Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
I think it's really important that thoseconversations take place first in a spirit and
partnership. We're not here to tellanybody you must do xt you must do.
Why we're here to say, thisis our perspective, as your partner,
as your friend, this is whatwe believe is the best way to
achieve both your tactical and strategic goals. Government's not my friend. I don't
know what he's talking about. ThisJake Sullivan who was speaking Insay's Jake Sullivan
(00:22):
who was speaking about strategy on Israelsaying, you know, we're not here
to tell them what they have todo, and they what they shouldn't do.
But that's exactly what you were doing, isn't that. That's why Blincoln
went over there in the first placetwice actually first and second place. Welcome
to the program. It is ourlast broadcast of this year, and you
(00:44):
can stream the radio program around thecountry. You can listen to ustrially,
and you can also watch the livestream the simulcast direct TV channel three forty
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I hope you signed up for thenewsletter Chapter and Verse over at Substack.
(01:06):
So because we've got a full studiotoday, I got a lot of people.
There's a lot of Shenanigans. Steveis actually in Texas today. Normally
he's kind of like vog all theway out in DC, but now he's
he's actually, he's here. Wegot we got the whole, the whole
show cruise here. I can seelike just the tops of your little heads
just over Santas Elves, just rightover there, all right. So lots
of stuff to hit today, justto get you kind of set up because
(01:30):
everybody we're kind of sliding into what, especially in an election cycle, there's
always this weird Christmas season malaise.Thank heavens, I think we're due for
some as it pertains to politics,because we all know that coming up after
the new year, everybody hits theground running and it is crazy time because
(01:51):
you have Iowa, then you haveNew Hampshire, you get into your early
States, then you got Super Tuesdaycoming up. The campaign kicks off in
Earnest and I have framed from thispoint of spending an inordinate amount of time
on the primary stuff, with particularregards to these early states, just because
you're I don't want to, Idon't want to inundate you with all this
(02:13):
stuff. There's just so much outthere and it's stupid up until four weeks
until the votes are cast, whenit's not stupid. So we're we're going
to start covering that more and more, and we'll get into some of that
as it pertains to Israel. Thoughwe talked about some of this yesterday.
It looks like Hamas there might bea split within their leadership. We'll see.
We were given a little bit ofthe history of Hamas and Fata and
(02:34):
the Palestinian authority and the whole youknow, West Bank and Gaza, et
cetera, et cetera. Because itseems like the solution that the United States
government wants to pursue is to forcea group who rose in popularity because they
didn't think that their neighbor to thenorth had any right to exist at all
whatsoever on this planet. It seemsto be that they want to get a
group that doesn't want to accept atwo state solution, never wanted to accept
(02:57):
a two state solution literally has intheir charter not accepting a two state solution.
To accept a two state solution,now, I feel like if you've
ever tried to get a toddler toeat vegetables, this is like that on
steroids. It's never gonna happen.It's never gonna happen. You're never gonna
make this happen. But there seemsto be one guy, and we were
(03:21):
talking about him, Hammad, theone, the one Hamas who was living
in the one Hamas leader. Ithink there are several, all of them,
though we're living in Cutter. Andhe left his big, old,
fancy swankie palace and Cutter and Ithink he was going. Did they ever
say it was Lebanon, Algeria?I have no idea why. Maybe Masade
was hunting them down, I don'tknow, and ended up leaving. And
(03:42):
he was saying, okay, wellwe could be prevailed upon to recognize Israel,
but the others aren't. I meanthe other the other spokesperson literally went
out there in October or no,it was November first. Even after the
November first, it was like,we're gonna continue to do this, You're
gonna have a million October seventh.This is never gonna end. We're gonna
keep We're gonna keep doing this.We're gonna keep resisting. I don't resisting
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what like getting free land, gettingyou know, free infrastructure. Oh,
I'm gonna resist getting all these freethings. It's like resisting Santa the irony
though, it's like resisting Santa forChristmas. I mean you you literally got
infrastructure, sewer systems, water systems, sewage treatment plants, water treatment plants,
greenhouses, industry left for you.As I said yesterday, it's like
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walking into a turn key house givento you for free, with all the
furnishings and all the fixing is fullystocked fridge and everything else. It's like
doing all of that and you're stillgonna complain. You're still going to complain
and moan about it. For whatwhat are you rebelling against. You got,
you got your your land, yougot all this stuff. Like what
else is there? Oh? Wejust don't think they should exist. And
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as you know, that's why Hamasgot more popularity than FATA and to the
point where they won they won electionsin O six after the unilateral withdrawing two
thousand and five. It's why theyended up actually encroaching on Palestinian Authorities authority
in West Bank with FATA because theleader of FATA's leader of Palestinian Authority.
So they suspended elections. That's whythey haven't had elections, because they enjoyed
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I just went over with you yesterdaythe survey showing that people still like come
as insane. But that's the wayit is. Gosen's felt overwhelming justification for
the October seventh attacks. They feltas though there had been a resistance,
a rebellion, and this was thenext step. That's troubling. Now you
can see why Jordan doesn't want toaccept any refugees. You can see why
(05:26):
Lebanon doesn't want to accept any refugees. You can see why Egypt the rof
A crossing, you can see whythat's shut down. They don't want to
accept any refugees. There's a reasonwhy, and it has nothing to do
with the with the i identarian battlesthat people want to wage. It has
nothing to do with that. Imean, unless you want to say that
all the Arab leaders in the Arabstates that don't want to take any of
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these refugees are themselves racist. Ithas nothing to do with that it has.
They don't want to. They don'twant to bring people who have been
generationally waged to think that terror isa form of policy and diplomacy. It
makes sense now. So that's oneof the things that we are watching.
The other thing that we're watching,I got a lot of We got some
cultural stuff that we have to uhto hit as well the economic aspect of
(06:10):
this. Let me pull up thewe're gonna get to some of the economic
aspects of this. Remember that thevideo that we posted yesterday, I did
not use that woman's screenshot enough.The Durrance Dance Troop company from New York
City, remember them. Kine reallyenjoyed them, he wrote, He told
me later. It really got himinto the Christmas season. What I didn't
(06:36):
lie you? You said it wasit was festive. Okay, all right,
let's go with it. Let's leaveit. I might be slightly exaggerating.
That's just misspeech though, right there'sno such thing as lies anymore.
It's all miss speech. Oh Imispeeched, That's what it was. So
Dorrance Dance, the New York Citybased tap company. Okay, can I
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stop for one second? I swearI'm gonna get through the segment. The
nutcracker should never be tapped. No, Oh my gosh, Wan hates me,
hates me to death. We're gonnaget sided by somebody from him.
So and then the guy with thesuit with the flower on his head comes
out. That's what is this?This is like I've never done acid,
but I'm pretty sure this is whatit's like. Is this? And then
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this chick who cannot keep her mouthclosed to save her life? Ah,
what is that? Oh my gosh, it's if you saw this in your
dreams, you'd wake up sweating.You absolutely would. You would wake up
in a sweaty mess. If yousaw this in your house, you'd call
(07:38):
the police and you Because I justdon't think it's meant to be tapped.
I'm a purist, can I.I'm never gonna stop complaining about it enough.
Never. So I do appreciate thatit's kind of old school tap,
and it's not like the Savian Glovertype, although I like the Glover type
Povin I think it's great. Soanyway, so this dance troupe kind of
interesting. This group, it's aNew York City based top dance company and
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they did the nut cracker suite inthe White House? I wonder who buff
the floors after that? By theway. Uh. They also, I
don't know if you're aware of theirlittle website. Are you all aware of
that? So they have a wholebunch of DEI stuff on their website,
and they also have a page dedicatedto teaching white people to check their privilege.
(08:20):
Have you checked your privilege? Kane? For the half of you that's
white, have you checked it today? I'll check it every day. I
think, like, when they saycheck your privilege, what does that mean?
I have a very Beavis and butthead understanding of this. Honestly,
I have no clue. Is ita card that you can swipe? No?
So, is it like I holdup? Is it like if I
(08:41):
go to Costco and buy mass quantitiesand then I go through the checkout.
Do I get to wait a minute, now, move over, amex,
and then I take out my whiteprivilege card and I swipe it and I
get to leave, and then itjust charges the ether. Is that what
it is? No? I don'tthink that's how it goes. I'm just
curious because I always hear check yourwhite privilege? Is it a ursul,
perhaps that one must check at thedoor. Don't think that's it either,
(09:03):
Like the nuclear football that the presidentalways carries around and he's got a dude
to carry it for him. Imean, it sounds like that could be
right, But I don't think that. Do you have somebody to carry your
white privilege for you? Or isthat a Is that like a bougie thing
to ask that? That sounds likeright there, That seems like that would
be super white privilege, almost aswhite privilege is domeaning no one else can
be armed, but you can affordthe armed security. Uh. I'm just
(09:24):
I'm just curious what checking white privilegemeans. I mean, growing up poor
and having to eat gravy, milk, gravy and biscuits every single day,
being raised by a single mother whoworked three jobs. I don't know,
Like, is that white privilege?Is that white privilege? I'm not quite
sure. And not being able toafford notebook paper when I went to elementary
school? Is that white privilege?Because if that's white privilege, my gosh,
(09:46):
what's above that? Like what's whiteexaltation? Is that? Do I
have to go to a good levelhigher in order to be able to afford
notebook paper, you know, becausemy white privilege has afforded me so much.
I'm just curious. So they havethis whole page talking about checking white
privilege, and then they state beingmindful of whoslash, what is financially supporting
the candidates you vote for? Andthen they link to BLM and this other
(10:07):
organization su are J, which isdedicated to quote organizing White people for Racial
Justice. And now I know thatthis was unintentional, but they sound like
the Klan? Did they mean toI? Just accidental? So that seems
(10:31):
like a real nice group you hiredthere. That's all that you couldn't find
anyone else. You're telling me thatthere is not a dance group? Does
everybody? This is the nature ofDEI. Everybody's got to be involved in
this hustle. Now that's great.We love that you can rearrange guts,
doctor Smith, But where do youstand on DEI? Where do you stand
(10:52):
on CRT? Where do you standon these items? Well, I cause
that's actually more important than your gutarranging skills, doctor Smith? Were you
laugh? But we're going for that. You know this, right, that's
right where we're heading. You're gonnabe going one day, Heaven forbid,
you're gonna be going to a doctor, and you're gonna be trying to go
to the most qualified cat out there. But they are going to determine who
(11:15):
is qualified by if they can bendtheir need to the point of like like
bending it into a noodle. Likeif they can, you're gonna they're gonna
be judged on how well they obeyas opposed to how talented they are as
a medical practitioner. This is alreadyhappening, This is coming, this is
coming. Well, I really hatewhite people. Does that mean you're hired?
(11:37):
I mean, I'm just that's kindof like it. It's like,
why does it even have to bea think? Can you just tap dance?
For the love of all things holy? Can you just do the damn
nutcracker? Can you just do that? It's so simple. Why does everything
have to be made annoying? God, Lee, there's enough drama in the
world. Oh all right, Sosome of the other stuff we're hitting today.
(12:01):
Somebody beheaded the devil shrine in Iowa, and the devil people are like,
that's so hateful. Can you believethey did that? It's so mean
to the devil like I don't.We're gonna talk about that coming up.
Also, dude, literally there's afifty something year old dude who competed against
(12:24):
like high school chicks and as ahe identified as it's a long story that
happened. Can identify as whatever Iwant because kne you go to fly Southwest,
you're going to identify as a highcalorie person, high calorie human.
Yeah, you're gonna identify it sothat you can get three seats, right,
(12:45):
it's by one get one free.Can I identify as the billionaire and
go into the bank and just belike, where's my check? If it's
not in my account, you aremean to me. And I can be
like, I am a black billionaire, you're racist and mean. See,
there's like all kinds of stuff wecan do, right, we got a
lot on the way. As wemove our partners over at the head rest
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And now all of the news youwould probably miss, it's time for
(14:35):
Danta's Quick five. Was that aSteve selection? Is that where you were
jamming over there? Is this yourChristmas dam? That's your Christmas team?
Yeah, Steve was used to he'srocking over there during break. So Coca
Cola has recalled two thousand cases ofdrinks due to potential contamination. That's a
lot. It's not just coke either, it's Geez Diego too, Fantom two
(15:00):
thousand cases of sprite die coke Fantain the Deep South because of potential foreign
materials and the can. Is thatlike more or less dangerous than like the
actual soda the four materials in thecan? I'm curious. They said that
the specific places that they're looking atare Alabama, Mississippi, and Florida.
They said that the cans may containa foreign material, and they don't tell
you exactly what it is, likewe talk about like fingers and toes,
(15:22):
Like when you say form material,what like what are we talking about here?
Like that? That can be likea whole bunch of stuff, Like
what does that mean? A nakeddude was found a top. Oh,
this is a horrible story. Idon't even want to read this. Why
is this in headlines? Oh?Yeah, it's right before Christmas? On
it to say prayer. So thisdude decapitated his mom and then I guess
(15:45):
tried to hide her body by layingon her naked. This is in Jersey
Shore. Oh. I don't evenwant to talk about this story anymore.
It's so gross. Everybody in Jerseysprobably knows about it now, but I
don't want to talk about it anymore. Uh So, let's I don't like
some of these headlines today. Iam dissatisfied if news media outlets are slashing
(16:06):
jobs. Maybe they can learn tocode to actually, you know what's going
to happen there. The algorithm isgoing to code them. News media outlets
slash record jobs two seven hundred andtwenty twenty three. The Hill says more
are expected as the cuts grow theoutplacement. They said that it was the
firm challenger Gray and Christmas. Somebody'slast name is Christmas. That's kind of
(16:26):
fun, mister and missus Christmas's sonor daughter. They found. Media companies
overall have made twenty thousand, threehundred and twenty four cuts so far this
year. It's the highest to datetotal since twenty twenty, and it's in
the new subcategory. The firm tracksthey've lost almost twenty seven hundred jobs,
including broadcast, digital in print.You know why, because it's the new
minuteman. You don't need it.The Internet has displaced it. We'll talk
(16:48):
about that some coming up. Stickwith us. So have you ever browsed
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(18:00):
Follow Dana on Apple, Spotify,or wherever you get your podcasts, because
knowledge is your ultimate superpower. Alot of big cities are having the problems
in San Francisco, but it doesfeel like, you know, the Republicans,
Conservatives, they try to make thatthe avatar or what's wrong with democratic
policies, What is it about SanFrancisco? And also those are very real
(18:22):
problems that San Francisco has. Howdo you even start to address them?
Well, I mean you first youown the issues, and then you start
to address the issues. But look, they've been on a doom loop about
San Francisco ever since Nancy Pelosi becamespeaker. I mean this, Remember California.
Is Nancy Pelosis the speaker of SanFrancisco. You got Kamala Harris was
a former center from California. California'soutperformed the American sounds like a thrash metal
(18:45):
band name for a bunch of cantankeristgrammarists. That's what it sounds like.
We got a little Donnie Hathaway playingthere. Wink wink, smile, little
Donnie Hathaway, Shake a hand,Shake a hand, Ladies and gentlemen,
it is the Christmas Jam. Sowelcome back to the program. A bottom
of this hour, that's Gavin Newsom. That's your favorite Democrat mayor. He
(19:06):
was on with Uh, what's thatdude's name, Seth Seth Myers? Can
I just ask a question that's completelyirrelevant to what we're about to discuss is
he wearing velvet? Question? Washe in a turtle neck or was that
a velvet jacket, because you shouldn'tbe wearing a velvet jacket unless you're at
dinner or you're in a cigar bar. And does he have the sleeves pushed
(19:30):
up? Like? What's up?Like? What is up with that?
I'm just curious. Yeah, soI'm I'm I'm not Gavin Newsom. Yeah,
yeah, Seth Myers. Is thatI guess it's a jacket. I
guess it's that that stuck out tome. I think he's in a turtleneck.
You didn't know. I don't likedudes in turtlenecks unless they're by the
(19:51):
fire. Bothers me. Just alittle thing. So Gavin Newsom, somebody
gave him a gen Z dictionary becausehe used the phrase doom loop. Somebody
told him that. And I lovethe discussion that they're having. It's like,
how dare you point out our crappycity? Like literally, it's crappy.
It's everywhere. I mean, theyhad a poop map for crying out
loud. Try to say that withoutyou know, elevating the vowels in that
(20:14):
word, you can't. It's impossible. But when he says doom loop or
that it's it's not an you know, they tried to use it as an
avatar because it is. I mean, Gavin Newsom was mayor of San Francisco.
The reason it is an avatar ofDemocrat policies. I mean San Francisco
was like the city, wasn't itat some point Kane, like in the
day whenever that was? When wasit back in the day? Ah?
(20:37):
Yes, b id back in daday. That's right. So it is
the avatar of all of their policies, I mean everything that they wanted,
all the gun control, all ofthe kittens and sunshine, let's have let's
have the open air drug markets orwhatever, all this stuff they had,
needle exchanges, Let's do the hightaxation, let's do the high property tax
(21:00):
is, the sales taxes, thebusiness taxes, the tourist taxes, all
the taxes, Let's do all ofit. It is the avatar, and
it's failed miserably. Now they're madthat you're pointing it out. How dare
you point out our failures? Youcan't do that. You can't use the
example of one of the biggest andgenerationally run Democrat cities and use that as
a comparison against the city that's actuallyresponsibly run and has good fiscal policy.
(21:21):
How dare thou Well, that's calledcomparisons. That's what you do. They
know it looks bad for them andthat it compromises them, which is why
they don't want that comparison. Butyou don't even have to. Okay,
fine, you don't want San Francisco. Let's use Chicago, Let's use La
Let's use New York, Let's usePhilly, let's use Saint Louis, Let's
use Houston, Dallas. Can't giveme a city, any city? Portland
(21:45):
ooh, we could totally sub Portlandin there. I mean if San Francisco,
if you're mad that it's the avatar, then I will pick another Democrat
run city and they're all Democrat runI will pick another city for you,
and we'll see how well that goes. It's just pretty fascinating. Yeah,
he learned the phrase doom loop.What does that phrase actually mean? Doom
(22:07):
loop? You looked it up.It came into the modern paw lance of
our time. What last year?A year ago? Yeah, So according
to Investipedia, this is back inOctober of twenty twenty two. That doom
loop describes a situation in which onenegative action or factor triggers another, which
in turn triggers another negative action orcauses the first negative factor to worsen.
(22:29):
I mean, I've heard of doomscrolling in the cycle continual. I hate
the language. We're just dumbing everythingdown so badly, doom scrolling. I've
heard of that doom loop. Soa bunch of negative things, you're not
allowed to point those out. We'renot in the doom loop. They are
literally in a doom loop exactly.I mean you have the first doom of
the feces everywhere, and then thatloops into the needles everywhere, and then
(22:53):
that loops into the crime everywhere,and then that loops into the high taxes
everywhere, and that loops into yeah, nobody can buy any property anywhere,
and that loops into people are fleeingthe state. It's bad. Steve is
dying because of what he put inSlack. Go ahead, do it,
there you go, he was.I could see him over there fidgeting.
(23:15):
I was like, oh, oh, I look over and Slack and there
it is right there, not unliked, not unlike San Francisco. Then He
also said this, This is thesecond part of Gavin Newsom's I guess he
thought he was cool by going ona late night show that only grandparents watch.
But okay, audio sound bite fiveseal to play, and I think
we need to assert ourselves. Wegot to be more assertive and frankly Republicans
(23:37):
man, they've been defining the termCRT, D E, I E.
SG. No one even understands whatthese things mean. And we're on the
DF made a lot. I thinkthe most important issue for our kids is
drag shows and trans issues, notgun violence in this country. I mean,
on all of these issues, we'reon the right side. We just
not need to get on the otherside of our anxiety and doubts and go
(23:59):
on EF. Okay, so youknow what those letters mean because you literally
made them up. Your side madethat. Let's start with CRT critical race
theory Frankfurt school of Marxism. Thisgoes all the way back to Derek Bell
in the sixties. And that's whyin twenty twelve, when I first wrote
the story about Derek Bell and BarackObama and how Barack Obama under I mean
it was basically a mentory ee ofDerek Bell. That's why it was so
(24:19):
big, because he was mainstreaming criticalrace theory, which was supplanting identarian politics,
identity politics for the fiscal warfare,the economic socioeconomic statuses that you would
always see divide everyone. They weresupplanting the identity politics for that. It's
still the same formula, it's justa different variable. And they were mainstreaming
that throughout college campuses all beginning inthe sixties. So that's something that y'all
(24:42):
came up with, Like y'all literallywrote books and called it crittech cult race
theory. We didn't come up withthat, you all did. We didn't.
We're busy people, like we're tryingto like pay taxes that you keep
inventing and you know, working andraising kids. We don't have time to
keep track of all your alphabet creations. And then there's d uh and and
you guys came up with DEI.We didn't do that. That does not
(25:03):
That's not something that conservatives sit aroundand think about. Cain, How can
we do diversity? What does iteven mean any more? Diversity exclusion and
idiocy? How can we do that? How can we create that and implement
that in all of our workplaces.You know what, Kine, we need
you know what we need to havefor the show. We should have a
diversity officer to make sure that wehave diverse ammo and you know coffee,
(25:27):
coffee, blessed and liquor two two, three, five, five six.
Make sure we have nine mil.Yeah. Variety, Yeah, like a
variety. I feel like that that'slike truly representative of America today. You
know. But his last little quipthere when he says, you know they're
working, they're focusing on drag showsand the big thing and not gun violence.
(25:48):
Well, first off, let's justthe presupposition is that gun violence is
the number one killer of kids acrossthe country, and as we've talked about
it actually isn't. The only waythat the CD so you can get that
figure is that they inflate it allthe way up to like, well they
reduced it to nineteen. It usedto go up to twenty, you know,
twenty year old babies, but itgoes up to nineteen. They include
(26:11):
eighteen and nineteen year olds. Whenyou break down all the FBI uniform crime
reports going all the way back toninety nine up until current time, what
you find out is that the majorityof those crimes, particularly with illegally possessed
handguns, it's all eighteen and nineteenyear olds, and it's all drug and
gang violence. Now when it concernsminors, it's still drug and gang violence.
And then when you remove all ofthose variables out of the when you
(26:33):
remove all of those numbers, allof those cases specifically out of the minor
age group, then it drops downto like fifth or sixth place, and
drownings and automobile accidents and accidental poisoningand really opioid crisis, all of that
stuff takes precedent, but they includethe drug and gang violence of eighteen and
nineteen year olds to overwhelmingly drive thatstatistics, so they can use that as
(26:56):
the basis for more gun control policy. So you have that on one hand,
But then the other hand, too, is something that you just brought
up. I mean, if you'rereally concerned about the lives of kids,
why in the ever loving world areyou letting all these repeat offenders out reoffending
over and over and over again.I Mean, the superintendent of the Chicago
PD said just a few years ago, it's the same fourteen hundred people that
(27:18):
are driving eighty nine percent of theviolent crime in Chicago, and the police
were disheartened because they keep arresting thesame people over and over again. I
mean, they're literally on a firstname basis with these people. They know
the criminals. They are on afirst name basis of the criminals, They
know the criminals family. I mean, it's like a cartoon. They know
these people so well, and theyjust keep catching them because they keep reoffending,
and then they get out, theyget a wrist slap, and then
(27:41):
they're out on probation. This happensall the time. And here's something else.
If they really cared about the livesof kids, then why would you
not include why would you not makesure that you have mandatory maximum for a
lot of these young violent offenders likethat vonder at Meyer's case in Saint Louis.
Y'all remember this. This is thecase of a kid was fourteen years
old. He already had a JUVIrecord that was multiple pages long, violent
(28:03):
record, and he was supposed tobe It was like a quasi house arrest.
He was supposed to be in hishouse when the sun went down.
He wasn't supposed to be out andabout. He had an ankle monitor on
and there was an off duty plainclose police officer who and this was what
was this intaigru park, off dutyplain close police officer who happened to be
walking by a known drug house andhe saw vondra At Myers and saw his
(28:26):
ankle brace going in and try tofollow up on it. Vonderrath Myers turned
around, shot at the cop.The cop returned fire and killed him.
Vonderick Myers was able. They lethim out without nothing. What was it
like, ten percent of one percentof his bond to get out for a
felonious activity when in reality he shouldhave actually I wrote a whole bunch about
(28:48):
it at the time. He shouldhave actually been in jail. He should
have been detained at that point.And the fact that they didn't because they
thought it was more merciful to lethim out in the street to get killed
than it was to keep him detainedin jail, or he'd still be alive
today. That's what your restorative justicegets you. Restorative justice kills more kids
than anything else. And that's whatGavin Newsom supports. That's the epidemic that's
plaguing youth today, and his partyis the number one driver of it.
(29:11):
So I would love for someone tochallenge him that on a debate stage.
But you know, you got tokind of know this stuff a little bit
beyond getting the gen Z Dictionary ofdoom loop so dumb. These people are
walking doom loops. So that's uh, we're already like we're already winding down
to the bottom of this first hour. I got to do I gotta do
something first before. So you guys, remember when I did the amazing Renaissance
(29:37):
drawing of Cain. So look,the belief is is that if Hunter Biden
can spit through a straw at leasthe's not snorting, spit through a straw
and create five hundred thousand dollars artpieces, yeah yeah, yeah, and
sell those. Then the thought was, well, prove to me that this
(29:59):
is not Nippo baby stuff, andI will draw my stuff is better.
So I drew one. It's aRenaissance portrait of Caine. I mean,
this could go from millions of dollars. This is I mean, look,
I even included the crosshatch that Ilearned in junior high art school. I
put my skills to use. Lookat your background, dude, it's great.
Look at the background. It's likediamond plate. Note, right,
(30:22):
isn't it? Note the detail onthe name. I mean, there's so
much care on this. Look howmuch I shaded his lip. You're The
biggest sales pitch for me is thefact that there's no spit on it.
No spit. There's no spit onthis at all. Right, it's a
sharpie, no spit. It makesit worth more when there's no spit on
it. Yeah, it's just me. And I added a little fun brought
to you by probiotics because he nevershuts up about it, so I put
(30:45):
that at the bottom. I meanthis, if you compare this to what
Hunter Biden does, you don't evennote what does that look like? It
looks like a Petri dish. Itlooks like he dropped his crack pipe and
a Petrie dish. And then that'swhat that's what came out of it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, thisthere's a face on it. He's got
his cans. Those are his Thoseare his eyebrows. You can't see if
you're listening, but the silas cansare just your head fine head funds.
(31:08):
Yeah, yeah, I probably shouldhave, like clearly articulated that didn't.
I just now realized, you know, so, I mean this is this
is the million dollar piece. SoI was thinking about, like what's the
best way to do it. SoI asked Lorna. I said, hey,
get me a list of people andthe YouTube chat and I'm just gonna
(31:29):
like I'll print their names out andI'll just like I put it up or
a number on them, and thenwe'll just like randomly pick a number.
So I did that. I don'tknow if the YouTube chat was aware of
it, so I did. Soshe got me the names and numbered them
and then just I randomly picked.It was number sixteen. I randomly picked.
Uh. The individual that I picked, they go by the name of
(31:52):
Kraken. And yeah, so they'regonna get the user they because you know,
people can't use their real names anymorebecause the FBI is gonna that now
they've been expanded, they're gonna comeget you. Uh so the user of
Kraken in the YouTube chat is goingto get this million dollar renaissance painting or
drawing with the sharpie. So thatis the that is the individual. Their
(32:14):
name is cracking. They are aregular participant and the chat and I'm going
to send this to them first,carry Cracking relations That is such a dad
joke, but I'll let it slidebecause you say that so nicely for my
Renaissance portrait that I so. Imean, this is like going to be
(32:35):
in a museum, Kane. Lateryou're gonna be like the Mona Lisa.
They're going to be like, whatis he thinking? I may be exaggerating
a little bit. Are you sayingthat I am not as good as Hunter
Biden? I'm just saying that piecemay not end up in a museum.
You don't think you have an arttaste, sir. I went to be
a one time, so now I'min talent though. Yeah, So congratulations
(32:55):
to Kracking. You're going to getthis beautiful, beautiful show one more time.
Reasons portraiture. We have a lotmore on the way we got today
in these United States coming up.You don't want to miss it. Looking
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(34:23):
So are the days of the UnitedStates usual patients lives as well as money.
So I want to thank you allfor taking the time to be here.
I want to thank my my introducers. I know you're down to thirty
five. It's going to get downhere. Two thousand bucks a year max.
(34:44):
Max. Twenty thirty five. Godbless you, all of my God
protect our troops. Thank you veryvery much. He stands like a toy
soldier from a nutcracker, like this, and then he squints, squints,
and he's just stays in that perpetualposition. And then he's hunched over like
a shrimp on a martini glass ofsome cocktail sauce in it. He's just
(35:07):
like hunched over like this, andhe's makes me want to shrimp cocktail.
Actually getting close to lunchtime, startingto get a little hungry. All right,
So coming up in our second hour, I don't know what's happening.
No, coming up in our secondhour. If you've seen that Civil War,
the Civil War movie, the NewModern Civil War, it's made by
(35:28):
people who literally have never been inthe wilderness, have never left like an
urban area. They have no clue. It's one of the dumbest things I've
ever seen. We got to makefun of it egregiously, because that's what
we're good at. And then StevenMoore is going to join us later on
in the program as well. Backin just a moment, if you go
somewhere, communism wins. Our friendsover at Hillsdale College went to wish you
a merry Christmas and thank you forall of your support for their amazing institution
(35:52):
this past year. As you know, Hillsdale was founded in eighteen forty four
to offer the education needed to preserveand religious liberties, and they hold true
to that mission today, so theirstudents are able to pursue their academic studies
and engage in really robust and goodwill academic debate on all the issues that
(36:15):
we're told to you know, wehave to be brainwashed to discuss anymore.
Today they teach critical thinking, notcritical race theory at Hillsdale College. So
they have a special video featuring theirSacred music choir sing a Little Town of
Bethlehem. You can access that onlyat Data four f O R Hillsdale dot
com. It will definitely get youin the mood this Christmas season. And
(36:35):
again they just want to thank youfor supporting their mission. And you don't
have to attend Hillsdale to take advantageof everything that they have to offer when
you go to Dana for Hillsdale dotcom, where you can see their choir
singing. You can also access aton of free resources there, so you
don't have to be on their collegecampuses to take advantage. You can be
anywhere in the world. Just accessit at Dana forour Hillsdale dot com and
check out all of those free resourcesto help you celebrate the season. That's
(36:58):
day of four fo R Hillsdale.I see a good and decent man in
Joe Biden who united the country,and all the evidence has shown that he
loved his son. His son wason hard times, and he bought his
son a truck and his son paidhim back. He loaned his brother money
and his brother paid him back.Joe Biden is just a decent American who
(37:21):
fought magotism and is seeing them usethis against him. And as I said,
in this is sick and perverse way. Okay, I've got so many
major issues with us. First off, welcome to the program, Tane Oka
Kane. We're not even into it. We're not even in the second hour
yet, are you all right overthere? The little buddy? Okay,
Yeah, So welcome back to theprogram. Danielast year with you. That's
(37:42):
Eric Fartswell, who I got toturn this fan off. Eric Fartswell,
who was trying to make make itlike Joe Biden's just you know, he
just loves his son, guys.He loves his families. Just a family,
guys. Just you guys are justso many Tom, He's such a
great dude. And Hunter was youknow, he just needed some money.
(38:06):
He was short on money. Youknow, if that happens, it is
a fact that one tends to runout of money if one spends all their
money on hookers and blow. Youknow that spending five million dollars on hookers
is bad. That's a that's alot of money on hookers and blow.
I mean, at some point,are you like, don't you just stop?
Ago? Okay, I've had enoughhookers and blow? I mean,
(38:28):
how much more? What else canyou do? You know what I'm saying?
Like, what right? Right?I mean, come on, at
some point, I like, whenis that too much? I mean,
that's not much. He paid fivemillion dollars? Was it over five million?
I think it was five million dollarson hookers and blow? At some
(38:50):
point you're just like, Okay,that's enough. That's enough money. Can
you find a different hobby? Now? Like pickleball's really taken off. It's
like a it's like a big thingright now, pickleball. Right then all
of a sudden, he's like apickleball champ with the sweatband around his head
and everything. So that's why hewent broke. He went broke because he
spent all of his money on drugsand you know, the escorts, the
(39:15):
ladies of the night, no,not vampires. I that's why he went
broke. But I love the spinthat they're putting on this. And by
love, I mean I find itamusing the spin that they're putting on those.
So that is the Uh, that'sEric Fartswell who was trying to make
that defense there. I why haven'tthey moved, by the way, why
(39:38):
haven't any Republicans in the House,because you had Hunter Biden ignore a subpoena,
and yet I have not seen anyonestart contempt proceedings yet. I mean
they that's what they have to do. They have to choose to do that
in committee and then they kick itover to Dood or whatever and then it
(40:00):
goes from there. I haven't seenthem start any content proceedings yet. Why
it's Friday? Why why has thisnot been done? I mean, this
is so stupid. Why has thisnot been done yet? I just get
so tired of this inaction, likewith the NDAA stuff. Yes, I
get that it's a temporary thing.Oh my gosh. I've had some fun
(40:22):
conversations with some of my friends,some of my friends who we're like eighty
twenty maybe ninety ten on a lotof things. And one of my friends
was saying, well, you gotto remember, Dan, know, we
just we have one seat majority inthe House. We just had another guy
who's going to retire to by theway, we're on track to lose the
House in twenty twenty four. Andhe said, you know, we only
(40:45):
got a one seat majority in theHouse. We don't have any you know,
I mean, this is all ofthis is is you know, all
these things, all of this isa result of those election choices. And
there are a lot of people I'mmad about NDAA, but maybe that'll change.
Was that going to be enough toget it? Here's the other thing.
(41:06):
I'm gonna say something. I'm popular, and that's what I'm supposed to
do. The one presidential candidate whocould hit this harder than anybody else,
who knows what it's like to besurveilled or ridiculously unlawfully targeted by the FBI,
(41:27):
whether it is setting up traps aboutRussian collusion, whether it's about leaking
stuff to the DOJ, working witha parah violating OPO research firm that advocates
on behalf of Russian oligarchs, FusionGPS, lying to a FISA court illegally
(41:51):
obtaining wiretaps on private citizens just becauseof their choice of where to spend their
time as a campaign volunt here insteadof selling NFTs, Trump should be beating
the drum on this, instead ofselling NFTs at a one hundred dollars a
pop and abiden inflation period right beforethe holidays and NFTs, I hate all
(42:15):
of NFTs because it's all garbage.Instead of doing that, he needs to
be He should have been beating thedrama about seven oh two. This is
a temporary thing. They're gonna haveto deal with this again coming up after
the first of the year. Idon't want to hear about selling pieces of
a suit. I don't want tohear about damn NFTs. I don't want
to hear about I'm mad because soand so didn't endorse me. I don't
care. There is one candidate thathas the ability, because of what they
(42:39):
specifically went through to make a verycompelling argument to people in the House to
stop the permanent expansion of faiza abuse, and he's not doing it. Don't
talk about fighting being a fighter forthe people if you're not fighting for the
people. And if you think thatthis Fizis stuff doesn't concern you, you
(43:02):
go tell that to the moms anddads who were getting surveiled by the FBI
because they spoke out at school boardmeetings. Go and tell the people who
got detained for unlawful parading, orthe people who didn't even go to the
Capitol on January sixth, who werevisited by the FBI, some even arrested,
Go and talk to some of them. Hell, you got people sitting
(43:23):
in jail cells. Now, isany NFT money being raised going towards them
their legal causes? No? Oh, you're not supposed to say anything about
this. Why because the pimpleton influencersthey get but hurt if you do,
and you ain't moving the needle.If you're moving the needle, you'd be
(43:44):
winning elections, and you're not winningelections. There's the reason why we say
AOC's influence only extends to the reachesof her Twitter account. And I got
to tell you, some people onthe ride are the same damn way.
So there's the truth of the matter. And I get aggravated about this because
it's like everybody ignored it until Imean, you knew it was coming.
(44:05):
It is a temporary thing, though, but you know they're gonna they're gonna
vote to make this permanent. They'regonna vote to make it permanent. And
it's bad. The fis the abusein this, to say nothing of the
taxpayer funded abortion on demand and militaryand all this other stuff. It's bad.
Now this, Uh, have youguys heard of the Chicago mayor Brandon
(44:30):
Johnson. You guys heard of him. Check out what they did in Chicago.
Brandon Johnson announced plans to eliminate thecity's high achieving selective enrollment high schools
to boost quote unquote equity, despitepromising not to do that during the campaign.
(44:53):
The Board of Education is proposed shiftingback towards neighborhood school so they're going
to get rid of the high achievingselective enrollment high school because it's not fair
to the other kids. They don'tget picked. So instead of helping students
(45:13):
achieve, or even opening more schools, instead of doing that, they're lowering
the bar to make it easier onthemselves. That's not excellence in equity are
not the same thing. Equity isa rejection of excellence. I mean,
equity is I mean, I don'tknow what they think they're doing here,
(45:37):
but you're not going to get excellenceby You're not going to get excellence by
making everyone equal in mediocrity. Andthat's what equity is. Making everyone equal
in mediocrity so that no one isthat's equity. Actually you have to incorporate
actual discrimination into it. Good grief, No wonder, you know what I
(46:00):
think of? Like stuff like this, No wonder, there's that. Did
you guys see this? Let mepull this up. Who's all in this
movie? It's that Civil war movie, it's the New Civil It's like this
movie about the New Civil War orsomething like that. I don't know.
Kirsten Dunst, isn't it? Andwho else is in this movie? Kirsten
(46:22):
Dunst, her husband Jesse Plemmons.I was trying to think of what else
he was in. He's in thismovie, and it's supposed to be about
like the factions something something. Thefactions in the United States are all the
(46:43):
states are fighting and it's an ideologicalbattle, et cetera, et cetera.
It's so ridiculously dumb. I don'tknow if you've if you've seen, I
don't want to play. I can'tplay the audio of it because they'll totally
cit us. But it is sogoofy. This thing is so goofy.
I'm trying to find my notes onthis movie, so bear with me for
(47:05):
a moment, because it's I don'tthink it's out yet in theaters. Is
it in theaters? No? Oh, it's Netflix. That's right, it's
a Netflix movie. So this theyhave like a little video that they've been
that they put out, and apparentlyin this film, some of the states
like it looks like a I theythink that Texas and California are going to
(47:31):
somehow be aligned or something like that. It looks like the Northeast is beset
by conservatives and progressives and the MAP. I don't understand. I don't understand.
It's Alex Garland's Civil War Jesse Plummet'sKirsten Dunstan some other chick. I
don't know. Oh, it isin theaters on April twenty six. Yeah,
(47:52):
it's in theaters April twenty six.And I was watching the trailer.
I couldn't even get to the trailer. They're like, Yeah, there's a
huge civil war that's going on,and it's all across the country. And
they make the journalists the heroes ofthe story because they just want to talk
about what's happening. The western forcesof Texas and California. They and they
(48:14):
show like these people all fighting andthey act like, I mean, this
is so unbelievably goofy, and Idon't understand. There's not going to be
any arbitrary and state line. Ihad a friend who said, you know
what, It's gonna be all regionaland cultural Balkanization. That's what's going to
happen. And it's gonna be ruralversus urban, that's what's going to happen.
(48:35):
There's not gonna be blue and redstates. That's so stupid because because
that goes away because you have stateslike Illinois that it's all red, but
then a blue city in Cook Countyin Chicago that runs everything. So that's
and that's true in a lot ofdifferent states. Honestly, this is so
goofy this movie. Why are theymaking something like this? And then of
(48:57):
course the reporters are the heroes.One of my friends goes, look at
Nevada. Have these people ever beenin Nevada. Nevada is not a lib
state. Nevada is the zillion milesof desert and bitter cowboys with one liberal
city that exists to take Californians money. This is a This is a city
which literally should not exist according tothe basic laws of nature. And once
the water infrastructure is threatened, it'snothing but a source of refugees. Oh
(49:22):
my gosh, this movie is gonnaflop. We have a lot more than
we've got headlines coming up you don'twant to miss as we get moving our
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off. And now all of thenews you would probably miss. It's time
(51:13):
for Dana's Quick five. Just tryingto repost a meme. All right,
So the lockdown effect Americans physical andmental health has deteriorated by every metric since
the pandemic. And they say thatit's you know, it's all the lockdowns
and all of that stuff that's what'sto blame. They say that half of
(51:36):
the world's gonna have a mental conditionby age of seventy five. I'm so
tired of this. I am sotired of this. I am so tired
of it. I'm tired of hearingthat everybody, big Pharma is trying to
make you believe that you need allthis stuff wrong with you so that you
can take their pills forever. That'swhat they want. They release this.
They surveyed five thousand adults and theytrack their changes in mental and physical conditions.
(51:57):
Have you ever thought that maybe thingsare stressful because stupid people are also
things stressful. Weak men create hardtimes. We're in that position right now.
I don't know if people realize that, but that's where we are.
So this is an NBC story.They're saying that race played a role in
the sentencing of this ten year oldboy for urinating in public. So this
kid, he's a ten year oldkid who urinated in public in August.
(52:20):
He was sentenced to three months probationand they said it's because he's black.
He's in third grade. He wasarrested on August tenth after a police officer
saw him relieving himself next to hismom's car when she was inside an attorney's
office. And they said that anybodywould have done the same thing given that,
or any child would have done thesame thing given the circumstances. There
was no public restroom at the attorney'soffice. He had to go. There
(52:43):
was no bathroom available to him.And I just like, really, you
got to get the courts involved forthis. Is it now? Is it
a question of race? Or isit like there are some people in positions
town according to the story, washe had to write a story about Kobe
Bryant. That's stupid. What isthat about? That is stupid? That
is so stupid. They said thathe's not gonna They said it's probation.
(53:06):
He's not gonna have a criminal record. It's a two page report and he
has to check in with a probationofficer for once a month for three months.
That is so stupid. That isso unbelievably dumb. I just want
to rage at this. This isridiculous. They said that. I mean,
he's ten years old. He's tenyears old. His mom was inside,
(53:29):
she ran inside. Oh my gosh, she's ten. Guys, come
on, and it's a senatobia inMississippi. I don't know, like what
their party makeup is there, butI'd be shocked if the people running that
town are Republican. Just saying,just saying, all right, So apparently
park Hill, there's in Denver.There's a neighborhood in Denver where somebody's been
(53:52):
raiding houses and stealing stealing ladies' painties. They said that some neighbors this Denver
community or on high alert. Aman's been breaking into their homes and stealing
women's underwear. He's called the parkHill panty thief way to give him a
nickname that he's probably gonna enjoy.Guys. I mean they said that he
passed over PlayStations, computers, jewelry, just took women's under Yeah, just
(54:15):
took women's underwear. It's the matterwith you, like, why are you're
not stealing any of the good stuff? Don't take I'm not saying that as
advice an auto industry I subscription fees. This is so dumb. So you
can pay monthly for heated seeds andcruise control? Are you serious with me
right now? That is so dumb. That's so dumb. We got a
lot more on the way. StevenMoore is going to join us, speaking
(54:37):
of business coming up next to stickwith us. So we finally got a
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(56:05):
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(56:27):
your podcasts. Look as it relatesto bionomics, the President I just announced
at the top of the briefing he'sgoing to go to Milwaukee. He's going
to talk about bionomics, investing inAmerica, what binomics has done for the
American people coming out of the pandemic. We can't forget what happened when the
President walked in. We saw aliterally the economy at a tailspin. And
so the President has been working middleclass from the bottom up, middle out,
(56:52):
and that's what you've seen him do. And the data shows, as
you just mentioned in your question,inflation is moderating, and you see jobs
created at more than fourteen million jobs. Unemployment is at under four percent.
All of those things is pied ispart of bionomics, and you will certainly
hear the President talk more about thatover the next couple months as we've finish
(57:12):
off certainly the year. Nobody believesthat. Nobody's believing anything that they're saying
about wage growth. No one's believingthat when they look at the prices and
how much more expensive everything is,particularly this holiday season. Welcome back to
the program. Bottom of the secondhour, Dana last year with you.
You can listen around the country terrestrially. You can also stream the radio program.
You can check out the Simulcash Tanelthree, forty seven, direct TV,
(57:35):
YouTube, Facebook, everywhere you canfind video. Joining us right now.
I really enjoyed his article that hejust wrote about The Magnificent Seven,
and not just because it's one ofmy favorite films, the original. I
also enjoyed Foo Quas remake, butI love the original Magnificent Seven. Talking
about American business Stephen Moore, whois the senior economist at Freedom Works.
He also is a former Trump economicadvisor. He joins us on Skype now,
(57:57):
and I wanted Stephen first off,I thought this was brilliant. I
thought that the way that you theway that you frame this piece was brilliant,
and I just want to share thatwith the audience because he talks about
how nothing exemplifies America's tech industry dominancemore than the Magnificent seven stocks Amazon,
Apple, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Navidia, Tesla, and they single
handedly account for our nearly all ofthe gains in the stock market this year.
(58:17):
And he adds that which is tosay, we as American shareholders who
own them have a net worth ofnearly ten trillion dollars. They're not Japanese
or German or Chinese. They're American. And yet and I love it you
say that the GM, the StandardOil, the JP, Morgan, all
of that of our time, andthey're not getting there the Washington. It's
like they don't as you say,like Rodney Rodney Dangerfiel said, they don't
(58:39):
get any respect. And it's true. They really are denigrated. Talk to
me about this. I did itgood to be with you. Thanks so
much for having merk Christmas, MaryChris. So you know, my wife
does our investing, and so doyou put a lot of money into Nvidia
at the beginning of the year,because she's just asking about right now because
that company is just surging. Andall of these companies though you know you
(59:02):
mentioned Navidia, you have mentioned Apple, Amazon, Google, Microsoft and others,
and they have been so amazing.They're the high flyers. In fact,
this year in the stock market,well more than half of the gains
and almost three quarters of the gainshave been attributable to those magnificent seven.
So it's really for anyone with fourone K plan or anyone with the retirement
(59:25):
plan or if you just invest individually. These stocks are during the market and
you're talking about trillion dollar companies,and it's great, as you said,
these are American companies. Isn't itwonderful data that the companies that are leading
the way on the new technologies.We hope that happens also in the artificial
(59:45):
intelligence and robotics regime are American companies. They're not Chinese, they're not German,
they're not Japanese. They're made herein America. And look, I
don't like the politics. I don'tthink you probably do either some of these
companies. You know. I don'tlike the fact that they discriminate, discriminate
against conservative voices like yours in mind, but if you just look at what
they're doing for the economy, it'samazing, it is, and I think
(01:00:07):
that there's like an I think someof the offset is that, you know,
we'll get more people who are likeminded into those companies as well.
I like the idea, you know, kicking down the castle door and taking
it over from the inside. Talkingto our friend Steven Moore, you you
mentioned too of that, but that'shappening a little bit. Yeah, we
as conservative have really been putting pressureon these companies because they have been discriminating
(01:00:29):
and trying to you know, closedown conservative voices. And now we're starting
to really see more fair treatment.I mean, look what happened obviously with
Elon Musk buying Twitter, and sowe do have options now that that didn't
really this before. We need tobuild great social media companies on the right
(01:00:49):
as well, and that's a bigchallenge. That's why those like yours are
so important. With the voice thatyou give, you also get into which
I think is a very important point, because there's, you know, some
of the monopolistic behavior that these companiesengage in. I mean, I think
there's a difference in adopting some ofthe behaviors and then engaging in full on
pushing a monopoly in a particular market. Talk to us a little about that
(01:01:10):
as well, because there is certainthings that happen in business. It just
happens as the nature of business.So, first of all, one of
the great myths of American history isthat remember in the textbooks you read about
the quote Robert barn Yes, youknow, the Henry Ford's and the JP
Morgans and the people who really standardoil and those people well, you know,
(01:01:36):
guess what, it turns out theyweren't Robert Barns. They built America.
How is it that we let someof our greatest entrepreneurs who created literally
hundreds of thousands of millions of jobsand created the rail industry, the oil
and gas industry, the banking industry, you know, all of these somehow
they were portrayed as evil people.Now I'm not saying they were saying,
(01:01:58):
but you know, they really breedin American American industry back one hundred years
ago. And so now we havethis new wave of great entrepreneurs, you
know, people like Bill Gates andpeople like Steve Jobs and people like Elon
Musk, and they're being treated liketheir monopolists, when in fact, the
most amazing thing both but this issimilar one hundred years ago to today.
(01:02:20):
They kept saying, oh, gee, Henry Ford, he's a monopolist.
JP Morgan, he's a monopolist.You know, the steel industry people,
or a monopolis. Guess what theprices of all those things fell. And
what those entrepreneurs did was make thosegoods and service like powers available to middle
class Americans. Well, that's exactlywhat's happened with these technology companies. They're
not driving up prices, they're drivingdown prices. I mean, I got
(01:02:44):
Google. You could search on Googlefor free. Yeah yeah, oh,
I think we just lost the videothere for Steven We've been talking to Stephen
Moore. Oh there is got wegot his unio, his great piece,
the Magnificent Seven, talking about theseyou know, these big titans of American
business. I was that was sucha sneaky Marxist trick to get everyone to
sort of turn on American business successes. It really was exactly That's exactly what
(01:03:07):
it is. You know when wethis is American that was became the richest
country in the world because we havefree market capitalism and we have great innovators
in great entrepreneur you know that.Just think of someone like Steve Job.
I mean he had this vision.I wouldn't be doing this interview with you
right now for Steve Jobs, right, I mean, he created He had
(01:03:30):
this vision that every American would havethis little device in their hand and you
could do video, you could domusic, you could do you know,
phone calls, all these things.You know, thirty years ago, who
would have even imagined that? Andso you know, these are people who
are and this is isn't it amazingthat so many of the great inventions of
the last hundred years they came fromAmerican know how in ingenuity, and I
(01:03:52):
love that about America and I wantto see us lead the world in the
nut hundred years, not China.I think that's a great point. Talking
with Stephen Moore, I also thinkthat particularly our allies, people who are
like minded with us, I meanand I we completely share the same opinion,
particularly on suppression of conservative speech.But I always I don't want to
get too ahead two over my skiseither and get to the point of denigrating
(01:04:15):
an American business because some of thesecompanies like Facebook, you know, like
Meta, you know, they theydidn't they didn't conform to China's request to
participate in their market, and asa result they're banned. I mean,
China has their own you know,Facebook Meta equivalent over there. I think
that's you know, for for allthe problems, and I definitely have problems
with them, I know you doas well. To me, that's you
know, okay, I get that. You know, maybe I don't totally
(01:04:39):
hate you Meta, but because that'sa good thing I feel like we we
don't want to get to the pointwhere we're denigrading American capability too much because
I feel like that's bait. Itfeels like we're being baited in a way.
Yeah, so it's a really goodpoint you're making. So you know,
when when you and I first gotstarted in this industry, remember it
was Welter konk write and you knowABS and ABC. You see, you
(01:05:00):
know, there were only a fewmedia outlet right there. Weren't shows like
this that we're doing right now.And so what's happened is the proliferation of
social media and then irony is Yes, some of these companies tried to quiet
our voices, but for example,is there any way that Donald Trump could
have been elected without social media?Eve was probably one of the greatest users
(01:05:21):
of social media. It's so amazingthat most of the hottest websites out there
and so on social media channels areon the conservative side, not on the
Liverpool side. We use it now. There are you know, some pretty
bad sites out there on the left. But we we have ways of getting
our voices heard now that we neverdid before. Yeah, yeah, I
(01:05:42):
completely agree with you. I agreewith you on this. So this is
a fabulous piece that I wanted tohave you on to talk about it.
You do not that there is alittle bit irony a Magnificent seven because I
remember the ending of it, fiveof them didn't meet the best end.
So I hope that that's not.Yeah, two of the seven, So
I hope that's where it parts.By the way, I did not,
I did not invent the term Magnificentseven. That's been out there for months.
(01:06:05):
But they are magnificent and we wantto see them continue to prosper.
And by the way, when whenyou and I do this show five years
from now, it'll probably be covendifferent companies, you know, I would
imagine, so I would imagine.So, Steven Moore, thank you so
much for joining us. I hopeyou have a wonderful Christmas and a happy
new Year. And thanks for thisgreat piece. Good to talk with you.
(01:06:26):
We have more to come, folks, as we wrap up this second
hour already of the program. Yeah, Magnificent Seven is one of my absolute
favorites. Love the original if youhave not seen Antoine Fuqua's remake, and
he's just a great director. AndDenzel Washington and Denzel is one of my
favorite actors ever. He can ithas Forget all everything that you've been fed
by the left about identity, politics, et cetera, et cetera. None
(01:06:48):
of that has to do with it. He's just, I think, the
best, one of the best livingactors we have. He is so amazing
in this remake, and the scoreis brilliant. If you've not watched it,
I was watching for whatever reason.I have a habit of watching Magnificent
Seven every Christmas season. Every Christmas, I watched Magnificent Seven. Totally not
a Christmas movie. I don't knowwhy I watched both of them. I
(01:07:09):
watched the original with Jil Brenner SteveMcQueen, and then I watched the Fuqua
remake. So good. All right, as we get moving because we got
today, Oh Florida Man. We'vegot Florida Man coming up. It's his
life mission to make bad decisions.It's time for Florida Man, all right.
(01:07:30):
So first up, let's see here. I'm like being distracted. We
have an elderly Florida man who isassaulted by his neighbors. While do we
had this on yesterday, so thisis old. I'm not doing this one
a Florida man's in custody. Hebarricaded himself in a sewer pipe following a
police pursuit in kindle. This guy'salso totally naked again. Video from the
(01:07:51):
scene shows the moment the South FloridaWater Management set a robotic camera inside of
the pipe to check the status ofthe dude. The guy started around two
am on Thursday. The man fledfrom Miami Dade police. Police lost sight
of him, and he disappeared intoa sewer pipe, and then they sent
a robotic camera into the pipe tocheck the status of the guy and then
(01:08:12):
they managed to take him into custody. He's being treated by Miami Dade Fire
Rescue at the scene and they saidthey haven't released his identity or anything like
that. So you know, Imean, a Florida woman, a porch
pirate, stole packages and then plannedto regift them for Christmas. Mm hmm,
yeah, yeah, so this Accordingto Polk County Sheriff's Office, this
(01:08:38):
woman, Kensley Mott, was seenat the victim's home surveillance camera walking up
to the porch taking numerous Amazon boxes, driving off in a red truck.
She had her eye on the prize. She followed the truck. She followed
this Amazon delivery truck all over thesubdivision of winter Haven, Florida, and
she's just started to take after theywould deliver them. She would go up
and start taking packages right off theporches on neighborhoods, like starting a noon
(01:09:00):
broad daylight. They reviewed the surveillancevideos. I guess you know, people
have like the doorball cameras and allthis stuff. So they started reviewing these
surveillance videos and they eventually found herat her place of employment, Hungry Howie's
Pizza. And when they asked herabout this, she said, no,
non, I'm regifting them. She'sregifting the stolen items. And then she
(01:09:27):
literally told police when they showed herthe video footage, she goes, quote,
what if it was just someone elsewho had my face? See now,
wait a minute, a sidebar.This is why I want a fake
finger as a ring, the fakesilicone finger. I want to wear it
on the hand so that way,if something happens that I don't like or
(01:09:48):
something like that, then I canjust be like, mm see there's an
extra finger here. This is clearlyAI. I've really thought about this,
you know, I've done a lotof research on the silicone finger ring.
You can't really get them on Amazon. I found like one really good one,
but apparently they're not for sale anymore. So I'm just saying, like,
if you're into that business, thatmight be you know. I'm just
(01:10:09):
saying, that's gonna be the wayto get out of stuff right now.
Like just get you a fake siliconedigit where it does a ring and that
way, you know, if you'reon public and all that and it's something
else. I'm just saying, youcan be like, no, no,
no, see I don't have thatmany fingers that clearly is ai. Can
they prove that you were wearing afake silicon finger in the photo? No,
they can't, they can't. I'mjust saying, I'm just I'm not
(01:10:30):
like trying to encourage you to breakthe law or anything. I'm just saying
it might be nice to have that, you know. I'm just that's a
little little extra. Anyway, theydid, they did get her in arrest
her, and of course she wascrying when they arrested her. Of course
she was. I mean that justso like you're following around a delivery truck,
if you're the delivery driver too,do you not at one point that
you're being followed around by the deliverytruck. I'm just wondering. Yeah,
(01:10:57):
uh, I don't even know howto read this this headline A Florida man
pours eye drops on his nephew sandwichto make him quote puke his brains out.
A Penela sparkman is accused of puttingeye drops in his nephew sandwich in
an attempt to make him sick Godly, they said that the witness. According
(01:11:17):
to arrest report, a witness reporteda customer asking for a bottle of vising
eye drops while purchasing food and anunnamed business on Wednesday. The witness told
police that the customer, identified asJames Leech, said he was having issues
with his nephew, hated him,and then after handing him the eye drops,
the witness that he opened the bottleand poured it all over the meatball
sandwich. The witness stated that thatcould hurt someone, and the defendant responded
(01:11:40):
by saying it would only cause himto quote blank himself and puke his brains
out, and then he I mean, and apparently there's video footage inside the
business where you can see him doingall this stuff and the nephew said that
he ate a small part of thesandwich and did know what may have been
tampered with. He didn't accept medicaltreatment, and the I mean, what
in the world, Like, whatis wrong with you? I don't know
(01:12:02):
how old the nephew is. Butthe guy who's forty five years old,
the guy they arrested him. Butthe guy's like forty five years old.
And I mean, I don't doesit really do that? I don't know.
Man. Let's see here this Floridawoman. Florida woman was arrested for
Walmart theft, drunken hit and runcrash in the same day Flager County,
(01:12:23):
Florida. Forty six year old Letteryin Emily. She gets in trouble for
petty theft and then me and thenshe immediately right after Dui and Palmcoast,
according to Flager County Police. Yeah, it's not a way to celebrate the
season. Stick with us. Thirdhour on the way. It's a simple
principle. You shouldn't pay a highestprice in the world for drugs that your
(01:12:46):
tax dollars have already helped create.We're already begun to secure fair pricing clauses
and contracts for new COVID vaccines.Three new covid vaccines. And we recently
proposed that when a drug company pricedrugs so high and Americas can't afford them,
those drugs were created by the Americantax talk, a federal government can
(01:13:08):
step in and allow other companies tomake and sell that same drug for less
because they did it here. Thisis all part of my administration's work promote
competition across our economy, to lowercosts, to raise wages, and improve
care. Last week, we announcednew steps to crack down an anti competitive
practices in healthcare. And we're goingafter a jog we call junk fees like
(01:13:31):
junk health insurance plans, junk feesand junk health insurance plans and oh my
gosh, don't get me started aboutinsurance. Don't get me started. That's
Joe Biden, who's barely getting throughthose remarks. Welcome back to the program,
top of the third hour. Itis our last broadcast of this year.
I'm back behind the mic on Januarythird. Rested and boiled boy.
Then we're drop right in Iowa allevery dang so, yeah, they're definitely
(01:13:55):
rested up over this break again.You can listen to Coast to Coast you
can during the radio program Channel threeforty seven Direct TV as well YouTube,
Facebook, all that good stuff.And don't forget the newsletter over at substact,
chapter and verse. So okay,he says they're investing in three new
coronavirus vaccines. Are these actually goingto be vaccines? That? It's a
(01:14:16):
million dollar question, Kain. What'sa vaccine? What's a vaccine? Yeah,
just like for you know, goggles. What's a vaccine? A vaccine?
Well, traditionally it's always been apart of the virus that's dead,
that is introduced to your immune systemso that your immune system can kind of
learn how to fight it for thepurpose of for the purpose of immunizing and
(01:14:38):
you know, so that you don'tyou don't get sick. Okay, and
it and it makes it to whereyou can't get the Yeah, the virus
you're supposed well that's what they claimed. Yes, Well, but with regular
vaccines though, like with vaccines youknow that they have previously because it's not
(01:15:00):
virus is like kind of you gottaadapt. You can really vaccine, yeah,
your body, but there's really novac I mean, this is the
thing that the mRNA vaccine actually tellsyour body to create the spike protein that
then your body has to fight,which is why this is such a dumb
thing. Everyone knows that when youget the shot or the booster or a
combination of them, your body doesn'thave an off switch for that, like
(01:15:20):
they're saying it dissipates over time.No one's given any sort of time frame
about it. But your body.You could be going through long COVID because
you have shots and boosters, becauseyour body continues to make the spike protein
that your body is trying to fight, So you basically put yourself through it
longer by getting the theoretically you could. Well, the narrative continues to be,
(01:15:42):
well, if I didn't get mytwelfth booster, boy, would my
COVID really have been bad? Stopit? Yeah, that's not so when
they say they're investing in three newones. No, technically, what you're
describing to me is a therapeutic.Yeah, so that's technically by the scientific
(01:16:03):
definition. I just want to makesure we're all on the same page.
It's definitely not a vaccine. Sayit's a therapeutic. Honestly, I mean
that's the closest thing we can callit, but I don't even think it's
a therapeutically, yeah, I don'tknow what the benefits are, Like ivermectin
was a therapeut Oh, we can'tsay that on YouTube because the YouTube fascist
(01:16:23):
get all butt hurt and the buttonpushing baristas who work at YouTube were like,
I guess we're going to try todemonetize you, Dana. You know
what I really want to tell youto do to go. I want to
tell you to do something unflattering toyourself. That's what I want to say.
No one could hear me, justin case they can though, that's
(01:16:47):
yeah, that's what they can doto themselves. So it's three new things
that are not going to work,okay, And how do they even know
the like, how do they evenknow the variant that we're supposed to be
experiencing in this particular season and thenthe next one, because that's really what
(01:17:12):
the vaccine is supposed to prevent this. That's what I was just thinking of.
How I was gonna ask you that, like, so do they know
what's coming? Because okay, sothat's what they get wrong with the flu
shot, Like every I don't getflu shots. I've gotten a flu shot
like when I was younger. I'vein my entire life, I've gotten three
flu shots. And every time Igot the flu, shit, I got
the flu. Yeah. All thetimes that I didn't get a flu shit,
(01:17:32):
I never got the flu. That'sjust my lived experience. I got
the shot once for the flu andthis was back in twenty ten. Got
the flu. Haven't had the flu. I got the flu so bad.
One year when I got the flu. It was our first year moving here,
and I was like, maybe Iguess I'll get it. I don't
know, and I had the fluso bad. Like Glenn Beck, who
I worked with at the time,was so concerned. He was calling like
(01:17:54):
do we do you need to goto the hospital, Like I I can.
I'm gonna curry courier over. Whatdid these like some stuff? I
can't It was like Z was itis a Z pack. Yeah, I'm
gonna I'm gonna curry this over.I'm gonna have a courier bring it over.
Uh, you know, I needto keep me up there because I
had like a super high fever.I had like one hundred and three degree
fever. It was so bad andit spiked up even higher than that,
(01:18:16):
Like it got really bad, likeI was in an ice bath. It
was so bad, and yeah itwas. That was like the worst I
have ever. I've never been assick as when I had the fluid that
time and we moved down here.I had never been so sick of my
life. And it took me likeweeks to fully recover. I was out
of I was off air for likea week and a half, and then
(01:18:38):
when I went back on air,I was so weak. It was so
bad, and I had a stupidyou know that's supposed to but you know
why it doesn't work. Where theysay why it doesn't work is because I
didn't get it? Well, yeahthat, but because you know, they
just they just got to gamble thestrain. They got to gamble on what
strain it's going to be. Theyjust don't know which brings me back.
(01:18:59):
I'm in the tuba back to shorein a long way. But how do
they know what stream it's supposed tobe. It's just a cold. It's
just a bad cold. Why arewe acting like, oh my gosh,
it's a novel virus that's so bad, it's something brand new to get freaked
out about. It. Oh mygosh, I just I'm so tired of
getting freaked out about stuff. Well, if they're the ones delivering the viruses
(01:19:23):
to us, then they absolutely wouldknow what's coming. There's not enough rum
in the world to have me dealwith us in a friendly fashion. I'm
so done with it. We're gonnahave your potions, master friend on later.
Can you like tap two sticks togetherand set some stuff on fire?
And does it make all the badjermys go away? All the baddies go
away. I was gonna say agreat question, but that's a question,
(01:19:45):
and I'll ask it's a brilliant question. Brilliant. I don't want to sound
disc slap together with I don't knowwhat do people do? Like you?
All right? What the hell doyou have over here? You? If
I rub that bottle that you have, does a genie come out of it?
No, it's not a bottle.It's an incense warmer. It's an
incense warmer. It warms the wood. You've got to set it on fire.
(01:20:09):
No, no fires. But thisis an electric warmer. So it
gets it raises. It doesn't burnthe wood, No, it does.
It actually heats that the oils andthe resins in the wood. I feel
they become shrannigans, so they becomefragrant, as opposed to say, a
pollutant. You don't set it onfire. So if it's on fire,
it's polluting. Is it not smokingwhen it's on fire? I don't.
(01:20:30):
But that's what you want, right, No, you don't want the smoke.
Want what it is. You wantthe fragrance. Get it from the
fire. Don't get it from thefire. You get it from the actual
resins and the oils in the wood. I do think it's annoying when now,
okay, long story, it's fridIt's it's Friday. You grace don't
care. I went to them,Oh gosh, I get don't sit here
(01:20:50):
and be like I'm going to makea bougie speak easy and then I'm only
going to serve drinks that have acup of sugar per drink. I can't
stand that. I I just I'mnot a type person, like I don't
have I have like hardly any sugar. Am I you get you? If
I smell a Snickers bar, I'mgonna freak out and like be like Beavis
and just you know, short circuit. I'm not gonna be able to deal
(01:21:10):
with it. And I get it'sa cool concept, but if you're gonna
do a cool concept, don't spendall your money just on the concept in
the interior. Make sure you hirelike decent bartenders. Don't sit here and
be like it's my mixologist. Shutup. It's a bartender and bar.
It's a skill. It is askill. I mean, kudos are bartenders
out there, because I see you, like, I know what y'all deal
with, particularly this time of theyear. I had, you know,
(01:21:33):
uh, my family ran a nota bar. It was in the Ozarks.
It was a tavern, a tavern. That's the best way to say
no, for real, that's thebest way to say it. I mean,
I don't know about you, butI had a motorcycle game that taught
me how to play pool. That'sa real story, for real, for
real, ri I lll for real. But long story short, So I
(01:21:57):
know a little bit, and II don't like that there's like so much
performance that goes into it and it'slike less quality. Does that make sense?
But at one of these places thatwe went to, and this is
how we got into this whole conversationin the first place. Last year they
brought out a little stick of woodand then they put a rosemary sprig on
(01:22:19):
it and they set it on firein this little stone trough and it smelled
really good, and I was like, oh, that's most you know,
being a total chick, I'm like, oh, that's most festive. Can
I just burn things in my house? Too? And they're like, no,
you this is I say it again, Pala santo. I don't know.
(01:22:40):
It's like some potion stick. AndI know rosemary because I cook and
it's rosemary. And I was like, I don't know what this wood is,
but so I was looking online toorder some of that. I did
not know that was like a wholething that people argue about. Are you
a part of like a community whereyou argue about the quality of the wood?
No? No, Oh my gosh. There's so many things to worry
(01:23:03):
about in life. I do nothave time to go and read literally forty
two pages on Reddit about this.Palo Santo is better than that one.
No, it's not, Yes,it is, this is why and I
I can't. Oh my gosh,well, it's a whole thing. I
brought in Frankensnse too, and frankSnSe is brought in Jesus did I did?
And frankincense is just the sap ofthe tree dried. Okay, here's
(01:23:27):
a question. Well, your potion'smaster friend know this. I'm I asked
this question. Sure who first waslike, what's that goo coming out of
the tree, Let's burn it.Well, I mean, I'm sure forest
fires were a thing even back then, so so they were like that smell
from trees crying. But it smellsso great. Ooh, leaky tree.
(01:23:51):
That's the name of a bar,should be. I can also name bars
along with bands. This show hasa point today, we really do.
But I'm like so close to youknow, Oh, I'm hosting a Christmas
party. We got our radio peopleand Steve's in the studio. I can't
really see them because it's kind ofdark over there. They just I don't
know what they do in the shadows. They just go over there and they
(01:24:13):
hiss. I don't know, likethey just all gang up over there,
and all I hear is it's justthey show each other memes. That's it.
Oh my gosh. All right,So I had, Oh, where's
I gonna get I was gonna getinto something. We're gonna have his We
always do a Potions Master check in, and then we have the top ten
fictional band names of twenty twenty threecoming up as well. Do you have
a favorite? Yeah? I thinkI put it as number one. I
(01:24:36):
think I have a favorite, butI can't remember what it is too.
A lot of them are favorites,but I'm like, I know every time,
I'm like, that's my favorite,and then another one. Nope,
that's my favorite. I don't knowhow many I can have, but any
of all the years we've been doingthis, how many bands have actually adopted
any of our names to name themselves. No, because I want all of
them. We need right right?Yeah, it'll we need that concert t
(01:25:00):
shirt. We do all right?We have a bunch of I mean,
I'm actually not hitting half of thesubthing that I had on my rundown for
you today. This is becoming problematic. We got it. I wanted to
get into at some point the guythere was a dude who knocked the head
off the devil statue that they putup in Iowa. Did you hear this
guy who's like this Christian dude whowent up there and all the devil worshipers
(01:25:23):
are like, that's so mean?What you did to the devil statue.
You knocked his head off. It'sso hateful too, It's what I'm fascinated.
So I'm going to try to hitthat here in between talking about potions.
All right, as we get moving, ladies and gents and now all
of the news you would probably miss, it's time for Dana's Quick five.
(01:25:45):
So if you like junk food,apparently you're supposed to blame your neanderthal and
or no blame the Black Death.Scientists claim that the plague that killed sixty
percent of Europeans changed mouth bacteria.Yeah, and it led to the love
of junk food. It's the secondplague pandemic of the mid fourteenth century,
(01:26:05):
known as the Black Death, andit caused all kinds of nastiness. And
they said that they studied calcified dentalplaque from skeletons and they revealed that the
dominant bacteria found a mouse today islinked to low fiber, high carb diets
as well as dairy consumption. Andthey said that this was that the events
(01:26:26):
such as the Black Death triggered thedominance of this bacteria. Changes to diet
in hygiene throughout the plague are thoughtto have affected the oral microbiome. This
is too close to Christmas for meto be pretended to be in probiotic level.
You know why I put that onyour renaissance drine, right, m
So, they said they looked atthe teeth of all these people buried at
(01:26:47):
archaeological sites, and they found allthese microbial species and they they came,
I'm not even pronouncing this one.They said that the other bacteria than oh,
breave beckerger that's right. Yeah,uh, that's now largely considered extinct
and healthy people. So they saidthat basically it changed everything the Black plague
(01:27:11):
did. That's very interesting. Let'ssee here. Oh no, no,
no, I don't want to readany of these. Oh no. So
this is a story about the worstbrand slogan of twenty twenty three. It's
a bicycle rental company called Tut Tut. Their slogan was put the fun between
(01:27:35):
your legs. That's the worst brandslogan, they said of twenty twenty three
by the rental company. To thebicycle rental company, I would also think
that's probably maybe the worst company name. Yeah, uh so coming up.
I don't know what it's Potions Mastering, and I don't know. It's Christmas.
(01:27:58):
Who knows what's gonna happen. I'mmaybe I'm sitting here when we come
back. Let's see. Don't letfomo get the best of you. Stay
in the loop and ahead of thecurve by following Dana on Apple, Spotify
or wherever you get your podcasts.I don't know why this sun cracks me
up. Wonderful Christmas time. PaulMcCartney wangs, So this soun cracks me
(01:28:24):
up, but it's it's like partof the whole Christmas feel. Welcome back
to the program, Dana last yearwith you bottom of this third hour.
You can listen coast to coast.You can stream the radio program, watch
the simul cast Chinel thirty forty sevenDirect TV. I'm steering at this thing.
We're gonna dive into this, Cain. It smells. I think it's
most like soap. You're like,that's clean. He's trying to I don't
(01:28:45):
know what things smell like. I'mlike the worst scent. It's like a
somalia of sense. I don't know. I'm like, that smells clean.
That smells nice. So Cain broughtin you got it from the your potions
master friend you brought in this.It looks like a genie's gonna pop out
of this thing. I put itup on Instagram. And you're burning one
of Jesus's presents in here, heatingheating one of heating one of Jesus's presents
(01:29:10):
in here. That's right, thefrankincense with which Steves says names after his
uncle. And he's got all theselittle baggies. Dude, this could legit
little. Yeah, it's like he'sgot some dime bags of us and wooden
stuff up in here. Yeah,it's not at all, but it actually
that actually smells good. It's verygood. You did not have this thing
(01:29:31):
last year. To just take itwith this is what Jesus was smelling in
the main. I mean, I'mI get yeah, I mean maybe not
in that little cute thing. That'sa little cutie thing that you got it,
that you got it in there.Okay, let's get to business.
Uh we we talked about this lastyear because I just want to warn you
guys twenty twenty four, we're goingto start out with a kick in the
neck. Okay, Like when weall come back here on January third,
(01:29:54):
you guys are gonna get punched inthe face with all this stuff going on.
I want you to be prepared soover this Christmas season, and we're
like, I don't normally focus onwellness and stuff because I don't care,
but I mean that smells good,and I you know, I'm just let's
talk about it. How do weclean up all of that and just have
it to where I just shook likea muppet for people who are not watching
(01:30:15):
and have it, you know,where we're cleansed of all of the stupidity
of the past year. And soJohn lnis is a he's a literal potions
master. I mean, he's gotlike all professionals. I could see,
he's like per president of this averagecore advertising group and he's got very important
titles. But he's I mean,I legit would be like potion's master and
(01:30:35):
only goes that. He is literallylike he's just let me read this,
a certified master, like you canget certified for this in the ancient Japanese
tradition of kodo the wave incense forover a decade, and he holds the
rank of kane of a komoto thatis a literal Japanese master of insincere ceremony.
(01:31:00):
That's a literal thing. See,he's the actual potions master. Yeah,
well potions isn't exactly accurate. It'sjust a fun word, right.
Yeah. And John joins us nowvia Skype. John, it's a pleasure
to have you. Thank you forjoining us again this moment. So first
off, that you had to gothrough like a whole thing to get certified
in all of this. Can Kiflick and the scent to me? Yeah?
(01:31:21):
Yeah, so real quick. WhenI was nine years old, I
started studying martial arts and world incensetraditions. Then when I was thirteen,
I trained under a certified master inthe way of incense it's called Kodo for
a period of ten years. SoI've been doing incense for over forty years
now. You could run Bath andBody Works out of business basically, I
can totally do that. Yeah.But you know you're you're talking about like
(01:31:45):
getting rid of all these emotions andwhat have you. I mean, what
you're really accessing, what you're talkingabout is the limbic system, which is
that part of our body, apart of our brain that really controls the
emotions. And so you know,we could be working on the hypothalm that
on the amygdala, on the thalamus, on the hippocampus without getting into two
bigger words, right, but there'sso yeah, Well, so you were
(01:32:06):
just having that experience with the Frankencents, You're like, it smells good,
and you started to relax and youstarted to maybe have less kind of
you know, negative thoughts or thoughtsthat are moving around that. Well,
that's what I do for people internationally, celebrities, businesses, and individuals.
But it's a way to center themind and deal with all the chaos that
we deal with every day, andespecially in the world of politics. I
(01:32:28):
don't know if you know anything aboutthat. So you're telling me that they
need more of this on Twitter,I think so, oh you know what.
And by the way, when Iwas on your show last year,
the amount of just hate that cameat me when I was literally talking about
gifts for Baby Jesus. I mean, it was amazing to me. They
need more of Jesus's gifts because thisif you smell the was that the franksis
(01:32:53):
and it's you're like, I'm you'rechill. They need I hate that you
had to do that, Like youcan't even tweet anymore because of these people.
You literally didn't you leave Twitter?I did well, I mean,
I still have an account, butI mean, it's like it was just
amazing to me, Like I'm onyour show. We're having this wonderful conversation
about the use of frankincense and murr, and it was it was amazing,
(01:33:14):
Like just the amount of names Igot called names that have nothing to do.
But then that's okay, that's okay, listen, listen. I'm I'm
a strong big boy. I canhandle it. And I've got sent on
my side, you know what Imean. I love that I got sent
on my side. You just burnedsome of Jesus's gifts and you feel better.
Why were those We're talking to JohnLennis, who's literally like a master
of this stuff. There's a lotof I mean, there's like a whole
(01:33:35):
certification here why those specifically were endedup being so popular and sort of like
now forever a part of human historythat Frankinson's the murr. I don't even
know if I'm saying that correctly.Murry's right here, you are, right,
Yeah, you're saying it right.So, so the research suggests that
the wise men would have been Zoroastrianpriests. Yeah, and they they held
(01:33:58):
a lot of the information on healthand wellness, and so Frankencense, for
example, the Male Clinic and andother very large medical organizations are beginning to
really use frankencense to to help thebody with a number of things lung issues,
arthritis, et cetera. And sofrankensense not only calms the mind,
clears the mind, but it alsohelps it's an antibacterial and anti mecrobial,
(01:34:24):
and so it's it's it's healthy.So also with murr, same kind of
thing, but you can actually youcan eat murr. You can eat frankencense,
and so it's a way to reallyhave the body be cleansed inside and
out. In a very short explanation, that's like brilliant is can you burn
too much of it? Well,you're not. He's not. I should
know. King's not burning it.And he keeps telling me that over and
(01:34:45):
over again. He's like, I'mnot burning a data that's more pollute.
That's not going to be a realword polluting it. Well, yeah,
polluting I like that. So inshort, it's like this is that most
incense in America is synthetic it's filledwith a whole bunch of things that that
are not pure. Therefore, whenyou're burning that, you can get you
(01:35:06):
know, indoor air pollution. Butif you're warming all natural fragrances, there
is benefit in the in the aromaticmedicine as it language in one way.
But but by warming it, you'reminimizing the amount of smoke and you're maximizing
the fragrance. Uh, and allthe chemicals that come along with it that
help again calm the mind, haveus recenter within ourselves again to be able
(01:35:30):
to deal with the chaos of theworld. We're talking with John Lannis,
who's like an expert in basically hecould run all the Sensey, the bath
and body Works, all those peopleout of business. Uh this, and
we're talking we're I mean, becauseit's I just find this fascinating. So
this you made a very good pointwith the Uh. I guess some of
like the chemicals and stuff that theycan put in some of the manufactured stuff.
(01:35:53):
So you got to be like reallypicky about where you get your stuff
from. Yeah, there's only threecompanies that I currently use the entire world.
Wow. Yeah, and so theseare things that I have vetted over
the forty years of teaching and trainingand leading groups. I mean, like
we literally do this for corporations,we do this for individuals, we do
this for people of note, andit's it's an incredible experience. It's called
(01:36:16):
the incense journey. And you're gettingyour own sense of it through Cain in
the studio. But you'll notice thatyou're that you don't have as much anxiety
maybe as you normally do when you'rein the presence of that. So imagine
every day being able to really havemore control over your mind to be able
to then put the attention where youneed to put it when you need to
put it there. You have tosend like special people out to get this
(01:36:40):
stuff because like some of this Idon't even know where you get some where
does one get frankincense, Like whereit's not like, yeah, it's not
like it grows wild and I don'teven know it's a tree, right,
it's set or it's set it isit? Yeah? Yeah, So frankin
sense is a tree. If youimagine the continent of Africa and you drew
a very thin line across the topof Africa, that that is where frankncense
(01:37:02):
grows and other places as well,but close to there. So what happens
is that three times a year theyactually cut into the tree, causing the
sap to come out and then toand then to dry, and then you're
taking that off. And so frankensenseis an autoimmune reaction to you know,
danger with the tree or some kindof a damage. Same thing with earth.
(01:37:26):
Yeah, well so well so sothis look a little bit at the
Egyptian tradition. So so the Egyptianstalked about frankensense as being sweat of the
gods. So when you hold upfranknsense, it looks it looks like if
you were to take sweat and thenyou know, amalgamated into a resin.
But the point is is that ithas connotations with the sun, It has
(01:37:47):
connotations with a number of things.But because it elevates our consciousness, it
literally focuses us in a way differentfrom everything else. That's why it's been
praised and used for thous of years. So this was like a really nice
gift that these our Astrian priests broughtJesus. This was like going to Neemens
and getting one of those big oldfancy once in a lifetime gifts like that.
(01:38:10):
What they brought him was like prettyamazing. Yeah. Well, at
the time, Franken sense would havebeen double in value of gold. Oh
my gosh. And they brought alot. I mean, I don't remember
exactly how much they brought it.They brought quite a bit. That's amazing.
Double the value in gold of gold. That's crazy. Yeah. Well,
and just like we talked about lastyear, we also saw that frankincense,
(01:38:33):
well actually mirror specifically shows up atthe crucifixion, So we have incense
at the birth and the death ofJesus, which is very symbolic. And
so the whole idea is is thatif we just take the night before the
crucifixion when when Mary anointed the feetof Jesus with spikenard, very costly.
Spikenard is another incense. In thiscase, it was an oil, but
(01:38:56):
it will literally relax you deeper thananything else you've ever had. So what
Mary was doing for Jesus and thedisciples was to relax them and really to
have them commune and be in thesame space together the day before the crucifixion.
Wow, that is amazing. Idid not know that. That is
absolutely amazing. John lawnis who Well, I'm afraid I give everybody your Twitter
(01:39:19):
account now because people out there aresuch jerks. They need to burn more
incense and chill out is what theyneed to do. I so appreciate you
joining us on this, and Ijust think that's very cool. Where can
people find you and find your recommendationsand stuff. What's a good place to
go? Yeah, So what Iwould do is I would go to Instagram.
It's at Sheihan Underscore Wellness. SoShehan Underscore Wellness. You can connect
(01:39:41):
with me there. You can alsosend an email to Sheihan Wellness at gmail
dot com and then we'll go fromthere. Sounds great. Thank you so
much for doing this. And Iwant to add too that John also works
with veterans and he helps work withhelps to manage their PTSD and all of
that stuff. So you do alot of great, great stuff for folks.
So thank you so much for doingthat and for joining us today.
We'd love to have you back.Thanks so much. Christmas By. It
(01:40:04):
smells great. It smells it's verychill. It's not like it's not like
I'm walking into like an old hippie'shouse. It's very clean, clean,
and it doesn't like overpower even veryso it's very it's light because like you
know those like a lot of peopleget those those oil plugins that they put
(01:40:24):
on their walls. One of myfriends had to repaint her whole living room,
uh because those it was one ofthose bathroom body works oil things,
and it even got on like thestone on her fireplace. It literally changed
that. You know how like ifyou're smoking, if you're somebody's a smoker
and they get nicotine on their wallsand all that stuff. Uh, it's
like it's very much similar to whatthe oil that was putting off. She
(01:40:46):
had to repaint everything because of thatstuff. And so now she just she
says, she just burns. Uhwhat is it? The Pala santo Pala
santa? Yeah, very interesting.All Right, we're gonna wrap up our
last broadcast of the year because comingup we have our top band names of
the year. That's how we're goingto be ending the show. Follow Dana
on Apple, Spotify, or whereveryou get your podcasts, because knowledge is
(01:41:09):
your ultimate superpower. All Right,welcome back to the program, Dana,
Last Year with you. It's ourlast broadcast of this year twenty twenty three,
and we are back behind the micon January third. Now, one
of the things that we do allthroughout the year, I don't know when
we started this ten years ago,is we have really good at naming bands
(01:41:30):
and apparently also bars. But weyou know, all of this came out
of just the daily news cycle fromthe past year. So it's like you'll
hear a phrase and you're like,man, that sounds like a great band
name. So Caine adds it tothe list, and so we've made and
by we, he's made a topten list of the top ten fictitional fictitious
(01:41:53):
band names of twenty twenty three.Kine, yes, ma'am. And by
the way, there was like fiftyor sixty. We average about one week
on the show every year, andso out of that fifty to sixty,
I have to whittle it down tothese. This is my favorite, one
fabulous ten and then we have somehonorable mentions as well. So at number
ten, drum roll please. Numberten is liquid Myth. Yes, liquid
(01:42:16):
Math, I love them. Beyour favorite, They're one of my favorites.
Yes, love liquid Math. Idon't even know if you can liquify
math, but it's great. Imean the name, not like the math.
I don't know. I don't knowhow the math is done. I
don't know either. Merry Christmas,all right. Number nine is personal riot.
Yes, I do this daily personalriot. You should have. Everybody
(01:42:40):
should have their own personal absolutely tohave a personal riot right here and right
here in Walmart. Number eight needsa little bit of an explanation. This
one is uh does it though?Number eight is Big Gay Baby. Yes,
I love Big Gay Baby BGB.What now? What is this though?
This is when we were doing thestory on the the trends people.
Dude, Yeah, there literally willalso appropriate an age like not only will
(01:43:05):
like a sixty year old dude saythat he's a chick, but then he'll
be like, oh not just anychick, a ten year old, check
exactly, or a six year oldor something GB Big Gay Baby. Oh
boy, that was number eight.Number seven love that one lesbian dudes?
Lesbian dudes. That sounds like,uh, what's that one lesbian duo where
(01:43:28):
they sing that one song Galileo?Oh man? What is it? No
Ingo Girls? Thank You? That'slike an Indigo Girls cover band. So
it's like two people who just dointo Indigo girl songs. Yeahlies and gentlemen,
it's lesbian dudes, all right.That was number seven, Number six
seizing the pounds, which is appropriateafter lesbian dude seizing the pounds, seizing
(01:43:53):
the pounds, and because that happensoften with the pounds. Yeah, that's
how the media treats us. Ineed to shut up and let you just
hear the pounds. Number five forLady death Man. Yes, first,
Lady death Man. I want thatpatch. That sounds like a fun time.
This one's interesting. Yeah. Numberfour, I think we know where
this came from. And this wasyour This isn't actually this was you.
Sound like a sandwich. This wasyou. Just so you know, this
(01:44:14):
is all you, Frank Enginer.Well, in my defense, that's what
happens if you have like the mutilationsurgery. Okay, go ahead, Sorry,
Wow, we got three more.Number three fatal Sound pollution, Fatal
Sound pollution, Number two illicit Meat. I had that one just yesterday,
and the number one number one Phillay Ground War War the Bud and their
(01:44:45):
first album is Our Long Molly Ohmy favorite. All right, I think
I have time to mention these lastyear Missing Biscuits flag team rejects, Bobcat
Attack, Ratzar. Those are thehonorable mentions. There you go, all
right, folks, that's our lastbroadcast of There. A big thank you
to Phil for Phill, Steve oneKine, the Radio America folks, Lorraine,
and the YOLDI people on YouTube.Thank you guys all so much for
(01:45:06):
supporting us this past year, andwe cannot wait to bring you so much
more funness and new content coming upin twenty twenty four. You guys are
a blessing to me. I loveyou guys. I'll be back with you
on January third,