Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
Of our friends over at Hillsdale College. This is one of the things that
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they teach at Hillsdale. This islike where you go for an actual good
education. It's a small Christian,classical liberal arts college. They're in southern
Michigan. They teach critical thinking.They protect critical thinking, not critical race
theory, and they understand that educationis absolutely paramount to a free society.
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The more you know, the freeryou are, especially with how your own
government works. And so that's whatthey teach at Hillsdale, where they foster
open debate, where students aren't penalizedfor engaging in honest academic discussion and displaying
intellectual curiosity. And you can studyAmerica's great heritage of liberty and grow by
studying these truths in a very supportiveand dedicated community. And you can see
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they have a short video up abouthow Hillsdale's work is super effective in defending
American liberty not just on its campuses, but across the country. You can
access it at Dana for foor Hillsdaledot com and learn more about the mission
of Hillsdale College. Visit dana forHillsdale dot com. That's standard for Hillsdale
dot com Hillsdale College, developing minds, improving hearts. I hope that we
can keep this pause going as longas possible to get as many of these
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hostages out as possible. That thereare some constraints because Israel has been losing
the hearts and minds of people notonly in the region but around the world.
One of the things that I wouldstrongly aerge our Israeli partners is to
release some of the funds that goto the Palestinian authority. I've been worried,
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even in advance of October seventh,that you could have the Palestinian security
services simply all quit on the WestBank and you would have chaos at an
unprecedented level. You know, sometimesthey hear these people talk and I'm like,
how how are they able to talk? Because they make such stupid observations
(01:52):
that it's shocking that they can carrylike an actual you know, it's shocking
that they can deliver a sentence,especially on this that was actually pretty shocking
to me. Welcome to the program. We're gonna break this down. Welcome
to the program. Dana last yearwith you. You can listen to the
radio show Coast to Coast stream theradio show. Watch the simulcast as well
(02:12):
on Channel three forty seven Direct TV. So that was that not blinkin' uh
Warner. That's correct. So that'sSenator Warner, and he's I'm kind of
shocked at his trust. I'm notshocked. I mean he's a Democrat.
Even for a Democrat, Democrats haveto understand who the Palestinian Authority is.
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I mean they have to understand whothe Palestinian Authority is and what they do.
I mean, he wants you cansee what the what the administration is
trying to do here. They aredesperately trying to prop up Palestinian authority.
They are desperate, they're trying tosave the Palate. And I say,
Palestinian just started off right off thebat. Palestine doesn't exist. It's not
a country. There's no ethnicity ofpeople who are Palestinians. None of the
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claims are supported throughout thousands of yearsof antiquity, So spare me. But
as I was saying the claim that, well, they need to release more
money to the Palestinian Authority so thatyou understand it, the Palestinian Authority is
the Palestinian authority, the ruling entity. They essentially have control in west Bank
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officially, like on officially, theyhave control, but really it's Hamasa.
It's so popular they have de factocontrol, which and I'll keep reminding people
of this. This is why wehave why they had the suspension of elections
back in just a couple of yearsago, because Humas won overwhelmingly in two
thousand and six after Israel unilaterally pulledout of Gaza in two thousand and five.
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They are incredibly popular in West Bankand Gaza. Don't let anyone ever
dissuade you from that, because thatis God's honest truth. They are supremely
popular in those two territories. Hamasis overwhelmingly popular. They people elected them
knowing about martyrs funds and everything else, knowing that and out of the two,
(04:10):
because you have Fata and you haveHamas, those were the two big
parties under the authorities umbrella for thelack of a better way to put it,
Fata at least, and I don'tlike them either, but they recognized
they they acknowledged Israel's right to exist, which was the bare minimum acknowledged it
(04:30):
and at least kind of gave overturesto a two state solution that Israel had
already accepted and said, we'll dothis, but then, you know,
if you keep firing rockets at us, we're not going to do it anymore.
Hamas didn't want it, which isthat was one of the big deciding
factors into why they were so popularand why they got why they were elected,
was that reason was that the recognitionof Israel as its own entity.
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So that's kind of a big deal, you know, when you're having a
conversation about Palestinian authority and fire andHamas and so to hear Senator Warner say,
well, this moronic comment, Well, if they just give more money
to them, you know, theyjust got to give some more money.
Kay, that's how litty is youknow, I would urge them to release
them funds. How many fun?How much fun they've been releasing fun since
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the beginning, Stop treating Gazza likea welfare state, and demand that their
elected government actually stop spending money onterrorism and maybe start spending money on the
people that elected it to represent it. Just you know, that's just the
thought. Israel doesn't know them adamn thing. They don't owe them another
dime, they don't owe them nota thing. They don't need to release
anything to the Palestinian Authority pound sandand they shouldn't and and and their people
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should should should criticize the Israeli governmenthardcore if they do, because they should
not release another dime. They've releasedso much money they annually aid everything else.
So that's something you got to kindof because they keep seeing this and
everybody. I don't know if theyjust don't know enough about the area or
they don't understand the history. Uh. Yes, their airfat went a long
way to really mainstream and popularize theseclaims with the authority, et cetera,
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et cetera. But uh, youhad the PLO, you have the Palestinian
Authority. I mean the difference isone signed a doc a governing document.
One didn't. Uh. But they'rethey're all they're the same thing. They're
the same people. Like the headof FATA is the chair of the of
the Palestinian Authority. They're all thesame people. So it's a stupid it's
just a bunch of It's like Canaand I saying, well, this is
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the Dana Show, and then thisis also the show Dana and this is
also the radio program of Dana lashand just doing a bunch of different names
for the same thing. It's thesame. It's the same thing. So
for Wanner, for Warner to saythis, I just this guy should not
be in involved in any any ofthis policy. If this is what,
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if this is his position. Iknow a lot of people have been kind
of critical to and asking why doesthe United States have to give Israel so
much money? I think that's afair question to ask. And the reason
I say it's a fair question toask is because it's to me, it
seems offensive to treat them like awelfare partner, you know what I mean,
Because they're not. I mean,they are more than they're they're They're
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more than capable of handling theirselves.They have the they have not only the
technological know how, the military knowhow, the resources to do it,
but they have the funds to doit too. They're not, you know,
a broke nation that misappropriated and andand acted with impropriety and spent everything
on terror tunnels. I mean,they actually built an infrastructure on like Hamas.
So I think that's a fair questionto raise. And I think there's
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a difference between you know, makingsure that your allies with someone and keeping
your allies safe and making sure thatyou know that that that you uh because
it's you don't want what's happening thereto spread. There is a good argument,
a different argument to have for that, But I think it's a fair
question. I see people argument thisall the time on social media, and
I I think it's a fair questionto ask. However, you can't allow
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people like the Squad to hide behindthat as justification for the stuff that they're
saying. Did you see what Rareshidato Leib did yesterday? So they had
these motions that they were voting onthe resolution to stand with Israel, et
cetera, et cetera. She's oneof those who doesn't She doesn't recognize Israel.
She wouldn't acknowledge that in the Houseor cheated to lead. Now answer
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me how you can represent anybody inthe House of Representatives and not acknowledge that,
not understand and recognize our allies rightto exist. I find that fascinating.
But that's but that's where they are. They have a huge problem on
the Democrat side. They have amajor problem, and I know the media
(08:35):
always ignores it because it's so muchfun to talk about the stuff on the
right, but they have a hugeproblem with anti Semitism. In the meantime,
the White House has said eight moreAmerican citizens as well as a US
permanent resident, are believed to bestill held hostage by Hamas, and they're
purposefully doing this, you know,very slow release of hostages. Will release
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a couple of heir, will releasea couple of them. There a couple
hostages here, just you know.Nine children apparently still remain captive in Gaza.
Thirty one people young adults have beenreleased so far, and Israel is
classifying if you're eighteen or younger thenyou're considered a child. They still do
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have a four year old and aneight month old I guess he's nine months
old now that are captive, andnobody even knows if they're actually being held
together. They were kidnapped with theirmother, the Bibbis family. The mother.
The reports were that the mother wasseparated. You might have seen the
(09:41):
video from one of the terrorist bodycams, and this was one of that
I think the IDF got a holdof and they had released it. She
had two kids in her arms andshe was crying and they were hurting her
into a van, that those arethe kids in question, and that's the
mother in question. The reports werethat they were separated from her in captivity
(10:01):
and that they have already said they'renot releasing the kids. They've already said
they're not they're definitely not releasing thefour year old in the I guess nine
month old now, uh. Andthey said that they're incredibly recognizable because they're
redheaded and because you know, youhave a young baby, you know,
a little baby, uh, andthat's uh, kind of makes them the
(10:24):
face of these hostages in a way. So I have I mean, that's
just horrible, that's crazy. Howwere they? I mean, think about
this, you got a baby,I got a baby. You there's no
way and to separate the baby fromhis mom. You honestly trust these Hamas
terrorists to take care of a baby, keep a baby alive. I mean,
you already heard the reports. Theywere beaten. The one child,
(10:45):
the one little boy that was released, they were they were kicking the crap
out of him, beating him up, putting him in isolation. They were
torturing that child. So, Imean, I can't even hardly think of
what they're doing to these kids incaptivity, but just a drip drip drip
release of the hostages. And they'redoing this on purpose. I mean,
it's a sy out there. It'sall psychological warfare, that's all. That's
all part of this, that's allwhat this is. While they're simultaneously claiming
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for ceasefire that they violated yesterday becausethey again fired on IDEAF troops. They
violated yesterday. So just that's oneof the things that the media doesn't want
to really widely report about. Soa few things the a couple of things
to touch on. They had theRosalind Carter her visitation going on today.
(11:31):
Why why were people and I noticedthat it was mostly progressive dudes. Why
were they flipping out about Mulania Trumpwearing a gray coat? Like one guy
was saying that, and I'm lookingat a photo of the former First Ladies.
They were in either dark navy orblack. She had a black dress
(11:52):
on, but she had a graycoat over it. And I mean it's
cold. I mean, for krenout loud, it's like near it's almost
December. It's cold outside, andshe wore it was a very nice gray
coat. She was completely appropriately dressed. And I noticed a number of dudes,
like people with like on cable newswho were saying, oh, it's
disrespectful that she wore gray. NowI noticed that all these dudes, I'm
gonna be honest, we're fat andugly. All of the dudes criticizing Milania
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Trump were for it. Why doesshe get so much hate? You don't
even have to like Trump or loveTrump to recognize that this woman gets an
ignort amount of hate. She hasalways dressed classy. I loved the Christmas
decorations. I will fight you onthat hill and I will win. I
loved the Christmas decorations with the redtrees. I saw that and my little
goth heart leaped. It was sogreat. But they were going on and
(12:37):
on stine that it was inappropriate,et cetera, et cetera. Uh,
and that she was she was,she that it wasn't It's not an acceptable,
it's not acceptable attire. They said, you know, just stay home.
Your attention seeking is classless. Shewore dark gray coat. It was
cold outside. She had a blackdress on underneath. Good grief. I
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mean, even in death, thesepeople cannot be classy, shameful on the
way, We've got a number ofthings coming up, including all of the
latest going on in the Middle Eastas well the Hoho thy's acting up.
We're going to discuss all of that. We're going to get into some of
the twenty twenty four stuff. TheKoch brothers are weighing in, not surprisingly
hear they're endorsing I'm I'm just sayingit observationally. We also have Hunter Biden
(13:26):
wanting to testify, but only ifit's public, but it doesn't look like
Congress is going to allow for himto have that chance. And did you
hear about the senior CIA official whowas caught posting pro hamas content on social
media? Yeah, the senior CIAofficial not retired. Yeah, wait until
you hear that story. Looking fora proactive solution in a battle against COVID
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ten. That's Dana and the numberten. And now all of the news
you would probably miss. It's timefor Dana's Quick five. So as we
were talking about some of the hostagesthat Hamas has in custody, the IDF
is now looking into claims. Justreported that the family, the mother with
the eight old or the nine monthold and then the four year old,
(15:03):
the Hamas has claiming that they werekilled. So this has happened before,
though they've claimed that Emily Hand forinstance, was killed and she was not,
so the IDF before any verifications takingplace, they're trying to investigate the
veracity of those claims, but thatcame from Jposts and several other sources.
On this, I really hope not. I think we all really hope not,
because goodness, that's just that,and that's just horrific. You almost
(15:28):
need a moment to process it.Also, UK study shows that memory problems
and cognitive loss have now been tiedto the lockdowns. Very unsurprising, the
stringent lockdown measures that were implemented acrossthe world were found to be have negatively
impacted the working memory and cognitive function, particularly of older individuals. Now there
(15:52):
are raised concerns about elevated risks ofdementia. According to a very comprehensive UK
study which published its findings this week, the University of Exeter and King's College
London, in collaboration with their NHSover there, they revealed these impacts and
they said they looked at over threethousand people. The average age was sixty
(16:12):
seven and they said that there's stillthey said the effects of these measures are
yet to be fully established, butthey're very troubled. In fact, they're
very nervous about what they've discovered withcognitive decline on this. So that's something
else. Also, North Korea claimsthat a spy satellite took photos of the
White House. Now what North Koreais going to be really shocked about is
(16:33):
I also can see photos of theWhite House using a thing called Google Maps.
Let's see eight hundred and thirteen thousandborrowers get email from President Joe Biden
on student loan forgiveness. They're stillpushing that we're going to come back and
touch on this because they sent emailsout to these borrowers. They forgiveness.
You just don't have to pay backthe money that you owe others. And
imagine you tried to do that inany other facet of life. The CIA
(16:56):
apparently has a secret office that's conductedufover retrieval missions on at least nine crash
sites around the world. According tomissile Blowers, men in black speaking of
aliens, cave aliens and eery trioalien like humanoid figures with giant heads were
found painted in an African cave leve, leaving scientists baffled. According to the
Sun, or they could just belike giant like fish or something like with
(17:19):
vert I don't know, but theysaid that they're cave aliens. I do
think that they think everything looks likean alien though, like these researchers,
this is very Monty python us.They go back and they find something and
then they construe this you know,fantastical thing around it and I don't know.
We have a lot more on theway. Stick with us. Our
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(19:10):
Check out the best highlights from everyshow and Dana's Absurd Truth podcast, hosted
daily from The Dana Show. Ahandful of Republicans have dangerously tried to link
Ukraine AID and make our support fordemocracy in the West a pivotal issue that
history will remember us for conditional onpassing hard right border policy similar to HR
(19:33):
two. It's hard right now basicborder policy is now hardright? Who knew?
You know? Yes? Can youhave an observation? So constitutional is
far right? Apparently? Okay?Apparently just actually enforcing existing border law is
(19:53):
apparently far right. I did notknow that was the thing. That's I'm
today's a long in knowing that.Uh, that was Senator Chuck Schumer who
was giving us the amazing insight onthat. How but how is it though?
That's not How is it hard right? Because a lot of the border
(20:14):
law that's in place there. Dude, you've supported it, you supported it.
So was it hard right? WhenChuck Schumer supported some of the previous
border law that now he refuses toenforce. I'm made of questions. I
mean it just when what made ithard right? Well, when our voters
decided that they didn't like it anymore? Hmm yeah, I I yeah.
(20:37):
And it could have been passed withthought the Senate. You're right, he
was right there involved in all ofit. So the uh, welcome back
to the program. By the way, I hope you signed up for the
newsletter over it to substack chapter infirst and Uh, I'm looking at this
the border, the border policy,because that was one of the things that
the House wanted to tie into anykind of additional spending, right and you
(21:02):
knew this was going to come up. We're going to have this battle again
over the border, over the overfunding. We're going to We're going to keep
having these battles because Congress is obsessedwith just kicking the can down the road.
They don't want to deal with it. And now they're saying, well,
you know, we're we just we'regoing to reject any request for any
(21:25):
kind of additional funding at the border. We just don't think that that's something
we need to be focusing on rightnow. I think it's actually something very
important to focus on because you wetalked, just talked yesterday about the border
surge about how border or customs andborder patrol they don't even have enough manpower
down there to process everything just goingthrough the border, which is definitely going
to affect commerce. And I mean, it's it's it's a problem that they
(21:48):
don't seem to want to address.They're too busy doing other stuff, like
the CIA deputy director who's posting proHamas stuff on Facebook. Yes even after
the attack. I don't know ifthese people are dumb. I just think
that they don't care. I simplythink that they just don't care. Well,
(22:15):
I think Miguel Cartona is dumb,don't He's the guy who yesterday said
that he butchered Reagan's quota. He'sdumb. But this is just they don't
care. So this story, itcomes from Financial Times. The CIA's Associate
deputy director for Analysis, changed herFacebook cover photo on October twenty first to
(22:37):
an image of a man waving aflag for a fictional country that's never existed
in all of mankind quote unquote Palestinianflag, and it's often used in their
very anti and not just anti Israeligovernment, but like anti Jewish people.
I mean, there's a big difference, right, people understand there's a big
difference between criticizing the Israeli government andthen being like to Jews. There's a
(23:00):
big difference. They don't seem torecognize that at this publication, that or
that that that the media has usedpreviously in their as their image to accompany
these articles that are very very criticalof Israel. It's like a widely used
image. So they said that thisthis CIA officer and again this is a
(23:26):
deputy director for analysis. Changed thisto the dude waving the fake flag.
FT decided not to name her afterthe intelligence agency expressed a concerned about her
safety. Huh. I think weall need to be worried about our safety
with this broad in the CIA,because that's a very you're a senior intelligence
(23:48):
official. You're posting a hyper politicalimage on a public platform that everyone can
see. That's unprofessional, especially ifyou're in the CIA. If you want
to be able to post things toyour little faithbook account, then don't be
a senior intelligence official. No one'ssaying that you can't post things to your
Facebook account. But when you area senior intell official with the flipping CIA,
(24:11):
there's a certain level of maturity andaccountability that is that's to be followed.
And if you can't meet that,if showing your backst on Facebook is
more important to you, then showyour backset on Facebook. Just going to
do it while you're with the CIA. So there's the difference here, and
this is there's apparently tensions within thegovernment because people are saying that Biden should
(24:33):
put more pressure on Israel. He'sbeing dragged I hope you see this.
Internally, I will say this,I don't think that Biden necessarily agrees with
the push to force or to tryto force Israel into ceasing defending itself against
hamas in Gaza. But I feellike he's being dragged to that position because
the pressure is so great. Idon't think he actually legitimately agrees with it.
(24:59):
But he's never and one known forhis spine or his leadership. So
if he gets pushed enough, that'swhat he's gonna do, He's going to
go right along with it. Andthis individual that's been posting this, they
it's they're a career analyst with anextensive background in all aspects of the Middle
East. Blah blah blah. Andthey said that they were not trying to
express a shut up, Yes youwere. Someone said, well, they
(25:22):
actually uploaded yours ago. Yeah,but they just made it their cover photo.
You epic moron. Learn how Facebookworks. It doesn't just become your
your new top. You know,like you have your your photo that you
use as your main avatar, andthen you have what they call their cover
(25:44):
photo and that's the uh wider photoup at the top, and that's what
they switched it to They switched itto that photo, and then of course
that populates in your feed on Facebookespecially, It doesn't matter if it's an
old picture or not. You cango and an old picture and repurpose it
to be used as a cover imageand it will populate on the home feed.
(26:04):
They so and so change their coverimage. That's what happened here.
So they're like, well, itdoesn't matter it, shut up, learn
how Facebook works. I'm not gonnaI can't see these people stop. It's
a CIA. It's a CIA officer. It is a CIA officer who is
posting this stuff, promoting pro Hamasstuff on their Facebook page. Now.
(26:25):
I know that the administration is aproblem with some of these pro Hamas people
and that they have working with them, but this is a little too far.
Does that make you feel uncomfortable knowingthat you got somebody that's standing for
Hamas. It's literally a deputy directorof Analysis and CIA. I mean,
don't we have enough problems with deepstate right now? And now we got
turns like this? Ask me again, why don't trust my government? A
(26:47):
healthy republic is actually dependent upon peoplebeing suspicious of their government, but they
also have to realize that they aremore powerful than their government, and this
stuff shouldn't be tolerated. And apparentlythis individual has not been disciplined. I
think, And and because I'm theemployer, because we pay for the CIA.
As the employer, I would firethis person because you cannot. This
(27:10):
is not like you're working as abarista and you decide to post something on
your own Facebook page. People arenot paying tax dollars to baristas. They
are not putting their faith in theexecution of missions to keep the populace at
large safe. They're not expecting thatof a barista, but they are of
a senior intelligence officer in the CIA. The government, as a taxpayer funded
(27:37):
entity of which the CIA is part, is required and should be required,
and the discipline, the penalty fornot observing this should be dismissal. They
are they should be required to beentirely bipartisan. That's not saying that you
don't get to have your beliefs,but can we stop this worship at the
altar of self. If you wantthe job, get over yourself. That's
(28:00):
just the bare bones of it.All of these people who think that the
world is owed their precious opinions youropinions aren't precious. Most everybody has them.
No one cares same thing with theCIA officer, a senior officer in
the CIA. Out of anybody thatshould be very rigidly observing protocol about bipartisanship
(28:23):
and not posting hyper political imagery,it should be the CIA. And the
fact that Noah, I think theyshould be dismissed. They should be fired
and not allowed to work in seniorintel. Again, that's a consequence of
valuing your ego more than your job. And if you don't want to be
told what you can and cannot poston Facebook, then don't take the job.
(28:48):
For the precious single brain cell drivebuys out there. It's not a
free speech issue, especially when ourtax dollars are at play, and especially
when someone has the security authority andthe access to be able to do some
real share stuff if they want to, you have the responsibility to deliver on
the appearance of complete propriety. Youcannot be seen as being compromised in any
(29:11):
way. So this is ridiculous.So they said, oh, well,
the analysts posted messages condemning anti Semitismtoo. That's what one person defending I
guess to NBC said of this individual, that's irrelevant. They made this photo
their cover photo. That flag issynonymous with Hamas. Now Hamas is the
(29:33):
government since they unit, since Israelunilaterally moved out in two thousand and five.
The people have overwhelmingly supported the electedgovernment that represents this flag. That
isn't anyone else's fault. That's notthe fault of the observers who are simply
remarking on what's come to be true. These are the actions of the people
in this area, including the peoplewho voted for Hamas. They act like
(29:57):
the only way to be considered aculp this is that if you have a
Hamas member's only jacket and a Costcolike membership card. It's not how it
is. I mean, this isjust it's it's insane. Does that?
I mean, don't you think Ithink they should be fired. They will
(30:17):
go after and they will tag parentsas domestic terrorists for speaking out at school
board meetings. But you have atop intel official that posts pro Hamas drivel
on Facebook, and nothing Hamas thepeople are killing, rape folks, including
kids. Nothing the overwhelmingly popular governmentof the territories. There nothing that's a
(30:42):
little bit one that's one too farfor me. Wait, just just one
too far. So I I betweenthis and and and watching the slow drag
of Biden towards cease Fireville. It'sgonna happen. You know, he's going
to be pressured into saying and youknow it's going to happen. It's just
(31:03):
a matter of time. But myheavens. So yeah. The CIA,
they sent out this internal email cautioningpeople about posting political messages on social media.
I don't even know why you havea social if you're in CIA,
you shouldn't have social media. Socialmedia is the matrix. I don't know
if people recognize this or not,but it is social media right now,
(31:26):
it'll be replaced, but it's thematrix. I mean, it's the Wakowski
brothers, well sisters now, Iguess right not they're brothers, but you
know what I mean, it's theWakowskis. I know that they kept trying
to they wanted to rewrite history laterand say no, it's actually about being
trans now. And this is amatrix social media is that everybody's got to
(31:48):
have an opinion, everybody's got tohave a hot take. It's to the
we're so self aggrandizing that you haveCIA officials that will actually compromise their position
and compromise that the public trust inthe agency in which they work, because
they're so obsessed with making sure everyoneknows their opinion. I must put this
(32:08):
thing on Facebook. I don't know, like I may, I maybe have
joked about it before, but Iactually like seeing pictures of the all sandwiches
and food and stuff. You know, I like seeing those kind of things.
I get real tired of. I'mgonna here's my hot take. And
I work in the industry. Irealize how incredibly ironic this is. But
you know what I mean, It'slike, not everybody has to have a
(32:30):
hot take. Sometimes we just wantto see Kermit dancing to a Christmas song
on us. And now sometimes wejust want to see a picture of the
pie you made. That's all right, there's nothing there's no shame in that,
no shame in that. There there'sshame in being a CIA official and
posting stuff like this, though.I'm telling you now, we have days
of these United States coming up,and also along the way, we've got
(32:52):
a couple of other things we're gonnaWe've got a few other things that we're
gonna hit to do you remember,I gotta I gotta update the story about
the dead Spin the guy named Karen, the dead Spin reporter who went after
that little kid and was trying tohe called. He literally said the kid
was in blackface. And the kid, as it turned out, was just
painted up in the Chiefs colors.He had one side of his face red,
(33:14):
one side of his face black.Wait until you hear about this development.
That makes it even worse for thismale, for Karen. That guy's
name's Karen. It makes it evenI'm not kidding you, it's his actual
name, makes it even worse forhim. You do not want to miss
this because I saw this last nightand oh my gosh, I mean,
it's a m night Shamelaan twist.It's pretty hardcore. So we got that.
(33:37):
We got that a whole bunch ofother stuff for you as we move
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on Apple, Spotify or wherever youget your podcasts like SAMs through the Ale
Glass. So are the days ofthe United States. I think I would
like my legacy to be this sortof idea of like celebrity two point zero,
like how can we live in thespotlight and you know, have a
(35:52):
large following, but try to doit in a way that feels like the
kindest, most grounded, fine,silly, empathetic, vulnerable way possible.
And I don't know if that canexist yet. I'm still figuring that out,
and I think, you know,there's certain circumstances where I might get
(36:14):
pushed on that exaplanation, since thisis not like I had a Barbie with
that hair of that color. Welcomeback to the program. I know I
had to subject you to that becauseI had to watch it. That was
so Forbes announced. I can't showyou the gift that I used, or
maybe I can how their tweet waswritten. They announced their their entrepreneurs of
(36:36):
the on the twenty twenty four Forbesthirty Under thirty lists. They're fighting climate
change with Carbo Creda marketplaces. They'reinventing the nine on one call Bill and
blade Blah Blue that's their thing.And there's a dude and some I don't
know any of these people, andmost of their products are stupid. I'm
just gonna be honest. And theonly one I like is the tequila that
(36:57):
that that one Kendle Chick Putter thegosh, what's his name? Bruce Jenner
or Caitlyn Jenner that Fox has onall the time, his daughter, because
you know, Tequila's nice. ButI don't even know who some of these
other people are. I'm going toreinvent the way that. Okay, why
did they? But they have youknow who they have on here? Because
again it's thirty under thirty entrepreneurs.They've got the Dylan mulvany dude on there.
(37:23):
Literally all he does is bitch onsocial media. That's all he does.
How is that entrepreneurship? All hedoes is complain on social media.
I'm trying to figure out, Oh, he's a creator, that's how they
have it listed. Oh my gosh, I hate that. What do you
I'm a creator? Well, weall create, slick, What do you
(37:43):
do? What value do you bring? Well, I'm a man, and
I talk about like what it's liketo cosplay as a woman. It says,
my life is a giant comic con. It's what it is every day.
What did you come in? Didyou come in as a Jojo character?
No? Oh you didn't, didyou? What did you come as?
They came out as the woman?That's stop? I want my legacy
(38:06):
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(39:37):
terrible events that that that occurred onPinos Square on Thursday. You know,
I really would ask people to tryand avoid connecting crime with migration. It's
not really Yes, people who maynot be here in the country and ire
it's legally I beg you not to. Please don't confuse that with criminals.
(40:00):
Seriously, there's still going on aboutthis. Welcome back to the program,
Dana last year with you top ofthe second hour. You can listen Coast
to Coast. You can stream theradio program as well. You can also
follow along on YouTube Facebunk Channel threeforty seven Direct TV. Yeah, illegal
migration, what's the name for that? Kane the name for illegal migration.
(40:25):
I mean, migration's fine, butif you're trying to immigrate or enter a
place not in accordance with the law, there's a word for that crime.
Yeah, that's right, thanks,I it's crime. It was right there.
And yeah, so weird that theIrish Prime Minister wants to ask people
(40:49):
to try and avoiding connecting crime withcrime. What you heard me, I
don't think I did. Yeah,stopt in crime with crime very simple.
But entering a country illegally is theuh huh. It's a crime. Okay,
(41:10):
but don't assume that the crime isalso related to crime. But it's
a crime. Uh huh. Doyou see how ridiculous this is. That's
them right now. They haven't changed, they haven't changed. Uh. And
this is all due to the it'sall fallout still from the riots and everything.
After this. This Algerian guy wentcrazy and they're still they were trying
(41:32):
to figure out if he was inthe country legally or not. Uh.
And he stabbed outside of a primaryschool. He stabbed, almost killed a
five year old girl, stabbed anotherwoman and then Connor McGregor spoke out about
it and they had thirty four peoplearrested, and then the Irish the Irish
(41:54):
police started investigating Connor McGregor. Eventhough he was like a chain. He
criticized the government and he condemned theviolence. But you can't criticize the government
there, so he's been investigated.Now, let me understand this is one
thing I've never understood. Let megive you a little insight into my family
history. I come from and I'ma true American. I come from all.
(42:17):
I'm a mutt. I mean,I'm literally a one person melting pot.
Everyone thinks that I'm something or other. They think I'm Italian, they
think I'm this. Our family isactually the main two veins of our Famili's
ancestry is American, Indian and Irish, and that goes up to my grandfather
and then my great great grandparents.A set of them were super Irish.
(42:44):
And I've never mean because you know, there's always jokes in our family about
you know, our ancestry and wherewe come from and things like that,
and you know the combination of thetwo. And then somewhere we're far back,
we got like we got like aNorwegian somehow, I have no how,
but apparently, uh Norwegian and thencame through the Carolinas and then oh
(43:04):
and I have a great times questionmark grandfather who was hung off the Carolinas
for piracy. So I'm going torevert back to my culture is in Ercosta.
Whenever I see anybody do it talklike a pirate day. But I'm
only going to do it to theprogressive left. You all get to pass
anyway. My whole point in bringingthis up is there is a stereotype about
(43:25):
the Irish, the fighting Irish,right, there's a stereotype, I mean,
and it's one that I have friendswho live part time in Ireland and
they embrace it wholeheartedly, the fightingIrish. You don't take nothing from nobody,
and it's just, you know,it's just a long, revered,
(43:45):
cherished perception, which is why I'mbewildered when the government's like, nah,
you can't do that, and Irishpeople are like, Okay, what what
are you talking about. I mean, I have a story. So one
of my friends the lists part timein Ireland, lists part time in Ireland
(44:06):
and then is in New York therest of the time. We're saying that
it was her younger brother and hisfriends that got it was their friends they
had a disagreement, they got intoa brawl. They were told to take
it outside the pub. They wentinto the street, brawl, made up,
went back inside, had another pint. And that's just the nature of
things, right, I mean,good nature, go out, get it
out of your system. But thenthe government tells you you can't do something.
(44:28):
Where does that fighting spirit go?I mean they had people out in
the street writing and Connor McGregor wasspeaking on Now you got the Irish police
saying we're going to investigate you.My response, do you want to know
my I feel like some of youdon't really want to know what my response
would be. I would probably dothe D generation X move while telling them
(44:51):
to investigate D's pecans. That wouldhave been my response. I'm not joking
you. I would have been arrestedso many times. And I that's what
I don't get, Like you you'rewhy would you? Why don't don't don't
abide that. Don't abide that.I mean they're talking about investigating Connor McGregor
(45:15):
for crying out loud. I readConnor McGregor's tweets when I first heard that
he had said something about all theriots and everything. I thought, Oh
my gosh, what did he say? We got to go? Look,
I was I don't know what Iwas expecting. I guess I was anticipating
that it was going to be solike over the top because he's being investigated
by the Irish police. I mean, surely they would, Oh yes,
(45:36):
they would. He's all. LiterallyI read the tweet seed the other day.
He's like, oh, there's gravedanger among us in Ireland. Should
never be in the first place.And he's talking about ignoring the law coming
into the country, and then healso talks about the importance of you know,
just making sure that you're polite tothe people that live in the country
to what you're immigrating to, justas you would be to them and theirs,
you know, I mean it extendsboth ways. All apparently that's bad.
(46:00):
And then oh, heaven forbid,he went and criticized Kane. He
went and he criticized the government.He went and stole their lucky charms,
he did. He went and criticizedthe governments and so now they have to
have a full blown investigation into him. Bringing me to my point that if
I were him, I would dodegeneration X move and tell them to come
investigate these pecans. You're welcome,could have said Cashews as well. Sometimes
(46:29):
I don't know which one I prefermore taste wise, you know. I
mean, there's so many things youcould do with the pecan anyway, that's
beside the point. Yeah, youcan't criticize anybody over there. It's not
not allowed. It's not allowed.So then it makes me wonder. It's
just, you know, what isthe fighting Irish? Then what's where's the
fighting spirit? Come on, where'sthat at? Where is it? All
(46:51):
these Western governments. That's one ofthe most terrifying. We talked a little
bit about this yesterday. That's oneof the most terrifying developments that I've seen
in the past twenty years, thesegovernments turning on its own free people for
exercising the freedoms that they have,huh, or for daring to expect that
other people follow the law. Hey, we got to follow the law.
You got to follow it too.Oh, that's mean of you. You
(47:15):
can't say that if you tell people, yeah, if you want to come
into the country, come into itlegally the way that we would come into
your country. Oh, you can'tsay that. That's mean. It's mean
of you. You can't be sayingthose things. Now. I don't know
why I'm still talking like Irish cop, but you know works, you can't
say those things. It's mean spirited. No, just not to brotherly love.
(47:38):
It's mean to sit here and talkabout that. Ah, the border
should be open, should it?Though? It's mean to have any to
disagree otherwise. But you have allthese governments, like you know, the
the what you saw with after Octoberseventh, and then our government comes out
like, oh well, we gotto really focus on the Islamophobia. Yeah,
(47:59):
it's lamophobia. I mean you gotJewish teachers being locked into classrooms for
their own protection, students being lockedinto broom closets for their own protection.
Hate crimes, I hate that phrase. But to use the words of the
left, you know, people targetingJewish businesses, vandalizing them. It's like
the nineteen thirties all over again.Oh my gosh. And then the Western
government, our governments are criticizing thepeople who speak out and say, hey,
(48:21):
didn't y'all live this before? Someonego rouse Jimmy Carter if he can
be roused from his deathly slumber andmaybe ask him he was around. It's
also to blame for everything that's happeningin the Middle East. But that's why
I don't know why we relignizing himnow. But you know that breaks anyway.
I just I don't get it.Come on, so a few other
(48:44):
things I want to make sure wehit. Oh my gosh, you guys,
I've been waiting for this one.So you remember the story that we
had the other day about the kid. The kid who was in the Kansas
City Chiefs colors like he had theheaddress onlf. His face was painted black,
half of it was painted red,and he uh got I mean,
(49:05):
he got savaged by this grown mannamed Karen. I swear to dude his
nick because I got a full stop. I know his mom couldn't foresee into
the future, like she couldn't seethat. You know, a man who
acts like a complaining woman and isnamed Karen. Granted it's c A R
(49:27):
R O N. No offense tothe Karen's out there. Just laugh it
off and it's all in good fun, right, Just don't be don't be
so heavy handed that you can't havefun with stuff. But I mean,
he went after this kid. Heliterally said that the kid hated black people.
He said the kid was in blackface. The kid hates black people.
Probably didn't you say? He probablyhates Mexicans too. He said a whole
(49:49):
bunch of stuff, I mean.And then, as it turns out,
the kid, I don't want toI don't really want to say his name,
but he's actually his last name isArmenta. He is from California.
He's actually an American Indian who belongslike he is literally a member of the
(50:10):
Chumash nation. His dad is onthe tribal board in Santa Ynez, like
a voting member of a tribal nation. His dad's on the board. Their
family is legitimate, their actual AmericanIndians. So Karen Phillips went after an
American Indian child in order to tryto score clout. Just let that sink
(50:37):
in, like literally bring it intothe building. Elon, no, for
real, let this seriously, Imean, and his little sweet little face,
he was so proud, he waslike all decked out. Yeah,
he's actually an American Indian. It'dbe nice if the chiefs came out in
support of him. Why haven't theydone that? You had a reporter go
(51:01):
after one of your youngest fans.Why wouldn't the team stick up for him,
be like, well, hey,Karen, this kid is actually a
minority, he's an American Indian andhe loves our team. Why wouldn't Why?
I mean, you're missing a goldenopportunity. The Chiefs should publicly stick
(51:22):
up for him. That would bea nice thing to do, don't you
agree? Do you think they haven'tbecause of the politics of it. I
think I saw a post about thefans themselves wanting to support by actually the
next game, everyone painting their face. I saw that. But you're right,
I think they did that. Imight actually like the Chiefs, right,
(51:42):
I mean, I just think theylook at this as a third rail
type of hot potato thing and theydon't want to touch. But I think
they should. Yeah, I mean, he just it just is amazing,
amazing the way that he went atthis kid. Yeah, the kid's dad
is literally on he's on a memberof a tribal governing boarder of a sovereign
indigenous nation. Oh my gosh,like this, Karen Phillips could not have
(52:07):
stuck his foot any further up hisown backside if he tried. Man,
what a cell phone. This isactually genius. The head rest safe and
I'm kind of mad that I didn'tcome up with it, or at least
steal it before they had it trademarkedcompatant. But the headrest Safe is a
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Carry Magazines Editor Choice Award for Bestin Class Vehicle safe. Now designed as
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you got a hard keep head,you got a hard key, got keep,
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it, like you're I don't knowhow many people I know myself included.
You know, you go to collegegames, or you go on a road
trip, you go do this orthat, and maybe you want to have
(52:51):
like a secure place to keep yourvaluables, your medicine, like if you're
standing at Airbnb or even a hotel. I mean, nobody, this thing
is not going anywhere with your headrest safe. It's on the passenger side,
so it doesn't interfere with any kindof driver safety. It lacks securely
in place of the deployable toggle bowland I can put it in. If
I can put it in, youcould put it in, probably faster than
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one hundred percent money back guarantee.And now all of the news you would
probably miss. It's time for Danta'squick five life saving cancer therapy may itself
cause cancer? This according to theFDA, they said that it's car car
(54:00):
hyphen T therapy. They said thatthere are some benefits. But the Food
and Drug Administration says that there's nineteennew cases, nineteen cases of new cancer
cancer that's linked to car T therapieswhich they give terminal blood to patients and
then they see immune souls taken fromthe bodying engineered to attack before being infused
(54:21):
back in the patient's blood. Butthey said that it could actually cause other
disruptions. But it's not No,it's not the class shot. Yeah,
it's not the classhot. Though.I'm going all the way down to what
I have highlighted and read here.I want to know how I know we
got the other but I can't.Well, I'm sorry, I like I
jetted past all the other headlines forthis one. A man, this dude
(54:43):
who had headaches for five months,right, I mean, imagine you have
headache every day for straight five months. It's like, really, that's awful.
Well, when he went to thedoctor to figure out why, like
what was happening, he learned thathe had chopsticks stuck in his brain.
Yeah, he literally had chopsticks inhis brain. It it is a man
(55:07):
in Vietnam he was flabbergasted after discoveringthat he had a pair of chopsticks lodged
in his skull. He's a thirtyfive year old patient. This is from
the British paper The Metro and alsoNew York Post. They said the doctor's
conducted CTE skins, which revealed thathe was he was suffering from a neurological
(55:28):
condition defined by a dangerous increase inintracranial pressure. Literally a pair of chopsticks
that were penetrated up his nose intohis brain. Now he was flocks over
how it happened. Then he saidhe remembered he was out drinking in Vietnam
and he had been involved involved ina fight five months ago. He doesn't
remember details, only that someone stabbedhim in the face of an unknown object.
(55:50):
How drunk are you that you don'tknow that someone literally puts chopsticks up
your nose into your brain. Sothat's and apparently they didn't discover it until
now. That's so nasty. Ican't deal. Oh my gosh, let's
see ooh Arizona alfalfa farms. Foreignfirms are exploiting water regulations unregulated water use,
(56:13):
so tensions are boiling through the inthe Arizona McMullan Valley over the out
it's the Alphi a water fight.It can't even talk. Goodness, stay
with us. We got a lotmore in store as we move our friends
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Patriotmobile dot com. Slash data atninety seven to two Patriot code Friday seventy
six. Elevate your commute, workoutsor downtime with the Dana Show podcast.
Unleash the power of knowledge at yourfingertips by following data on Apple, Spotify
or wherever you get your podcasts.Well, hey, everyone, one of
the things we need in this countryis term limits for members of Congress.
(57:42):
It's a good policy. We havepeople like Pelosi that have been there for
decade after decade. They're more interestedin advancing themselves than they are delivering results
for you. So we need termlimits. Problem is Congress is never going
to enact this. As President,I'll lead the efforts to bring about limits
through the states. Now, firstoff, welcome back to the program,
(58:04):
Dania. Last year with you.Bottom of this second hour, that's Florida
Governor Ron DeSantis. Now full disclosure. I and I'm gonna lay this out
there because somebody's bound to get mad. I disagree with us. Full disclosure.
I like I I disagree that,and I still like DeSantis as my
primary selection because we live in arepublican not a monarchy, and we've all
(58:27):
had family members that have either bledor died for the preservation of that choice.
Correct, So he's my pick forthe primary. I disagree with term
limits, very very passionately disagree withterm limits. And here's why. And
I've talked about this before, andI understand what he's saying, and I
think that he makes some good Ithink that he's made that he makes some
(58:50):
good points. I understand the positionthat some have wherein they say, look,
the checks and balances that the fousenshrined in the Constitution have been twisted
and manipulated and turned and bastardized tothe point to where they do not serve
(59:10):
the same function that they did priorto the twisting and the turning and the
manipulation. I understand that, whichis also why I disagree with doing more
of it. Here's my point.I agree with what the founders wrote in
the Federalist papers about term limits,and they liked the idea of rotation for
(59:37):
a while there were I think itwas Madison and Hamilton, et cetera.
They really they they kicked around theidea of term limits, you know,
and rotation and things like this,and they had a very I think it
(59:59):
was Federalist seventeen Federalists fifty two wherethey got into a lot of this.
But ultimately, long story short,they realize that the term limit should be
the voter. The voter makes thedetermination as to when they believe that a
(01:00:22):
politician enough is enough. They areno longer serving the purpose of the people.
Thus they have to go. I'mvery wary of giving government any more
power or responsibility that initially was designedto rest with the free people itself.
(01:00:45):
It's supposed to be our discretion.It is our decision as to whether or
not someone remains in office for acertain period of time or not, or
whether they go. I mean,that's what our vote is. It's the
con to be governed, the consentof this individual to represent us in Congress.
(01:01:07):
And I understand too. You gotthe Pelosies out there, you got
the you got all these people thathave been in Congress for like longer than
some of us have been alive.I completely understand that. But a people's
failure to do their duty, theirdue diligence as citizens is not a case
(01:01:30):
for government involvement. Wherever the peoplefail, it has always been exploited by
government to grow itself. If thepeople fail in charity, then the government
expands and it promotes this concept ofwelfare, and it does it horribly.
(01:01:52):
It it just spreads around mediocrity,and it's it's a shameful form of bare
minimum charity that private individuals could doand do and do so much better themselves.
But wherever it is that people fail, that's when government always takes the
opportunity, exploits it to grow itself, to enrich itself. And this in
(01:02:15):
my opinion, and again I basedmy assessment on what the founders wrote.
I've read federalist papers, i readanti federalist papers, I've read arguments on
this, and I tend to agreethat this is a responsibility of the voter.
I mean, think of how muchof our power we have just seeded
(01:02:36):
over to the federal government. Andthis is another of them. Now,
as I said, as I wassaying, I understand the argument that well,
people like Nancy Pelosi have been intheir way too long, I agree,
But the failure by the people toremove her, is that a call
from more government? Because here's whatI think it was Hamilton when he was
(01:02:57):
writing in the Federalist Papers about this, and one of the arguments that he
had put forward is that, well, if you have term limits, you're
going to have the same special intereststhat are in DC no matter what,
and that's going to greatly empower thosepeople, the unaccountable influences in government that
(01:03:20):
really write a lot of the stuff. Let's be honest about it. I
mean, look at the healthcare law. How much of that was written by
lobbyists. See what I'm saying.You are strengthening the power of the unaccountable
because more people that come in,they're not going to have built the they're
not going to have the established reputations, they're not going to have the understanding
(01:03:42):
of how to navigate, they're notgoing to know the procedures on the floor,
et cetera, et cetera, andthey're going to end up being kind
of second string to these special intereststhat are are unaccountable to the voters that
are there in DC. I getthat, and I think that that's a
good argument. I mean, likeI said, I understand, you know
what some say in that they can'ttrust some of these bad representatives to be
(01:04:09):
removed by way of vote. Butthat's not an argument to give that job
to the government. I don't thinkthat. Well, because the people fail
to do their job, I guesswe should have the government handle it.
Because that's what this is. Theproblem is bad government, correct, So
why are we giving it more power? That is what you're doing with term
(01:04:30):
limits. You're seeding your authority asa voter over to the government. I
mean, some people I want tostay in there longer, if I'm being
honest, people like Louis Gomert,you know, people like Chip Roy,
people like Thomas Massey. I wantthem to stay in there longer. I
want Thomas Massey to stay in thereas long as he wants to. He's
quite good. Some of these peopleI don't want to stay in there.
(01:04:55):
But that doesn't mean we outsource ourresponsibility as citizens and as voters, our
civic duty. We just signed awayto the government because we can't be prevailed
upon to undertake it ourselves. That'sall that's the argument here. So I
am completely against term limits on eleventyhundred percent against term limits. I don't
(01:05:19):
think that it is a I don'tthink that it's a good position. I
don't think it's one that we shouldbe advocating right now. And I don't
think that we should make voters easyin apathy. That's not a slight on
voters. It's just an observation ofreality. I mean, you had a
how many people, how many registeredRepublicans didn't go out and vote last election?
(01:05:41):
How many registered Republicans don't go outand vote in their municipal elections.
I mean, when I look atthe numbers, it's hard for me to
to drum up an apology about apatheticvoters when I see how few vote and
some of the most important elections.One of the reasons that Republicans lose elections
is because not enough of them goout to vote. In Georgia, we
(01:06:05):
lost that special Senate election because notenough Republicans turned out to vote, especially
Marjor Taylor Greens County, and justa quick note on that, she was
saying, well, this is Trumpcountry, but they didn't come out and
vote when it mattered to save theSenate. And they also didn't come out
and vote in twenty twenty. Iwas looking at the numbers on that,
so I don't know, maybe sheneeds to go get out the vote there
(01:06:26):
a little bit more. I've beenin Georgia. I've been on the ground
there helping a canvas for votes andget out the vote and all that stuff
and raise awareness and encourage people togo and do their civic duty. And
I was talking to people who justdidn't want to go vote. So it's
perfectly reasonable to remark on the apathyof the voter. And that is not
(01:06:48):
a case to be made in defenseof government intrusion in the matters of citizens'
responsibilities. So this is why Idisagree with the governor here. This is
like one of my first big disagreementswith him. And here's the thing.
(01:07:12):
I disagree with every There's not apolitician in office that I don't disagree with
somebody on something. Folks, that'sthe nature of it. Do you agree
with your spouse on everything? Imean, yes, ladies, I hear
you. Well, I'm always right, so yes, he should. I
get you. I get it.Like, for instance, in my house,
we have a long running debate.I think that I have a more
(01:07:32):
novel way of approaching the loading ofthe dishwasher. Now my husband disagrees.
Also in my home, when Iwent to hang something, I really,
you know, put a lot offaith in the old trust thee eyeball,
right. Not my husband. Heliterally has a thing on a tripod and
(01:07:54):
then he has a level thing,and the thing on the tripod like shoots
a laser out at something. Andhe's got this level thing and he brings
out all this equipment that he hasfor literally hanging in photo. For instance,
I went to go hang something inmy son's room. I ordered it
for Christmas for him last year,and I was just gonna eyeball it in
(01:08:15):
the middle of the you know,I'm a pretty good judge of that.
I was just gonna put in themiddle of the wall. It's a big
wall. This is gonna put inthe middle of the wall. Nope,
nope, nope, that will notdo. He my husband had to get
out the tripod and the thing withthe bubble, the level or the level
thing in there. That's by theway, that's like we have that.
It's sobermedial and we use it andit's fascinating to me anyway. But he
(01:08:35):
gets out all this gear to hangone thing on the wall. I took
a picture and put it on Instagramwhen it happened. I think that's a
little excessive. You know, personally, I disagree with his approach. Nobody
is going to agree with someone athousand percent of the time, and if
you did, that is frightening.I find that frightening whenever I come across
(01:09:00):
anybody that's like, I don't disagreewith this politician at all, everything one
hundred percent. You're an alien,You're a Martian. That's weird. It's
not normal. That's not normal.Stop it. It's healthy. We live
in a republic. You should beencouraged to ask questions. You should be
(01:09:20):
encouraged to be like I don't likethat because people died for your ability to
say and not like it. SoI don't agree with him on this.
I still like him. He's stillmy pick in the primary. But I
totally disagree with him on term limits. Now you might say, well,
Dana, that's a smaller thing incontext of you know, all these other
issues. It's actually not. Ithink it's actually a pretty big issue.
(01:09:43):
The reason I say this is becausethink about how much special interests are going
to be empowered. Just go backfor a moment, if you will indulge
me, go back to twenty ten. Do you remember how many portions of
that healthcare bill were alleged to havebeen written by a lot, especially as
it related to like R and Dand what is it the excise medical taxes
(01:10:09):
and all that stuff XI tax onthis. I mean, it was wild.
All these different insurance lobbyists and everybodyhad a hand in the pot,
and some of them were pushed awayby more senior members in Congress who had
been there and had the clout todo so. And we're trying to fight
(01:10:29):
and scrape as much as possible.I mean, Democrats ended up losing so
big after this thing passed, butthere were some Republicans in there that were
fighting it, and I think hadwe a Republican majority, those senior members
would have had more authority, butthe makeup was as it was at the
time. Now, imagine having peoplein Congress that have zero clout, zero
authority, and all the power restswith these lobbyists. That's what you're getting.
(01:10:53):
So that's another thing to take intoconsideration where it concerns term limits.
It's his life mission to make baddecisions. It's time for Florida. Man.
This headline just cracked me up.So this came. This came from
(01:11:14):
Click Orlando. This uh, theyjust know this happened a bit ago,
but they did this huge piece onit, like just the other day.
Here's the headline. This tree waseven older than Jesus. Here's how a
Florida woman burned it down. Rememberin twenty So this was back in twenty
twelve. Simon Old County they hadthis tree that was like three five hundred
(01:11:38):
years old and it was called theSenator and it was a big tree park
in Longwood until twenty twelve. Itwas the largest and oldest bald cypress in
the world. Is one hundred andtwenty feet tall. Let's see. They
said that it was this big landmark. And what they said they bored a
hole into the tree. They countedthe rings on the trunk, so it
(01:12:00):
was like the fifth oldest tree inthe world, they said. And then
June, on January sixteenth of twentytwelve, it was reduced to a stump
because some lady burned it. SarahBarnes, a Winter Park Florida woman,
went into the park that morning witha friend jumped the fence, entered a
hollowed up portion of the tree,started a small fire, and then it
grew out of control. Because she'sa moron, she ran to a fast
(01:12:24):
food restaurant, watched the crews,you know, put it out. That's
like so horrible. They thought thatshe was trafficking drugs, and she was
found guilty of meth possession. Soof course a myth had burned the damn
thing down, and uh, that'sit. So it's a stump. Now
that's so depressing, isn't it depressing? I just depressed you. That's so
sad. Oh boy, here wegot this guy, Florida man claims meth
(01:12:46):
was planted in his underwear. Hesays he believed it was advil. I
don't I have literally never seen meth. Does it look like advill? Like
the capsules? Like? Wait,like, what kind of advil? I've
seen? Breaking bad? And Idon't think any of that myth looked like
adville. Hang on, wait,don't laugh at me for a minute.
(01:13:06):
What does meth look like images?Let's look here? Oh what they look
like crystals. It's like a littlecrystal, looks like salt flakes. I
did not know that I am nowright now years old. I did not
know what meth looked like. Soit's like it looks like giant flakes as
salt. Right, Okay, allright, that doesn't look like Adville.
(01:13:30):
So a Florida man says that themyth that the cops found in his underwear,
he thought it was adville and hedoesn't know who put it there.
Uh. Caleb Phillips was changing intohis jail clothes when an officer found it.
Forty his sky's forty six years old? How is this male? Forty
(01:13:50):
six years old? Kate? Howold this man look? Dude? Right?
Wow? Is right? He's wowyears old? Caylee Anthony Phillips said
he didn't know how this stuff gothere. Is changing from his civilian close
to prison attire. According to thearrest affidavit Indian River County. On Monday,
he got a warrant failure to appearin connection with the DUI. He's
(01:14:12):
getting booked, and that's when hegot in big trouble. They found a
cylinder containing what looked like well,it was in his bridges under his stuff,
and he's like, oh, Ithink that that's advil. They tested
it. It was so not advil. It was myth, a lot of
myth. He's in trouble. Stickwith us. Look, it is not
a right to be a member ofCongress. The media will always remind me
(01:14:35):
of that every time I talk tothem. But it is a privilege,
a privilege that you work hard for, and you get elected to Congress as
a privilege to represent those who havechosen you. Madam Speaker, I think
we can all agree that due processmatters, and that we should all be
(01:14:56):
very concerned about the way that weare conducting the process. I ask that
all my colleagues in the House considerand understand what this means for the future,
and to set the record straight andput this into record. I will
not be resigning, and with thatI yield back the balance of my time.
Hmm, Well, that's George Santoswho says he's not going anywhere.
(01:15:19):
Welcome back to the program, Danalast year with you. At top of
this third hour, they're voting onhis expulsion Thursday. You know. But
the broads who sit here and sayall the anti Semitic stuff nothing, that's
fine. I just, uh,can I be real. I don't care
about the Santo stuff. I justthink he's hysterical. I think this whole
(01:15:41):
thing is hysterical. I think it'speople trolling themselves. It is. I
mean, people voted for him.He was drama before the election, and
people kept voting for him anyway,So it's like clearly they knew what they
were. But he's he's a redvote. I mean, he's going to
vote how they want to. Imean, you know, I don't think
Democrats get to sit here and judgethe uh legitimacy worthiness of Republican candidates after
(01:16:09):
they lionized a guy who legit drovea woman into a pond and left her
there to drowned, to drown andmarry Joe Kopecney left it Teddy Kennedy drove
her into a pond, left herto drowned, ran away, went back
to a party. Yeah. Idon't think you all are like a good
measure of who's decent who's not.I think that like that bird flew the
(01:16:30):
coop a long time ago, Iwas gonna say, what is he charged
with stealing something? Charges on donor'scredit cards without their authorizations? I mean,
is he does he seem shady?Maybe? Does he look like a
character from Arthur. Yeah, justas I'm entertained. I don't know what
what do you You're getting ready towhat what? What? What are you
(01:16:53):
doing? You're getting ready to typesomething to slack. No. I just
know that there's a double standard asit relates to someone on the right or
Republican in this situation where it's immediatelyimmediate calls for resignations. And I think
it was Duncan Hunter that situation therewhere they well know, nobody called for
him to quit or dun or anyof that. It just seemed it's just
(01:17:17):
the double standards are consistently, inmy view, always out there some New
York publication is every lie told byGeorge Santas. I think he gained weight
since he was in I'm not sayingto be mean, Yeah, he's gained
weight. I saw any He's alwayswith the collared shirt, the sweater and
then the jacket. I'm not youknow, I'm not hating. I'm just
saying, Uh, they like helied about what did they say that he
(01:17:43):
had? He's lied about. Helied. They accused him of aligned to
donors and then using their money tomake purchases at RMEZ and only fans.
Again, you guys had Teddy Kennedy. Uh. He used campaign money for
personal travel in Botox. I justthink it's funny that a dude in Congress
is using money for Botox. I'mjust he lied to collect multiple or he
(01:18:08):
lied to collect unemployment benefits. Heallegedly committed identity theft. They said,
he allegedly lied to Congress. Whohasn't. I'm not excusing any of this.
I just think that if Republicans aregoing to oust someone, then then
it should be of Republicans' own machinationsand not because Democrats want to impose a
set of rules on one side thatthey themselves don't want to follow. I
(01:18:30):
mean, like, you know howI match energies, I also match rule
following he reimbursed himself for loans hedidn't make. Wait a minute, this
is coming from the party that wantsto quote unquote forgive student loans. Shut
up, y'all don't get to saynothing. Y'all get to say nothing.
No, huh huh. He liedabout where he went to high school.
(01:18:55):
Well, who do you have?Blimouthal lied about serving in Vietnam? Okay,
I know I'm not doing what abouthis I actually don't care. I
just think it's hysterical. Does thatmean am I being mean? No?
They have no idea where his moneycame from. They have no idea of
his money's legit. He lied aboutfounding an animal charity. He swindled.
(01:19:15):
They said he swindled somebody a vetthat he ripped off, an Amish dog
breeder. I mean, he soundslike I don't even know if half of
these are true or not. Ijust don't care. I just don't care.
I mean, I don't know,right, I just think he's hysterical
and entertaining, and I don't care. I don't care because I'm not going
(01:19:36):
to take criticisms or entertain any kindof measure of propriety offered by the left
considering who they protect. Does thatmake sense? I feel like that's fair,
right, I feel like that's fair. Like you don't get to judge
are crazies all right? You don'tget to You don't get to sit here
(01:19:59):
and stones at our crazies. Youleave our crazies alone, We'll deal with
them. You'll mind your own crazies. I'm just saying, right, And
he just doesn't care, and whichI don't know, So I don't know,
I'm just saying, ah, whatis it. There's like a whole
bunch here, but he's like,I'm not going anywhere and everyone should enjoy
due process. It would have madeit better if he would have said believe
(01:20:24):
all women and then like ended itthere hashtag me too. I got to
tell you I saw this from BBCjust a little bit ago, so in
Ireland, because you know they're they'redealing, they're being rowty over in Belfast.
They said that there's anti immigration signagethat has shown up in in West
(01:20:48):
Belfast and somebody, I guess itwas like this blockade on the road,
like this concrete blockade, and afterthey had this Algerian guy. I don't
know if he immigrated legally or not, but he went on the stabbing spray
at primary school, stabbed some kids, a teacher, put a five year
(01:21:09):
old girl in the hospital and hewas taken down by a Brazilian man by
the way, So kudos is thatdude. But they had Irish lives matter.
Someone spent they've been putting this onsome of the buildings around Belfast and
somebody spray painted it on this.I guess this divider in the road there
in Belfast, and the BBC saysanti immigration signage in West Belfast is being
(01:21:34):
treated as a hate incident. Policesay it's a hate incident. Oh but
wait, there's more from their story. Graffiti reading Irish lives matter was dabbed
on the wall of the Kennedy Centeron Falls Road overnight. People before prophets,
(01:21:55):
Jerry Carroll said, quote, there'sno place in our society for this
kind of racist poison. End quote. It's racist poison to say Irish lives
matter. What if what if theywould have said don't matter? Oh no,
that's okay, then perfectly exceptable,except we'll go on now carry on.
(01:22:21):
I mean, am I missing something? Oh no, it's been treated
as a hate incident. It's hateto say Irish lives matter. How is
that hate? It's not to theexclusion of anyone else's lives. It's just
saying that Irish lives matter. It'snot saying that anyone else's lives. This
is a roar shock test, ifever there was one. It's this.
(01:22:43):
People's reaction to this tells you everything. There's certain questions like if I if
I meet people, or if Ihave like business dinners. There's a couple
ofquo. I'm not gonna tell youwhat they are, but there's a couple
of questions that I throw out andask them. Some of them seem innocuous,
as like a way to gauge theircharacter and figure out if I want
to have anything to do with them. And I think that for people generally,
(01:23:06):
for everybody else, this phrasing blanklives matter anything like if you say
Irish lives matter, or you know, American lives matter, or anything like
that, the reaction to that isa great read on someone's I think,
character and motivation, because saying Irishlives matter or X lives matter is not
(01:23:30):
to the exclusion of Y or Z. You're just simply saying that X lives
matter. I mean, it's justbasic logic. You're not denying the existence
or the value of anyone else's lives. But with regard to this particular situation
in Belfast, it's the incident ofthis guy going crazy and stabbing everyone and
(01:23:51):
then all the Irish being told toshut up and don't protest or ask questions
or how dare you criticize law enforcementor elected leaders who allowed this to take
place to the point where we can'tverify who's coming in, where they're coming
from, if they have criminal recordsor not, so shut up and just
accept it and then criticizing that,and people who are doing the criticizing being
(01:24:11):
told to silence themselves. That seemssort of like a rejection of the value
of the lives affected. Right,So thus you get the Irish lives matter,
and people are saying that it's quoteracist, poison end quote again,
what is happening over there? Whatis happening and they actually have they actually
(01:24:35):
have in this piece. People mayfind these images offensive, Oh of the
spray paint on the wall, Oh, good grief being treated as a hate
incident, Like, what about thatis hateful? I mean, it's this
(01:24:55):
is just wild. Now some peopleare like, well, you know these
are because these I understand. Thereyou have some people who are in Europe
and say, well, it's controversialto say that, and it seems like
it's intentionally provocative. That's irrelevant nowthese now this isn't Belfast, so it
is important to note so. Butso I don't know if people understand like
(01:25:19):
the history of you know, likethe troubles in Ireland and the contentious relationship
with the UK, so Northern Ireland, you have UK laws and regulations,
and that also includes regulations on speech. So what you might be able to
say, you know, like inWexford, not the same thing that you
can say and do in Belfast.And so there's that things are treated differently.
(01:25:42):
So that's why you have these kindof laws that are applied to this
particular spray painting situation because they havethe UK regulation of speech because it's part
of the United Kingdom. People understandthat, right, you got England,
you have Britain, you have theUK, the Commonwealth. All mean different
things, but it's all it's irrelevantbecause this is stupid. This is dumb.
(01:26:04):
It's not to the exclusion or tothe hate of anybody else. The
revolution is complete when the language isperfect. There's a reason for that.
We have more to come. NowTomorrow we've got I'm not gonna do a
live chat of this, but I'mgonna I I do have a piece working
up. The DeSantis Newsome debate istomorrow, uh and that's gonna be at
(01:26:25):
eight pm Central. It's gonna bein Georgia. They're not gonna have an
audience there, so that's gonna bedifferent because I think, uh, I
think that actually is gonna work inDeSantis's favor, but I think it's gonna
harm new some a bit because I'vejust seen him at different public things and
I think that he he will reactoff audience to give himself a beat to
(01:26:46):
think and and I and I thinkthat sometimes Dysantis, I think he might
be better without an On. It'sgonna be this is gonna be weird to
see because you've not you've not hadthis kind of match up before. I
also think that it's purposeful to cutout the leaders of both parties in the
(01:27:09):
polls anyway, interesting well the nationalif you think those matter. And now
all of the news, you wouldprobably miss it's time for Dana's Quick five.
So police say that a man wasarrested after following this woman home and
hiding under her car. Oh that'swril. They said that the man,
(01:27:30):
twenty five year old Trevor Lewis,was found beneath the woman's car they followed.
He followed her home from Walmart.This is in Massachusetts, and he
was arrested on Mondays, being heldwithout bond, well out on pre trial
release for previous stocking charges. That'swhy women need to be armed. I'm
just saying, let's see this.New York drivers who need vision tests could
(01:27:54):
lose their license after a COVID ruleexpires. So in New York they had
this rule that they implemented to curbcrowds at the DMB when the pandemic was
happening. So it's going to expirethis Friday. If New Yorkers haven't gone
in to certify their vision requirements becausethey previously could do it online self certify,
(01:28:17):
then they're going to lose their license. And so far, about fifty
thousand drivers have still yet to submitvision tests with self certification, according to
the DMV. Happens to you abig government. But I wonder how many
people are actually aware of that law. Cursive is making a comeback in public
schools by law in Montana and inapparently well in California. Twenty sixteen,
(01:28:41):
they had they realized that kids weren'table to read cursive very well. I
guess this has been a long timecoming, but they had the California legislature
unanimously pass the teaching of cursive orwhat they call joined italics handwriting and grades
one through six. My youngest son, even though so they were homeschooled up
(01:29:05):
until oldest to eighth grade. Youngestin the like fifth grade, and they
both earned cursive, but the youngestnever liked it, always fought it,
and actually struggles to read cursive.Now the oldest can read it. He
had the most beautiful handwriting of anyperson I've ever seen, Like his handwriting
was literally perfect. It looked fake. But cursive is valuable to read,
(01:29:29):
they say for historical documents, increaseswriting speed, and it's actually a great
way to make sure that students don'tuse AI. So cursive is making a
comeback. Who knew that cursive cursivewould be that solution. Stay with us.
We've got more in store. Whetheryou're a policy wonk, a news
junkie, or simply someone hungry forinsightful discourse. That Dana Show podcast has
(01:29:53):
your back. Follow Dana on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your
podcasts. Ask you this, whydo you think that Chicago has become America's
largest outdoor shooting arrange? Do youthink it's because of Chicago citizens who have
(01:30:23):
no criminal record but who have awfullya gun in their home for protection or
perhaps for hunting or do you thinkit's because of a finite group of criminals
who have rap sheets as long asKing Kong's arm. So Mississippi, Louisiana,
(01:30:47):
and Missouri actually have higher firearm deathrates. Obviously there's certainly what about
Chicago, So I don't live inChicago. It's not my primary area of
research. You don't have an aionon that. I think there's easy access
to firearms compared with combined with environmentalconditions, lack of great education. There
(01:31:08):
actually been studies showing them. Whenyou green vacant lots and repair abandoned buildings
in urban neighborhoods, you see decreasesin gunshots and violence, as well as
in stress and depression in the neighborhoodsaround them. No disrespect doctor. That
sounds a lot like word chilid tome. And he's right. That's Senator
(01:31:29):
Kennedy, the good one from Louisiana, talking to this doctor who is there
speaking before the Senate about firearms.And I want to correct her statistic because
she is wrong about one thing.Welcome back to the program. At bottom
of this third hour, Dana Lashhere with you. You can listen around
the country. You can also watchthe simulcast of the radio program too.
The statistic that she likes that sheand the left like to give. They
(01:31:53):
like to say, oh, no, these red states have serious crime too.
Yes, red states have. Well, when you break it down and
you actually look at where the crimeis occurring, guess where the crime is
occurring. It is in the democratgenerationally Democrat run super blue cities. It's
not outside of the super blue generationallyDemocrat run cities where the crime is increasing.
(01:32:15):
And this is supported by FBI uniformcrime reports from the latest that have
been released, and that's in twentytwenty two, all the way back to
the beginning of time where this hasbeen measured, and it's all publicly available
on this thing that we call theInternet, and it shows you. It
breaks it down region, it breaksit down, county, city, state,
everything. No, So she isabsolutely incorrect. Places where the crime
(01:32:39):
occurs are A places that have moregun control and B Democrat ran generationally.
So in my hometown of Missouri,guess which two cities drive the homicide rate
for legal possession of firearms? SaintLouis and Kansas City. In Texas,
Guess which cities drive the homicide rateusing illegally possessed firearms, Houston, Austin,
(01:33:01):
Dallas. It's not out in Waxahatchie. I'll tell you that it's not
out in Amarillo. I'll tell youthat it's in these generationally run Democrat areas
where they also implement gun control measures. And you see that time and time
again in every single state across thenation. These are unarguable figures, These
are unarguable facts. Green Space.Really, you know Chicago's problem and then
(01:33:28):
media just loves it when I talkabout Chicago. Chicago's problem is they got
a repeat offender problem. A fewyears ago. This was literally hours after
I did the town hall on CNNAabout Parkland, and I had to go
and speak before the Vice president atthe time at Seapac and I was so
mad that I saw these media camerasback there because I just had literally I
(01:33:51):
was on four hours of sleep.I had to take a late flight from
Miami into DC and then we hadto be down I think, at the
seapack room at seven and I hadwatched as CNN was, you know,
positioning a camera before this grieving mother'sface at the Parkland town hall. She
wasn't there for a political agenda.She was there still grappling with the fact
that, you know, all ofthese people, the law enforcement up to
(01:34:13):
the school administration had failed them atkeeping this very known violent person, keeping
their students safe from this very wellknown violent person. And speaking at Seapack,
you know, it made me thinkof all of the times that you
see this happening people. You know, the left hates it when you bring
up Chicago because they're forced to eattheir ideology. They don't want you to
talk about Chicago. They look atChicago they act like, oh, that's
(01:34:36):
a cop out, except it's not. Chicago is everything that the Left has
ever said that they wanted in acity, and it's failed, particularly with
gun control. The former superintendent ofthe Chicago PDEED once said, it's the
same fourteen hundred individuals that are drivingover eighty six percent of the city's crime.
They offend, they get slaps onthe risk, they go out and
reoffend, They offend, they getslaps on the risk, they go out
(01:34:57):
and reoffend. Same thing over andover and over and over and over again,
same thing, over and over again. And it is sad. It
reminds me of this case. AndI was looking at this, do you
remember it was the teenager who wasIt was near Tower Grove Park, I
(01:35:25):
believe, and I'm trying to findmy peace on this. And it was
this teenager that had previously been involvedTower Grove Park when I lived in Saint
Louis. Was just I mean,I could run to it. This teenager
had had had a long history,juvenile history. He had already been in
(01:35:47):
trouble, been before the judge alreadyhe was supposed to have excuse me,
he was supposed to I think itwas he was supposed to have been not
under house arrest, but he wassupposed to have been in the house,
you know, at Sunset, etcetera, vonder at Myers. I wrote
(01:36:09):
a lot about this because this happenedshortly after we left. It wasn't sorry.
It was in the Shaw neighborhood,and he had he had a history.
He was eighteen. This was abouta month and a half after the
whole Michael Brown thing in Ferguson.You know this, this teenager was not
supposed to be out in about healready had a history. Eighteen years old.
(01:36:31):
He had a judge reduce his bondto like under what the required amount
was like less than ten percent inorder to get out of the last you
know, the last time he wasbefore the court and he was killed because
of restorative justice. He was runningwith a drug he was running with a
gang running drugs. Came across thecop, fired at the cop. The
copp returns fire and kills him.And it's said because he's eighteen years old.
(01:36:56):
An eighteen year old that would havebeen alive had the judge not given
him risk slap after or wrist slap. An eighteen year old that was killed
because of the indulgence of this falseunderstanding that restorative justice pretends to have.
It is not compassion to withhold penaltyas a way to teach a lesson or
as a way to get somebody right. I mean, that's why the whole
spare of the rod spoil the childwhen you withhold discipline. Discipline is not
(01:37:20):
cruelty. When you withhold it,that is, you're spoiling a person.
You're ruining a person. This eighteenyear old, they thought it was more
compassionate to reduce his penalties for allof his previous offenses down to nothing,
slap him on the wrist and lethim run out with gangs and run drugs
and Shaw and the Shaw neighborhood,which was like right by the area that
(01:37:41):
I was in McKinley Heights. Andso what is more compassionate, you know,
enforcing the law and upholding the penaltyand getting him off the streets,
even if that means that he hasconfined for a while, or let him
run out in the streets and nowhe's dead. You tell me what the
compassionate response is. That's restorative justice. And the same thing happens every single
(01:38:09):
day in Chicago, and the leftthinks that this is somehow more compassionate.
You know, back in twenty ten, Otis McDonald, who's a civil rights
hero, and the racist left,yes, the racist left will never give
Otis McDonald the respect he is due. He's passed. He passed away in
twenty fourteen. He has a civilrights hero. He was in a Chicago
(01:38:32):
City neighborhood. He was tired ofseeing his neighbors' homes get broken into.
This man was a veteran, Heknew his way around a firearm. He
wanted to be able to possess afirearm for his own self defense. City
wasn't going to allow it. Sohe sued the city of Chicago and it
went all the way up to Scotusand it set a precedent. He's a
civil rights hero and he did itbecause he was tired of being told by
(01:38:54):
the same government that wouldn't allow himto have a gun, will protect you,
but they're not out there protecting you. When they send people out there
to protect you, they blast thepeople that are protecting you, drag their
characters and impugne their characters, dragtheir reputations through the mud. So nobody
wants to actually serve and protect,so that leaves the innocent people to be
able to protect themselves. Not everybodycan do what Otis McDonald did, but
(01:39:15):
he did it. This happens everysingle day in Chicago. When I went
up on that stage in Seapac hoursafter the Parkland town hall, what I
said was every bit of I mean, oh my gosh, the headline's about
it was crazy. They went afterme headline after a headline they said it
was a maternity theater, which Ithought was hysterical as the sexist headline from
the Atlantic, no doubt written bya man, progressive man. They said
(01:39:39):
that, oh, the exploitation ofgrieving mothers, et cetera, et cetera.
Because I said the remarks that Ihad said, which still ran trud
toy. I said, Minnie andlegacy media love mass shootings. You guys
love it. It was my directquote, and I was a thousand percent
correct. I said, I'm notsaying that you love the tragedy, but
I am saying that you love theratings. Crying white mothers are rating's gold
(01:40:00):
to you and many in legacy media. That was my direct quote, and
I was one thousand percent correct.Still in the legacy press is inherently racist,
and that's what they don't tell you. They want to lie, and
they want to project their moral failingsonto everyone else. But look at the
way that they give coverage. Theywill, they will, and this is
what they did through the AstroTurf Mom'sdemand and everything else in their When they
(01:40:25):
had their list of school shootings,do you realize that like only a third
of those and they're incredibly rare,which is, you know, and still
horrible nonetheless, but that's not mypoint. My point is that they're rare,
but they would include things like drugdeals that happened at property in the
same area as being a school shooting, and it would be like a drug
deal gone wrong at like you know, midnight, at a property down the
(01:40:46):
road from the school, and thatwas literally counted as a school shooting.
I covered this in one of thebooks that I had about it, where
I went through this list exhaustively.But they want to scare people, suburban
women into thinking that everybody's kids areat risk because urban women, they think,
will be loud and the press isgoing to pay attention to them.
The press pays attention to them.But what about the moms in Chicago that
(01:41:09):
get to watch these repeat offenders everysingle day. Are their concerns for their
children somehow less important than the momsthe suburban moms somewhere out and you know,
out in Kansas or out in Floridaor anywhere else. But that's the
thing. The media doesn't pay asmuch attention because they think, oh,
well, it's just another horrible weekendin Chicago. Oh, it's another horrible
(01:41:31):
you know, drug deal gone wrong. Oh it's another horrible gang story where
a youth is shot and killed withan illegally possessed firearm by another youth.
Why is there such a discrepancy inthe reporting of these lives. Do those
lives not matter? There's the lackof consistency by the media because you have
the equivalent of a school massacre thattakes place pretty much every weekend. But
(01:41:56):
why don't they care? If youwant to have a discussion about race and
ethics, have it, But yougot to talk about why they don't cover
Chicago. You got to talk aboutwhy they don't cover Saint Louis. You
got to talk about why they don'tcover Houston. Why don't they cover Kansas
City? Why don't they cover laWhy don't they cover what's happened in the
Bronx? Why don't they cover Whydon't they cover those stories? It's weird.
(01:42:17):
They seem obsessed with a certain typeof story and a certain type of
demo and a certain type of crimeinvolving a certain type of people. And
they want to tell you that it'sabout saving lives and doing things fairly.
But what they hide are stories likeChicago. That's why Otis McDonald did what
he did. Why didn't se Annhost a town hall in Chicago? I
(01:42:38):
never got an answer to that question. How come they never hosted a town
hall in Chicago? Probably because Theydidn't want to hear from Black Guns Matter,
probably because they didn't want to hearfrom Chicago guns Matter, Probably because
they didn't want to hear from thegroups of mothers there who are like,
we love our city and we're goingto stay in our city, and we
shouldn't be treated any differently because wedon't live in the burbs, or because
(01:42:58):
our skin color is different. Ourchildren's lives matter just as much, probably
because they don't want to hear fromthose mothers. Now, you tell me
who's exploiting who follow Dana on Apple, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts,
because knowledge is your ultimate superpower.You believe also that we should evaluate
risk. There's a lot of discussionon AI that is about existential risks,
(01:43:24):
and those are real, but oneshould also ask existential to who. So
we have an an image of theterminator and Arnold Schwarzenegger and the machine and
right machine versus man, and manywould argue that that is something that we
should take seriously as a possibility.It is not a current threat. Ma'am,
(01:43:45):
Are you high this? Yeah,ma'am, this is this is a
Wendy's that's our super smart I wasafraid it was taking your today's stupidity audio
Okay, and you're like, no, I have so much more. Yeah,
(01:44:05):
she keeps talking. So what wasthis that? This was that nobody
pays attention where she goes? Itwas surplus of stupidity? Where where was
this that? Like? This isa forum? Yeah, she's doing some
form with the New York Times rightnow some I guess some deal books summit
or something. I don't know what'sgoing on with it. Does anybody?
Does anybody know? I don't theysend her to notice how they just send
(01:44:28):
her off into the pasture on theselike really weird, like these little weird
events, And they just send heroff to these weird events. And then
I mean the thing is they intentionallyput her in front of an in friendly
environments, like media friendly environment,and she still does this stuff? Is
there cain and unburdened by what hasbeen in the collection from her only about
(01:44:57):
seventy that send seventy different one thatexist on the internet. I mean,
you could turn everything she says intoI mean her all of her remarks.
You can break it up into justa million little really ridiculous soundbites. Because
there's more. There's a lot moreof this. What was she saying that
time was? Is this is thatthe one? Okay, I'll say that,
(01:45:18):
I'm not gonna I will get down. I'll get on that. But
yeah, oh man, it's somethingelse. I'm telling you. That's a
she's a heartbeat away, y'all.That's what I'm saying. I think that
there is and coming up later thisweek, that's one of the things that
we're going to discuss because I thinkthat people need to be very careful with
(01:45:44):
the newsome thing. I think there'ssome fire being played with here that I
think it has to be handled verycarefully. All Right, today's stupidity.
I don't mean to take a book, all right, is yeah, we
did tease it as our vice presidentHarris all right. So, of all
(01:46:04):
things that are chronological facts, Iwould think age is one of them.
Age is definitely a chronological Yeah.I mean that's how it's literally how you
measure someone's age. So let's hearwhat she has to say about that to
the point, because it is apoint that has been made. First of
all, I would say that ageis more than a chronological fact. What
(01:46:27):
I spent a whole lot of timewith our President. Okay, the Age
Situation Room. The only thing ageis is a chronological fact. It's like
all ages. All ages is chronologicalfacts. The factually measure the time.
Yeah, I mean wow, butyeah, that's believe me. There was
(01:46:49):
much more believing. There was muchmore today from that deal book summit with
the New York Times. What isage if it's not a chronological fact.
I don't. I don't know whosays this stuff. She's like a Martian
who says these things. I can't. We got a whole other two days
in this week. She's got morethings, folks. Make sure you send
up for the newsletter of her substack. I'll be back with you tomorrow.
(01:47:10):
Find the mic