a state so
(01:30:59):
reasonably divine into counties. It isneat and tidy. It is the tidiest
thing I have ever seen. Doyour all self a favor if you ever.
I know it sounds weird, butlike Google all the different google Iowa
counties map, and I mean itis very satisfying to look at it.
(01:31:19):
They are so perfectly. I mean, it's all perfect. It's it all
makes sense. It's so perfect.They're all almost perfect squares. I mean
there's at least several roes that areperfect squares. Palo Alto County is literally
a perfect square, Floyd County aperfect square, Butler a perfect square.
The only one was it Ida.The only one is a little got a
(01:31:42):
little leg sticking out there that's probablya river or something. Otherwise, you
know, it's all like perfectly reasonable, very nice. Like Fayette, it's
like almost a rectangle, very nice, very orderly. Now if you look
at some of these other states,it's a hot mas, yes, hot
mess. I looked at this upthough, and I was blown away by
(01:32:05):
how organized they were with their counties. Like someone actually sat down with a
ruler and paper and just did itlike that, like you know how you're
supposed to. Probably, uh,they did it, they did it properly.
I want whoever is in charge ofthe counties in Iowa, I want
them to come and like organize mypantry, you know, maybe like my
(01:32:26):
closet and and then my everybody hasthat one drawer in your kitchen that you
use for like your secondary plastic ladlesand stuff. I need that. I
need them to come and situate thatstuff. Want's getting the map up because
people aren't gonna believe me, Iwill say. Webster County kind of messes
it up a little bit, likethey they and what is it? Cospeth
(01:32:47):
County. Cospeth is like I'm gonnarectangle this all up? Is that just
like rule? Is that what itis? I'm assuming I don't know,
but like it's just so perfectly divided. And then you have Shell and the
other one in Guthrie and Dallas County. They all literally are shaped the exact
same with the little notches. Whodid this? It's so, you know
(01:33:11):
what, I look at this mapand the level of satisfaction I feels like
when I'm swift on the floor andthere's this one spot by my cabinets where
the swifferhead fits perfectly like it wasmade for it. Like the people who
are making who built the house,were like, you know what, let's
put this in here for the ladieswho like to swiffer and they want that
swifferhead to just fit perfectly in there. Let's just do that. Because you
(01:33:31):
do it and you're like, ohyeah, right, nice. Or how
when you're vacuuming and you're on carpetand that's just perfect, it looks like
a mode lawn, like MLB modelawn. It's like someone from the MLB
who takes care of stadiums came andvacuumed your carpet. It's like that kind
of perfect. I feel I hadthat satisfaction. Anyway, kudos Iowa on
(01:33:51):
your very orderly counties. It's verynicely done. I mean some of us
are a little jealous. I'm justsaying because like, let's look at our
homesteak, kne that's don't just googlethis up. Yeah, we got some
issues here. We got some issueswith some of these kinds. It's not
as neat and orderly. I mean, it's pretty good. It's not not
(01:34:15):
heinous. It's not heinous. Alot of the borders are. They're using
rivers. It's like when they getdown to the boot heel or or the
toe. Yeah, you're like,and it's not as bad as like California.
California's county map. They just stoppedcaring. They just don't care,
like they some of it's weird.I don't know, like they just I
(01:34:38):
mean some of these other I'm justit's very interesting. So anyway, he's
been to all of these counties there, he's been to all of them.
They went to the fair. Theyate the meats on the sticks, they
ate all of that stuff. Youknow, they they did all of it.
So I I'm not going to getheavy into it until we get into,
(01:35:00):
you know, after Christmas, becauseyou guys, you all don't want
to be like, you're not goingto be focusing on that. Come on,
you're not gonna be all into that. You're you're more into your very
you want to focus on, likeI think everybody's focusing on Christmas and Holidays
and Thanksgiving and all that stuff,just because everything is so stressful and nasty
(01:35:24):
and it's been already a nasty primaryand people are just done with it.
Can I just share a little factoidhere about Argentina's new president, the guy
with the piercing blue eyes and crazyhair. He looks like a character from
The Mighty Boosh, which, ifyou're unfamiliar, is one of my kids'
absolute favorite shows. Ever. It'sthis old British show. It's from the
(01:35:44):
early aughts and we discovered it duringlockdown, and he looks like a character
from the Mighty Boush. This thenew president elect, Javier Milai. So
apparently you can tell he's a Libertarianbecause he does this. Libertarians capital el
Libertarians all have some weird currency.They'll seem totally normal when you talk to
(01:36:08):
him. Everybody has a weird tick. Republicans, conservatives, socialists, are
you know, communi everybody, butlibertarians are particularly interesting because they'll say things
like, yes, you know,I also believe, yes, we should,
uh, we should go back toreturn to gold standard, and we
should you know, abolish everything that'snot Article one, Section eight, and
(01:36:30):
we really need to honor states rightsand all this stuff. And they say
things that make all the sense inthe world. And then they'll say things
like yes, I also use apsychic to communicate with my dead dog and
ask it for political advice. Andyou're like, what, well, wait,
everything you were saying sounded so neat. Yes, and also the psychic
(01:36:51):
thing with the dog. No,no, no. You see what I
mean, though, Cain, Imean, would you agree, like they
all say things that are totally normal, and then all of a sudden they
come out of left field with this. I'm not making this up, by
the way, this apparently is whatI have here. I'm not saying this
against him. I don't know howto interpret it. It's intriguing, not
intriguing, it's entertaining. I'm notgonna lie. So the guy, the
(01:37:12):
new president elect, apparently he hadan English mastiff dog named Conan, and
he has four other dogs that werecloned with Conan's DNA and tissue samples.
And he said he always had adog to love. I mean, he
really took it literally in politics,if you want a friend, get a
dog. He did, and hecloned it. And then he also in
(01:37:33):
his spare time, he uses amedium to communicate with the dead dog.
The dead dog that he had thatall the clones got came from. I
don't dislike the guy, but youknow what I'm saying, Like, I'm
not kidding you. You all knowthis capital A Libertarians they will always want
(01:37:56):
to. They will always come outof left field with one thing, right,
Like, yes, I believe inall of these things and all of
this, and Marian Williamson too.Yes, I sleep inside of a hollowed
up crystal. I'm a fairy atnight. I mean, I mean,
it wasn't like that, but youknow, I mean it's or you know,
(01:38:18):
I I guess I agree with youabout monetary policy, and I also
think that we need to you know, we need this quantity of easy nonsense.
By the way, do you knowthat I'm actually an alien in a
meat suit. My real name isBorg. I mean, you see what
I'm saying, Like it's they comeout of left field with something. I
(01:38:38):
was just waiting for this one todrop. I'm like, with hair like
that, dude, it's gonna happen, just waiting for it. Yeah.
So it's his dog Cone and uh, this was This was in his biography
by the way, So unless youthink I'm making this up, it's from
his biography that's written by an Argentinianjournalist, Juan Luis Gonzalez, and it
(01:38:59):
says that the new president election studiestelepathy and he uses a medium to talk
to his dead dog ask his deaddog about political advice you know, makes
with and he's got his other clonedogs. All right, but hey,
did you see the video where hewas thrown away all the stuff on the
board. If he does even halfof that, okay, all right,
(01:39:24):
I'll give you the dog medium cuthalf of that. You know what I'm
saying. I like to make theseunofficial, nonverbal deals with elected leaders right
like that are only exists in yourhead, you know what I mean,
Like things like, okay, maybeif you build the whole wall, I'll
forgive the spray TND. You know, things like that. That's what I'm
(01:39:45):
talking about. Like I'm just saying, you know, I but the Capitol
Libertarians, every one of my libertarianfriends, they all have like one of
I have. She's sweet. I'mnot going to say her name, but
she's gonna know immediately if this evergets out. You know, it's just
(01:40:05):
us here, just a few ofus, but Capital Libertarian. And she
sleeps with crystals, like a forestof them on her nightstand. It could
be something to that. It's likea forest of them, and it's like
they're like different types, and thenthey have little stands and then one of
(01:40:30):
them lights up. It or no, it doesn't light up, she illuminates
it. I don't know, man, just and then different crystals throughout our
house for certain energies, like it'sa rock really really with you over there.
Kane was over there saying what heshowed me a package of probiotics.
(01:40:53):
I took a picture of him withouthim knowing, because what, yeah,
I send it to you. Evendid you not even look at Slack?
You don't even look at this stuff? He's like probiotics. And then it's
like he's being filmed by an imaginarycameraman in here. And the way that
he was taking it out of thebox, it's like he was being filmed.
So I'm like, what is happeninghere? He's taking holding the package
(01:41:15):
logo out like he's hand modeling it. It was hysterical. I'm just saying,
you know, I think that's yours. Yours is your bacteria tea and
your your pills, your your hippiepills of the probiotics. Anti science.
I'm not anti science. I justthink it's funny, Like there's without fail,
without fail, I'm never wrong.So if you meet a libertarian,
(01:41:35):
there's something's gonna come out. It'llbe like, you know, I have
an invisible fifth leg. I don'tknow, like they'll come up with something.
You know, I had nine fingersand I or I had eleven fingers
and I cut one off. Idon't know, like they'll come up with
something. They'll something four visible legs. Yeah, OK, I don't know.
I'm just I'm scrattling all things topof my head. It's really hard
(01:41:57):
to top the dog medium, yousee. It's very, very difficult to
do. So all right, we'regonna get moving. Follow Dana on Apple,
Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts, because knowledge is your ultimate superpower,
and make sure that you find uson Facebook and YouTube, like and
subscribe. Find that again that newsletterover at substack, chapter and verse.
(01:42:18):
Always good stuff that goes out thereregularly. And a big thank you to
everybody who is listening, whether you'relistening terrestrially, whether you're streaming the program,
whether you're in fact watching the simulcast. We're grateful for all of you
this Thanksgiving because, honestly, especiallyas it gets crazier and crazier out there,
(01:42:39):
it's really nice to know that youhave someplace to go every afternoon and
feel like you're sitting at this virtualroundtable with people and just you know,
having some coffee or some soda orsweet tea on sweet tea for methinks,
and you know, just being ableto talk with people and laugh about how
absurd everything is. So a bigthank you to everybody out there who keeps
(01:43:00):
the show going, who helps makeit possible, to everybody in our YouTube
chat, to Lorraine for holding itdown, to Cain and Want and Steve
as well. We're thankful to themwho keep the show going, act as
the gatekeepers. They always got mysix and they make sure that we do
a really stellar broadcast every single day. So we're very very grateful for you
guys, grateful for the staff,and grateful to you know, Radio America
(01:43:24):
puts our show out every single day. Grateful to the first and the crew
over there. We got a lotof things to be grateful for, and
we got a great country and alot of freedom to be grateful for.
So as we start rolling into theconclusion of this year and onward to the
next, let's turn that gratitude intoaction and demonstrate our gratefulness by making sure
that we protect those things that wevalue. So folks, I will be
(01:43:47):
out tomorrow. I will be backbehind the mic with you on Monday.
I hope you have a blessed Thanksgiving. We got a great guy, we
got a great country, and wegot a lot of stuff to be thankful
for. Thank y'all so much.Have a wonder full, blessed Thanksgiving.