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October 2, 2024 106 mins
Dana recaps the best and worst moments from the Vice Presidential Debate. Dana fact-checks claims from Tim Walz, J.D. Vance and the moderators. Dana explains how J.D. Vance’s “Compassionate Conservatism” approach reminds her of George W. Bush which spurred the modern day TEA Party in 2009. Heroic Americans are getting arrested for trying to rescue people with their own helicopters after Hurricane Helene.14:00 - Tim Walz lies about his claims on abortion. Israel plans a response after Iran attacks them for the death of the leader of Hezbollah.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
To clarify for our viewers, Springfield, Ohio does have a
large number of Haitian migrants who have legal status temporary
protected maura.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
But thank you, Senator.

Speaker 1 (00:11):
We have so much to get to, Margaret.

Speaker 3 (00:13):
I think it's important turn out of the economy.

Speaker 4 (00:15):
Thanks Margaret.

Speaker 5 (00:16):
The rules were that you got to get a fact check,
and since you're fact checking me, I think it's important
to say what's actually going on. So there's an application
called the CBP one app where you can go on
as an illegal migrant, apply for asylum or apply for
parole and be granted legal status at the wave of
a Kamala Harris open border wand that is not a

(00:38):
person coming in applying for a green cart and waiting
for ten years. Thank you, senatoration of a legal immigration
Margaret Bye.

Speaker 1 (00:45):
Thank you senator for describing the legal products. Have so
much to get to, the Senator so much a book
since nineteen ninety, Thank you, gentlemen.

Speaker 5 (00:55):
We want to have that app has not been on
the books.

Speaker 1 (01:00):
Gentlemen, the audience can't hear you because your mics are cut.
We have so much we want to get to. Thank
you for explaining the legal process.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
Nora, thank you Margaret the economy.

Speaker 2 (01:11):
Well because she is condescending. I mean, so I watched
this debate. I didn't want to. I'm not gonna lie
because I wasn't looking forward to it. I wasn't expecting
any you know, humdinger moments out of it. And I
watched this debate and.

Speaker 6 (01:27):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
Did we learn anything? I don't know, but I thought
the moderators it will I will say this. I thought
it was actually a particularly polite debate.

Speaker 6 (01:35):
Believe it or not.

Speaker 2 (01:36):
I can't say that it was a particularly polite debate,
but that moment when they cut him off and he's
trying to correct how things are recorded on that CPB
app which we've talked about here before in the space
when we've had on Border Patrol members and you know,
we've talked about it before, and it's a I mean,

(02:00):
he's he's he's correct, Because if you're going to fact
check somebody, you know, if you're going to be the
moderators and you're going to fact check someone, then you
need to be accurate when you're doing it. You know,
you can't you can't just be blowing smoke at your backside.
You you need to be accurate when you're doing it,
and I mean, clearly I don't think that they were,

(02:22):
and that was I think one of I mean, there
were several moments in that debate where they would ask
Waltz a question and they would load it up so
as to protect him, because any kind of pushback, you know,
he would he would crumple on. He looked nervous when
he walked out there. He did. He looked and you

(02:43):
could say otherwise, he looked nervous. He was rattled. If
you get the the Substack newsletter. I talked about all
of that in there. How I thought, you know, he
looked like he was already tweaked. I didn't get the
jazz hands, you know, opening that I really wanted. But
you know, whatever, you know, not everything can be about me,
I guess. And he just.

Speaker 6 (03:07):
He just he just looked goofy, I thought.

Speaker 2 (03:11):
And he he also needs to be told when he
is on stage. He needs to be made aware of
the fact that the camera when you're on stage, even
when you are you know you're not the one talking,
and you know that the camera is on your opponent.

(03:31):
And they had to tell him that it was a
side by side, right, didn't they tell him. You think
that it was because it was like he wasn't aware
of his own expression when he was on It was
like he wasn't aware of what his face was doing
when he was on camera. And I just think that
that looks weird and I just feel like that made
him It just made him look goofy, and it just

(03:53):
didn't make him look prepared.

Speaker 6 (03:54):
And I don't know.

Speaker 2 (03:55):
I mean, I we're going to dive into all of this,
and I'm going to tell you what I thought the
best and worst moments were.

Speaker 6 (04:02):
What I think that this mean.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
I don't think that this moves the needle at all
for any you know, the presidential Canada's I really don't.

Speaker 6 (04:09):
But I also.

Speaker 2 (04:13):
Think there's a couple of other things in play that
extend beyond twenty twenty four. And there were a couple
of disappointments. And I'm gonna be really honest about this stuff.
So welcome to the program. First and foremost, Dana Lash
with you, and we're at the top of this first hour,
Channel three forty seven Direct TV. You can also find
us on Rumble, et cetera, et cetera, all that good stuff.

Speaker 6 (04:30):
I So I watched the debate.

Speaker 2 (04:33):
And again, if you get the newsletter, I sent this
out in the Subsec newsletter that I you know if
you sign up for it. So you got my early
impressions of this debate, so you kind of know where
I'm going with some of those, because I was I
don't think that Tim Waltz made a I don't think

(04:53):
he made a major problem for himself except.

Speaker 6 (04:55):
With two gaffes.

Speaker 2 (04:57):
And I do feel like, you know, he just he
could have gotten all wound up. And I think that
he has the potential for someone to make him mad,
but he didn't take that bait.

Speaker 6 (05:11):
I thought that he didn't. I thought that he didn't
take the bait.

Speaker 2 (05:15):
He didn't go into getting ticked off when he could have,
and he kind of kept us cool for the most part, right,
And I just think.

Speaker 6 (05:27):
That, well, we're gonna play.

Speaker 2 (05:28):
Some of the audio. Let's play some of the other
because this was his worst moment, the China stuff. Listen
to this. This is when he was asked about China.
Audio SoundBite three.

Speaker 6 (05:37):
This was wild. Watch this.

Speaker 5 (05:40):
No, Governor, you say, trust the experts, but those same
experts for forty years said that if we shipped our
manufacturing base off to China, we get cheaper goods.

Speaker 4 (05:49):
They lied about that.

Speaker 5 (05:50):
They said if we shipped our industrial base off to
other countries, to Mexico and elsewhere, it would make the
middle class stronger.

Speaker 4 (05:56):
They were wrong about that.

Speaker 5 (05:58):
They were wrong about the idea that if we made
America less self reliant, less productive in our own nation,
that it would somehow make us better off.

Speaker 4 (06:06):
And they were wrong about it.

Speaker 5 (06:08):
And for the first time in a generation, Donald Trump
had the wisdom and the courage to say, to that
bipartisan consensus.

Speaker 4 (06:15):
We're not doing it anymore.

Speaker 5 (06:17):
We're bringing American manufacturing back, We're unleashing American energy.

Speaker 4 (06:20):
We're going to make more of our own stuff. And
this isn't just an economic issue.

Speaker 5 (06:24):
I meant about three beautiful little kids at home, seven,
four and two, and I love them very much, and
I hope they're in bed right now. But look, so
many of the drugs, the pharmaceuticals that we put in
the bodies of our children are manufactured by nations that
hate us. This has to stop, and we're not going
to stop it by listening to experts.

Speaker 2 (06:40):
He's talking to them about China. And then well, I
wanted the Waltz one when Waltz kind of just like
falls apart on this is audio.

Speaker 6 (06:47):
Yeah, audio sundites. This is a long one though.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
Can we just get the part where he's like, I
misspoke and we'll play the full one later because it's
already twelve minutes into the segment and I don't want
to play a minute and God helped me two forty
five not going to play the whole segment that needs
to be wast order this. But he like.

Speaker 6 (07:02):
He he completely fell apart on it.

Speaker 2 (07:04):
He completely fell apart when he was asked about He
got pushed one time and he and he just he
just fell apart when he was asked about China. Uh,
and we're gonna we'll get that. When we got a
queued up, do you have a go ahead and hit
this governor?

Speaker 1 (07:15):
Just to follow up on that, the question was can
you explain Thereancy?

Speaker 7 (07:21):
All I said on this was is I got there
that summer and misspoke on this, So I will just
that's what I've said. So I was in Hong Kong
and China during the democracy protest went in and from
that I learned a lot of what needed to be
in governance.

Speaker 2 (07:39):
All right, well, let's cut this because I wanted the
video of them on there also for the simulcast. We'll
go back into this as a huge part of the
huge part of it, but we can't play two minutes
and forty five seconds. Uh. The We're going to get
into some of the issues that they that they I
thought each of them flubbed on. I thought that Vance
wiped the floor with them on immigration, and I thought
he wiped the floor with them on the economy as well. Uh.
The CBS News posted Bay poll said it was close,

(08:01):
but Van Vance won, and I said two in the
am I rundown. I thought that Vance won on I
thought his substance was better. And I felt his substance
was better. And I also thought that he didn't make
any He didn't make any.

Speaker 6 (08:19):
Gaffs major gaffs like Waltz did.

Speaker 2 (08:23):
I thought that there were two points that Vance performed
very poorly, guns and abortion, and I'm going to deep
dive into those. And I don't when I'm evaluating a
Republican candidate, I don't just evaluate them next to the Republican.
I evaluate them knowing what the GOP can serve and

(08:43):
the standards that I have for my candidates. And I
think anybody can look great next to a sack of
potatoes like Tim Walls. I thought vance was He's a
great debater. I thought that his biggest opponent on that
stage was the moderators. I thought he handled them very well.
He would answer the question how he wanted to answer,
and then he would bring it back around to the

(09:03):
original question, ask repeat that question, and then answer it
after he set the context. That was very well done.
He did that throughout the night. I thought that he
fled the abortion answer. I thought that that was actually
his worst answer. He was not prepared enough and familiar
enough with the cases that Walt's cited so as to quickly,

(09:25):
efficiently and without question shut those cases down. And we've
covered Lorraine's got piece after piece up on substack, chapter
and verse, where we've gone through those individuals that Tim
Walls brought up. Those weren't cases, Those weren't abortion cases.
It was medical malpractice. And the two of the women
that he cited had taken the birth of the abortion pill.

(09:47):
The one woman particularly that Walls cited three times took
not one, but two abortion pills.

Speaker 6 (09:52):
She waited hours after she.

Speaker 2 (09:54):
Started experiencing the consequential side effects that everybody warns about
with this pill. And then she waited hours to go
to the hospital. But at that time sepsis had already
set in, had set in, and she was bleeding and
she was in bad shape. So that has nothing to
do with abortion and whether or not it's run by
the states. That was her taking the abortion pill, two

(10:15):
of them, her not seeking medical care, and then for
whatever reason, even though she had no viable life inside
of her at all, whatsoever, the staff at that hospital
was slow to do anything. And it wasn't because there
was any kind of law preventing them from doing so.
And so I thought if Vance was better prepared on
those cases, he would have shut that down. And so
I thought that was a disappointing moment. Those two answers, though,

(10:39):
deserved their own segment. We're going to talk about that
after headlines. I also thought that the couple of different
as it relates to immigration. This was audio sound bite four.
Someone finally asks about those missing kids.

Speaker 6 (10:59):
Listen.

Speaker 5 (11:00):
So, first of all, Margaret, before we talk about deportations,
we have to stop the bleeding.

Speaker 4 (11:04):
We have a historic immigration crisis.

Speaker 5 (11:06):
Because Kamala Harris started and said that she wanted to
undo all of Donald Trump's border policies, ninety four executive orders,
suspending deportations, decriminalizing illegal aliens, massively increasing the asylum fraud
that exists in our system.

Speaker 4 (11:22):
That has opened the floodgates.

Speaker 5 (11:24):
And what it's meant is that a lot of fentanyl
is coming into our country. I had a mother who
struggled with opioid addiction and has gotten clean. I don't
want people who are struggling with addiction to be deprived
of their second chance. Because Kamala Harris led in fentanyl
into our communities at record levels.

Speaker 4 (11:40):
So you've got to stop the bleeding.

Speaker 5 (11:42):
You've got to re implement Donald Trump's border policies, build
the wall, reimplement deportations. And that gets me to your point, Margaret,
about what do we actually do. So we've got twenty
twenty five million illegal aliens who are here in the country,
what do we do with them? I think the first
thing that we do is we start with the criminal migrants.
About a million of those people have committed some form
of crime.

Speaker 4 (12:02):
Insition.

Speaker 2 (12:04):
He brought and he brought it back to the original question.
It's a long bite, but he brought it back to
the original question and the and that was good because
he set the context and then he would bring it back.
You set the context and then you would bring it back.
By the way, a couple of people asked me about
the screenshots that were on the substack my newsletter post
that literally was from last night, that those were walltz

(12:25):
is looking like a loon.

Speaker 6 (12:26):
That's not photoshot.

Speaker 2 (12:28):
Can't cannut you watch it, you can attest that's he
was like totally unaware of what he looked like on camera.
Oh my gosh, the memes. So we've got a lot
to deep dive in. We're also going to give you
the latest on Iran versus Israel, and we're going to
also dive into the Hurricane Helene aftermath.

Speaker 6 (12:47):
We've got that for you as well.

Speaker 2 (12:49):
We've got, like I said, the hurricane relief, We've got Israel, Iran,
the debate, the election.

Speaker 6 (12:55):
I've got a couple of new polls for you.

Speaker 2 (12:57):
Nothing's going to be on this and I don't think
the VP thing is really good to move anything. I
do think it's going to help with the name ourcognition
for each of those candidates.

Speaker 6 (13:03):
So we'll discuss that.

Speaker 2 (13:04):
But we're going to deep dive into the best and
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Speaker 9 (14:18):
And now all of the news you would probably miss
it's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (14:23):
So I thought this was funny because they are saying
now that gen X is the most stressed generational live
but they're also the best at handling it.

Speaker 6 (14:31):
And we're also called the coolest generation.

Speaker 2 (14:33):
Just got to say, gen X people who are born
between sixty five and seventy nine, I'm there. I'm there,
so stop gatekeeping. I barely got in, but I'm there.
Stop it. It's official.

Speaker 6 (14:45):
Night just cited this a very official news article.

Speaker 2 (14:49):
Kine. It's America's goofy middle children sandwich between the boomers
and millennials, and gen X is all individualistic nonconformists. I mean,
you know, we did punk zines and tech startups, so
everybody can st up off. It's a loof cool, right,
But they're also really self We're the latch key kids.
According to one marketing marketing study, gen z Or gen

(15:09):
X went through its all important formative years as one
of the least parented, least nurtured generations. In US history,
it was the first generation that experienced both parents working
outside the home, so we had to be self sufficient
for survival. That's why we can handle stress, and in
gen X fashion, we don't like to let people see
that we are stressed. That's a huge study and they're
totally correct.

Speaker 6 (15:30):
This is weird.

Speaker 2 (15:31):
A long lost seafloor discovered beneath the Pacific Ocean could
rewrite Earth's history. Are there aliens? Scientists have mapped it.
They found that it was unusually thicker and cooler than
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Kongo's down there, And anyway, it's the Nasca Plate and

(15:55):
the East Pacific Rise. So if that's you know, your jam,
it's kind of interesting. Let's see.

Speaker 6 (16:00):
Uh oh, I don't care about this chick who left
the Washington Post.

Speaker 2 (16:03):
She's literally nobody. Green Day was banned from Las Vegas
radio stations because Billy Joe Armstrong is a d bag.

Speaker 6 (16:10):
He called the city a poohole.

Speaker 2 (16:12):
He didn't say it like that, but he did, and
he got mad and I I just don't know why.
I feel like he's got an arrested development because he's
like seventy thousand years old and he dresses like a
twenty year old in two thousand and three. And it's
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Speaker 10 (17:56):
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Speaker 11 (18:15):
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Speaker 2 (18:26):
Little Prodigy boy, this song created some problems back in day.
It's they're smacking an unfortunate person up is what this
song is titled. And you know it made me think
of I thought of this video, and I thought of
this song when I was thinking of this Doug m
Hoff story. Of course, you know I was going to
go there. Welcome back to the show. It's Stana Lash.

(18:47):
What'd you think it was?

Speaker 6 (18:48):
Big Bird?

Speaker 2 (18:49):
Kamala Harris's husband, Doug m Hoff, forcefully slapped ex girlfriend
for flirting with another man in a booze fueled assault
after a date to a star studded gala. There's a headline,
so Doug m Hoff, who's fifty nine, slapped the woman
in her face so hard she's spun around while wait,
this is the whitest thing I've ever heard. Well, Waiting
in the valet line late at night after a May

(19:10):
twenty twelve Ken Film Festival event in France, democrat white,
by the way, one of her friends told the Daily
Mail that the woman and there's photos of them, but
they they've blurred out her face. The woman called him
immediately after the incident, sobbing in her cab, described the assault.
They're not naming her. She's a successful New York attorney.

(19:30):
They're calling her by a pseudonym, Jane. A second friend
said that Jane, who had been dating m Hoff for
three months, also told her about the alleged violence at
the time. I mean, who wouldn't think of a guy
who got his namy pregnant with his first wife would
slap up a chick that he's dating, you know, three
months into the relationship in can I'm just wondering. I mean,
it's believe all women, right? Are we still on that

(19:52):
line or are we not doing that anymore? Is it
still me too?

Speaker 6 (19:57):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (19:58):
I mean they can't. Conveniently, after that whole thing fell apart,
they suddenly couldn't figure out how to define women. But okay,
so I mean, does it believe all women or not?
Because Kamala Harris is grilling Breck Kavanaugh and being a rapist,
and here you got Doug am Hoff impregnaty nannies and
slapping bitches up I'm just wondering, like, what's you know,
is it believe all women or not. I'm just curious.

(20:18):
I got questions for a few millions of my friends.
We're all wandering here, so I do think. I mean,
I just feel like we've got to bring that back, right,
We got to bring that back because you know, remember
Kamala Harris grilled the ever loving tar out of Kavanaugh.
She she didn't basically she accused him of being a
rapist and all this other stuff.

Speaker 6 (20:39):
So I feel like this is fair game.

Speaker 2 (20:41):
Kane phairsies gamesies, it's sucond to gentlemen. He's redefining masculinity,
don't you know, Doug am Hoff, He's redefining masculinity. You know,
Toxic masculinity to the left is when a man behaves chivalrous.
You know, if you have chivalrous behavior, you behave in
a chivalrous fact, you to save the world from Nazis.

(21:02):
That's apparently considered toxic. But if you impregnate your kid's
nanny while you're married to your first wife and then
you slap up your girlfriend at can Film Festival valet line,
that's apparently redefining masculinity.

Speaker 6 (21:17):
Who knew.

Speaker 2 (21:18):
I know it's and maybe we're in a backwards world.
I don't know, but that's what.

Speaker 6 (21:23):
That's the thems, the.

Speaker 9 (21:24):
Rules, right, it is just me or they just keep
moving the goalposts like that all the time.

Speaker 10 (21:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (21:28):
I mean, you can drive a woman into a pond
to die and that's not toxic, you know, But you
go liberate France from the Nazis and there you go
toxic masculinity. You know what I'm saying, good night, Just
you know, point that out there, just throw it out there,
redefining it. So I can't wait until she's asked about
that one in the press conference that she definitely will

(21:49):
never have or the next sit down that she totally
won't have. Ooh, all right, so a couple of things.
I know we're gonna follow the latest with the strike
as well. There's lots of stuff we're following. This debate
last night, good and the worst moment was got to
give that. Got to give that ribbon to Tim Walls,
who just started falling all over himself when he was asked, well,

(22:09):
why did you lie about China? I've never heard anyone
take so long to say that they didn't lie. Listen
to this governor.

Speaker 1 (22:16):
Just to follow up on that, the question was, can
you explain the notreancy.

Speaker 7 (22:21):
All I said on this was is I got there
that summer and misspoke on this, So I will just
that's what I've said. So I was in Hong Kong
and China during the democracy protest went in and from
that I learned a lot of what needed to be
in governance.

Speaker 2 (22:41):
Hmm. I mean you could have just said that you lied.
I mean, they asked him and he's like, well, it
was the best of times, it was the worst.

Speaker 6 (22:49):
Just do just say that you lied.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
Well, I misspoke, you lied, And then you know, he
told on himself because he was like, you know, and
I how did he put it? I quoted it at
the time he had said, uh. At one point he
was like yeah, I you know, I too. You know,
sometimes get into I slip into the rhetoric. Well you
just admitted that you lied. Then at that point, I mean,

(23:10):
that's what in the world is your damage, dude, You
just admitted that you lied.

Speaker 6 (23:14):
That's all I gotta do, all I gotta say. But
that was a really that was awkward.

Speaker 2 (23:18):
That was a very awkward moment for him, and there
were a lot of very awkward moments.

Speaker 6 (23:25):
Yeah, he's he didn't.

Speaker 2 (23:27):
He doesn't. He didn't have a lot of room last
night except to play that kyogrma knuckle hoad stick. But
then he was like, well, I get caught up in
the rhetoric. Okay, you just just you lied, you lied,
And then he tried to cite scripture, which, as you know,
if you're familiar with the Merchant of Venice, even the
devil can quote scripture. But there you go.

Speaker 6 (23:46):
He's I.

Speaker 2 (23:48):
I don't think that he he didn't get angry, and
I was actually kind of anticipating for I was waiting
for him to do so because from what I know,
he's got a short temper and he just seems like
a jackwagon. He's one of those dudes, right, He just
seemed like that. But he didn't take the bait, and
he was very disciplined in that regard. So was jd Vance,
And jd Vance state on point now, I'm gonna say

(24:09):
something that's unpopular. His answer on guns was horrible, Yes,
Walts was. Walts's answer on guns was bad. But I
wasn't impressed with Jady Vance as either. I don't think
he's a gun control guy. He's not a gun guy, though,
that's evident. And when I say that he's not a
gun guy, I mean he's not a hunter. He probably
doesn't shoot regularly. I don't demand that you be a
hunter or that you go out and shoot regularly in

(24:32):
order for me to like you as a candidate. But
I do demand that you agree with me on these
issues relating to our enumerated rights, and I do agree.
I do demand that you don't use the language of
the left. So here's the question that was asked, and
we'll get into all the other stuff. But this is
where I'm going to be. I'm going to call balls
and strikes on this stuff. And this was the first

(24:55):
time VANCE was really tested like this, I think, on
this issue. So this was it was like four hundred million,
eighty three audio SoundBite, the one where where is it
Nora is asking the question Nora O'Donnell and first off
the questions wrong audio sound bite nineteen go ahead and
kick this one. Nineteen thousand, million, eleventy forty thousand. That one.

Speaker 3 (25:22):
Now to America's gun violence epidemic. The leading cause of
death for children and teens in America is by firearm.

Speaker 2 (25:30):
Okay, that's wrong, and right out of the gate when
that question came in, that should have immediately been established
and it wasn't.

Speaker 6 (25:36):
Why is that wrong?

Speaker 2 (25:38):
Here's that Here's why that question is a presupposition based
on fraudulent not even evidence, just based on lies. First off,
it is not the leading cause of death. The only reason,
the only way that they can make it the leading
cause of death is and this is what the CDC did.
They redefined the age of a quote unquote child to

(25:58):
go all the way up till twenty, so eighteen to
twenty year olds are now factored into that average. When
you remove that age demographic, the eighteen to twenty year olds,
guess what that falls down? Behind car accidents and drownings. Now,
let's go back to that subset. I've written about this,
It's in one of my books. There's a lot of

(26:19):
evidence on this, so I'm not making anything up that's
not publicly available on the internet. According to the CDC
and the DOJ and the FBI's own criminal statistics, this subset,
this age subset, the eighteen to twenty year old. Why
does it inflate that number so much? Because it's gang
and drug violence and it completely correlates when you look

(26:41):
at the numbers given by the CDC for eighteen and younger,
and then you add in the FBI Criminal Statistics FI
the uniform crime reports. When you add in the publicly
available crime data, it tracks the CDC inflate it's that
number by including eighteen to twenty year olds and defining

(27:03):
them as children. That is why they then can say, oh, well,
look it's the leading cause of death for children because
they redefined it. Again, when you remove that subset, then
eighteen and under it falls behind the child. Uh, the
leading cause of death falls behind automobiles and drownings. Now,

(27:25):
suicides are also factored in there. That is a mental
health issue. In fact, suicides comprise one third of that
statistic for that subset. Now that's a whole other conversation.
But the reason it is inflated is to fear monger
and scare people into thinking that their children could be statistics.
When these incidents, although one is too many, are incredibly

(27:47):
rare and they're always preventable. But we don't talk about
the preventable aspects of it, which is one of the
things that Vance did touch on. What I didn't like
that Vance did, and I was not a fan of
his language on this is he borrowed the language of
the left.

Speaker 6 (28:01):
He used the language of the left.

Speaker 2 (28:03):
In his response on firearms, he said the phrase gun
violence epidemic, and he and Walsh were very nice to
each other on this, and he also used the phrase
illegal guns.

Speaker 6 (28:17):
Here's why I have a major problem with this.

Speaker 2 (28:20):
Again. I don't demand that you be as hardcore about
two A as I am for my support, but you
do need to believe that my right, my enumerated rights,
should not be infringed upon language like gun violence epidemic,
language like illegal guns, that.

Speaker 6 (28:34):
Those are words of the left.

Speaker 2 (28:36):
You cannot win a debate on this issue when you
are already validating your opponent's points because you're incorporating their
rhetoric into your argument. This is rhetoric one oh one.
For instance, there's no such thing as quote unquote illegal guns.

(28:57):
A gun is in ananimate object. There is criminal possession,
but there isn't an illegal gun. By saying the phrase
illegal gun instead of criminal possession, you are ascribing a
moral esthetic to an inanimate object, which is exactly what
gun controllers want to do. Because that continues to validate

(29:19):
the anti gun language which dictates that inanimate objects somehow
possess the ability to influence the carrier of set object
towards criminal behavior. A gun itself is not illegal, it
cannot be so. The legality or illegality is determined by

(29:39):
the wilful way in which.

Speaker 6 (29:42):
A person chooses to use or acquire it per law.

Speaker 2 (29:49):
And there's no gun violence epidemic. There is And this
is where Vance left a ton of meat on the bum.
I don't know how you don't get into Tim Waltz's
behavior during a min in a soda the riots. Vance
left that meat on the bone. There is and this
is where he could have done it. There's in a
gun violence epidemic. There is an epidemic of lawlessness that

(30:11):
is brought on by the sort of restorative justice that's
supported by Tim Walls and Kamala Harris. Look at the
riots in Minnesota. How many of those people were not
even arrested, not even detained. Kamala Harris was promoting their
bail fund, the bail fund of people who burned down
entire communities, historically black communities, I might add, you know

(30:32):
the communities that Gwynn Wall says she enjoyed smelling burning,
and that's why she left her windows open. He left
a lot of meat on the bone there, and that
was very disappointing. I expect wolves to be anti gun,
but I don't expect my Republican candidate to validate their
language by speaking recklessly on it. Because we are in

(30:54):
where I mean, it's a match where you cannot give
any kind of ground. And words do matter, folks, because
when it comes to this sort of thing, when it
comes to gun law, the words you use invoke different
aspects of the law and with it different penalties and consequences,
and with that, different abridgments of your rights.

Speaker 6 (31:14):
So you're damn right. Language is important in some instances.
It's everything.

Speaker 2 (31:19):
Now with this we've got, I mean, I've got so
much more, and we're gosh, we're already wrong. We're not
even near anywhere where we need to be. Oh, we
got someone.

Speaker 6 (31:31):
Because I wanted to touch on this real quote, play eighteen
for me.

Speaker 2 (31:33):
It's real quick. This is eighteen. I'm going to play
two cuts before we go to break versus eighteen. This
is what I'm talking about, ascribing a moral aesthetic to
an inanim an object.

Speaker 4 (31:41):
Listen, and I.

Speaker 7 (31:42):
Think what we end up doing is we start looking
for escapeboat. Sometimes it just is the guns. It's just
the guns, and there are things that you can do
about it.

Speaker 2 (31:51):
Okay, what does that mean? Sometimes it's just the guns.
So you're telling me that when a person is fine
and on the track of good behavior until somehow they
acquire a firearm and then they immediately turn bad, because
that's what he's suggesting here, which gets into my whole
argument that you do not ascribe human characteristics on inanimate

(32:13):
objects because you're validating what they're saying there. There was
no follow up to that. I thought Vance could have
done that. And what do you mean is it's not
just it's not the guns, it's not the god what
Sometimes it's just the gun. It's not the guns. Sometimes
it's just recidivism. Sometimes it's the breakdown of law and order.
Sometimes it's the breakdown of the American family. Sometimes it's
the breakdown of good parenting. But that was meat left

(32:37):
on the bomb. I got a lot more to hit.
We got abortion coming up, we got the economy, we
got the latest with the strike Iran versus Israel, all
sorts of things to touch on. Education is so unbelievably
important to preserving liberty. You cannot preserve liberty if you
don't know what you need to know, if you don't
understand how your government works, if you don't understand the republic,

(33:01):
how we are founded as a republic that incorporates some
democratic principles. And Hillsdale College was founded in eighteen forty
four as a small Christian, classical liberal arts college in
southern Michigan to offer the sort of education needed to
preserve those liberties, and it holds true to their mission today.
They have all kinds of free resources. There's free Speech
Digest in Primus, there are educational podcasts.

Speaker 6 (33:23):
But they also have a free Pocket.

Speaker 2 (33:25):
Constitution that they're handing out and you can get yours
for free, free shipping, even they don't sell your info.
It's Dana four four Hillsdale dot com to get your
free Pocket Constitution and if you have one, just get
another one and give it to somebody you know who
doesn't have one, because it's a great way to share
these crucial documents with other people, including the next generation.

(33:45):
So get your free copy of the Pocket Constitution from
our friends at Hillsdale while supplies last visit Dana four
f O r Hillsdale dot com. Fill out the form.
They're not selling your info. They'll mail you. You get
free shipping, they'll mail you. Don't pay anything now. Like
I said, it's not going to last long. Subcriber's quick,
it's your pocket constitution now at Dana four Hillsdale dot com.

Speaker 11 (34:07):
Get the loadown on the latest news with the side
of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to the Data Show
podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 9 (34:18):
Like sands through.

Speaker 4 (34:19):
The Outer Glass.

Speaker 9 (34:20):
So are the days of the United.

Speaker 2 (34:22):
States like commuting powers.

Speaker 12 (34:25):
And I actually think if you're a woman, that might
be the worst moment Jadvance had because he was going
to man splain right over that mute button.

Speaker 4 (34:34):
He was.

Speaker 12 (34:35):
And again I don't pretend to know however we'll react
to this. I think that a lot of women in
positions of authority that should command respect just by virtue
of that dynamic, will see themselves as some du that
disrespected them and talked over you know. I mean, there
was a moment like that with them vippertunities on stage.

Speaker 2 (34:53):
Where was the sexism? Gote does everything? Vagina vagina vagina?
Just shut up already, I'm so tired if there ain't
a woman on stage as a candidate, then they'll try
to fabricate it and appropriate it and project it onto
the moderators.

Speaker 6 (35:07):
They're big girls.

Speaker 2 (35:08):
And if there's a woman who can't stand being talked
over on a debate stage, if that offends her, then
get your ass off the stage. You're not grown up
enough to be on it. This is a grown folks event. Okay,
grown folks event. We don't have time for any of
this stuff. Jiminy Christmas. I mean no, I can't, man,

(35:29):
I just can't even Yes, it's this is so annoying.
Can just people? Can we just not have that for
one time? Even when you got two dudes out there,
somebody's got to inject sexism? Well, I mean well, did
kind of act like a bit of a bee at
some There was one point where his mask slipped.

Speaker 6 (35:48):
Did you see it?

Speaker 2 (35:49):
He got You can tell he's starting to get mad.
It's like someone nudge him and tell him, dude, the
camera is on your face. It's on your face.

Speaker 6 (35:56):
Stop it.

Speaker 9 (35:56):
I saw a little bit ago the Babylon b had
put out that de j was going after JD. Vans
for beating up three women last night and I couldn't
have left out loud.

Speaker 2 (36:06):
It just hit me.

Speaker 6 (36:07):
Yeah, that's true, but internally I did.

Speaker 2 (36:09):
Golly well.

Speaker 6 (36:10):
We got a lot more on the way.

Speaker 2 (36:11):
But we're also going to talk about something else too
that we're gonna have to have a conversation about at
some point in the next year, and it's how the
George W. Bush two point zero quote unquote compassionate conservatism
is making a comeback within the GOP, you know, the
ideology that spawned the Tea Party movement. I'm going to
explain how because I've been seeing it and hearing it

(36:33):
a lot lately, and it's from people who I guess
didn't experience it the first time around, so they think
it's new.

Speaker 6 (36:39):
So we're going to touch about on all of that
and a lot more.

Speaker 2 (36:41):
We got to strike, we got Iran, we've got the
debate still, we got a lot of stuff.

Speaker 6 (36:45):
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Welcome back to the program, top of the second hour.
I mere lovable curmudgeon Dana lash here joining you to get.

Speaker 6 (38:04):
You all up to speed.

Speaker 2 (38:06):
We watched that, We watched that debate last night, and
we're also following the latest with the strike the Longshorm
and strike Iran versus Israel. We've also got the disaster
ongoing recovery from Hurricane Helen. We're gonna get into all
of that first up, recapping some of this debate.

Speaker 6 (38:24):
We're going over the worst and best moments.

Speaker 2 (38:26):
And I said before, I think it's easy to go
up against somebody like Waltz. He played it safe, and
the big biggest hits that he took last night are
when he messed up about China and would admit that
he line.

Speaker 6 (38:39):
We played that.

Speaker 2 (38:40):
And then there was this really wild gaff when they
were talking about this was mass casualty incidents and this
is audio sound by seventeen. I actually when I first
heard this, I couldn't believe that I'd heard it, and
I sort of asked X about it.

Speaker 6 (39:00):
Could not believe that I heard this, but it was
that's what he said.

Speaker 2 (39:02):
Listen.

Speaker 7 (39:03):
So I've become friends with school shooters I've seen it.
Look the NRA I was in, He's.

Speaker 6 (39:07):
Become friends with school shooters. I thought, what what?

Speaker 2 (39:13):
I don't even And he never actually walked back to
clean that up. That's just just hung out there. That
that was a very wild gaff, and of course it's
now making the headlines, So there were some I thought.
I thought that Vance, like I said, if I had
to pick a victor, I would give it to Vance

(39:34):
for having more coherent answers. And he didn't make the
big gaffs. He didn't make two major gafs, the China
screw up and the friends of school shooters thing that
that Walls did. But I absolutely think that Vance missed
some opportunities to verbally beat the snot out of Walls.

Speaker 6 (39:46):
I absolutely do.

Speaker 2 (39:48):
I also, I'm gonna say this, and this is not
going to be popular, but I'm warning you because.

Speaker 6 (39:51):
We had we did all back this. Why are you
doing that?

Speaker 2 (39:54):
We did all this back in nine actually started before
on nine. Do you remember when the tea party first
kicked off? And I was one of the original people
that was on that phone call that Sunday. We were
arranging stuff for that very next day, and it actually
was in response to and I hate this phrase compassionate

(40:14):
conservatism because.

Speaker 6 (40:16):
That is a phrase that George W.

Speaker 2 (40:18):
Bush came up with. And I'm not mean.

Speaker 6 (40:20):
He seems like a very nice person.

Speaker 2 (40:21):
I disagree with some of his policies clearly, including this
whole compassionate conservatism thing, because it's neither compassionate nor conservatism.
It's a fun name for big government.

Speaker 6 (40:33):
That's what it is.

Speaker 2 (40:34):
It's the compassionate conservatism of making the government pay for
family leave and basically glorified corporate welfare. It's welfare, but
just you're pushing it through the corporate veins, so it
counts than less than welfare. It's the too big to fail,
It's all of that stuff, right. It's the kind of
thinking that was dominant within the Republican Party for a

(40:58):
long time. That made a lot of us satisfied with it.
That's the reason the Tea Party started. Democrats tried to
co opt it and say that the Tea Party began
because of Barack Obama. The Tea Party began as a
rebellion against big government republicanism, and after Barack Obama was

(41:18):
into office, when he continued those policies because big government
republicanism there's another name for it. Do you want to
know what?

Speaker 6 (41:24):
It's called?

Speaker 2 (41:25):
Democrat? And when he continued some of those policies were like, see,
we told you, and we kept protesting them, and then
it was like, oh, they're just protesting him because he's
a black president. We actually started before he was running. Thanks.
So I say this now because I feel like a
lot of people are some people on the right, not all,

(41:45):
but some people who weren't there back then, who think
this is well, who believe this is all new to them.
They are unfamiliar with the history of quote unquote compassionate
conservatism being code for big government, which is code for democrat.
They're unfamiliar with us. They are unfamiliar with how back
in the day many Republicans were arguing that, well, sometimes

(42:09):
the government has to intervene, or how they were arguing
on behalf of government intervention if it was advantageous to
a Republican policy, without realizing that you're opening the door
for Democrats to exploit it the exact same way, which
they did. A lot of these people who are here
now weren't in this fight then, and they think this

(42:31):
is all brand new, and because they had not seen
the logical conclusion of it. They don't find anything wrong
with it.

Speaker 6 (42:38):
Now.

Speaker 2 (42:39):
The reason I bring this up is because one of
the issues that this ideology plagues the most is the
idea of family leave, which I don't even know why
it's an issue. We don't like government involved in business, correct,
except what with this? Apparently so, there was a question
that was asked about paid family life and this is

(43:02):
there are two instances. Now I've said, I don't need
to keep you know, patent vans on the back. I
think he took the debate, like I said, coher an answer,
I need to make apps. But there are three issues
that he wasn't great on abortion, the guns issue. He
could have been stronger, and he could not have used
the language of the left. This issue I was very
disappointed on. And it's the family leave one. Here is

(43:24):
part of his answer because he was asked about that
once got some of it.

Speaker 6 (43:27):
Check this out.

Speaker 1 (43:29):
Do you support a national paid leave program? And if so,
for how long should employers be mandated to pay their
employees while they are home taking care of their newborn?

Speaker 2 (43:40):
You have two minutes.

Speaker 4 (43:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (43:41):
Well, first of all, Margaret, a number of my Republican
colleagues and some Democrats too have worked on this issue,
and I think there is a bipartisan solution here because
a lot of us care about this issue. I mean, look,
I speak from this very personally because I'm married to
a beautiful woman who's an incredible mother to our three
beautiful kids, but is also a very I think I.

Speaker 2 (43:59):
Think immediately is wrong and by part of an answer.
I know this personally too because I've given birth twice
and I've worked now. He also said the quote, and
this is one of the things that he said last night,
and I have it isolated here. He said the quote,
We're going to have to spend more money. We're going

(44:21):
to have to induce more people to provide childcare services.
I don't know what the weir is in this, and
I don't know what the how means. That was never clarified.
Here's my point in all this. If companies want to
offer childcare et cetera voluntarily to be competitive, great more
power to them. That is well within their right to

(44:42):
do so. The government should not mandate that businesses do this.
This is nothing more than big government nonsense, and it's
defended by some on the right as quote unquote compassionate,
just like Bush two point zero. Welfare is welfare regardless

(45:03):
if it is forced through corporate or offered as an entitlement.
It is not a small government position to demand that
government mandate businesses to help people and accommodate family planning.
It is weird to complain about big government while begging

(45:24):
the government to get bigger by mandating that businesses accommodate
family planning. That doesn't make any sense. Now. I know
that mine is not a very particularly popular take on
this right now, but I would rather be consistent than
be liked.

Speaker 6 (45:41):
By the way.

Speaker 2 (45:41):
The only correct, the correct and only answer on this
is is this. If businesses want to offer this voluntarily,
so be it. But in the meantime, stop taking in
so much of our taxes. Stop taking our money in
tax so families can either afford childcare or a forward
to have a two parent, one income household if they

(46:04):
so choose. Should they want to be able to have
a parent at home with their children. And I'm going
to tell you what these businesses, I don't know what
some of these people think businesses get started for. The
people on the left think that businesses are created and
should be created only to be charitable. You don't need
to pay for this stuff. Just give everybody a million

(46:25):
dollars an hour.

Speaker 6 (46:26):
Whatever.

Speaker 2 (46:28):
Some on the right think that, well, then if the
government doesn't force them to do it, are they still
with then how is it going to work? Look if
a CEO, If I was a CEO and I wanted
an employee that had a particular talent, and I knew
that in order to get that talent, I would have
to offer certain perks, like if that talent wanted to

(46:50):
have a family. If that, then I would absolutely do
it because my business would benefit. Businesses are going to
make decisions that grow business because it's fiscally responsible, which
is a conservative trade. And if they voluntarily want to
offer that, if they want to go after people that
have proven skills and that are worth it, businesses are

(47:10):
going to do that. They're already doing it now without
government having to mandate it. And a lot of these
people don't realize some of these small businesses cannot afford
to pay long term leave for people who are not
generating income. They don't understand what it's like to make payroll.

(47:33):
They don't understand what a small business owner pays to
replace that employee. You're paying two salaries for one job.
That is not a small government, constitutional conservative position. It
is a Democrat position that is wrapped up in the
veneer of quote unquote compassionate conservatism in order to render

(47:58):
it more palatable to republic looking voters. But it's a
Democrat policy. And so that is why I think, And
there were he had long answers on this. I thought
his answer was wrong. He defaulted to government on his answer.

(48:19):
That bothered me because we went through this once already,
and it's why Republicans got beaten and the aughts. There's
no point in securing a legacy if you're going back
to Bush two point zero, because that was defeated once.

Speaker 6 (48:37):
We saw how that plays out.

Speaker 2 (48:39):
And that stuff makes me nervous because I don't want
to be in a position with all this stuff where
you defeat yourself again because you're promoting policies that fail
back in the aughts. So, like I said, I don't
know what there's only one good answer to that, and
there wasn't a lot of daytime between him and Waltz

(48:59):
on that. Now, a couple of other things here, Walls particular.
We know Walls is going to be bad because he's
I mean, he just was horrible with a lot of
things audio sound by at sixteen when he was asked
about firearms, this made me angry. Listen to this.

Speaker 7 (49:19):
I got a seventeen year old and he witnessed a
shooting at a community center playing volleyball.

Speaker 8 (49:25):
Those things don't leave you.

Speaker 7 (49:26):
As a member of Congress, I sat in my office
surrounded by dozens of the Sandiok parents and they were
looking at my seven year old picture on the wall.

Speaker 2 (49:35):
So he got into if he can get paid. He
was saying that I own firearms, and the Second Amendment
is there, but our first responsibilities to our kids is
what he had said, and the way that he positioned
it seemed as though he was suggesting that being a
parent and owning a firearm are two incompatible things. I

(50:00):
think you have to beat through a mass casualty incident
to understand the importance of your children or to understand
the importance of defense. And I mention this online as well.
I am very grateful for my second amenmory of self defense.

Speaker 6 (50:13):
As a mother.

Speaker 2 (50:15):
You know, I've had someone try to break into my
home because they wanted to harm me because of my ideas,
And I'm grateful that I had a rifle because guess what,
that person was there for almost twelve minutes before the
cops were love my police. A lot can happen in

(50:37):
twelve minutes, and I'm glad. What if I had no
means of protecting myself because I believed, as Tim Walst did,
that somehow parenthood was incompatible with defense. No, A lot
of reasons why, A lot of reasons why parents, particularly
mothers have firearms, shood they can defend themselves on their children.
I thought that that was an ignorant take that he had.

(50:59):
I mean, I'm not so prize it's walls. He's a fud,
But I was, I was just, I was just abhor
that was an abhorrent take. We have more to come.
The latest on the strike. We're going to touch on
the strike, and we got more on the hurricane relief.
What is up with the helicopters. Apparently a lot of
private owned, privately owned choppers are helping out with assistance.
But why why is there not more happening. We're gonna

(51:21):
get into all of that and more as we roll
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Speaker 6 (52:31):
Tell them that Danta sents you for the level all
things holy.

Speaker 9 (52:34):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (52:40):
Someone called Sam Jackson. A passenger thought it was okay
to take a ten foot Burmese python in his carry
on luggage. Yeah, it's a guy at Tashkent Airport in Uzbekistan.
The guy was instructed to open his carry on luggage.
Was just two days ago or sorry, last week. It's
a little bit more than two days ago. He had
zipped his bag revealed a ten foot long little blonde,

(53:02):
little blonde python curled up a sleep inside it sleep
and just having a little nap. Snake was having a nap.
He was a three meters snake. And it was uncovered
and he was not allowed to take it as a
carry on. They said it was not declared. It was
discovered it was a tiger albino python. It's native to
South and Southeast Asia.

Speaker 6 (53:23):
Because it was listed in an international Red book.

Speaker 2 (53:25):
They have to import it and they can't. You know,
you just can't.

Speaker 6 (53:30):
Take it in. I is that, like, do you think
somebody's actually.

Speaker 2 (53:33):
Smuggling it or were they like dumb enough to think
that's I'm a pet, because that's not like what I
think of When you're trying to smuggle something, it means
you're trying to evade security. Right, you can't just put
it in a duffel bag with a little bed and
like walked. It just doesn't make sense. It sounds like
it's a pet. A hyperrealistic inflatable alligator was rescued from
a creek in Levanon County. Oh that's good, they say
that inflatable alligator. This is in Pennsylvania. A resident said

(53:57):
that there was a gator in a North cornwall and
I can't why are there so many? What? Quite a palawful?
Yeah creek. Yeah, that's right. And they immediately had to
get law enforcement out there to get this gator out.
And what they discovered, they said it was very realistic.

Speaker 6 (54:14):
I gotta be honest.

Speaker 2 (54:15):
With you, it's not. It's not a very you know,
those like gator floats that you get for your pool
and they have handles on them. It was that that's
not realistic, Gator, it's not a hyper Yeah, it's not
hyper realistic. Good night.

Speaker 6 (54:30):
So musk knew that X was overpriced when he got it.

Speaker 2 (54:32):
Now it's worth twenty five percent less than what he
paid for it, and that's because they're trying to kill it,
the government, because they want to control it. We got
a lot more on the way. The latest at the strikes.
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Speaker 11 (56:06):
Dana makes some common sense of the crazy headlines. With
a data show podcast, You're on the go guide for
getting up to speed on today's most important stories. Subscribe
on YouTube, Apple or your favorite podcast platform.

Speaker 2 (56:21):
Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash with you. We're
here at the bottom of this second hour, and we're
going to get into the latest with Iran and Israel
as well as Hurricane Helene recovery, and then we're going
to touch on the strike real quick. I want to
play this isolated audio because I was talking about beware
of slipping back to Bush two point zer quote unquote

(56:42):
compassionate conservatism, which is a code word for big government,
which is a code word for democrat, because you can't
have the government involved in everything. And we were talking
about family leave and how businesses should not be involved
in doing this unless they voluntarily choose to do so.
We can't very well go and complain about government involvement
and stuff and then beg the government to get involve

(57:04):
the mandating business to provide accommodation for family planning. That's
neither a conservative nor constitutionalist.

Speaker 6 (57:12):
Perspective on that.

Speaker 2 (57:13):
And the reason I brought it up is because I
actually thought I thought Vance won the debate, but I
did not think that this was his brightest moment, And
I just wanted to play this really quickly so you
have perspective on what I was talking about. Fully listen.

Speaker 5 (57:24):
It's the heart of the Donald Trump economic plan, cut
taxes for American workers and American families, cut taxes for
businesses that are hiring and building companies in the United
States of America, but penalize companies and countries that are
shipping jobs overseas. That's the heart of the economic proposal,
and I think what President Trump is saying is that
when we bring in this additional revenue with higher economic growth,

(57:46):
we're going to be able to provide.

Speaker 4 (57:47):
Paid family leave childcare.

Speaker 5 (57:49):
Options that are viable and workable for a lot of
American families.

Speaker 1 (57:55):
Can you clarify how that will solve the childcare shortage?

Speaker 5 (58:00):
Well, because, as Tim said, a lot of the childcare
shortage is we just don't have enough resources going into
the multiple people who could be providing family care options,
and we're going to have to Unfortunately, look, we're going
to have to.

Speaker 4 (58:12):
Spend more money.

Speaker 5 (58:13):
We're going to have to induce more people to want
to provide childcare options for American families because the reason
it's so expensive right now is because you've got way
too few people providing this vary situation.

Speaker 2 (58:23):
So that's exactly what I was talking about. That is
exactly it. What do you mean, who is the we
and what is the how? You're going to have to
spend more money and induce more people, like I said,
real quickly, and then I'm gonna move on companies that
want to offer childcare voluntarily to be competitive. That's their right.
The government should not mandate that businesses do this. Again,

(58:45):
it's the same big government stuff that was marketed under
Bush two point zero as quote unquote compassionate conservatism. And
the only answer to this is number one, businesses can
voluntarily do it if they so choose. Government shouldn't mandate
this because look, welfare is welfare, regardless of whether it's
forced through corporate or if it's offered by the government
as an entitlement. So the only correct answer is only

(59:08):
businesses should determine voluntarily if they want to do this.
And really, we have to stop taking in so much
tax so that families can afford to get childcare or
they can afford to have a two parent, one income home.
Should they so choose if they want to be able
to have a parent at home with their children. That
is the only correct and acceptable answer on that. So

(59:28):
that's what I was talking about.

Speaker 6 (59:30):
Everything that Wall said I disagreed with.

Speaker 2 (59:32):
I just got to put that out there for clarity,
all right, So I want to switch gears here, and
I want to touch on this very interesting thing that
I've been seeing.

Speaker 6 (59:44):
With regard to.

Speaker 2 (59:47):
The helicopters and the way that they have been, like
the privately owned choppers, and how they've been responding to
a of this. There was a very interesting piece that
I was reading about the US Helicopter Commune. I'd love
that we have a helicopter community. God bless America. I

(01:00:10):
never I've flown in a chopper. I've never flown a
chopper per se. Kind of now I'm interested in it.
But it talks about like, for instance, in North Carolina,
they have all of these privately owned choppers that are
out there doing these rescue efforts and it's amazing to
see some of this stuff. And they've i mean the

(01:00:30):
photos and the video air their airlifting supplies there. It's
like the Cajun Navy, but like in the air. Cajun Air, right,
Cajun Air. That's an air wouldn't you fly that airline?
I would totally fly that airline.

Speaker 9 (01:00:44):
Instead of peanuts, they give out gumbo or something.

Speaker 2 (01:00:47):
Dude, here's your cup of gumbo. Now we ain't giving
you no peanuts up in here. You get a cup
of gumba. Oh my gosh, Cajun Navy, come on, you
got it, y'all gotta make that happen. Cajun Air. I
would demand to fly Cajun Air everywhere. Oh there's your slogan,
Cajun airwhere there? It is right there. So they have
been going in and around trying to help all these people.

(01:01:08):
And I know that there's also this. People were asking
about Fort Bragg because there's a lot of helicopters at
Fort Bragg, and the people were asking, well, why are
they not getting why are they not getting Involvedhy are
they not getting power? And get out there and get
supplies in because a lot of the people have been saying, well,

(01:01:30):
a government aid is nowhere to be found. And they've
got video of all of these helicopters that are privately
owned volunteering their time and their fuel, and they're running
supplies because the roads are impassable, they're running supplies, they're
rescuing people, they're dropping stuff up on the hills.

Speaker 6 (01:01:43):
I mean, it's just wild.

Speaker 2 (01:01:46):
And there was one guy who told who was told
by the fire chief that if he went back, and
he's a guy who owns a chopper, if he went back,
they would arrest him. He had to leave this dude
on the mountain. Why, okay, I'm really confused about this.
Why are people Why are some of these it seems
like some of these private choppers, Why are some of.

Speaker 6 (01:02:06):
Them being deterred from doing this?

Speaker 2 (01:02:10):
Is there? I mean, you're in a it's a natural disaster,
it's an emergency zone, and people have been You can
see how people have been following like flight tracker and
all this other stuff, and they can see how many
government assets like helicopters, government helicopters are operating with rescues
and they're able to filter out civilian and passenger aircraft.

(01:02:33):
And people are wondering. It seems like there's more privately
owned than there is government owned. Here's an interview with
this guy who was saying that he was told he
basically had to stop making these rescue efforts and dropping supplies.
Listen to this, this is wild.

Speaker 6 (01:02:52):
How why started helping with coordination?

Speaker 13 (01:02:55):
He gave me radio frequencies to coordinate with them on
set up a landing area for me to come back
with the other victim, and in the middle of the
whole conversation and then blocking the road off, I was
greeted by the at that time I didn't know but
Lake Lure fire chief or assistant chief maybe, and he
shut down.

Speaker 8 (01:03:14):
The whole operation.

Speaker 13 (01:03:15):
So at that point there was I felt like the
conversation wasn't going any further. And again he asked me
to leave, and I said, hey, I have no problem
getting out of your area.

Speaker 4 (01:03:24):
If that's what you want us to do, we'll leave.
No issue.

Speaker 13 (01:03:26):
At that point, I asked him, you know what was
the reason I had to leave them there? And he said, again,
you're interfering with my operation. I just need you to
get out of the area. I said, sir, I don't
know where you were trained at, but I know how
my training is and I'm not going to leave personnel behind.
I'm going back to get my co pilot. He said,
if you turn around and go back up the mountain,
you're going.

Speaker 8 (01:03:46):
To be arrested.

Speaker 6 (01:03:47):
I said, well, so I'll say this, I get it.

Speaker 2 (01:03:50):
If you know you are you know the firefight er
EMT and you've got a rescue plan and resources in place,
and you don't want anyone interfering with that. But that's
the question, isn't it. Because the assertion is that there
wasn't a plan, nor were there resources in place. Right,
that's the whole thing, right, So, and this is just one,

(01:04:13):
apparently one example, because emergency responders are so overstretched in
these areas it's insane. And I think that you would
take that into account and would welcome or try to
incorporate as a part of your plan people who are

(01:04:36):
able to help out, who have the ability to get
to these areas that are impassable due to landslides and
busted up roads and all this stuff. And I get that,
you know, you want to secure an area and you're
trying to do everything, but again, a lot of these
people are a lot of these first responders are totally overstretched.

(01:04:58):
I understand you don't want every time to can coming
up and get involved in all that, but you need
people with shoppers because apparently there are not enough. And
I think it's you know, important, especially if part of
your plan is making sure that you're rescuing people off
the mountain and you don't have the fully available resources.

Speaker 6 (01:05:16):
To do so.

Speaker 2 (01:05:17):
Why would you have people wait up on the mountains
being stranded for days when you could have like privately
owned choppers people and assist those people and organize them
and use their resources, use them as assets, and have
them rescue people so that you're not stretched so thin.
I feel like there's a better way to do this.
And the crazy thing is is that if we had

(01:05:39):
a better I think I think some of these, if
we had a better response in some of these areas,
I think that this conversation would be it would be unnecessary.

Speaker 6 (01:05:48):
But that's I mean, the devastation.

Speaker 2 (01:05:51):
I mean, I, oh my gosh, they still don't even
really have estimates as to how much and what all
is going to be required. I mean, it's just so
they're still just trying to add ascertained the level of
damage and.

Speaker 6 (01:06:04):
Save people.

Speaker 2 (01:06:06):
And I also think that the other issue with this
is there's not do you feel like there's not enough
attention on this from national press? Like they talked about
it and now I just feel like it's sort of
fallen by the wayside. Am I being too sensitive with that?

Speaker 9 (01:06:27):
No, you're not. I believe that this media has been
consistently running cover for the left, and I think this
is another example.

Speaker 2 (01:06:33):
But do you think that they're not reporting on this
as much because it's Southeastern states that are mostly affected? Again,
I don't want to sound like I'm trying to cause
a problem unnecessarily, but I do have to wonder why
the coverage is so completely lopsided.

Speaker 9 (01:06:49):
Well, I remember, and I put this story in your
prep last night, that back in Hurricane Katrina, they couldn't
immediately get to the area right, and so when there
was a lag in FEMA help and all of that,
people were going all over the media and saying how
George Bush hated black people and all of this stuff
and made it a race issue in the whole nine.

(01:07:11):
So if those rules applied to what we do today
in how we respond in the media on this, then yes,
it would look like based on the lack of FEMA
and obviously the lack of interest that both Kamala and
Joe Biden had in this whole tragedy, apparently they hate
white people and they hate people that vote mostly for Trump.

Speaker 2 (01:07:33):
I mean, apparently. Helene is already one of the deadliest
costless storms to hit the United States. It dumped forty trillions,
forty trillion gallons of rain on the Southeastern States. Forty trillions,
forty trillion gallons. That's enough to fill Dallas Cowboys Stadium
fifty one thousand times or Lake Tahoe just once.

Speaker 6 (01:07:56):
That's how much.

Speaker 2 (01:07:57):
Now, the reason I bring this up is because Steve
made a good point Hurricane Scenia got so much coverage,
and not that it didn't, you know, deserve to get
a lot of coverage, but you have Katrina, Harvey, Ian
Andrew and Sandy was listed at number four, but Helene
is right now and it's top ten. It is a

(01:08:19):
it's a it's a bad hurricane. But and the devastation
seems like it's in multiple states and not just really
concentrated on a couple. But there does seem to be
like there's a lopsided coverage because the media is mostly
centralized in the Northeast, and anything that happens to the
media just takes over, you know, the whole day, my

(01:08:40):
goutsh You get a snowstorm and it's just you know,
wall to wall coverage, and you get major flooding like
in Tennessee and there's like barely a blit. And now
the recovery efforts for Hurricane Helene are just starting to
slip past, and they're rolling off.

Speaker 6 (01:08:53):
There what they call above the fold.

Speaker 2 (01:08:55):
So when you get your newspaper and it's folded in half,
all the most important stuff is above the fold before
you even fold it. Unfold it to.

Speaker 6 (01:09:02):
Be the full broadsheet half broadsheet, then all the most.

Speaker 2 (01:09:07):
Important stuff was there. So above the fold is what
they refer to. That's like the order of importance. It's
already fallen below the fold. Now it's going on page
one A, two A, so this is it's I don't know,
I'm not trying to be overly sensitive, but it feels like,
you know, considering some of the devastation, like in North

(01:09:27):
Carolina they got hit so bad and the landslides are horrific.
I'm I'm on and they're still trying to find people.
There's still tons of people unaccounted. One hundred and fifty
nine fatalities so far with ABC had that twenty hours ago.
It's probably more now. Florida peanut farmers say this is
worse than Adalia. They say that they're dealing with devastating

(01:09:49):
losses with the peanut crop. So it's and they think
that that Helene is going to join the five most damaging.
It's technically in the top ten, but it's being estimated
that's going to in the five most damaging hurricanes of
all time. We got a lot more to touch on,
including the latest with Iran Israel and that strike as
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Speaker 9 (01:11:34):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida.

Speaker 8 (01:11:42):
Man.

Speaker 6 (01:11:44):
Yeah, So, got a couple of things here. This I've
I this is an older story.

Speaker 2 (01:11:56):
Hold on and do this one. So a guys son
was gets caught trespassing, right, Why is it always at
a Walmart? I'm not kidding you like every time I've
got like a trespass storid, it's always at Walmart. So
Florida man gets arrested because his son was trespassing at

(01:12:17):
a Walmart and when the dad showed up Flager County,
he attacked the deputies who contacted him to get his kid.
So Flager County Sheriff's Office responded to multiple reports of
juveniles causing disturbances and a Walmart. They were all in
our sixteen. They were in bikes of the story, yelling,
curson setting off car alarms, and deputies found the group.

(01:12:38):
Recognized the teens contact with their parents and one of
the parents this explains why the kid was doing what
he was doing. Thirty four year old Jonah Harrington from
Palm Coast arrived in immediately confronted law enforcement. He gets out,
runs up to the deputy and just shoves shoves him.
It's all on body cam footage. And dude, don't you
know that he's If you had to guess, like, was
he wearing his hat with a straight bill, and did
you have like a goof shirt on and you know,

(01:13:01):
look like he got a d bag starter kit, the answers, yes, yes,
he did. Two other deputies try to detain him, and
Harrington punched. One officer resisted the efforts of another deputy
to secure in handcuffs, so then he tried to flee.
He was apprehended after a struggle, and the sheriff said,
the apple doesn't fall from the tree. You know, we
asked these parents to come pick up their kids because
they were causing trouble, but this parent chose to attack

(01:13:22):
our deputies instead. So now you see, right, doesn't He's right,
It does not fall far from the tree. Can you imagine,
God help my child. If the police called me and
they were like, ma'am, you have to come get your child,
I would turn into Granny Boots. Granny Boots would get
real quiet, and she'd point to a willow tree that
she had her front. You know, we killed this tree.

(01:13:43):
She had twenty three grandkids. We killed the same tree.
We had to go cut a branch off it with
a pair of utility scissors. She would strip the leaves
off with her hand and fold it and whoop us
with it. I never got a whooping because I was
an angel and I was yep, and I was Granny
Boots his favorite. So but all my other cousins got beat.
But that's like the scariest thing ever. I would show

(01:14:04):
up with like a whole thatch of them things, be like,
you tell me where my kid is, Officer, I will
handle this situation. I'm just saying, Golly runs up and
he's on and you know all these place it's like
you can see their body camp their body cameras.

Speaker 6 (01:14:18):
Why would you do that? Third hour on the way
stick with us.

Speaker 2 (01:14:23):
Welcome back to the program, your lovable curmudgeon here, Dania Lash.
We've been going over a number of things, following the
latest with Hurricane Helene recovery efforts. Also we've got coming
up discussion on Iran and Israel, and then the latest
with the long shortman strike. We've been recapping this debate,
gone over some of the best and worst moments. Now
I talked about one of the worst moments I thought
for Vance. Although I think he won the debate because

(01:14:46):
he was most coherent, he didn't talk about being friends
with school shooters. This is where Walt's like, really walls
fell apart here. I don't think Vance's answer and an
abortion was great either, And I bring that up because
that's like a huge issue for the right, it's like guns,
taxes and babies, guns and babies GTB, not necessarily in
that order.

Speaker 6 (01:15:04):
Is for some people.

Speaker 2 (01:15:05):
Maybe it's BGD B GT or TBG. But we're just
doing guns, babies and guns, taxes and babies. So the
discussion about abortion, he was asked because and again channel
through forty seven Direct TV find us on Rumble where
the chat is also on X. One of the big

(01:15:26):
things that Democrats have had that they've struggled to get
around is they try to try to paint Republicans as
being extremists, when if you look at I think there
have been nine major polls taken in like the span
of what six years, maybe longer than that, that have

(01:15:48):
dealt with the issue of abortion and how most people are,
including the majority of Democrats, and really this is what
drives in independence and Democrats they're like, oh, we'll stop
it at fifteen weeks. Democrats wanted it to be literally
on demand up to the moment of birth, and they
also wanted the taxpayer to subsidize it. Now, I'm not

(01:16:08):
just making that up. That was literally what the quote
unquote Women's Protection Act that they all co sponsored in
the Senate when Kamala Harris was also the head of
the Senate, the President of the Senate. They all sponsored that.
That was a big thing back in twenty twenty and
going up into twenty twenty two, and so Walls now

(01:16:30):
has to answer for his party on that. And the
reason that this became a big issue is because you
had Ralph Abortham, oh sorry Northam, who was the former
governor at the time over in Virginia, and he was
on he did a radio interview where he said that
he actually supported it all the way up till the
moment of birth, and he included he didn't want to
provide care. And that's another thing that Walls flubbed on

(01:16:53):
so audio some by twelve Walts was asked, Okay, well,
what about any limitations on abortion as demand used as
birth control because every state already protects the life of
the mother in cases of rape and incest.

Speaker 6 (01:17:06):
And whilst like could not give an answer to this, listen.

Speaker 3 (01:17:10):
Would you like to respond and also answer the question
about restrictions.

Speaker 7 (01:17:13):
Yeah, well, the question got asked Donald Trump made the
accusation that wasn't true about Minnesota. Well, let me tell
you about this idea that there's diverse states. There's a
young woman named Amber Thurman. She happened to be in Georgia,
a restrictive state. Because of that, she had to travel
a long distance to North Carolina to try and get
her care.

Speaker 2 (01:17:35):
Amber Thurman died, Okay, can we put it for real quick,
because that's a lie. I want to want to point
out that this is a we'll come back to it.
Just don't just say that right there, because we're going
to come back to it. That's so he's talking about
the case of this woman, and Lorraine wrote about this
over at substack, chapter and verse. She's actually she's got
all the cases up there, and she talked about the

(01:17:58):
Amber Thurman, that woman who is from Georgia.

Speaker 6 (01:18:01):
Aramber Thurman was.

Speaker 2 (01:18:05):
She had gone to get the abortion pill, and.

Speaker 6 (01:18:11):
She went to get the abortion pill.

Speaker 2 (01:18:13):
She took two of them, and then she ended up
going into sepsis and she started bleeding. And I don't
know why she waited for hours to go to the
abortion to go to the hospital to help with this,
because now it was I mean, she ordered her baby
with this pill. I don't know why she waited that long,

(01:18:38):
but she took the abortion pill. She took two of them,
and then when she went to the hospital for whatever reason,
they were late getting her some care. But it was
they blamed this. They blame an abortion band for her death.
But it's an irresponsible lie because she she legally acquired
abortion pills. Amber Thurman legally acquired abortion pills. She discovered
she was pregnant with twins, she sought an abortion as

(01:19:02):
a form of birth control, and she was over six
weeks pregnant. Georgia has a six week limitation. Well, she
was over six weeks pregnant. She took one abortion pill
in North Carolina, another abortion pill in Georgia, and they
literally warn you when you take this pill, and it
says it's widely reported that you could wind up in
the hospital because they caused serious complications. And guess what,

(01:19:24):
she developed serious complications. She was vomiting blood and she
developed sepsis. But she literally waited not just hours, she
waited four days before she went to the hospital. And
what Democrats were trying to falsely say is that the
hospital waited to perform a DNC. That's actually a lie
there when there's no and this is in Georgia's law

(01:19:46):
that explicitly allows dncs as a treatment following a miscarriage.
It's the twenty twenty three Code of Georgia, Title sixteen
Crimes and Offenses, Subsection sixteen one one in sixteen seventeen
ten gets into Chapter twelve, Article five, Section sixteen twelve
one four one restrictions on the performance of abortions, availability
of record, civil cause of action, and affirmative defenses. And
it literally gets into everything from topic ec topic pregnancies,

(01:20:11):
detectable human heartbeats, all of it, medical emergencies, medically futile, sponted,
It gets into literally every aspect of it. They absolutely
this law does point out, yes, you do, didn't cease
to as a treatment following a miscarriage. She was having
a miscarriage at that point, so they were trying to
misconstrue the law and say that she wasn't allowed to
get help and that's what killed her. That's not what

(01:20:33):
killed her. Her waiting for days ago the hospital getting
stepsist in vomiting blood. I don't know. I just think
if you're vomiting blood, you might want to go to
the er instead of waiting days.

Speaker 6 (01:20:41):
So it was a lie. That was an absolute lie.
He okay, go.

Speaker 2 (01:20:45):
Ahead, and with the other. I'm sorry one. I didn't
mean to interrupt, like the video, but I'm like I
had to stop there immediately go ahead.

Speaker 7 (01:20:51):
To try and get her care. Amber Thurman died in
that journey back and forth. The fact of the matter is,
how can we as an say that your life and
your rights, as basic as the right to control your
own body, is determined.

Speaker 2 (01:21:08):
On geography, like people to have sexual pregnant.

Speaker 6 (01:21:13):
No one's doing that some of these other cases.

Speaker 2 (01:21:15):
By the way, I wish that Vance would have been
familiar with that case so he could have just nix
nipped it right there. I think he should have been
prepared a little bit more with that, uh.

Speaker 6 (01:21:27):
And he wasn't. And that's where I was a little
bit like, come on.

Speaker 2 (01:21:32):
They they could have I think really really verbally beat
the snot out of him with that. Uh. But he
also lied. And this is I'm going to get into thirteen.
If we can speed thirteen up a little bit and
just we can come in like in the middle of it.
Because Walts was he was being questioned about the bill

(01:21:52):
that he signed that removed a requirement for doctors to
preserve the life of an infant.

Speaker 6 (01:21:56):
I want to I want to go back to, like
I think it was two.

Speaker 2 (01:21:58):
Thousand and six or seven, in Illinois, they had what
they call the Bornelive Infant Protection Act. That's when Barack
Obaum was the state senator in Illinois. This is actually
two thousand and six, I think, and he voted against it.
He was one of the big votes against that. Build.
What the Bornelive Info Protection Act was doing was it
was one of the first, similarly one of the first
of it's kind in the nation that was about codifying

(01:22:22):
health care for an infant that survived an abortion and
so that they wouldn't be denied care. The baby wouldn't
be denied care. What Tim Walls did, he did something
very very similar. He actually removed the requirement that demanded
doctors offer treatment after survived abortions and that they don't
have to report it because there was a reporting requirement

(01:22:43):
to the state. He fought to remove that. He was
questioned about that. Here listen to this.

Speaker 7 (01:22:50):
Yes, Governor, please respond, Look, this is one where there's
always something there.

Speaker 8 (01:22:53):
This is a very simple proposition.

Speaker 7 (01:22:55):
These are women's decisions to make about their health care decisions,
and the physicians who know best when they need to
do this trying to distort the way a law is written,
to try and make.

Speaker 8 (01:23:05):
A point that's not it. What was I wrong about?

Speaker 4 (01:23:07):
The governor? At least tell me what was that?

Speaker 8 (01:23:08):
That is not the way the laws written.

Speaker 7 (01:23:10):
Look, I've given how I've given this advice on a
lot of things that getting involved, getting against. That's been
misread and it was fact checked at the last debate.
But the point on this is is there's a continuation
of these guys to try and tell women or to
get involved. I use this line on this, just mind
your own business on this. Things work best when Roll
versus Wade was in place. When we do a restoration

(01:23:30):
of Rome, that works best. That doesn't preclude us from
increasing funding.

Speaker 2 (01:23:35):
Fortuarly, really under Walls, babies who were born alive and
botched abortions were not where it was all right to
deny them any kind of treatment after. And then Walt's
not only supported that, Walt's not only pushed for it,
but he removed the requirement for doctors to report the
babies who survived and then did not make it. That

(01:23:58):
is a true thing, and the fact that I wish
it would have been a little bit more aggressively pursued.
There's no way around it. I mean, that's literally what happened,
in fact, on his watch, eight infants, when he's during
it as he's governor. Eight infants were born alive, they
survived botched abortions. None of them received any care. There

(01:24:21):
was no attempt made to preserve their lives. They didn't
even receive basic comfort care. They were just left unattended.
And they also, up until twenty twenty three, Minnesota, they
did not punish the neglect of infants who were born alive,
who survived abortions.

Speaker 6 (01:24:40):
These babies would have survived with care.

Speaker 2 (01:24:43):
And they changed the the reporting requirement. So Walts's issue,
he didn't care so much about the dead babies. He
didn't want that to be reported to the states. So
that that was on his watch, so he had the
law changed to eliminate the reporting requirement. That is an
absolute fact. It doesn't matter if you're for abortion or

(01:25:06):
against abortion. That's the truth of the matter. Bottom line.
That is the I mean, the law is up there.
The Minnesota was the rare law that stated that born
alive abortions had to be publicly reported.

Speaker 6 (01:25:23):
But it was a very.

Speaker 2 (01:25:24):
Uncomfortable statistic for Democrats. So he worked with a Democrat
legislature in twenty three and they eliminated the born the
reporting requirement, and they also eliminated the state's legal obligation
for doctors, for nurses, and for medical professionals to administer
life saving care. It was included in the signed bill.

(01:25:47):
It was SF twenty nine to ninety five. So that
was a lie. It was That's an absolute lie. He also,
by the way, another quick thing. I didn't want to
go back to the guns thing, but I wanted to
point out he also made the false accusation that the
CDC was barred from researching as a health issue quote unquote,

(01:26:10):
gun violence.

Speaker 6 (01:26:10):
That's a false. That's a lie, and I've written about
that extensively.

Speaker 2 (01:26:14):
The CDC is barred from using taxpayer dollars for political
advocacy for or against the Second Amendment, which I think
is incredibly reasonable. They are barred from politicizing using your
tax dollars. This But notice that he omitted how in
this There are receipts of this, and I've written about this,

(01:26:36):
and so have a number of other outlets. There were
emails that were made public showing the gun control lobby
everyone from every Town, to Bloomberg, to the Brady Group
that were pressuring the CDC via email to remove from
the CDC's website the defensive gun usage statistics showing just

(01:26:56):
how many times firearms in the hands of law abiding
people were used in defense of their lives, in protection
of themselves or loved ones, and the emails in that
explicitly verbatim stated from these gun control advocates that they
were upset that the use and presentation of defensive gun
usage statistics on the cd website CDC website were a

(01:27:17):
complication to their anti gun narrative, and so the CDC
complied most happily and removed it. So if you want
to have a discussion about politicizing things or being barred
from doing something, let's look at how defensive gun usage
was removed by repeated harassing requests of the gun control lobby.

Speaker 9 (01:27:36):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 2 (01:27:42):
A woman was arrested and accused of a point three
four blood alcohol content while driving on the airport Taxiway
No Big Wis in Tulsa, Oklahoma. She was accused of
driving drunk just the other day they got a call
on my birthday of a lady who was driving a
silver he S on the tax siaway. She's blocking all
the out bound planes. Police though, were unable to find

(01:28:05):
her when they arrived, and then the next day they
got another call that literally two days in a row.
How First off, how in the world does that happen?
First day they get a call she blocked, they couldn't
find her when they arrived. Then they responded to a
similar call the next day. After again, air traffic Control
said there was a drunk driver and a silver Nissan

(01:28:26):
block in the runway plans trying to land. Planes trying
to land. Pilot said he was taxing his airplane when
he came up on the Nissan. He actually had to
get out of the plane and try to get the
driver to move out of the way, and they saw
the car full of beer cans. They arrested Bonnie Campbell
for a second offense filon a aggravated DUI. She was
taken to the hospital for treatment. Eighteen empty beer cans

(01:28:46):
inside her suv, along with a cardboard box, a cors light,
an empty six pack, and a garage bag full of
other beer cans. She was unstudying her feet, bloodshot icelord
speech thirty four on the point three to four on
the blood alcohol breathalyzer test, four times I legal limit.

Speaker 6 (01:29:02):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (01:29:02):
So she told Blace she was visiting family who have
a hangar at the airport, and jail records show her
home addresses in Texas.

Speaker 6 (01:29:09):
Just wow.

Speaker 2 (01:29:11):
Fat Bear Week a bear death caught on camera, postpones
fat Bear Week, plans that's an actual thing, Fat bear Week.

Speaker 6 (01:29:20):
It's fat bear Week.

Speaker 2 (01:29:21):
Two Alaskan grizzlies got into a fight and one of
the animals was killed, and it was captured on a
live stream run by explorer dot org and they were like,
oh my gosh, another bear killed. A bear killed another
one on the river. Ah, so now they're fat bear off.

Speaker 8 (01:29:35):
Here you go.

Speaker 11 (01:29:35):
Stick with us on the go and need a quick
news fix with a fun twist. Follow Dana's Absurd Truth
podcast for bite size and formative episodes perfect for your
busy schedule on Apple or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 2 (01:29:49):
How is the Left going to deal with the cognitive
dissonance that comes with me too believe all women? And
then the wait, second dude slapping a chick hard enough
to spin her around back in twenty twelve and Can
Film Festival. That story that's out today. And by the way,
there are people running down they've got photos of this,

(01:30:10):
our video of him with this chick arriving at the
twenty twelve Can Film Festival, which, by the way, why
was he going there? I don't know even know what
he does? What does he do? I don't really I'm
too lazy to look it up myself because I don't care.
But he was accused of forcefully slapping his girlfriend they've
been dating for three months, for flirting with another man
at this gala and they were in the valet line

(01:30:31):
at the Can Film Festival. And I don't know, man,
I just I don't know how he's redefining masculinity by
impregnating the nanny while he was married to his first
wife and then slapping a chick in twenty twelve. Wait,
didn't he he didn't even marry Kamla Harrison to like
what twenty fourteen, twenty sixteen. But she was like, I

(01:30:51):
helped him raise his kids? What nanny? No, I don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:31:00):
I got questions.

Speaker 2 (01:31:01):
I got some questions. So all that's all I'm saying,
Just you know how is the left going to deal
with that? I mean, this is these are the people
who are like Bred Cavanall literally raped everybody. It's better
to say who wasn't raped by Brad Kavanall.

Speaker 6 (01:31:15):
I mean there was like that. Remember how bad it was.

Speaker 2 (01:31:16):
It was so bad. I'm just saying, you know, I
don't know. I don't know how the left is gonna
deal with that.

Speaker 6 (01:31:25):
They are just weird.

Speaker 2 (01:31:26):
We have the two weirdest candidates on the left, and
their spouses are weird. That Gwynn lady, dude, I for
real think that she is an actual psychopath. Have you
seen her eyes? Look at her eyes? Or don't not
too close. I'm gonna give you. I'm gonna all the

(01:31:47):
millennial dudes, actually dudes in general, zoomers, all of you,
but particularly of the younger demographic. You see a chick
across the room that's got eyes like that, you divert
thy glance, sir, because she cray all right, like I'm
saving you so much drama and I'm saving I am. Look,
I am not wrong. Your sister here is not wrong.

(01:32:10):
Your sister in conservatism in Christ is not wrong. You
see a chick that's got eyes like that, and she
gives you the look from across the room, divert thy
glance because you don't want that crazy and Caine, I'm
not wrong, right, those chicks are like that.

Speaker 6 (01:32:26):
They got them crazy eyes.

Speaker 9 (01:32:28):
Seems to be a common thread.

Speaker 2 (01:32:30):
Yeah, it's like the good Lord above is like, this
one's weird, so we're gonna give them the eyes to match.

Speaker 6 (01:32:37):
I mean, as though you couldn't tell when she was
like I love the smell of burning tars and all that.

Speaker 2 (01:32:43):
And then what was the other thing that she did?
Turn the page?

Speaker 9 (01:32:47):
She talks to the crowd like most democrats do, as
though they're toddlers.

Speaker 2 (01:32:53):
It's yeah, she I mean she had her a whole
like turn the page? Can you say it with me?
It reminded me of that episode of It's s H
Shit's Creek, the television show where Moira Rose was trying
to tell her son David how to fold in the
cheese and she had no idea how to cook and
they were following her grandmother's like enchilada recipe or whatever.
She's like, David and I have to fall down that

(01:33:14):
chase and he's like, okay, what does that mean?

Speaker 6 (01:33:16):
What does it mean to fold in? The cheese. Well
do you just fold it and fold.

Speaker 2 (01:33:20):
And the cheese? And he's like, you keep saying that
to me, but what does that mean? Fold in the
chi I don't even think you know what that means.

Speaker 4 (01:33:26):
Just fold it in.

Speaker 6 (01:33:27):
It's the same thing. I got, the same vibe.

Speaker 2 (01:33:30):
Turn up page. I just want to throw the book
at you. That's all I want to do. Oh my gosh,
she just seems too don't and they seem to, Okay,
maybe this is me being weird. Let me let me
go in a little Let me go on a little
off road adventure.

Speaker 6 (01:33:47):
Real quick?

Speaker 2 (01:33:49):
Are you weirded out? When you meet people who are
too joyfully nice? Think, just think about it. Not like
people who are courteous, but people who are like, oh
my god, hello, you are so lovely, welcome, it is
so good to see you. That creeps me out so

(01:34:10):
bad because I'm not maybe you know, I I somewhere
sometimes when I have a thought, it's not in the
box or anywhere near the box. It's way outside the box,
out into the woods, down a path near the river,
and I'm just like, they're gonna eat me.

Speaker 6 (01:34:24):
It's like my first thought. Right, doesn't she give off
that vibe.

Speaker 2 (01:34:32):
Yeah, it's like.

Speaker 6 (01:34:36):
It's totally weird.

Speaker 2 (01:34:37):
I just I'm so I get so nervous about that,
and people are super nice, right just think about it,
like how many times have you and those people are
usually psycho killers. Tim Watson is kind of like that too,
you know, like all in person, he's all like, well,
you know, I'm just that nocle hood gook yok. But
then you know, behind the scenes, you know, he's like.

Speaker 6 (01:35:00):
He's like super nuts.

Speaker 2 (01:35:01):
He's super nuts.

Speaker 6 (01:35:04):
You know It's true.

Speaker 2 (01:35:05):
Come on, I just I just neither of them are
they I feel like, you know, they just they're like
the type of people that they invite you to a
dinner party You're like to eat me, Like why because
you're crazy? But I'm never wrong. These people are always nuts.
I look at Doug Emhoff and I feel like he's
trying too hard to be the second banana, you know
what I mean?

Speaker 6 (01:35:26):
Well, I'm just a wife guy. Were you a wife
guy when you were on top of your nanny? Just
a wife guy?

Speaker 2 (01:35:34):
Were you a wife guy when you were slapping that
chicken line at the Can't Film Festival? Valet? Huh?

Speaker 10 (01:35:42):
Don we just cover the do we go from the
talking heads to the drowning pool in one reference.

Speaker 6 (01:35:47):
We did you're correct, psycho killer kiss.

Speaker 2 (01:35:55):
Better? Yes we did. We did.

Speaker 6 (01:35:56):
Then that's full circle.

Speaker 2 (01:35:58):
There you go.

Speaker 6 (01:35:59):
Are you impressed yet? Our son? Are you impressed?

Speaker 8 (01:36:01):
Se i?

Speaker 2 (01:36:04):
But you know what I mean?

Speaker 6 (01:36:05):
Like he is? Is he a wife?

Speaker 2 (01:36:06):
Guy?

Speaker 6 (01:36:07):
What is that?

Speaker 2 (01:36:07):
That's what normal people would call a husband. But the
Left has to make up cutie little terms for everything. Right, Yeah,
it sounds so lame. I'm like you just like a
female copulatory organ. Stop it just you can't deal with it?

Speaker 6 (01:36:25):
All right?

Speaker 2 (01:36:26):
Aaron and Israel just gonna switch gears here. It's no
other better way to segue. So we're just gonna go
through it. So hmmm, I just think and like I said,
we've been following everything and waiting to hear because you
have uh Iran that says that they're they're just you know,

(01:36:47):
they're gonna they're gonna strike back, They're gonna Israel said
that they could actually they're considering just ending their nuclear program.
I do wonder why out of all the times, now
you know, Iran has decided we're not going to act
through a proxy. Who thise or has bellah or his
ballah and the HMAS. We're not going to act through

(01:37:10):
any of these proxies. We're just gonna do it ourselves
because now they're opening themselves up to full you know, aggression. Uh,
the un completely worthless you in they called for halting
the escalation in the Middle East guies. The United Nations
has weighed in the EWAN Secretary General Antonio Guterrez announced

(01:37:31):
the escalation of tensions. He denounced it, and he said
that we need to cease fire. Who are you telling
to cease fire? You tool bag? Well, I condemn it.
We need to cease fire. Who to tell Iran to
cease the fire? They this was not an all out
of war until they started cease firing. They started firing

(01:37:54):
and not ceasing through Lebanon. What are you doing? So
he released a stupid statement and as a result, he
is now persona non grata and he's banned from entering Israel.
According to Israeli Foreign Minister the Israel Katz, he declared
that General Antonio Kuterrez is persona non grata banned him

(01:38:15):
from entering the country because he did not categorically condemn
Iron's missile attack on Israel, which he didn't He's correct.
The cowardly UN Secretary General just said, quote, this must stop.
We absolutely need a thief fire. I condemn the broadening
of the Middle East conflict with escalation after escalation, That's

(01:38:35):
what he said. He added, and all out war must
be avoided in Lebanon at all calls, and sovereignty and
territory integrity of Lebanon must be respected direct quote Whoh,
you're missing a country here, dude. They had no beans
to pick until they got it tack again, what is
with these people? Blank? The UN? Blank? The UN. It

(01:38:58):
is the most worthless, rediculous organization. Oh but Dana, we
needed at least to keep up the appearance that we're
behaving civilly with each other. And wouldn't you want the
United States to control it and instead of it being
in another nation? Maybe I could be prevailed upon with
that sentiment ten years ago. Okay, maybe fifteen years ago,

(01:39:18):
but not anymore because this is worthless. I mean, they're condemning.
Notice how they won't even they can't even bring themselves
to mention Israel. Well, you know, the territorial integrity of
Lebanon must be respected. What about the territorial integrity of Israel.
They won't even mention Iran. They're just like poor Lebanon.
What about Iran that's using Lebanon as a launching base

(01:39:39):
for all of this?

Speaker 6 (01:39:42):
What about?

Speaker 2 (01:39:42):
What about? What is it the Jruiz people who have
been completely attacked by Hisballah and all of this, all
of these Iranian proxies in Lebanon, what about that? I mean,
they can't even bring themselves to condemn Iran, and they
can't bring themselves to defend Israel's territorial integrity.

Speaker 6 (01:40:01):
Burn, burn all of it. I'm done with all of it.

Speaker 2 (01:40:04):
This guy, this Euan Secretary General, are to be dragged
out of his offices in downtown cushy building there in Manhattan.
Every time in mid Manhattan on my way to look
WARDI I gotta go past it. Well, depending on what
part of midtime I'm coming from, I got to go
pass you in. I hate I You just feel the
evil that imanates from that building. It's just worthless. So yeah,

(01:40:29):
I would say that he's persona on Grada as well.
He added, Israel was going to continue to defend it
citizens and maintain its status with or without Antonio Guterres. Well,
he's absolutely correct on that. I mean, I can't even imagine.
They said, oh, we need to. The Secretary General demanded
that the international community support the four hundred and twenty
six million dollar humanitarian appeal launched today in Beirut. Why

(01:40:49):
don't you pay for that? You know the only why
don't Why don't you demand that Iran pays for it?
Because Iran did this, Iran did all of this. And
the Iranian people, by the way, this is the one
time i'm at I differentiate them from Gaza because Gazin's
voted for Hamas. They overwhelmingly love Hamas. Poll after poll

(01:41:12):
they love them. Some Hamas Hamas was so damn popular
that they were gonna win elections in the West Bank two.
But it's not the same in Iran. Those people have time,
have tried time and time again to stand up. Most recently,
the biggest one was the Green revolutional to date in
modern time. The Green Revolution went under Obama. Biden and

(01:41:35):
Obama turned a deaf ear to them. People in the
streets protesting. You know why, they covered their faces with
whatever they could get their hands on, Not because they
were trying to be trendy douchebags like black block and
everything over here in the United States because the Iranian
national their Iranian Revolutionary Guard was going and killing their
family if they found out that they had a member
of their family in the street protesting the regime. They

(01:41:56):
were sniping out protesters on rooftops. Do you remember Nita,
the beautiful young woman who was shot in the head
by a sniper by a member of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard.
She wasn't even actually part of the protests. Her and
her father were in the car driving back home for something.
They saw the protest. They parked the car to the

(01:42:17):
side of the road, they got out, and they walked
forward to get a close review. She wasn't even participating,
but it would it appeared to the guard member who
shot her that she was, and she got sniped through
the head, all on video, all on video. She fell
to the sidewalk and was dead in minutes and seconds,
actually her blood streaming out behind her on the sidewalk.

Speaker 6 (01:42:40):
Yeah, that's what happens in Iran.

Speaker 2 (01:42:41):
The people, that's the only This is one of the
very rare instances in which I separate the people from
the regime, because they have tried time and time again,
but they don't get the support from the United States
that United States gives to Hamas and Hamas's supporters. No,
my gosh, Nited States put up a damn floating port

(01:43:02):
to give more supplies to Hamas. But they were completely
mia Fribranians during the Green Revolution. By the way, I
saw a picture of Jimmy Carter wheeled out in a wheelchair.
What is it? What was he seeing was like blue angels?
What was it?

Speaker 8 (01:43:18):
Yeah?

Speaker 9 (01:43:19):
Was that a chair? Was that like a gurney?

Speaker 2 (01:43:21):
It's something?

Speaker 6 (01:43:22):
Because he celebrated his one hundredth birthday.

Speaker 2 (01:43:24):
How sad is it that he may not live to
see the absolute pooh cano that he created in Iran
in the Middle East when he opened that Pandora's box
with the iatola and the shot and all that.

Speaker 6 (01:43:35):
How how sad.

Speaker 2 (01:43:36):
That he may not live long enough to see that
come full circle? Huh?

Speaker 11 (01:43:42):
Makes some common sense of the crazy headlines. With a
Dana Show podcast, you're on the go guide for getting
up to speed on today's most important stories. Subscribe on YouTube,
Apple or your favorite podcast platform.

Speaker 2 (01:43:55):
Welcome back to the radio program. It's your professional radio
Lady Lovable. Promote to Dana Lash with you as we
close out this third hour. I'm not going to take
Cane's Today's stupidity cut, although it is fabulous. I have
plenty no no, no, because you were very protective of it,
so I'm allowing you to keep it.

Speaker 9 (01:44:13):
Was what were the signs that I was very protected?

Speaker 6 (01:44:15):
You got Gwen Wall's eyes.

Speaker 2 (01:44:18):
Your eyes morphed into Gwen Walls Wow, And I was
temporarily scared. I was like, well, there it is right there.
That's uh he went crazy.

Speaker 9 (01:44:26):
Yeah, if that's true, I don't blame.

Speaker 2 (01:44:28):
Yeah, right, I mean not even not even messing with that.
Uh but uh, we got that strike that's ongoing. So far,
there's we're just gonna watch everything get expensive as everybody
dukes it out. And we'll have more on that as
we follow up on that tomorrow. So far, there's not
a heck of a lot of development with it, just
people on the lines. Uh, but uh, you know, we'll

(01:44:50):
we'll see. And also make sure you sign up at Substack,
chapter and verse because I'll have some stuff out. Any
kind of polling that we get following the VP debate,
I'll make sure to include it in your news letter.

Speaker 6 (01:45:00):
Although I really.

Speaker 2 (01:45:01):
Don't think it's going to move the needle all that much.
I really don't. I think people at this point, especially
when you come to the number two guys, they're pretty
much set in their mind what they're going to do.
You know, all right, go ahead and play your very protected.
You're protective of this.

Speaker 9 (01:45:13):
Part, right. This is Tim Walls. You know, he was
kind of pressed on this last night at the debate
when he lied. They didn't misspeak, he he lied. And
this is him addressing that as the press just minutes
ago asked him about it.

Speaker 14 (01:45:27):
Yeah, look, I have my dates wrong. I was in
Hong Kong and China in nineteen eighty nine, that that
move from Hong Kong into China.

Speaker 8 (01:45:39):
It was profound for me. That was the summer of democracy.
I said.

Speaker 14 (01:45:42):
It's where I understood how sacred democracy was because what
I encouraged me.

Speaker 9 (01:45:45):
This is him trying to explain it away as though
he misspoke because it was the same year. I guess,
but I remember, I remember where I was during the
Challenger explosion. I remember where I was during nine to eleven.
He doesn't remember where he was during the team sport.

Speaker 2 (01:45:59):
Since he got married on the date, because it was
so important to have remember. Yeah, yeah, I mean he
picked that date because he got so.

Speaker 9 (01:46:06):
He's very important to more intentional than stupid.

Speaker 2 (01:46:08):
Yeah, I'm telling you what. Make sure you find us YouTube, Facebook, like,
and subscribe. Sign up over at substec chapter and verse.
I will be back behind the mic with you tomorrow.
Have a great evening.
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