Episode Transcript
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(00:01):
We shall fight in France. Weshall fight on the seas and oceans.
We shall fight with growing confidence andgrowing strength in the air. We shall
defend our island, whatever they castmay be. We shall fight on the
beaches, we shall fight on thelanding grounds. And we shall fight in
(00:22):
the fields and in the streets,which will fight in the hills. We
shall never surrender. And if whichI do not for a moment believe its
island or large part of it,were subjugated and starving in our empire beyond
the seas, armed and guarded bythe British Street, would carry on the
(00:47):
struggle until, in God's good timethe New World, with all its power
might, steps forth to the rescueand the liberation of the old. Wow.
That's one of I think the mostpowerful addresses given, not just at
the time, but I think ever. And that of course was Winston Churchill
(01:10):
who was rallying the Brits to fight, rallying England as the Nazis were trying
to waylay them into submission. Welcometo the program, Dana Lash with you.
We are at the top of thisfirst hour. It's the eightieth anniversary
of D Day, and what makesthis D Day. It's it's almost odd
(01:34):
to say that it could be morepoignant, but more so is that this
may be the last D Day whereyou actually have D Day veterans there where
you you know, you may actuallyhave those who are part of the greatest
generation who fought to liberate a world, who fought to save the world there
(01:57):
actually on the beach at this observance. Because they're old. I mean,
it's the eightieth anniversary, and Ithink these nineteen and twenty year olds,
I mean, goodness, those areit's the youngest now that we're there,
who are alive today. The ceremonyto honor them is ongoing. It's in
Normandy now. It started this morningand various towns throughout northern France have been
(02:23):
having their marches to commemorate this,and they're you know, they have the
assemblies where school children applaud and givestanding ovations to these amazing heroes. And
there's some really amazing footage that hascome out of this, and they reenact,
obviously at a lot of smaller scale, but they reenact the D Day
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landing. It's it was the largestseaborn invasion in the history of the world.
And just I one of my favorite, John Boyega, actually narrated this
most recent and World War Two.It's They used a lot of footage from
those who were who were documenting itright there on the front lines, and
(03:07):
a lot of it was new andunseen, and it was colorized and it's
just amazing. But one of theone of the veterans who had given an
interview and I think he since passedfor that documentary, he was in the
airborne and he said that they wereflying over the channel as all of the
ships and you know, everything thatwe the Allies were sending as they were
(03:30):
going, as they were crossing thechannel, and when the cloud cover finally
cleared and they were going over andthey saw them, and he said it
was unbelievable. One of them saidthat it looked as though you could cross
the channel from Britain to northern Franceand just use them as a stepping stone,
because you used the ships as steppingstones, because there were so many
(03:50):
of them in the channel, andthe way that they described it, it
just sounds completely overwhelming, and Iwant to dive in. We do this
every year, but there's several differentthings that I want to examine because I
think it's incredibly important to understand thehistory of this. I also think it's
incredibly important to remember the history ofthis. And some of these are just
(04:14):
they're just amazing stories. I mean, they're just amazing stories. But I
want to dive into. What we'llstart with was the deception that took place
and where were the Germans. TheGermans were not anticipating when they finally saw
the ships coming through, they actuallythought it was a much smaller scale invasion.
They didn't think it was the realthing. They kept thinking it was
going to happen at Calais. Sowelcome again to the program. Dania Lash
(04:38):
with you top of this very firsthour. And one of the reasons why
we did this, and I'm gonnaI'm gonna bring the tugbut back to shore.
But one of the reasons why Ilike doing this and covering all of
this is I want to touch onreally quickly because there's meaning in this.
Did you get You've you've heard aboutthe and yes we are going to get
into Joe Biden being at the ceremonyand all of that stuff. Oh my
gosh, this was the Great Libraryof Alexandria. And this was back in
(05:01):
three hundred and five. It wasthree hundred and five years before the birth
of Christ, and it was whenhe took tole me One, took control
of Egypt, and they had thisamazing library, turned Alexandria into this huge
hub, this thriving capital, andtold me he wanted Alexandria to be the
absolute intellectual center of the world.And it's interesting because he built this huge
(05:25):
library that was supposed to house allof the world's antiquity under one roof.
And he was a voracious reader andhe just he sought out knowledge and he
was incredibly aggressive in how he purchased. He would purchase, you know,
these manuscripts. He would get stufffrom everywhere, from Egypt, from Greece,
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from India, everywhere. And whenships would come into Alexandria, told
him he was so devoted to this, he would demand that they had to
bring they had to submit all ofthe anything written, any manuscripts, anything
that they had on board that waswritten, so that it could be copied
and stored in the library in Alexandria. And it was this huge thing.
It was considered one of the wondersof the world, one of the seven
(06:08):
Wonders of the ancient world, andso they over time it became one of
the largest collections of manuscripts on theplanet. I mean thousands and thousands and
thousands and thousands and thousands, andthere were a lot of scrolls on parchment.
You know, parchment tends to breakdown the more it's handled, the
more it degrades. And the otherbig thing that they did at this library
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was they for the first time measuredthe world's circumference. That was an original
work that they did at this library. And they just had so many Aristotle's
works because Aristotle had I think it'ssomething I think it was estimated to be
like two hundred two hundred plus piecesthat he had written during his lifetime,
and there's only like a small numberthat survived today. They were housed there
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at the library in Alexandria. Andone of the things to keep in mind,
what I meant about the parchment degradingis that it wasn't enough just to
copy those in store them once.You had to have a commitment. You
had to be dedicated to saving theknowledge. You had to be dedicated to
recopying those before the parchment broke downand it was lost forever. And this
was something that you know, toldme that he was just so aggressive in
(07:19):
getting all of this, and theywould recopy things while he was alive.
I mean, they've got they gotplays from Sophocles, they got all of
these ancient works that could have toldus so much about there we only know,
like a tip of the iceberg abouta lot of ancient culture because so
much was lost in the Library ofAlexandria. Now, no one actually knows
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well their theories as to what happenedto this library. Maybe it was Caesar,
maybe it was you know, raidedduring a civil war, you know,
and forty eight they I mean,they don't know, but it ended
up it was completely lost. Therewas a huge fire and it was lost.
But that wasn't what contributed, accordingto historians, the loss of this
knowledge in the first place. Whatcontributed to it was that it wasn't being
(08:03):
recopied. After Ptolemy's death, hisheirs and those who came after him,
they were not as committed to knowledgeand the collection of knowledge as he was,
and so the degradation of that beganlong before the fire took out that
library in Alexandria. They just weren'trecopying it, and so much was lost,
everything was lost, and that wasit was the apathy and that killed
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it. And it was forgetting itand abandoning that commitment which made all of
that knowledge lost in history. AndI bring up this amazing story about the
Great Library in Alexandria and where alot of classical culture disappeared because there wasn't
(08:52):
a commitment to keep it and preserveit. There wasn't a commitment to remember.
I bring this up because the eightiethanniversary of D Day and so many
of those veterans that are there onthose on the cliffs right now in Normandy
and who are watching these amazing reenactmentsand who are being honored for their service
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and honored for their bravery and theircourage. What happens to all of this
when they are gone. There wasvideo of an amazing veteran who couldn't stand.
He was in a wheelchair, buthe was determined to stand, and
he had a little help. That'swhat Wan is showing. It was caught
just real quickly, just you know, just in passing. It was caught
by the television cameras he was doingeverything he could to stand. There's another
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photo I saw of a ninety somethingyear old veteran who was there at one
of the American cemeteries and he wasstanding by the grave of his nineteen year
old twin brother who died in combatand World War Two died on D Day.
Just amazing what happens when these veteransgo. And I wrote a piece
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about this over at Substack that ifyou are a subscriber you would have gotten
this morning. I wrote about this, what happens when these veterans go.
You know, there are so manyAmerican cemetaries over there that tell the story,
but they don't tell the full story. There's so much more. I
mean, what happens if someone goesto, you know, the American cemetary
in Luxembourg, and they go andsee and I think wants preparing a picture
(10:20):
that they go and see another Americancemetary and at the very head is General
Patten's grave, still there, watchingover his soldiers all these years later.
It tells a story, but itdoes it tell the full story of the
bravery, of the inventiveness, ofthe cooperation that went into making this day
as historic as it is. Andthat's the million dollar question. Who's going
(10:45):
to keep these memories alive. Imean, look, how look at all
of the knowledge. It was lostin the Great Library of Alexandria because there
wasn't a commitment to keeping it alive. There wasn't a commitment to remembering.
There wasn't that dedication. And it'sI mean, it's sad to think this
is the last, probably big observancefor World War two vets for D Day.
(11:11):
And I wrote last night, oractually this morning. It came out
this morning. He said, I'venever missed my grandparents more than I do
now in this age. And I'venever grieved for the dwindling down of an
entire generation more than I have forthe greatest one, Because sometimes I wonder
if they served such a grand andfruitful purpose they put all other endeavors from
later generations to shame. And thenI realized why I mourn their loss when
(11:33):
I take inventory this absolute healthscape inwhich we call a society today and the
growing instability here and around the world. So take heart, because we were
born for such a time as this. I love this quote from Paten,
and I always share Patent's speech tothe troops. Patten was you either loved
(11:54):
him or you hated him, ButI think you needed to love him because
he was flashy, old black udodand guts. He was flashy, and
he was a leader, and heknew what it took to inspire courage and
fire in the hearts of men whowere facing insurmountable odds. He was able
to keep men mobilized all the wayfrom Africa going into Sicily, going through
(12:16):
Italy, even after he was removedfrom duty because he was slapping cowards that
he had to pull from the frontline, people who were fatigued and who
were giving up, and he waslike no, and he needed to set
an example for all of his men, who loved him for it, even
after he was pulled and sent onthis you know pr campaign before before he
took control of one of the deceptiveunits which we're going to talk about,
(12:37):
and then they gave him control athird army. He knew what it took
and he had the ability to inspiremen going from one continent to another.
That's not easy to do. Buthe had said quote, the brave men
will breed more brave men, killoff the gd cowards, and we'll have
a nation of brave men. Ilove that quote. I love all of
the stuff. He said, Actually, we have a lot to touch today
(13:00):
because it's the eightieth anniversary of DDay, and I think it's important to
remember for the story that I gaveyou about the Great Library, you don't
want things to be burned in apathyand forgotten. So we're also going to
talk about Biden at the ceremony.I think he tried to go to the
bathroom when he was in front ofeveryone there. I don't exactly know.
We're going to break it down Zapruitererstyle and maybe kind of, you know,
(13:22):
explore what happened. Also, it'sday four of Hunter Biden's gun trial.
We're going to talk about that.His wife has got to sit there
as baby Mama, an ex girlfriend, and all of this stuff is up
there. And as Lorraine noted,the first lady is in Normandy trying to
save Biden. So she's not she'syou know, got two messes to deal
with right now. So we're goingto get into all of that. We're
(13:43):
also going to get into some culture, the true equality of General Patton.
You're not gonna want to miss thatone. We got a lot to hit
as we roll towards. Already we'reat the bottom of the hour. Well
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And now all of the news youwould probably miss. It's time for
Dana's Quick five. All right,so first up on this eightieth observance,
eightieth anniversary of DDA, which we'recovering, We've got some fun history stuff
playing for you, just in timefor the election. The world Health organization
is warned of a news strain ofbird flu. It's jumping to the human
skin and it has the potential fora high public health impact. Guys,
(15:56):
better give up all your rides againday, shut down your businesses, and
everybodys stay then from school. Anotherthreatning election here though, Yeah, totally
weird. I'm not talking about this, skanky one. Cucumbers have been linked
to a salmonella outbreak that's spread totwenty five states. Wash your cucumbers that,
(16:17):
okay, I meant like that.You know. Lego thefts really south
south southern California. There police aretrying to figure out why people are stealing
legos, probably because they're so expensive. Now they said that suspects have stolen
more than one hundred thousand dollars inLego merch merchandise from six Bricks and Minifigs
stores. The Lego reseller which stocksthem has more than one hundred outlets across
(16:41):
the US. So six figures andlegos that you're stealing. There are plastic
bricks, you know. I mean, there's other things to steal, but
don't steal. There is a rollerskating circus bear who dropped the act to
maul a trainer in front of shockedkids during their performance. Uh. If
you thought that it took place inRussia, you're right it did. It
absolutely did stick with us. Sothere's a company that I just started using
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(18:11):
come your way. That's ammosquared dotcom. Looking for the drive through version
of The Dana Show, check outthe best highlights from every show and Dana's
Absurd Truth podcast, hosted daily fromThe Dana Show. The Trail of the
Third Army in the nineteenth Tactic LandCommand of the Eighth Air Force is mob
(18:34):
buy more than forty thousand of bytecrosses forty thousand data Americans. General Georges
Patten, God love him and oneof his addresses. After he came back
to the United States, they hada huge celebration. They had a huge
parade, you know, obviously foreverybody coming back and when Patten came back.
(18:56):
He was such a great speaker.That was part of his speech.
We have more of that. Welcomeback to the program at bottom of this
first hour. I've got a lotof stuff to get into, including Biden
at the eightieth anniversary ceremony over therenot good, and that's coming up here
in just moments. And then we'realso going to get into the latest day
four of the Hunter Biden trial.And I got some culture stuff for you
as well to dive into. ButI wanted to talk real quick. I
(19:18):
think history is incredibly important, andI every year we talk about this on
the especially we're on airth on theanniversary of DDA, because I think it's
so incredibly important to understand what wasdone, and I think that we as
a society should be committed to rememberingit, because you want to remember your
the great things that your greatest amongstyou have done. And I love getting
(19:41):
into the weird history of World WarTwo. I'm a huge World War Two
buff. I love getting into thehistory of it. We had grandparents that
served. My grandfather didn't enter thewar until at the bombing of Pearl Harbor,
and he totally lied about his age. He was like sixteen or seventeen.
We think he was sixteen. Theylied about everything back then, their
age, their hair color, everything, and he and his brother went and
enlisted. They didn't get drafted,they volunteered, and our other grandparents were
(20:06):
in Europe and they came not onD Day but in the days like right
after D Day. And so it'samazing that our family was on both sides
of the planet. I think everybodyhas family that fought in World War Two,
and it's just all of my greatall of my great uncles fought.
All of my great uncles were inWorld War Two. My great grandmother was
(20:30):
an actual riveter. Like she there'sold photos of her in a factory doing
steel work and that she I thinkit was, and can you remember the
big factory that used to be NorthSaint Louis. She moved up from the
Ozarks, my great grandmother, andthey they had the ladies stay in these
like not condos I'm trying to almostlike dorms basically, and to work in
(20:55):
the factories. And she brought hertwo children up with her, one of
them was my grandmother. While herhusband was in the war. It's amazing
this the history of this and didshe went to work with all the other
women. Everybody pitched in, everybodypitched him. Patten was is one of
my favorite figures in history because heis an You don't they don't make him
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like him anymore? Can you?We need a patent now, we do?
We need a patent now. Insteadwe got Millie. I think one
of the last that we got that'ssimilar to him is maybe a devil dog,
old devil dog. Maybe that's it. We need another old blood and
guts. It's always old something,isn't it. But Patten got in trouble.
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I don't know if y'all knew this. I get so mad on his
behalf. He got in trouble.He became a public relations difficulty, so
you still had those sensitivities even backthen. He when he was it was
during his campaign going into Sicily,his brilliant maneuvers going into Sicily, that
(22:00):
he slapped a couple guys, right, I mean, you know, on
a couple of different occasions, soldiersthat were on the front lines that he
thought were acting a little cowardly.He slapped him slappity slap, and he
got in trouble. They removed himfrom command, and so he didn't get
to go on through up through Italy. He had to go all around them,
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met all around Europe and do thesepress events and he was speaking and
it actually ended up working out inthe allies favor because he was lifting morale.
And it also was freaking the Germansout because they had no idea everywhere
he was. They thought something wasgoing to happen there, and he was
all over He was in Malti,he was in Corsica, he was in
Egypt. And it was also toboost the deception plan that the Allies were
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coming up with. And he wasbrought into England and it was in January
of nineteen forty four he was broughtPatent was brought into England and his subordinate
at the time, Lieutenant General OmarBradley, was running the show. At
that point he had to command.Patton was told he had to command the
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fictional a fictional outfit. And thisfictional outfit was the first US Army Group
FUSAG you SAG. It was afictional army group and it was designed to
help deceive, to get ready inadvance for invasion, et cetera, et
ceteratca and so he had to commandit, and then you know, he'd
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he'd get the US Third Army,as he was mentioning in his speech when
it was ready to deploy, wheneverthey were ready to go into France if
he fulfilled this and took command ofthis fictional mission, because they needed the
Germans to believe that this fictional groupwas real, and if Patton was at
the helm of it, oh mygosh, they absolutely were going to believe
it. And that's absolutely what happened. I you know, the Germans would
say that at the time, theNazis were like, oh, the Allies
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are so unimaginative, but they feltlike they felt like Wiley coyote for everything
that we put out for them.They took debate every single time. I
was I mean I when they weregetting ready, when they were trying to
trick them out as to where theywere going to invade, they were building
up forces and getting ready, makingthings look like they were going to go
to Calais, and they had inflatabletanks even then. And and it was
(24:15):
funny because there's stories of these farmersout in rural Britain and they said,
all of a sudden, they knowthey went to bed. They woke up
in the morning to go milk thecows, and I'll be damn, there's
all these inflatable tanks and everything rightthere. And they had no idea where
they came from. They even weregiven implements to make tire tracks in the
pasture so that when the Loofoffle wentoverhead to do some reconnaissance they could see
this. It was so amazing thelevel of subterfusion which they engaged. And
(24:41):
so they created this impression that ournumbers were actually way bigger than they were,
uh, and that we were goingto go in different places than we
actually did. And it was thequicksilver illusion. And they needed to make
it really, really really and itwas part of helping Operation Overlord, which
was the invasion of northern France.They had to make it really, really
believable, and it was amazing.They even had They they got a they
(25:07):
captured a bunch of German spies andthey turned him into double agents, and
it was The stories of this arejust it's just it's the stuff that movies
are made of. But it's realand we did it, you know,
I mean, it's real. Yeah. They they saw these units, they
saw when they had their forces,German forces fly overhead and they thought,
oh my gosh, it's you know, they wanted to make They did everything
possible to throw suspicions of the Germans, and that's when you had the Ghost
(25:30):
Army, which is one of themost amazing things. I'm sure you're familiar
with the Ghost Army effect just withthis was last year's Associated Press. The
Ghost Army members who deceived Nazis withbattlefield ruses in World War Two were given
the Congressional Gold Medal. Actually thiswas in March twenty first of this year.
The Ghost Army absolutely changed the courseof war. They it was amazing
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and they had some of the bestpatches as well. They used art to
deceive. You know, Ian Fleming, who were James Bond, was all
part of this. He was apart of a lot of secretive missions,
but he it was it was likea James Bond plot. The stuff that
Ian Fleming and others came up with. There were you had George Eastman Kodak
(26:14):
Company, who was involved in thisbill Blast. Operation Wierson was their last
biggest op that was credited with savingtons of lives and they literally made stuff
up they would they would have audiodeception. They had in the northern France.
They they were a mobile deception unitand they would They tricked the Germans
six ways to Sunday and it's oneof the reasons that Patton got folks across
(26:36):
the Rhine because it was the GhostArmy that was tricking them. Just amazing
the the history of this, andthey didn't really they weren't allowed to talk
about it. In fact, itonly came out like in the eighties,
and it was a an article Ithink it was a Smithsonian magazine article where
it finally came out. It waslike eighty five or eighty six when it
was finally discovered. But they hadOperation Their missions for the Ghost Army included
(27:02):
d Day and that was there wherethey were trying to deceive where they were
going to be coming in at.That was part of their fictional command unit.
And then they had Operation Veerson thatwas in March and nineteen forty five.
They told the Germans. The Germansbelieved that the Allies were going to
cross ten miles away from where theyactually cross, and it totally worked and
it managed it. I mean,it saved lives. I mean it saved
(27:26):
lives. There were only eighty twoofficers and barely over one thousand men in
this unit, and they made theGermans think that they were two battalions.
That's genius, that is like,that's genius, that's amazing. Yeah,
nineteen eighty five, April nineteen eightyfive, that's when the first story came
out. Nobody knew, and whenthe families of these men found out,
(27:47):
they were like, this is absolutelyamazing that this happened. They had radio
deceptions, they had visual sonic everything. They would place stuff in the bushes
nearby where Germans soldiers were that madethem think that there were marches happening,
or that there was you know,there were tanks rolling, you know,
a certain distance away. It wasso great. They had audio engineers,
amazing artists, storytellers. It waswhen the it was when culture and military
(28:12):
worked in such beautiful harmony together.Nothing like it is I think been seen
since. It's just amazing. Andthat's a ghost army. And then after
Patten successfully helped with some of thesedeception missions, he got the Third Army
and then the rest is history.Just fascinating stuff. I got to talk
to you about what Biden did today. Guys, we're at that we're at
(28:34):
that point. We're gonna get intothe Russian stuff. But can we play
the video where he tried to sitdown in front of everybody? This is
audio some by ten. This isthe D Day commemorations this morning. Now
he's there with Emmanuel Macron, BrigitteMacron, that's the president, first Lady
of France. He's there with doctorAlbiden. Any welcome squad as. What
(28:57):
is he doing? He's trying tosit down or he's taken aduce. It
could be either. We really don'tknow what does he do? I don't
know what he's doing. Now theother part let's get ready to audioce theme
BYT eleven. So at this event, Macrone and Biden they're supposed to stay
(29:18):
and greet the veterans. This iswhat when American presidents go over. This
is what they this is what theydo. They stay and they greet all
of the veterans. Biden was escortedout by Jill like immediately after that,
and Macrone, you see in thefull video, is very confused. He
has no idea what's happening. Theaids are confused, even they're kind of
running after him. Macrone was like, uh uh, well, I guess
(29:41):
uh, and they left Macron thereto greet the veterans by himself. Guys,
the whole nation is sitting here goingthere's something wrong. Democrats are even
going there's something wrong. There's theWall Street Journal piece yesterday that came out
where you have Democrats and Republicans sayingthat there's something wrong, while needs are
saying, we have to discredit thisarticle because they included a couple of Republicans
(30:03):
in it. There is something wrong. This is not right. I don't
believe that Joe Biden will last ifhe's reelected in November. He's not going
to make it for a second.I'm just saying, because you can look
at his health and see the wayhe's acting, He's not going to make
it for another four years. There'sno way in hell, no way,
he will not make it through anotherterm. That's probably why he gets so
(30:26):
hostile when members of the press askhim about this. He literally told asked
one reporter the other day if hewas dropped on his head, and then
he threatened to fight another after theyask him about this. Guys, this
is not right. You know,it's not right. Everybody has. Everybody
has somebody in their family, anelderly person where they saw either a physical
or mental decline. He's got both. It is not normal. He does
(30:51):
not look healthy, he does notlook aware. He has difficulty getting around,
He can't finish sentences. He itdoesn't even remember his own policies or
history. This is not This iseven worse than what Chamberlain ever was.
My gosh, this is not good. I mean, I look at this
(31:15):
stuff and it's kind of scary.He's not running the country. I know
you know this. I fully believe, and I'm not saying this as like
our talking point for radio. Idon't believe that Joe Biden's making decisions about
the country. He is not theacting president of the United States. So
who is. We have a lotmore on the way. We got days
of these United States coming up.We also have the developing story apparently American
(31:40):
weapons are being used inside of Russia. We're going to discuss this and the
true equality for alphabet month of GeorgePatten. We're gonna talk about that as
well. Our partners over at HillsdaleCollege, an actual educational institution where they
do some learning. They do thelearning at the Hillsdale. It's a smart
place for smart people. No,for real. Hillsdale is a small Christian,
(32:02):
classical liberal arts college in southern Michigan. I just got to say,
I've run into an extraordinary amount ofpeople who've gone to Hillsdale. All these
people that I keep running into thathave these that are very, very smart
and they're working in analysis and strategy, they all went to Hillsdale. Hillsdale's
churning them out, and I thinkthey're like, the only one you got
to save America, Hillsdale, andyou can help. Actually, Hillsdale do
(32:22):
that, I'm not kidding. That'stheir pursuit. They want to defend liberty
through education and that's been their hallmarksince they're founding in eighteen forty four.
So one of the ways they're doingthat is they're asking for your input.
You can take a survey on presidentialselection at Dana four Hillsdale fr dot com.
Now why am I asking that Becausethe Marxist left has been pushing to
just abolish the electoral college. Theywant direct democracy, which is mob rule.
(32:45):
It's literally a bunch of wolves inone sheet voting on what to have
for dinner. That's it. That'swhat they want. Though eighteen states have
sided IT has signed on to overallhow presidents are elected. Hillsdale desperately needs
your views on this because they wantto understand the views of mainstream Americans on
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So you can access this at Danafour f O R. Hillsdale dot com.
(33:07):
Start your national survey on presidential selectiontoday. That's Dana for Hillsdale dot
com. Don't let FOMO get thebest of you. Stay in the loop
and ahead of the curve by followingDana on Apple, Spotify or wherever you
get your podcasts like SAMs through theOuter Glans. So are the days of
(33:28):
the United States? My god?Yeah, yes, yeah, Okay,
it's gonna attacked by cards. Thisnews reporter in the middle of a live
(33:54):
shot, meaning the camera is aboutto go live, so it's sending a
live feed of where she is tothe control room and she's waiting for them
to throw it to her. Andas that's happening, she's a bird starts
dive bombing her and it's hysterical.Those are really when you do outdoor live
(34:15):
shots, there's a certain level ofnervousness that goes along with that. I
remember when I was a the tokenconservative. This is some years ago,
back in twenty twenty twelve, andwe were outside they seeing in it,
and it was at the Republican debateprimary debate, and seeing in who constructed
(34:37):
this little stage. It was inFlorida at their fair ground somewhere in Florida,
and we were there and it wason this nice little stage, and
there was like a stream, likea little like a creek or something nearby,
and right as I mean it was, they just gave us the two
minute warning, meaning make sure lastlooks all that stuff, sit there,
(34:58):
make sure your MIC's everything's nice straight, you know, you're all where you
need to be. And as theydid it, there was like a bird
fight in the trees behind us.I don't know if there was like a
hawk or what had happened. Andthis was like late late summer, so
the birds were still really active,and I don't know what the heck was
(35:19):
going on because you're not We couldn'treally turn around and look because we at
that point when you're giving the warning, you're you know, you got to
stay there and get ready to go. It was so loud. I could
not We couldn't hear anything in ourin our monitor. We couldn't hear anything
in our ear monitor. Are inyour piece like I have on right now?
We couldn't hear anything because it wasso loud behind us. It was
(35:40):
crazy. So they actually had towait until they figured out what was going
on because it was so loud.Can you imagine? Can you imagine what
that headline would have been, like, we're gonna throw it now, and
it was Wolf Blitzer, who wasthe anchor who was hosting it, Like
we're gonna throw it to Wolf andthey're at the Republican primary debate getting ready.
Can you just imagine? It wasso loud and it did Finally they
(36:06):
ended up it ended up stopping,but we had to wait for a few
minutes. But it was It washysterical, and I just kept thinking,
please do not come over here becausethere's an open top and they only had
stuff to deflect and diffuse the light, so the birds could have flown overhead.
And I'm like, oh my gosh, just like, are we gonna
get attag by birds? It's likea hitchcock thing. All right, we
have more on the way it's theeightieth anniversary of D Day. We're also
(36:27):
going to touch the day four ofhunter Biden's gun trial. It's getting getting
a little crazy, getting a littledramatic, and Biden weapons in Russia,
Biden at the eighty at the ceremony, the eightieth anniversary ceremony in France.
I mean, it's pretty weird.There's a ton of stuff culture to get
into all of it. Stick withus. We have a pack show second
Hour moments away. You don't needa disaster to prepare for major emergencies.
(36:51):
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of any regularly priced item that's readywisedot com Code data twenty. We stand
on a lonely wind sweat point onthe northern shore of France, but forty
years ago at this moment, theair was dense with smoke and the cries
of men, and the air wasfilled with the crack of rife fire on
(38:00):
the roar of Canada. Here inNormandy. The rescue began at dawn on
the morning of the sixth of Junenineteen forty four. Sixty two of the
rangers who scaled the cliffs there atPlant to Hope now back forty years later
to the scene of their heroic action. These are the boys of puant' hope.
(38:27):
These are the men who took thecliffs. It was a very moving
experience They were what General Marshall calledour secret weapon, the best damn kids
in the world. Where do wefind them? Where do we find such
men? And the answer came almostas quickly as I'd asked the question.
(38:53):
Where We've always found them in thiscountry, on the farms, the shops,
the stores, and the offices.They just are the product of the
free of society the world has everknown. Someday, Liz, I'll go
back, he said, Private firstClass Peter Robert Zonetta of the thirty seventh
(39:15):
Engineer Combat Battalion and first Assault Waveto hit Omaha Beach. Lisus and not
a Hen began her story by quotingher father, who promised that he would
return to Normandy. She ended witha promise to her father, who died
eight years ago of cancer. I'mgoing there, Dad, and I'll see
(39:38):
the beaches and the barricades and themonuments. I'll see the graves, and
I'll put flowers there, just likeyou wanted to do. I'll feel all
the things you made me feel throughyour stories and your eyes. I'll never
forget what you went through, Dad, nor will I let any one else.
(40:01):
Just an unbelievable, unbelievable audio therefrom Reagan, Ronald Reagan, President,
Ronald Reagan, who was himself honoringwhat happened on D Day. And
now we're at the eightieth anniversary ofit. It's amazing eighty years. The
(40:23):
greatest generation. Welcome back to theprogram. We are at the top of
this second hour. And as wealways do whenever the anniversary falls on a
day that we are on air,we talk about D Day, We talk
about the some of the historical aspects, maybe that you were unaware of,
some of the amazing stories, andthen of course we have to talk about
(40:44):
the news of the day as well, which we will do. Do you
know that it was almost first off, D Day was disastrous, was up
against disastrous odds, insurmountable odds thelandings, and it's hard to say it,
but it's the reality. Part ofit was to be a war of
(41:04):
attrition, to be wave after waveafter wave after wave after wave of troops
coming in to overwhelm the Germans thatwere there on the cliffs, and it
almost was a disaster because of theweather. This is an interesting story.
There was a short gap. Theyhad a storm on June fifth, and
(41:28):
there was looked like it was goingto be maybe a storm coming after,
and there was just a partial breakin the cloud cover that allowed for this
to happen. Eisenhower was forced todelay it by twenty four hours because of
the storm. It was going tohit the channel. On June fifth,
they had a break off of thecoast of Ireland's county Mayo. And the
(41:51):
story of this is interesting. MarneFlavin, she was called Sweeney. She
ended up being honored by our owngovernment because her weather report saved thousands of
lives. She passed away last year. They had twelve hundred warships getting ready
to go. Everything was planned forJune fifth. Every single aspect of the
(42:15):
invasion required a certain weather condition tobe successful. You didn't want crazy,
stormy water there in the channel.You didn't want cloud cover that prevented our
aerial support from protecting what was happeningon the ground. They needed calm seeds,
(42:35):
calm seeds. They needed a lowtide. You had four thousand,
It was over four thousand. Ican't remember the exact number of over four
thousand landing craft. Crazy crazy,the largest military, the largest seaborne invasion
in the history of this planet.So you had the deception that we talked
about last hour that made the Germansthink, and not just not just on
(42:59):
d Day, but even after thatsaved lives. But you had this Marning
Flavin, and she lived in Irelandand the story of her. She was
a post mistress or a deputy postmistress, and she was watching overnight.
(43:21):
She had the overnight shift on Junethird, and it was her twenty first
birthday, Marrine Flavin, and shewas doing some of the readings of the
weather and she saw that the whatwas going on with the waves and the
force six winds. She said thatwe're capable of whipping up eleven foot high
waves. It was coming in fromthe Atlantic. She saw what was hitting
(43:45):
her where she was, her locationin County Mayo, and so she was
sharing details. She ended up reportingwhat she was experiencing. She was peppered
with calls about our work from awoman with an English accent. She was
asked to repeat her readings. Herreadings were passed unbeknownst to her to London.
(44:08):
She was relaying the information to IrishMeteorological services as well. In Dublin,
and she had been married to thelocal lighthouse keeper, Ted Sweeney.
She rode to Black said bays Lighthouse. They were looking at other meteorological instruments
relaying this to the Irish government.And why they were doing that is because
(44:30):
whatever was happening to County Mayo,that was an indication of what was going
to be going into the channel andabout anywhere from you know, twenty four
to forty eight hours. And soshe saved lives because she said, wait,
wait, wait, this is somereal bad weather coming in June fifth,
guys, wait wait, wait,this is what's happening right now to
(44:52):
County Mayo. Wait wait, wait, wait wait. And she also was
in contact with them. According tothe historians and the documents and everything.
At the time, there was anunreleased note from Eisenhower that was talking about
the landings. They were waiting fora break in the weather to get a
satisfactory foothold, et cetera, etcetera. And I mean it was the
(45:15):
very high risk, high reward playhere. And they knew that even though
the weather wasn't totally perfect on Junesixth, it was partial cloud cover,
there was a break in the storms, a twenty four hour break that was
going to give them enough time.So just that, I mean, just
a little window of time, twentyone year old postmistress who just was there
(45:37):
and was tasked with watching what wascoming in. This is unbelievable. Just
every part, every person played arole. And I want to talk real
quick, and we're going to getinto the news of the day. I
want to talk about the actual truequality of patent because we here it's alphabet
month, D Day gets a day. And what the men and even the
(45:58):
women did on D Day. Whatwas done on D Day that is fighting
for rights. That is a struggle. That is true inspiration. Everything else,
all this other stuff with the alphabetstuff is nonsense. It's noise.
If one of my favorite and againI share it every year because I think
(46:22):
it's honestly the best speech ever.I can't read all of it. On
air, Patten noted that he didnot speak he said it. How did
he say? It's not polite forTea Rooms, maybe, I think is
what is how he put it,And even for the movie on his life,
they sanitized it. But he spokehow the troops needed to. He
(46:45):
spoke what they needed to hear andlove. I have the full speech,
it's I read it, but it'svery long. I have the full speech,
but I love this aspect of itbecause he was talking about all of
the people involved in this the teamwork, he said. Every single man in
(47:07):
this army, says from his speech, plays a vital role. Don't ever
let up. Don't think that yourjob is unimportant. Every man, Patton
said, has a job to do, and he must do it. Every
Man is a vital link in thegreat chain. What if every truck driver
suddenly decided he didn't like the wineof those shells over head, turned yellow
and jumped headlong into a ditch.He says that cowardly well redacted could say,
(47:30):
hell, they won't miss me,just one man in thousands. But
what if every man thought that way, Where in the hell would we be?
Now? Where would our country,our loved wins, our homes,
even the world be like? Hesays, No, damned Americans don't think
like that. Every man does thisjob. Every man serves the hole.
He talked about the ordnance men andsupplying the guns and the machinery, the
(47:51):
quartermaster bringing up food and clothes.Because he goes where we're going. There
isn't a hell of a lot tosteal, he said. Every last man
on kp As a job to do. Even the one who heats our water
to keep us from getting the giruns. But that's not what he said.
And he said this, he goes. Every man must not only think
of himself, but also of hisbuddy fighting beside him. He said,
(48:14):
we don't want yellow cowards in thisarmy. He said that they should be
killed off like flies. And ifnot, they'll go back home. After
the war. The cowards and breedmore cowards, and the brave men will
breed more brave men. But hetalked about every link in the chain pulling
together, he goes, and thenthat makes the chain unbreakable. That's equality
(48:40):
what Patent talked about. That wastrue equality. None of the sex,
flag and military men and heels inuniform nonsense. This is a quality of
purpose. It's a quality of battle. It is equality of teamwork, real,
(49:04):
actual equality, true equality, lastingequality. If it didn't strengthen the
whole, then it's a distraction.And distractions, well, those are the
enemy's tricks. And that was Patent'sequality. You were there for the unifying
(49:29):
mission of purpose. You are therebecause you are fighting and evil that you
need others to help you defeat.Every single person plays a role. We've
lost that. We've lost it alot in politics. No one thinks like
that. Everybody wants to go offfor the golden Ring because they don't appreciate
(49:49):
all of the other roles enough.We don't have enough encouragers. That's a
very powerful I think calling to haveis to be an incur That's just as
important as being the person who getsthe Golden ring. And Pattern recognized all
of this. He recognized every bitof it. We don't have patents anymore.
(50:14):
It's depressing. Maybe we do.Maybe they're coming. What does it
say hard times create strong men.Strong men create good times. Good times
create weak men. Well, we'renot in good times right now. So
what type of man are you raising? And that includes women? Just amazing
now coming up going into this thereyou had a health entity that actually was
(50:44):
telling the public that men can getovarying cancer. Can have you checked her
overies lately? We're going to talkabout reactions to this. We're also going
to talk about one of the thingsthat Biden mentioned, Oh yeah, the
use of US weapons in Russia.It's getting more unstable by the day.
(51:06):
We're going to talk about all ofthis coming up. Patriot Mobile is the
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Mobile dot com slash Dana nine sevento two Patriot and now all of the
news you would probably miss. It'stime for Dana's Quick five. Never been
happier to not be in New Yorkbecause now flying venomous spiders the size of
a human hand. No, ohgosh, no, they're gonna fly,
(52:36):
literally fly into New York. It'scalled what is it, the your spider?
It's an invasive species that hey,guess where it originated? China.
Now they're sitting us spiders. Wehad virus balloons and now spiders. Geez,
it's like the stupid plagues. Theycan fly up to one hundred miles
(52:59):
by turning their webs into makeshift paarasailslike comas. And they're venomous, but
they but scientists insist that the yuruspiders venom is sweet guys, and the
skin's not strong enough to break theskin of humans or pets. Did you
test this yourselves? You tested ityourself. They're known to cannibalize the brown
colored male mates. Oh great,so are they're feminists? Uh great,
(53:21):
we got a bunch of bitchy spiders. They're gonna be flying in the wind.
And I don't like brightly colored thingsthat are insects because I yeah,
it means bad, it means no, like run run no. I would
much rather battle like a monster,a big one, than like a little
brightly colored insect because they can getin your brains and eat your brain up.
(53:45):
I don't know, I just can'tdeal with it. Just let's got
to set New York on fire.Now, guys, let's see doctor Pat
Sajak is leaving. I don't thinkthat you could have anybody replace Pat Sajack
and Vana White. They should notbe allowed to leave. And if they
have to leave, then just don't. Just the show needs to be over,
then that's it. A fifteen yearold is going to make a PGA
(54:05):
tour to view after the success ona corn faery tour. A fifteen year
old in the PGA. I mentionedthis one yesterday, but we ran out
of time. This isn't Palo Alto. The elderly donkey called Perry that inspired
Eddie Murphy's character in Shrek was givena ten thousand dollars government grant to help
pay for his care like nobody couldadopt him. I mean, I would
take a donkey. I totally adoptedDonkey to have. You know, they're
(54:30):
jerks, but you know, soam I. So it works out.
We'd get along all right. Wehave a lot more on the way we
got culture we got apparently Biden nowtalking about the use of weapons, American
weapons in Russia. Stick with us. Our partners over at Keltech. It's
a great Florida based company that alot of people try to rip off because
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(55:59):
your podcasts. You know, there'sa really powerful parallel too between what we're
commemorating today and what we're doing now. Back then, it wasn't just the
United States here in Normandy. Twelvecountries came together, one hundred and sixty
thousand men coming to this beach,coming to start the final fight that ultimately,
eleven months later, led to victoryin World War Two. In Ukraine,
(56:21):
we have more than fifty countries standingup standing together making sure that Ukraine
has what it needs to defend itselfand to push back this aggression. And
that's the power of our alliances.And that's the biggest difference maker we have
in the world. Are necessarities arecompetitors. They don't have the same kind
of voluntary alliances. Yeah, sometimesthey course countries into helping them, or
maybe they pay them off. Herewe have country after country that volunteers to
(56:42):
stand together, stand together in defensiveprinciples that we share and no need defending.
We're seeing that in Ukraine. Wesaw that eighty years ago here in
Normandy. That's ridiculous, antony blinkand actually trying to compare Ukraine to Normandy,
which is so historically illiterate and offensiveit almost provokes me to violence.
Welcome back to the program, Danalash with you at the bottom of this
(57:06):
second hour. Can you imagine justit's just that's such a heinous comparison,
such a heinous comparison. It's justa cringe. And I've seen He's not
the only person who's been doing that. I don't know if you saw this.
This was Hillary Clinton five hours agosaid quote eighty years ago today,
(57:28):
thousands of brave Americans fought to protectdemocracy on the shores of Normandy this November.
All we have to do is voteWow Trump. Look, Trump is
not Hitler, and U Republicans aren'tNazis. And you tried to cheat and
lost. She attempted in twenty sixteen, she attempted to undo a everything that
(57:52):
these World War II heroes fought forby partnering with Fusion GPS to law under
discredited oppo in the press and thenmerch it out into surveillance warrants on enemies
through Faiza. And if my WorldWar two grandparents, the World War Two
(58:15):
vets grandparents were alive today, they'dslam this, they'd slam her sentiment,
they'd slam such a comparison. That'sshameful when people throw around the accomplishments and
the bravery and courage of these greatestgeneration, these veterans, as as like
a comparison some way to substantiate theirown behavior. That's the mark of a
(58:37):
person who's never done anything. That'sjust asinine. It's one of the most
defensive things I think I've ever heard. You have Biden here as well.
This is a audio sound bite eight. He does the same thing. Anthony
Blincoln does. Listen to this becauseIf we do, you're creably be subjugated
(59:00):
and I'll not in there. Ukraine'sneighbors will be threatened, all of Europe
will be threatened. And make nomistake, the autocrats of the world are
watching closely to see what happened inUkraine, to see if we let this
illegal aggression go on. Check Wecannot let that happen. To surrender the
(59:22):
bullies, to bow down the dictatorsis simply on thinking you. I'm just
I'm floored that he is in Normandylecturing everybody, these veterans about Ukraine,
about a foreign land dispute that hasnothing to do, not even remotely comparable
to what happened in World War Two. You absolute incoherent historically. Oh my
(59:49):
gosh, I muted it, buthe's you know it, that's so disrespectful.
They wanted, they wanted democrats wantedso bad with his stupid remarks,
to have a Reagan moment. Theywanted him to have his own little Reagan
moment, right, And it's embarrassing. How are you standing up there comparing
(01:00:12):
d Day to Ukraine. It's aforeign lane dispute based on a lot of
his historical disputes between these areas thosetwo that geographical location that goes back a
century. It's not spreading, it'scontained. The only thing that's I mean,
if you want me to argue it, the only thing that actually has
(01:00:36):
expanded was NATO. But I'm justsaying it's not even remotely the same.
In fact, you can't have itboth ways. I have let me pull
this article up. I was actuallynot going to get this to this until
Friday, but I'm doing it now. There was an article that I read
the other day, and I wasactually going to be bringing it up with
(01:00:57):
us Stephen Yates. No one haspaid attention, talked about it a little
bit on the program here. There'sbeen a seismic shift in global power that
nobody's talking about. Russia notes NeilBarnett has become China's vassal state. Russia
is not the threat China is.They had gaz Prom that signed a three
(01:01:23):
hundred and nine billion dollar contract,the biggest in its history. Gas Proms
are Russian entity. They signed thisto supply gas two China. They built
a huge pipeline power of Siberia thatcan withstand temperatures negative sixty two celsius,
and it went all through eighteen hundredmiles through the Siberian wilderness all the way
(01:01:45):
to China. They opened it severalyears ago, huge celebration. Now they're
wanting to do the power of Siberiato an even longer pipeline. And even
though you've had three of Russia's nordstreampipelines, you've had some explosions in that.
(01:02:06):
Since it was in what twenty twentytwo, Moscow has been trying to
find a way to put where tosell its gas, its dirty gas since
the United States under the last administrationwas trying to free hour which is weird.
You're gonna have NATO as a hedgeof defense against Russia, but yet
you're going to rely on them forall of your energy. That's wild.
(01:02:29):
So the United States, with ourenergy resources, we're trying to alleviate that
dependency upon those Allied nations on Russiafor that. And so Gazprom they posted
their first loss in more than twentyyears, their share plot price plunged,
and then now they're trying to establishthese more transactions, more of this energy
(01:02:51):
infrastructure with China. But China's tryingto drive down the price of Russian gas,
so they're playing hardball with them.They've been dragging these negotiations out for
forever and Moscow wants better terms,so they haven't agreed, but it looks
like they're probably going to be forcedto. And China has an economy that's
like eight hundred something percent larger thanthat of Russia's. They have more people,
(01:03:15):
they have all of they have theentire upper hand in this situation,
and they have been friendly. ButRussia's the second banana to China completely.
This has been a huge shift inglobal power, which is another reason why
(01:03:39):
I completely discount these arguments of peoplelike Anthony Blincoln, who's audio we played
coming into the segment, and whatJoe Biden just said. They were talking
about Russia. China does to givea rats backside about Ukraine. Only Russia
does. Actually only Russia cares aboutthe Dambis region and Crimea and Sevestopol.
(01:04:00):
They China doesn't. Russia does.But they're a second banana to China.
They have their economies in tatters.They're not the superpower, they're not the
super bad guy power anymore. They'renot the mini boss. And so you've
been seeing how all of this hasbeen playing playing out this this threat that
(01:04:28):
they keep talking about. The democratsand neocons keep talking about it's not Russia,
it's China, and only so muchin so far as China can use
Russia. But they're more interested inHong Kong. They're more interested in Taiwan.
They have eyes elsewhere. They wantto dominate the South Seas. Hmmm,
this has been a very it's interesting. So to hear him, to
(01:04:51):
hear these people, they notice theydidn't mention China. Blincoln didn't talk about
China. Biden didn't mention China.And his address. I mean, first,
if you're at the Normandy event,you're at the eightieth, so the
eightieth anniversary, you're celebrating the veteransthat are there. That is not the
(01:05:11):
time to make a speech trying toextol your money laundering operation in Ukraine.
It is not the time to makea highly politicized speech about financing a foreign
war in which Americans have zero interest, and doing it in front of these
veterans and wasting the precious seconds thatthey have on earth by doing that.
(01:05:33):
That was so wholly inappropriate and grotesque. But I'm not surprised because it is
the I'd call him the white trashpresident. But that's an insult to actual
white trash. He just looked likea fool. And those veterans there,
I don't know if you saw theexpression on some of their faces. I'm
(01:05:56):
telling you, you know they're watchingthe guy who heads up an administration that
has as a Deputy of Health andHuman Services a man who wears lipstick and
heels to work and says he's ashe. But once the lecture you about
health, mental or otherwise, aguy who had a disastrous, disastrous withdrawal
(01:06:24):
from Afghanistan from kabble and lecturing theseveterans here, I mean, it's it
is truly amazing, and so II just it's just so oh my gosh,
my jaws on the floor with thatjust so inappropriate audio. Somebody seven
(01:06:49):
he said this too, talking aboutdemocracy is at risk. Listen, now
the question for us is in ourour trial, will we do ours?
We're living in a time when democracyand more risk across the world than a
point since the end of World WarTwo, since these beaches were stormed in
(01:07:09):
nineteen forty four. Now we haveto ask ourselves, when we stand against
tyranny, against evil, against crushingbrutality, of the iron fist. When
we stand for freedom, when wedefend democracy, we stand together. My
answer is yes, all we canbe yes. I'm just amazed at this.
(01:07:30):
My view of history, and Iread a lot of history is out
of step with the popular narrative.I don't view Russia as a friend or
an ally. I hate communists andI think you're better dead than red loath
(01:07:50):
communists. For him to again,we're talking about DDA about World War Two.
It seems a little bit tone deafto say this stuff world War two
(01:08:11):
and try to compare what's going onin Ukraine to this, especially one of
the bloodiest battles. I got tosay with Stalingrad. One of the bloodiest
battles in World War two was Stalingrad. And that's when the Germans realized,
So Christ Napoleon two point zero lookat us. By the way, that's
what urban warfare was really really kindof kind of kicked off with Stalingrad.
(01:08:32):
The mechanics of that battle when youcouldn't use you couldn't use your heavy artillery,
couldn't use your tanks, you couldn'tuse couldn't I mean, you had
it had to be hand to handand that's then they knew that, and
they fought because they were tired ofbeing rolled across, whether it was by
their damn government, their damn Commigovernment that they were mad at, or
the Nazis coming in. They weremad. They're just mad, and they
(01:08:54):
had it. The history's amazing.But to stand there and say that D
Day again, just acknowledge that veteransacknowledge how amazing it was. Maybe a
remark on how that's when we wereunified. Maybe instead of drying division,
you desiccated old turn Maybe maybe maybehighlight the unity that we had that you
(01:09:15):
insist on driving away. Now,how everybody came together. You had every
every good force on earth coming togetheron those beaches eighty years ago. And
not just that, but in America, my gush, you know, we
went above and beyond. If theyasked us for fifty ships, we'd send
(01:09:35):
one hundred. Our manufacturing capability becausewe were so bound and determined we had
to do it. No one elsecould do it for us. We couldn't
export it out or import it in. We couldn't. We couldn't outsource the
work to China or India. Atthe time, it had to be done
in the United States, and wehad to know how. We had the
(01:09:57):
desire, We had the willpower andthe manpower and woman power those riveters to
do it, and we did it. We did what needed to be done
because it needed to be doing.It needed doing, so we did what
needed to be done. That wasunity. Everybody came to You had victory
(01:10:18):
gardens. Women change their hairstyles toeven ration supplies. Fashion changed entirely to
support the war effort. Everything wasin lockstep to defeat evil. Everyone was
on the same page. That's whathe should be highlighting. But he's divisive
(01:10:40):
trash, so he promotes divisive trash. He should apologize to those veterans.
Shame on him while his son withone of his baby mamas sits in court
speeds dot com. It's his laughmission to make bad decisions. It's time
(01:11:02):
for Florida man. Hmm all right, So first up, a Florida a
passenger tracked missing luggage to the homeof an airport store worker who's now charged
with felony theft. A Florida manis facing a felony theft felony grand theft
charge in Broward County after an airlinepassenger who was supposed to flya to Fort
(01:11:26):
Lauderdale, Hollywood, and March trackedher stolen luggage to the guy's house.
According to the affidavit in the case, Junior Bazil of Fort Lauderdale twenty nine
was charged. The victim left theairport on a Spirit Airlines flight. The
airline canceled the flight told the passengersthey could get their luggage at the terminal,
but apparently she waited two hours forher pink roller bag. It had
(01:11:48):
her Apple MacBook, her iPad,her Apple Watch, all this other stuff.
It never came on the luggage belt. And they said that her luggage
had been sent to her house,but it never arrived. And then she
had her own electronic tracker, soshe pinged the items inside the bag.
She located them, she found them, tracked them down, and all of
(01:12:09):
them. She actually uh called nineone one and went to his house.
But here's the other thing. Don'tput your stuff in your suitcase. Keave
it in your carry on the matterwith you. Stop it. A Delray
beachman is accused of attacking his mindover a child's haircut. He was apparently
upset. Drew Wertheimer, thirty four, was arrested, charged with false imprisonment
(01:12:31):
of an adult, aggravated battery,aggravated assault, oh with a firearm,
well goodness, tempering with a witness, depriving someone in the use of nine
to one one. I did noteven know that was a charge. He
got upset because his children's haircuts werenot short like the other ones. One
of the kids, and so hejust lost his mind. Sounds like he's
got problems. It also sounds likemaybe she should have had that many kids
(01:12:53):
with that guy, because he's probablynot the best. Third hour on the
way. Stick with us. Althoughno unit, no individual won the war,
we're fortunate in having won here tonightwith us who had a large party
in winning the war. I'm pleased. I'm proud to have been privileged to
(01:13:19):
fight by the side of General GeorgePatty. You're honor Mayor Generald Dolttle soldiers,
ladies and gentlemen coming over here.That was a very great lesson.
(01:13:45):
The first four hours we passed overa destroyed lamb utterly destroyed. You who
have not seated, do not knowHell looks like from the top, that
is one German. It looks likethat Astril loves slide that is for at
(01:14:08):
any place, better thing aim Manfor wait on looks like Wake Don god
Lee. They don't make them likePaton anymore. They really don't. Welcome
back to the program, Dana,last year with you. Top of this
third hour. You can listen coastto coast. You can find this channel
through forty seven Direct TV. Youcan watch us on X and Rumble and
(01:14:30):
YouTube and Facebook, all of that. And we always, as we do
whenever we're on air, when theanniversary of D Day takes place, we
always pause and we talk about thehistory of it, and I always try
to share something new about the historythat maybe you didn't know every single year.
And I think it's incredibly important tocommit to not just remembering, but
to keep the memory alive just asit and make it as accessible now and
(01:14:55):
in the future as it was whenwe had all of our veterans still with
us, all of the greatest generationwho went over there and did what they
did. I've got some pieces upat substack, chapter and verse, the
newsletter for the radio show that ifyou're a subscriber, you've got that.
This morning, we've talked about everything. We talked about the other escapades of
the Ghost Army. We talked aboutpat and how he was relieved of duty
just because he which maybe I disagreewith, because he got mad at some
(01:15:19):
of the cowardice of some of thesoldiers, slept in in front of others.
And then before he got his thirdArmy command back, commanded a third
Army back, he was on thisoptics, this pr tour all across Europe
and they're all around the Mediterranean.And then he also took control of this
deception, this deceptive unit uh andthey the Germans believed all of it because
(01:15:40):
he was involved in it. Savedso many lives and it's just unbelieve.
There's a couple of really good booksabout the Ghost Army. I think it's
Ghost Army dot org. That oneof the guys who did one of the
documentaries on it, they have awebsite out they got they were finally recognized
in March of this year for theiramazing work. And you had you had,
(01:16:00):
you know, Americans Brits working together, Ian Fleming Orchestra like basically wrote
the book before James Bond on allof it. That was the James Bond
guy. He was involved in alot of off the book stuff and also
a lot of these missions of subterfuge. For the lack of a better way
to put it, but just amazing. It was absolutely amazing. But this
(01:16:21):
is going to be the final yearfor a lot of these veterans. This
is a major milestone moment. Anduh, it's there's there's this sense a
lot of people have been saying this, this sense of a final farewell because
there are so few left and theones that are there now there they were
(01:16:42):
the youngest ones and they're they're intheir nineties, you know. Uh it
is uh, it's it's an amazingthing. And I'm just I'm happy that
that there had that they had theseceremonies, and I hope they continue to
have them. Uh. And asI said in March, Congress gave its
highest civilian honor to that secretive Armyunit, the Ghost Army. They got
(01:17:04):
Congressional Gold Medals, and nobody knewreally anything about that until the eighties.
Is kind of crazy. And thenof course, you know you had Operation
Mincemeat. There was all kinds ofcrazy operations that they did. That's when
they had dropped what a dead bodywith fake papers about an invasion and all
the step plans in Sicily, theinvasion in Sicily, and the Germans bought
it. Germans bought every trick,every trick. The Germans bought it,
(01:17:29):
and it was It's a really amazing, it's really really amazing all of this.
And I'm going to put some linksinto a separate piece for you on
that. I was reading this storylast night and he was part of D
Day. He was a thirty oneyear old soldier. He was from Britain.
He was evacuated from Dunkirk in nineteenforty. He led three machine gun
(01:17:53):
and mortar three mortar teams to attacka heavy a German heavy naval artillery position
at Mount Fleury. And I wasreading about this guy. Listen to this,
so he and his men, hisname was, his name was Stan
Hollis came under fire from a machinegun pill box hid in a garden wall
just behind the beach there in Normandy. He charged her with thirty yards at
(01:18:15):
open ground. He stuck his stingun in the slit and emptied the mag
He dropped a grenade in the hole. They caught one remaining German survivor.
Then he saw a trench in asecond pillbox, and then he ran at
that captured that and took thirty Germans. And then at eleven am, having
taken command of a sixteen platoon,hollisaw an enemy field gun hidden in a
hedge and decided that also had tobe destroyed. And then he and two
(01:18:39):
brand machine gunners crawled towards the gunhe was armed with. It's called a
piat It was similar to one ofour pezukas. He fired a shot and
missed. Then he got his twomen to retreat and cover in a roobarb
patch that was attacked by a fieldgun. Made him mad. Hollis took
out another brend gun, walked outinto the open with a heavy machine gun
on his hip and fired directly thefield gun. The field gun took aim
(01:19:01):
at Hollis and missed, and thatallowed his men to retreat to safety.
He was the only British soldier awardedthe Victoria Cross on D Day. On
D Day, those are balls,goll Lee, some of the heroics of
I mean, so many servicemen Iwould love I mean, got Lee.
(01:19:23):
You could do month's worth of showson it, months worth of shows on
it. It's just truly stunning wehave. It was just the the partnership
and the unity and how everyone workedtogether, and it was just just unbelievable.
And the Germans, they were sotricked. They thought when they first
saw stuff coming in, they thought, no, no, no, that's
(01:19:43):
not the biggest vision. They thoughtthe big one was coming still a cale,
they were convinced the deception work wassaved so many lives, saved so
many lives. Then there was Icould we could sit here and talk about
gosh, all of the amazing heroics, all of the uh, some of
(01:20:03):
like some of like like Josephine Baker, some of the other women that took
part that were spies and were helpingif it wasn't the French resistance and they
were helping the US or they werehelping the the Brits, and uh,
just amazing. And because they werenice, pretty women, you know,
the Germans didn't think that they were. They were going, there's not going
to hurt them. This fraud linesis not going to hurt me. Yes
(01:20:25):
they will, and they did.Just amazing. That was read to the
story of one woman who killed adude with her bare hands, like ripping
you apart. Well, it's goingthrough her mind right, Just amazing amazing
stories, amazing stories. We thatwas, I mean, really the greatest
generation. So so much to sharebecause it's the eightieth anniversary of D Day
(01:20:49):
and we've been talking about all ofthis, this amazing day of courage and
uh day of reckoning and a lotof losses. There's so many American cemeteries
over there, and I'm so heartenedwhen I see photos of how, particularly
in the North, the French arejust they revere these people who came and
(01:21:09):
liberated their country and they they didn'twant to deal with the Nazis and they
were doing everything that they could howeverthey could. They had their you know,
the French Resistance that were the mostepic troll unit ever conceived, and
they were doing everything they could theycould to fight back. And it's when
you see the photos of all thecemeteries and the way that the French also
(01:21:33):
take care of them. There's oncesome of the cemeteries that are their normandy.
What they do is they had Imean thousands of these graves they you
know, they these white marble crosses. They go and they take sand from
the beach and they rub it onthe names of over three thousand of these
crosses. Every year and it settlesinto the where the names are carved.
(01:21:56):
You can see on the simulcast Wanshowing you, and it just gives them
this goal, Hugh. And theydo this every year for D Day,
and this is what this is whatthe French citizens do. They go and
they do this every year for DDay, every name on every cross.
And as you can see, it'snot a one and done thing. I
mean they put the sand in,they rub it in, they get the
(01:22:16):
extra sand off, and they makesure everything is covered. Just truly amazing.
And it was that teamwork and theappreciation of that teamwork. H While
this has been happening, you know, we had the president who went over
there and spoke and I think itwas a really embarrassing moment. And then
it looked like he was crouching downto take a deuce. And my thought
(01:22:40):
was, well, dark Brandon candrop a deuce where he wants to.
I guess you know this part ofbeing dark Brandon, right, isn't that?
Hey, they wanted the meme.The Left thought they were going to
be funny with the meme drop Uhyeah, deuce, Brandon drops it where
he wants to drop it. Wildtop man just saying, just what was
that? What was he was he? I mean, I'm trying to be
(01:23:04):
he wasn't. Even at first Ithought maybe he's trying to reach something on
his leg. Now he was reachingback behind him like he was looking for
something to sit down on. Itwas way far behind him. The chair
was not right behind him. Itwas pretty far back there was he was
not. There were no chairs there. He was trying to sit down before.
(01:23:26):
He was supposed to see pretty farback as he's walking up where all
the other guys. Though, yousee how far back those chairs are him
when you watch him actually sit down, the chair is right there. So
watch if this goes all the waythrough. Here he goes he's about to
sit and she's like, wait,it's not time to sit yet, and
then he's like huh, and thenthey start sitting. Oh, so the
(01:23:47):
video stops there. The chairs alittle further back though from that, like
they had to step back to sitdown there. Someone was saying it was
the space what is it? Spatialawareness? People were saying, well,
the chair was further back from himthan it looks, and he was dealing
with spatial awareness, and that's asign of he's too old and not mentally
(01:24:08):
agile enough to be president. Allin, I'm just gonna go with he
was gonna drop a deuce. I'mgoing with it. That's where we're going.
We're going with it. But man, it was just not a good
not a good you know why,I will say this. At least he
didn't challenge the remaining Vets to afighting. He didn't because he asked one
(01:24:30):
reporter who was asking him questions ifhe got dropped on his head, and
then he challenged another reporter to afight. At least, you know,
he didn't challenge the other Vets toa fight. The Vets look shocked.
I don't know if you could seesome of the faces behind him, but
they it. Uh yeah, itdidn't look too great. It didn't look
too good. And then Biden wascaught. Loraine knows that Biden was caught
sleeping during the ceremony. How muchdo you want to bet that he says
(01:24:55):
he was in prayer. You knowthat man, don't pray. Stop it,
or he's gonna do what my momand grandma used to say. I'm
resting my eyes. How many y'allgrew up with parents or grandparents would be
like, I'm all rest my eyes, and I'm like, that's called sleeping.
There's no like eye resting. Youdon't just that's sleeping. If you
close your eyes and they stay closed, you're sleeping. There's no resting your
(01:25:17):
eyes. But he sat there andthen Jill was like leaning into him,
and I swear to you, itwas like she was trying to like surreptitiously
nudge him to where he couldn't see. In the meantime, his son's been
in court still. Oh man,it's such a mess. This is such
(01:25:39):
a mess. So while his mumblemouth Marble's dad was speaking, Hunter Biden
was in court and he was,I can't even I have stories of like
what because he's there with his instawife, instant influencer wife. You got
baby mama's exes. And then theyhad more stuff about the laptop, you
(01:26:01):
know, the laptop that everyone saidwas Russian disinformation that's now been confirmed and
as we knew it was from thestart, and it's part of the trove
of evidence against him. Uh it'sand then Halle, hang on, Halle,
was I know, we got tomove Halle. Uh that's was the
sister in law Kathleen's wife. Halle'sthe sister in law. Now suddenly she
(01:26:25):
can't remember. Lauren says she couldremember anything when she got on the stea
on, couldn't write. All ofa sudden, our memory is so hazy.
She's gonna rest her eyes. Andnow all of the news you would
probably miss. It's time for Dana'squick five. Little uh le'vian Rose there
NFPF all right, so uh noone? And then the Baldwes Alec and
(01:26:46):
how does you say her name?Her? That's our real name, she
changed it. She tries to fakeSpanish lady Hilaria Baldwin. They've decided they're
going to do a reality TV seriescalled We Need to Pay Alex's Legal Fees
after he killed a woman on aset. That's not what it's called,
but that's what it should be called. They're doing a reality show? Is
it going to cover his trial?Wow? Wow? Is she going to
(01:27:11):
speak English? You know she's bornand raised in Boston and she pretended to
be Spanish. How do you saycucumbar? She actually said that she was.
Remember that it was like the TodayShow and they were trying to cook
and she's like a muppet. Howyou say cucombar So when she's not popping
out baldwins, she's faking being Spanishanyway, I can't even uh. Also,
(01:27:34):
the proof that the Internet isn't allthat great. This is an insane
story. So there was this remoteAmazon tribe that I don't know why we
kept trying to contact them. Leavethem alone, they were perfectly fine.
Oh no, said society. Wegotta make contact. Let's introduce them to
not antibiotics, not like, youknow, a lighter maybe, or some
(01:27:58):
other things that they might need.No, we'll introduce them to the Internet.
And guess what happened. They allgot hooked on porn and social media.
And I'm not even making that up. The Brazilian two thousand member Marubo
tribe has been left bitterly divided afterStarlink arrived nine months ago. Now they
have the Internet, one of theseventy three year old elders told The New
(01:28:19):
York Times. When it arrived,everyone was happy. But now the young
people have gotten lazy because of theInternet, and they're learning the ways of
the white people. I'm sorry thatthe white people brought porn and social media.
We take that one. So Ohmy gosh. You know, the
society ruins everything. We got moreon the way. You don't want a
(01:28:42):
miss stick with us. Craving adaily dose of intellectual adrenaline, look no
further than the Dana Show podcast whereCuriosity meets courage. By following on Apple,
Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome back to the program Dane.
Last year. Bottom of this thirdout D Day, you're hearing the
bagpipes playing Highland Laddie and insanely.This is a story of how there was
(01:29:09):
a well he was called the madBagpiper of sword Beach, and it's because
you had that head of Clan FraserLord. He was the Scottish laird,
Laird Lovett, who brought with himhis own personal bagpiper on D Day to
sword Beach. It wasn't allowed,as he was told by the English War
(01:29:29):
Office, but as he told hisbagpiper, Bill Millan, he said,
ah, we're Scottish and he wantedhis own personal bagpiper to be there on
the beach to play the bagpipes toraise morale. And Bill Millan, who
is twenty one years old, steppedfoot on that beach with his dad's World
(01:29:51):
War One kilt and nothing but thatand a ceremonial dagger and his bagpipes.
That's all he had. And hestarted out by playing a number of songs.
In fact, Lovett had actually screamedat him at one point, h
play Hiland Laddie, like here's takingrequests. But as bullets were whizzing by
(01:30:13):
and mortars were exploding and other soldierswere being shot, he was walking up
and down the sand at Sword Beachvery coolly, very calmly, very collected,
playing the bagpipes, and as menwere coming out of the water and
streaming past him to fight the Naziswho were perched in the cliffs, their
(01:30:34):
morale was boost and although some ofthem thought he was nuts, there was
apparently a sergeant was like, getdown, you mad bugger. The Germans
thought he was crazy, at leastthat's the rumor, and he survived because
they thought he was crazy, sohe might as well not kill him,
because who in the hell else wouldbe walking up and down the beach on
d Day playing bagpipes but a crazyguy. No, it was Bill Mullen.
(01:30:57):
He's a bagpiper, and he saidthat he was the personal piper to
the layert and his job was toplay the bagpipes for the invasion, going
ashore completely undarmed except for the ceremonialdagger and uh love it. Also there's
there's a couple of stories. Therewas this story of this. I think
it was like a French dentist.When he passed as a young boy.
(01:31:20):
Uh, he heard like the bagpipesin the marching, this weird sound coming
closer and closer to his village andhe was told the Scots were coming and
that was there. They were comingin to liberate his village. Love it
if I remember. Uh, hewas the guy who after he went in
through Normandy, he was they therewas one of the bridges. There were
(01:31:42):
two bridges that they had to takecommand or will hold basically until they were
relieved. And that and they onlyhad days to do it. They were
on the clock. And one ofthe things that has said is that a
lot of the soldiers, who alot of the vets later said that,
you know, they were really propelledgoing because you know, the Scots,
because they heard those bagpipes and theyjust went for the cliffs. They just
(01:32:03):
went for it. It's pretty amazing. But they were near river oorn.
They were up and down the shoresof Meyerville. They were, they were
everywhere, and they were part ofI think one of the they were I
think one of their missions was oneof those bridges that they had to hold
(01:32:24):
until they had been relieved and PegasusBridge. They had to help with the
airborne troops and they had and itwas Pegasus Bridge. And so this is
just amazing. And they moved atthey were. They had to move fast.
I think they had like two daysto get it, to get there
and get in position. Just anamazing story. But I loved it.
(01:32:44):
He was he was in the theIf you've seen the film Longest the Longest
Day, Bill Millen is his storyis part of that. And he used
to go to Normandy frequently. Passedaway in twenty ten. But just an
amazing, amazing story. And it'syou know, it's it's not just us,
it's it's the Americans. You hadthe Canadians, you had the Scots,
you had the British, I mean, you had the Aussie's. I
(01:33:05):
mean they were. It's an amazingstory of teamwork. But I just love
this. I mean, this guy'son the beach walking up and down playing
the bagpipes. I mean, canyou you would be like, yes,
this is inspiring. I think he'smad, but also I'm very much inspired
to motivate it now right, justsuch so great, such a such a
great thing. Simon Fraser, who'sthe layert. He was described Kane as
(01:33:29):
a bit of an Eccentric's why hehad his own personal bagpiper that he took
with him to sort beach. Butyou would have to be a little eccentric,
right of all the things you're gonnatake with you my personal bagpiper please
and we can do it. CusWorth, Scottish just funny. I love
these stories. I love them allright. I wanna switch gears here because
(01:33:50):
we've been talking about all this otherstuff as well. The uh ah do
I want to get into this?I mean we just talked about it,
really us, I do it.The this is a British It's ovarian cancer
UK. This is what they tweetedquote, did you know that anyone with
(01:34:15):
ovaries, regardless of gender identity canbe at risk for a varying cancer?
Let's raise awareness by asking can menget a varian cancer? And then they
answer their own question, anyone withovaries regardless of gender identity can be at
risk of ovarian cancer. Additionally,all genders can carry a BRCA gene fault
(01:34:42):
or Lynch syndrome, which would potentiallymean their children would be at a higher
risk of a varying cancer. Okay, get your ovaries checked. Call my
doctor right now. We should dothis. Should do this live. Call
my doctor and set that appointment up. Yes, I'm here to get my
(01:35:02):
ovaryas. I don't know how youwould that would work. I don't know.
You should get your pap smear togoing and get that pap smeared something
I won't pay for. Oh mygosh, you I mean. My first
thought is you people are morons andthis is not science. My second thought
(01:35:29):
is this is so insufferably disgusting andinsulting. Again, it provokes one to
violence. You're diminishing cancer, specificallyovarian cancer. And clearly the person who
tweeted this has never had to livein fear of their own body turning on
them and betraying them. They've neverhad to live with that fear. They've
(01:35:53):
never had to go to sleep atnight knowing that their body was working against
them while they slept. They've neverhad that they've never had to worry about
that. They've never had to worryabout children, having children, nothing,
not anyone who has ever had toworry about that would never say something like
this. It is such a diminishment. It doesn't do anything to increase awareness,
(01:36:15):
It doesn't do anything to encourage morewomen to get checked. It doesn't
do anything like that. It's cultishvirtue signaling. It's not even a virtue.
It's sins signaling. It's insufferable.Men do not have ovaries, thus
they don't get overreailments. Men don'thave uteruses, and they don't have cervixes,
(01:36:38):
and they don't have ovaries. Theydon't have any of those things.
Women have those things. Don't pretendto be in healthcare or medicine. If
you can't acknowledge basic biological fact,stop making everyone try to accommodate your mental
illness. Stop stop trying to forcepeople into value dating a mentally ill person's
(01:37:02):
fantasy self perception. I can't dealwith it. I'm done with it.
And it's dangerous to women's health todo this. This is dangerous to women's
health. It is, and it'scompletely fair to say that we got an
(01:37:24):
email the other day, Steve forwardedit over. I'm not going to say
the name of the guy or anythinglike that, because he wasn't being a
jerker anything of that sort. ButI feel like he's a dad who's torn
because he wrote and he says,I love your radio show and have been
a faithful listener. However, Iwish you would leave the gay community criticism
(01:37:45):
right if your show comments, hesays, my son is gay and is
having a rough time dealing with us. I appreciate your conservative positions, but
I wish you would leave the moralissues alone. He says. I'm sure
you can easily just regard my commentsas I'm only one voice, but I
wish you would consider this thought.Thank you. Well, clearly he's also
struggling with this as a father too. I don't know what he means about
gay community criticism. What specifically I'mwondering is he hinting at when we talked
(01:38:14):
about the rainbow stuff on everything,because that's a complaint that comes from the
gay community, and it's just cringe. You don't need what does that complete
s and p five hundred rainbow allthe things have to do with that,
And by the way, moral positionsare part of my commentary, they always
have been. But to talk aboutthe trans issues, I wouldn't constitute that
(01:38:36):
to be part of any community.And I just gave you an example of
why it's dangerous. It's incredibly dangerousto have men who costplay as women,
and then they demand that the medicalcommunity adopt their self perception and affirm what
they see themselves as their fantasy.Affirm that and make that literally a part
(01:39:01):
try to retconent and make it apart of science. You see how dangerous
this becomes when it starts to affecthow care is approached. Now, I
think, if your child is havinga tough time dealing with this, what
I'm going to say it might beunpopular and it might be considered tough love.
But I look at it like this. First off, it's not my
(01:39:25):
job as a commentator to make youfeel better about whatever you're going with you
with your child. There a lotof other people out there, and if
it's an issue of the day,I talk about it, and I have
every right to talk about it.I'm a parent, i'm a woman,
i'm a mother. I've a rightto talk about it just as anybody else
does. But the other thing,too, is race tougher kids. If
(01:39:48):
you think it's bad that I amactually just merely clinically discussing these issues on
air. The world is a scaryplace, my friend, and you can't
s field your children forever. Shipswere not made to stay in the harbor,
raise and build tough kids to dealwith this stuff. That's how you
(01:40:13):
equip them, That's how you strengthenthem. That's where empowerment comes from.
It doesn't come from accommodating weakness.Power comes from making someone stronger, making
them react with strength to weakness.So I think that the gentleman who wrote
(01:40:34):
I think you need to kind ofrealign your thinking on this. And again
I always joke with people, I'mnot Dorothy Explorer. I'm not here to
raise your kids. We're here tohang out and talk smack and have a
nice time and learn some stuff andgo through the issues of the day.
Build tough kids because we are inhard times. Follow Dana on Apple,
(01:40:55):
Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts, because knowledge is your ultimate superpower.
We bring in the studio this morningone of the gay rights activists, mister
should I call you mister Shepe Julianon Zima. Thank you for coming me.
Good morning. Why are you gay? Who says I'm gay? You
(01:41:20):
are gay? How can I describeyou? I'm a human rights defender currently
focusing on LGBTI issues. Just forthe record, i am not a gay
rights activist. I believe there's nothinglike gay rights. There is human rights.
Now we're looking at the raging debateyour gay rights activists. Why should
(01:41:44):
someone be gay? Gay people areborn that way. They are born gay
because you tend to realize yourself asor find out this changes when you check
you're initially male or female. Thesix that was assigned to me at birth
(01:42:08):
was female and you opted to becomemale. Are you dating any female?
Yes, I am. Doesn't thatmake you gay? She's like, what
do you mean, doesn't that makeme gay? I'm I'm a man.
He goes, but who's gay orwho is gay? She's like, I'm
(01:42:29):
a male and I'm in a female. I'm in a relationship with another with
a female. And he goes,who is gay? It's funny because he's
so deadpanned about it. But alsoshe's a woman who can't just say she's
a lesbian. She's like, no, no, no, I'm a man,
even though she isn't really, Andshe says because she thinks she's a
(01:42:53):
man dating a woman that that meansshe's not a lesbian or gay. It
means she's just a man. Andhe's like, no, no, no,
no, no, that that doesn'twork. But that's what she keeps
saying. I is it? Whatdo they look down? Okay, I'm
I say this, do they?Is she like looking down and seeing a
(01:43:19):
male copulatory organ that's like a phantomwhere we don't see it, but she
sees it. I don't know whatI want to can't well, I'm just
trying to figure out I don't.I mean, clearly, you look down
and you don't got that. Youknow that equipment an't there. So well,
(01:43:42):
I mean, I'm just pointing outthe what exists in the corporeal world
here. You know, there isn'ta weanness there. I don't know how
to put it right. So she'sshe's a lesbian, but she insists that
(01:44:05):
she's a male. When you hearsome of the trans Tifa talk, they
say this stuff and then and thenyou'll someone will ask them, well,
did you get like the surgery orand they say no, well, so
you've got the you know, theequipment, and they're like, yeah,
I'm like a man. Will belike I'm a woman though, but you
(01:44:26):
never had it removed. No,I'm a man. I'm a woman,
and it does not how that works. Excuse me, it's man, it
is man. Yeah, I don'tknow. I just that's that's one of
the funniest videos that's on the internet. It's one of the funniest ones.
All right, Uh, today instupidity came all right, we'll have to
(01:44:47):
be Anthony blink in one. Canyou play cut thirteen. We'll just play
some of this. He's trying tocompare D Day to the Ukraine Point Russia
Ward. You know, there's areally powerful parallel to between what we're commemorating
today and what we're doing now.Back then, it wasn't just the United
States here in Normandy. Twelve countriescame together, one hundred and sixty thousand
men coming to this beach, comingto start the final fight that ultimately,
(01:45:11):
eleven months later led to victory inWorld War Two. And you've got more
than fifty times. That's not evenI'm so insulting, and especially to those
older joy keep talking about division insteadof focusing on unity. The eightieth anniversary,
I don't know if we'll have allthose vents with us again next year.
The greatest generation, if you knowone, thank them, God bless
(01:45:33):
you. We'll be back together behindthe mic tomorrow