Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Dana Lashes of surd Truth podcast sponsored by Celtech.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
It's his laugh mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida. Man.
Speaker 1 (00:14):
All right, I'm gonna start right with this one because
I hate myself, says Margate, Florida.
Speaker 3 (00:22):
This guy's mugshot's like, yeah, I did it.
Speaker 1 (00:24):
What I'm gonna read this headline as is, victim escapes
bus stops sexual assault by allegedly biting the suspects.
Speaker 3 (00:37):
You know, I know.
Speaker 1 (00:40):
A man was arrested after his victim thwarted a sex
assault at a bus stop because yeah, well the they
allegedly bit his male copulatory organ to escape. August seventh,
officers from Margate Police Department responded to a nine one
one call from a caller who said they were witnessing
an assault attempted sexual battery. MPD officers they were flagged
(01:01):
down by a witness who observed a male tech and
a female in the area. The guy's name Devin apple White.
Speaker 3 (01:07):
What a name. He was assaulting the victim in the
middle of the roadway.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
Apple White pulled the victim's hair and then was hitting
her in the face and yeah, she just he was
trying to force her to do an act and she
did not want to do it, and then she finally
bit him, and then that's how she was able to escape.
That's disgusting. I'm gonna vomit a lot. That's so nasty.
Thankfully she was able to escape. She was evaluated there
(01:32):
was she was okay. I don't care if the other
guy was okay. I just feel like, you know, that's
how you get your knob torn off, and I'm just
saying that's that should be. It would state was it
send him to Louisiana where people who do that kind
of stuff there's just you know what, they'll just get you.
They'll tie you up, they'll pull you behind her truck
with it, rip it off like a tooth. That's some
needs to happen to these predators. People are dying at
(01:54):
me right now. I can just feel it. You guys
are like Dana, What on earth? That's what happens. That's
what happens. So this Florida robbery suspect jumped into the
river to evade arrest while people questioned him. While the
police were questioning him Daytona Beach, this guy was accused
of robbery. He had to be detained in the river.
I mean it's where the gators are. Thirty two year
(02:16):
old Richard Martinovic's officers greeted him. He was walking with
a plastic bag and a cup. They were questioning him.
He was asked to take a seat, and then like
a second later, somebody they heard a plunge in the
river and someone goes, he's in the water. He was
escorted on a boat with life vest and in handcuffs. Yeah,
he can't be especially three of the gators are. You
can't be doing that. And then let's see here this
(02:41):
an iguana clog to this Florida toilet and apparently this
is the thing. It is so the whole green iguana
thing is so prevalent in South Florida that it's so invasive.
Apparently one of one Florida man actually had to go
in and there's a video there was an iguana that's
somehow got into as the South Florida home and they
(03:03):
had to with cruelty free removed vi iguana from the toilet,
which means that the trapper Jeff Darlington, grabbed it by
the tail, pulled it out, just pulled it right out
of the commode. That's a crazy story. That needs to
be terrified to go to South Florida.
Speaker 4 (03:21):
Hi.
Speaker 5 (03:21):
I'm George, an economics major at Hillsdale College. Here's Hillsdale President,
doctor Larry Arne with the Constitution Minute.
Speaker 6 (03:28):
The decroce Independence is more than a bold letter to
a British king written by upstart columnists, although it very
much is that. The decrotion explains the promise of America
that all men and women are born equal in their
possession of natural rights, and that the proper exercise of
these rights can lead to a full and deeply satisfying life.
Just as the decrotion explains America's promise, the Constitution upholds
(03:52):
that promise. Its purpose is to protect the rights of
all of us are natural rights. This establishes the possibility,
not the guarantee, that we can have a good life.
Speaker 3 (04:04):
This is true freedom.
Speaker 5 (04:05):
To learn more and get a free pocket Constitution visit
constitutionminute dot com.
Speaker 3 (04:21):
How many of you?
Speaker 1 (04:23):
First off, I was talking to some friends last night.
We had dinner with some friends last night. They were
in town, and I was actually Kurt Schlicker and his wife,
and we were discussing how I can't just go to
a movie theater and sit and be held captive by
the dark and in the seat. Unless it is a
(04:45):
great movie. It has to be a fabulous movie. I
have to be fully engaged, fully into it. Otherwise I
cannot sit still. I get so fidgety and I just oh,
it's just torture. This is one that I definitely am
not going to go see because most movies have been
so not great and so overwhelmed with political correctness and
(05:06):
all this other stuff. You guys, remember this is We've
been talking about the snow white thing for how long?
Speaker 3 (05:09):
Now came?
Speaker 1 (05:11):
Yeah, I don't even know how long this has been
in production for it first made headlines because Peter Dnklige
made some little people angry because they accused him of
acting as like the gatekeeper for all little people.
Speaker 3 (05:27):
In film roles.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
In fact, Peter Dinglige got mad, Remember he got mad
over the whole there were dwarves and snow white and
he was like, oh, you can't believe you know, it's
twenty whatever and you're casting no dwarves. That's this, you know,
but that's the story. That's literally how the story goes.
And then Disney, because of apparently what he said, then
(05:51):
they got very nervous, and they decided we don't want
to offend little people, so we're gonna replace the dwarves
with magical creatures. And then at w W Star Dylan
Postil he got mad and he wrote quote who died
and made Peter Dinklige king of the Dwarves?
Speaker 3 (06:07):
It pisses me off end quote.
Speaker 1 (06:10):
He blasted him, He absolutely blasted him, and Disney was like,
we don't want to reinforce stereotypes all this and it
wasn't just Dylan pulsal Warwick Davis. So I don't think
anybody's more famous as far as acting and being a
little person in Warwick Davis. He hit out at the
theater in London because they got rid of the Snow
(06:31):
White and the Seven Dwarves. They were doing this Christmas
performance of the Grim fairy Tale.
Speaker 3 (06:37):
They changed it.
Speaker 1 (06:39):
It was the de Montfort Hall production of the nineteenth
century Grim Fairytale and it was known as Snow White
and the Seven Dwolves, but he was changed to Snow
White and has Seven Friends because they said dwarf Ism
is not a word that people feel comfortable with, and
Warwick Davis he said that it's patronizing when people are
(07:00):
offended on his behalf, and that angers him that he
doesn't want others of his stature to lose out on jobs.
He says, quote, it loses something if you don't have
snow white dwarves. I've been in a lot of pantos,
and I don't think it's offensive at all.
Speaker 3 (07:14):
He says.
Speaker 1 (07:15):
I'm sure there are those out there who don't like
the term, but as a short actor, I want to
be given the choice about whether I appear in panto
or not, and I don't want someone making that decision
for me.
Speaker 3 (07:22):
End quote. And I love it that. He also added
that it was a smoke screen.
Speaker 1 (07:29):
He thinks that to allow companies to drop expensive actors,
and he says the excuse of people being uncomfortable is
a poor one. He says, I doubt they've questioned the
audience about whether or not they think the war dwarf
is offensive. Very interesting, so that Warwick Davis was mad.
So now they've replaced because everyone was wondering, Okay, what's
(07:49):
Disney going to do? Because they were going to replace
them with these magical creatures, right, and they just look
like a bunch of hippies who just walked out of
the whole foods and we're going to their cars. Son,
in its bid to avoid reinforcing stereotypes, decided to completely
eliminate acting roles for actors of such smaller statures and
(08:11):
just do it all CGI.
Speaker 3 (08:12):
And it looks absolutely heinous.
Speaker 1 (08:16):
It looks insane, and so yeah, that's what they've got.
And there's a teaser trailer out apparently and they did CGI.
And can I just say that, CGI, it's weird when
they do people, it's weird. We're not there yet. We're
(08:37):
not there with AI, We're not there with CGI yet.
To do people like that in a film, it's weird.
And now everyone's saying that the dwarves look very unnatural
and weird, and they call the appearances is Uncanny Valley
and the stuff of nightmares. And apparently Disney also did
a terrible CGI job, and everybody's blaming Dinglishe. You know,
(09:00):
I mean, there's not and they were saying that. Now
the left is like, well, you know, it's true, there's
not really a lot of rules for people in Hollywood
that are, you know, little people, or that are of
short stature.
Speaker 3 (09:10):
That is true.
Speaker 1 (09:11):
Maybe if they could, you know, just to fix the depiction.
Here's the other thing that we were talking about.
Speaker 3 (09:15):
Now.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
Granted, you know, we were weird generation that were raised
on Lord of the Rings and my kids were raised
on Lord of the Rings King. In the fantasy realm,
dwarves are not like Lord of the Ring, like him, lay,
(09:36):
et cetera.
Speaker 3 (09:37):
They are not.
Speaker 1 (09:39):
A joke of a being.
Speaker 3 (09:42):
They're like noble beings.
Speaker 2 (09:44):
They are as a matter of fact. They're regaled a
lot in some of these films.
Speaker 1 (09:49):
And apparently with amongst the Zoomers, they hate elves and
they're all about dwarves.
Speaker 3 (09:58):
It's like a big thing with deep rock al and
all this stuff. I don't even I wouldn't be able.
Speaker 2 (10:03):
To intelligently tell you the difference between the.
Speaker 3 (10:05):
Two an elf and a like a dwarf.
Speaker 2 (10:08):
Yeah, I have no clue. I literally have no clue.
Speaker 1 (10:11):
If you listen to the Zoomers, the elves are g
h g y and total like you know, losers, and
they do magic, which is hated, and then the dwarves
can just build literally anything in our hardcore and can
kill you.
Speaker 3 (10:27):
That's right? Do I have that right? Zoomers? Do I
have that correct? I think?
Speaker 7 (10:30):
So?
Speaker 3 (10:31):
That's what.
Speaker 2 (10:33):
Yeah, I'm as confused as I was five minutes ago.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
I mean, the magical creatures thing doesn't work.
Speaker 1 (10:39):
It's way better if it's dwarves anyway, because when you
think of when I hear draws, I'm like, oh my gosh,
what are the rings?
Speaker 3 (10:45):
That's what I think of. I think of like the
dwarves of lore.
Speaker 1 (10:48):
That are well they're hardcore, right, yes, And they found
this chick who came from a broken home.
Speaker 3 (10:56):
You know, she's like out in the woods, all like
falling over.
Speaker 1 (10:59):
He can't do anything, and you know, they bring her
in and they and then she takes care of their
house and they go out and they do work, and
then they come back. She makes their food. You know,
she's like the female presence in the home that they
never had. And you know, and they go out and
they go and help her and they protect her too, right.
I mean, it's like, you know, a win win all around.
But I don't. It's just weird that they decided that
(11:21):
it's better for everybody. Let's just get rid of the
actual human actors and we're just gonna do weird cgi
where they like she's the same physical human actress and
then all of the other actors and their issues were
just too problematics, so they just jettison them for fake beans.
Speaker 2 (11:41):
Like you said, they're just trans dwarfs.
Speaker 1 (11:43):
Well, yeah, they're trans dwarfs. Theyre not even real. I
don't know, I Disney decided. I think it's hysterical that
the left is like, well is this woke?
Speaker 3 (11:53):
Now?
Speaker 1 (11:54):
Wan is showing you what it looks like. That's like
from one of their teasers. It looks bad they I think,
isn't that more insulting?
Speaker 3 (12:04):
They gave them all of these exaggerated.
Speaker 1 (12:06):
Features, and I guess now they're saying, well, sorry, little people,
you weren't enough.
Speaker 3 (12:12):
We're gonna have to do this.
Speaker 1 (12:14):
And it also kind of suggests that they don't believe
that little people can be good actors. And I would
think consider that, you know the presence of Warwick Davis
and Peter d even Petered English who started all of this.
You absolute loan, He's a phenomenal actor. You do not
factor in any physicality when you watch him act, because
(12:36):
he's very good at his craft. He's also a giant
hole And.
Speaker 3 (12:44):
Are you okay?
Speaker 4 (12:45):
All right?
Speaker 2 (12:47):
I'm just upset at the fact that this will be
now see, this will be like a point we look
back on thirty years from now and realize that, you
know what, we couldn't employ any live, little person for
any role anymore because of the potential offense. And so
now we've ruined an entire whole generation of people from
(13:08):
being able to earn money at a craft like acting.
Speaker 3 (13:10):
Because how is this progression? Though? Like, how is it progressive?
Speaker 1 (13:14):
Because and that's what Dinglige had said and his thing,
because you're progressive in one way you cast a Latina
as snow white, but then you're still making that backward
story about dwarves living in a cave, but they didn't
live in a cave, you absolute embassy, or they didn't
live in a cave, then an actual house. So that's
your bigotry. The trailers out there and it shows all
there are seven iconic opinions companions that they're all portried with.
Speaker 3 (13:35):
With a PC PC CGI. It's just.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
Not progressive, it's illiberal. I mean, you literally have a
film that has roles specifically for a segment of the
population that is incessantly overlooked by Hollywood, and now they're
overlooked in the most offensive way possible because the people
(14:07):
did not want to be faced with any their own discomfort,
and so they pretended to do something on behalf of
the group that they're actually robbing and saying no, no, no,
it's for your own good. And these people just want
to work. I mean, it's so stupid, you know what
I mean.
Speaker 3 (14:25):
People are like, well, it's not realistic.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
The animals talking this stupid movie in this story, are
you serious?
Speaker 3 (14:32):
There's a witch with an apple, she's killing a chick.
Speaker 1 (14:36):
I mean, it's like she's murder. This is so dumb,
and it just gets dumber and dumber and dumber.
Speaker 3 (14:45):
And then there was this chick that he'd wanted to
be in the movie anyway.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
Because remember she's like, oh my gosh, I'm not having
the prince kiss me and waiting yet.
Speaker 3 (14:51):
Well then stay dead, bitch, I don't care. Stay dead.
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Speaker 3 (16:08):
The new page fifteen, tell them Dana sent you and now.
Speaker 2 (16:12):
All of the news you would probably miss. It's time
for data's quick five.
Speaker 1 (16:17):
All right, So first, uh this, less attractive people live
shorter lives than those who are apparently better looking, according
to a weird study that I have no idea why
anybody felt.
Speaker 3 (16:29):
Necessary to do this.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
It was from Arizona State University in ut They analyzed
data from a long running study that tracked over eighty
three hundred Wisconsin high school students from the fifties until
just a couple of years ago.
Speaker 3 (16:42):
They looked at Facebook photos.
Speaker 1 (16:44):
Everything, yearbook photos, a lifetime of health data, and what
they discovered they said that apparently better looking people live longer.
I think that's weird and I don't know. I'm quite
Why are you why? Why are you having that?
Speaker 3 (16:58):
Look?
Speaker 2 (17:00):
Who determines who's better looking than who? I thought beauty's
in the eye of the beholder and not some science thing.
Speaker 1 (17:05):
Yeah, I don't know if i'd trust like a science
like anybody determine whether. I don't know, it's just weird, right,
that's a weird Yeah, I don't know. I don't know
if I put a lot of stock into that. When
why what is the what's the necessity is what's the
purpose of What does that conclusion serve?
Speaker 3 (17:19):
Classical music is medicine.
Speaker 1 (17:21):
Hey guess what another study on classical music that we
all know is true, mood boosting tunes helped synchronize the brain.
Classical music is medicine. No, no, no, not at all.
They looked at mood all kinds of stuff classical music, guests.
There's studies about how it helps you to study better,
(17:42):
it helps you to relax, it helps boost your mood.
There's all kinds of stuff.
Speaker 2 (17:45):
I know a lot of metal music is based on
some classical music too.
Speaker 3 (17:49):
Yeah, no, totally has.
Speaker 1 (17:50):
Two people were hospitalized after trucks hauling molasses and manure.
Sounds like an interesting name for something they collect on
a southern Idaho interstate and there's no saving that.
Speaker 3 (18:05):
That's just awful.
Speaker 1 (18:06):
There was a collision between two trucks, one molasses, one manure,
and it was about two PM and uh yeah, there
were two semi loaded trucks, a freightliner, semi loaded trucks.
One was in a ninety eight one loaded with manure.
Another one was in a twenty thirteen freightliner loaded with
forty eight thousand pounds of cam oasses and one bumped
(18:27):
the rear of the other, and then a thousand pounds
of molasses was spilled due to the collision. The other
freightliner came to rest in the median and caught on fire.
Speaker 3 (18:36):
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 1 (18:37):
Everybody's everybody's okay. There were some taken to the hospital.
But good night. That's not that is not under the
spilt molasses. Yeah, that's not a rec i'd want to
be involved in. A woman crashed her car into a
Canoga Park taco shop. This was a week after she
she hates this taco place. She also vandalized their catering truck.
(18:58):
She really hates this taco place. This is an LA.
Police booked her for felony vandalism and I think they're
adding an assault with a deadly weapon charge because people
were in the restaurant when she.
Speaker 3 (19:08):
Brammed through it. They still are.
Speaker 1 (19:10):
They don't know why she's targeting this same taco place,
but clearly she has issues.
Speaker 7 (19:15):
Hey, everybody, Tim Walls here, JD. Van's and Donald Trump
are going to ban medicaids, abortion, making sure they make
decisions and getting between you and your doctor. Bathroom vice
president Harris, and I will make sure that you make
your healthcare decisions because we have a rule whether you'd
make the same decision as someone else. Just mind your
own damn business.
Speaker 1 (19:32):
Gosh does he I'm so tired of him saying that
he acts like it's like this new thing.
Speaker 3 (19:35):
Guys, look what I just learned to say.
Speaker 1 (19:38):
Welcome back Dan a lash with you bottom of this
first hour. Go and find the discussion over at Rumble.
Can find us on x channel three forty seven Direct
TV as well in substack, chapter and verse.
Speaker 3 (19:51):
All kinds of good stuff up there.
Speaker 1 (19:53):
Speaking of mind your own damn business, Remember we told
you about the snitch line that they created right because
the Minute Soda they had some pretty draconian lockdown orders
and they had some pretty draconian penalties if you ran
a foul and you didn't stay home or do whatever.
(20:15):
And so this, the one story in particular, was really
I mean this, this is There's so many crazy stories
that happened from that time. This woman, Lisa Hanson, she
was a small business owner. She owned a wine and
(20:36):
coffee bistro. She's the mother of eight, She's gonna have
eighteen grandchildren very soon.
Speaker 3 (20:44):
The only other thing.
Speaker 1 (20:45):
The only other time she's ever been in trouble with
the law was when she got a speeding ticket as
a teenager. She owned her business for over thirty years.
She and her husband both owned it together for more
than thirty years. And her business called the Interchange Wine
and Coffee Bistro and Albert Leah. It was about ninety
(21:07):
miles south of Minnesota, had been open for almost about
a decade, and she had on different businesses, always apparently
in the service industry. Well, then they got the shutdown orders, right,
so they got the shutdown orders, and her bistro initially
complied with the shutdown order that March, but then months
(21:31):
following that Waltz never fully reopened and there were businesses. Remember,
liquor stores were deemed to be essential. Churches were not essential.
That was even in Texas, and bars, restaurants, gems, dance
studio salons, all of the those were considered non essential.
(21:56):
Strip clubs were considered essential. Big box stores were con
considered essential in Minnesota. Liquor stores were considered essential in Minnesota.
But if you wanted to go to a restaurant, if
you wanted to go to the gym, if you wanted
to get your haircut, that was non essential. And she
(22:16):
was trying to make a living her and her husband.
They had bills to pay. It was really cute to
hear Joe Biden talk about rent moratoriums and not having
to pay rent and putting a moratorium on that, putting
a pause on it. But the problem is that for
business owners, they still had their bills to pay, and
(22:40):
the people that owned the buildings where people were leasing,
they still had bills to pay. And so Hanson was
watching this grandmother. A lot of these businesses have been
opened for decades have to close down before they ever reopened.
And she said he always allowed the big box stores,
et cetera to open. So she decided, and this is gosh,
(23:04):
almost almost a full year even because this was going
up between this is all going up into even into
January twenty twenty one.
Speaker 3 (23:15):
So she decided to reopen her business.
Speaker 1 (23:18):
And she defied his shutdown order for bars and restaurants
six times between December twenty twenty and January twenty twenty one.
In December of twenty one, this is a full year
after all of this first kicked into gear. Correct full year,
(23:38):
she was convicted on misdemeanor charges and she got the
maximum sentence of ninety days in a one thousand dollars fine.
She ended up serving two thirds of her sentence sixty days.
She was in jail for two months because she needed
to open her business so she didn't lose her head.
(24:04):
And this is just one business owner in Minnesota. A
lot of these business owners are coming out and saying,
we either were jailed, we were fined, or we lost
our businesses. And his executive order it completely closed down
all dined in services one hundred percent for indoor and outdoor.
(24:27):
She said that there were two hundred other business owners
just in her area alone that were targeted. They were
targeted by at the time Minnesota A G. Keith Ellison.
They were operating in a rogue fashion outside.
Speaker 3 (24:41):
Of the law.
Speaker 1 (24:43):
There was no statute in their state constitution that allowed
him to do what he did, but he did it
and it was completely outside of the scope of the
statutory law in Minnesota. And then in addition to that,
you had the snitch line. They were encouraging people and
one has that line. They were encouraging people to call
(25:03):
the snitch line. That not only did the governor set up.
But your but Minnesota tax dollars paid for it. They
paid for the monitoring of it, They paid for all
of it. Listen, this is what happened. This is what
people would get when they would call the snitch line.
This is literally it.
Speaker 4 (25:17):
Listen, Hello, you have reached the Department of Public QUI
Stay at Home hotline. The information you leave is considered
public information at the tone. Please leave the following information,
your name, your callback number, how the stay at home
order is being violated, and where the stay at home
(25:39):
order was violated? Thank you?
Speaker 3 (25:41):
Is that an unbelievable That is unbelievable.
Speaker 1 (25:46):
So this is what But yet he has the audacity
to go out and tell everybody else to mind their
damn business. You need to go mind your own damn business,
he said, mind your own damn business.
Speaker 3 (25:56):
She was jailed. She was jailed.
Speaker 1 (26:02):
I mean, remember that there was a candy store that
was kept open KSTP, Minnesota Channel five ABC affiliate, the
largest candy store was allowed to stay open. Well why
was that? Why were they considered essential? But a bistro wasn't.
Oh because they're really good friends with the governor. Oh really,
uh huh.
Speaker 3 (26:23):
Yeah, there's a whole article over a KSTP that gets
into how they're friends. Huh.
Speaker 1 (26:28):
Interesting that. So if you're telling me that if you
were a friend of Waltz's that exceptions could be made
in this very important health role. Oh yeah, because see
the virus, if you needed an exemption because you were
a friend of the people putting the orders in place,
the virus wouldn't affect it.
Speaker 3 (26:43):
It was less contagious. There. You know, that's how science works.
Came that's how it worked.
Speaker 1 (26:49):
And of course, you know, we'd later find out that
none of the stuff, and we knew none of this
stuff was.
Speaker 3 (26:55):
It was all a joke. It was all fantasy.
Speaker 1 (26:58):
It's shocking to see how many people wanted to comply
with it to the extent that they did. So this
guy walking around saying, oh, yeah, mind your own damn business,
Well he didn't do that. He didn't mind his business.
And he's been saying that over and over again. There's
like a ton of different soundbites. I'm tired of like
seeing them where he keeps saying it over and over
again like it's a catchphrase. It's really cringe and it's
(27:19):
also very disingenuous. This is what to expect if you
get these clowns in the White House in November, I
can only imagine, Oh, here's some bird flu stuff.
Speaker 3 (27:28):
We got to shut everything down, have to shut everything down.
That's it.
Speaker 1 (27:34):
I mean, this is this is who they are. And
Waltz is bad, bad, bad bad. We're gonna get into
some of the other Chinese stuff.
Speaker 3 (27:43):
But bad guy.
Speaker 1 (27:45):
He's that he looks like he's innocuous because he's Oh,
he's just this old Minnesota dad, you know, fly over dad.
Speaker 3 (27:52):
That's what it is and just you know.
Speaker 5 (27:55):
Thanks for tuning in to today's edition of Dana Lash's
Absurd Truth podcast. If you haven't already, make sure to
hit that subscribe button on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever
you get your podcasts.