Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
The absolutely breaking law. Oh I yes do.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
Look at Arizona versus USC the's breaking law.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
But look me in the Denver Mayor. We agree on
one thing.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
He's willing to go to jail. I'm willing to put
him in jail because there's a statue. It's title eight
in nice days called thirteen twenty four a triple I.
And what it says is it's a felony if you
knowingly harbor and concealed illegal and from immigration authorities.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
The absolutely breaking law.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
I just can't believe how many times this has to
be said. It's another reason why I'm so incredibly excited
for Tom Holman to take to take over, because I mean,
it's it's just needed, it's just needed. So welcome to
the program. It is the top of our first hour,
(00:44):
and your a lovable curmudgeon here with you, Dana lash So.
We we're going to get into all of this stuff.
But this is the like I like Tom Homan, and
I'm just I am just I know as you all
are on pens and needles waiting for all of this
(01:04):
to get situated where it concerns the cabinet and get
these cabinet posts filled and there's some some of the
selections are not what I would like, and it's you know,
they need to be something that we like because we
we got to deal with it. So we're gonna get
into all of this. Welcome to the show. It's Thanksgiving
(01:25):
Eve Eve, and we've got culture. We've got some actual
good news. I can't believe I'm saying this about DEEI stuff,
because it feels like the pendulum is swinging the other
way and that we're actually making some ground, gaining some
ground with us instead of constantly fighting and losing and
(01:47):
having to deal with all these woke skolds out there.
So there's some good news on the horizon. We're going
to touch on that today. We're also going to get into,
you know, obviously all of the latest with the cabinet.
We got domestic pol I was reading a survey from
Gallup this morning saying that people's their confidence in the economy.
(02:08):
I'm sure you're really surprised by this has improved post election. Gee,
I wonder why. And then of course the cost of
Thanksgiving food. We got to talk about that that we
have had that discussion too, because they're still trying to
push this idea that somehow we're all feeding people on
like mounds of people on what just like twenty fifty dollars.
(02:32):
We were talking about this the other day. It's still
going it's still going on. The left is still trying
to defend this stuff. So I don't know. So anyway,
welcome to the program. Happy Thanksgiving. EV. One of the
things that we've seen and we're getting some whispers is
to what we can expect from the administration, they haven't really.
One of the things that was floated out there was
this idea that he was going to that he was
(02:54):
going to have a basically get rid of those who
were serving who are I guess identify as transgender. And
the spokesperson came out and said that that's not something
that they had float or that they have made a
decision on. Rather, so there was a I just noticed,
and I know you saw those headlines too. There were
quite a lot of them yesterday, and I was kind
(03:15):
of wondering where some of them were coming from. But
apparently that didn't originate with the campaign. It kind of
makes me wonder if someone was floating that in an
effort to maybe move the needle for the administration. I
mean it's definitely possible. I don't know, but that's one
of the things that that is not certain that they
(03:35):
said that they hadn't made a decision on a couple
of the other things, some of the tariffs. The discussion
on the tariffs, which we've talked about. He has said
that and made it a huge priority, you know, in
his you know, like the first I guess month that
he's in office, he's gonna have to do a lot
of stuff with executive order because so many people have
(03:56):
been taken out of the House unfortunately, and you know,
whether or not there's the appetite to go back in
and make sure that we're passing legislation for this remains
to be seen. But he's going to have to do
quite a lot with executive order the first probably the
first few weeks, just because we've got special elections that
have to happen. You're not going to have all of
your Senate seated and your house seated. You're not gonna
(04:19):
well your house particularly, So that's what makes me look
at this one headline where they were talking about tariffs
on Mexico, Canada and China. That's part of his first
rash of executive orders. Now this is something that again
I get weird with executive orders because you really need
congressional action on this stuff. And reading the Planet said
(04:40):
they were looking at imposing a twenty five percent tariff
on products imported from Mexico and Canada. This was one
of the only day one, first week, first month things
that he's put out that he's had on his truth
Social account. The other stuff like I was telling you
about the trans under soldier thing, that's all. That was
(05:01):
also something I don't know where that came from, but
they said they had made a decision on that. So
this he said, one of my executive orders, he said
on True Social he's going to sign the documents necessary
to charge a twenty five percent tariff on all products
coming into the United States. And he said this tariff
is going to remain into effect until such time as
drugs ventanyl illegal aliens stop the invasion of our country.
(05:22):
That's what he put on True Social. And then Mexico
was responding saying that they were that they would that
they would in kind do something similar that they would
they would probably well the look at they'll look at
implementing a tariff on US products. I don't know if
they can withstand something like that, to be quite honest
with you, but why what all the United States would
(05:47):
have to do is immediately stop the flow across the
border and just say we're going to stop with green cards,
We're going to stop with all this stuff then, and
we're going to just specifically target you Mexico with I mean,
there's a lot of stuff that they could do that
doesn't necessarily it's not necessarily it doesn't have to be
tariff in response or increasing tariffs against Mexico they decide
to be retaliatory over all of this, but it's it is.
(06:10):
This is one of the things that the right is
going to have to debate. The right's going to have
to debate it because there are some of the right
that I think that they're more libertarian leaning, that are
very much against tariffs. And I get it in some instances.
I don't support it in every instance, but I do
think you can't pretend that you have a free market
when other countries are levying tariffs upon our products and
(06:33):
yet we're completely supposed to let everyone have free access
to ours. You know, it can't exactly go both ways,
so or it has to. I mean, you have to
that door has to be able to swing both ways.
You can't just have it, you know, one particularly, So
that's honestly would be like one of the first things
that they would need, I mean really that the United
States would have a lot at its disposal as a
(06:55):
way to push back against any kind of trade retaliation
or anything. For Mexico. They said, oh, oh yeah, we would,
just we would. We'll do tariffs of our own. But again,
the visas that we grant. What's the number of visas
so for this is fiscally your twenty twenty three the
type the new lawful permanent residence status for Mexico. The
(07:18):
total for that period was one hundred and eight and thirty.
All you gotta do is just turn it off. If
Mexico wants to FA, then FO and just do it.
Just like they'll immediately stop. They will immediately stop. So
there's there's one thing you can do in the meantime.
The uh, we'll wait and see, because China is obviously
(07:38):
not taking that taking that disc well, that's a whole
other topic. We're gonna say that when for Steve and
Yates when we come back for Thanksgiving. But the tariff
and the fight over this uhere where it has to
do with Canada, I don't. We have a really good
relationship with Canada. But he makes a point about the
drugs coming across the border, and a lot of that
(07:59):
is lack of interior andfment in Mexico. I mean, just
a complete lack of enforcement. So you have to have
a partner at the border as well, and they can't
just speak constantly partnering with China. You have to have
a partner at the border in order to implement for
this to for everything to work well, for us to
stop the flow of drugs across the border. I don't know.
(08:19):
I just want to get Tom home in an office.
I'm so tired of talking about these damn nominations. I
just want to wait and get some We know who
they are, We've lodged our disagreements with them. I'm not
Fox News, and I'm not going to sit here and
talk about the same damn appointments for a week after week.
God helped me. Not going to happen. There's other stuff
to touch on. Nothing's changing with these Hey, guess guess what.
(08:40):
The people that were nominated still the same people that
are nominated nothing's changed. No one's sprouted another head, they
haven't grown a third leg, nothing's changed. Same people. So
one of the other this is our business insider, the
president's vow. I don't know if this was a vow
as much as it was maybe a suggestion to use
(09:04):
US troops for mass deportations could face intense resistance starting
from within the military. Hey Kane, what's the uh what's
the job of the president? What they call him?
Speaker 4 (09:19):
Well, he's the commander in chief, he's the head of
the military. He's the one that is the a number
one authority as it relates to the military.
Speaker 3 (09:30):
So what if what if I were to tell, you know,
my bosses at Radio America, i just don't really feel
like doing this. I'm just not gonna. And I just
you know, told him every time they like put a thing,
I'm not doing this, I'm not doing this one. I'm
not doing this one. Yeah. Uh no, I'm not gonna.
I'm not gonna cooperate with you on this. I'm not
doing that wouldn't go overwell, wouldn't go overwell for anybody
in their job, right. But yet, why are they leaking
(09:53):
to the press saying, yeah, we're not going to go
along with any of this, and he's just speculating, by
the way, he's not kicking out step by step plan.
And I love all these people that are like, well,
they they google things like well, I mean, let's look,
you know, you have the uh, the Act that bars
you know, federal federalized guardsmen from acting as law enforcement.
It's oh, suddenly, now you guys are love the Constitution.
(10:15):
You're gonna start you're gonna start citing it. You're gonna
start citing parts of the Constitution. But wait a minute.
How What gets me is they don't they think that
you're you're over extending to send people who are here
illegally home, and you're also over extending to enforce any
(10:36):
kind of border law. None of that makes sense, and
that's where we are. So I don't know. I just feel, hmm, well, yes,
you know you we're going to cite the Pasi Coomatatis
Act and we're gonna bar active duty and we can't. Oh,
suddenly they're citing the Constitution. Suddenly they love it. And
by the way, this is something that Tom Holman had
suggested as well. He had said that troops could assist
(11:00):
immigration dragnets through non enforcement roles.
Speaker 4 (11:03):
UH.
Speaker 3 (11:04):
And that's completely that's because it is a national security issue. UH.
And of course they haven't released he hasn't put out
a step by step plan on true social about it.
But that's something that they've you know, they've speculated about
and they've suggested. But we'll see. But the idea that
you're going and you're gonna grab people who are in
the country legally and you're gonna you're gonna deport that's
(11:26):
not what they're talking about. People who I mean, I
don't know, do you have to draw a picture? How
much more how much more clear can you make it
for these people? There's literally there's a difference between coming
in illegally and coming in illegally, major difference, major difference.
And he can technically legally employ deployed the National Guard
if they're working with state governors and it's all for
(11:49):
uh domestic law enforcement. That's absolutely allowed. That's it because
they're operating under state control, not federal control. So that's
absolutely allowed. So I think people miss some of that.
We have a lot more on the way as we
roll towards headlines and getting you set up for Thanksgiving
break so you have something to offend the Biden voters
(12:11):
at your family table about as we move our partners
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Speaker 6 (14:15):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 3 (14:20):
It can stop this, they're saying, forecast our warning of
possible winter storms across the country during Thanksgiving week. Stop it.
It's going to be eighty degrees in Texas tomorrow. It's
sixty degrees today. It's absolutely frigid. This is just artic.
It's frigid, sixty degrees. It's some of the far comes
on eighty degrees tomorrow. My head's going, what's happening? Everyone?
(14:44):
Sinusys are like, why does nature hate us? So they
said that another round of winterry weather could complicate stop
it right now, could complicate travel and talking about snow.
I apparently Montana are already getting snow. That's crazy. You
guys are old. I don't know, man, I can't. I
like to look at it, you know, maybe like touch it,
(15:06):
and then I'm done, finished, Finitoed can't handle it anymore.
It's too cold. It's like a no, I can't. You can't. Also,
let's see New York's meatpacking district is gonna say goodbye
to its last meat packer, and a sixty story tower
could be on the way. That's like now, like the
really already bougie it's been like that for the last
twenty years, a real already place. Are they gonna call
(15:26):
it meat packing anymore? I mean if they're the last,
because that's where all the meat used to go. Now
it's like all luxury, high end stuff and clubs and
all this. But yeah, that's where actually all the people
went to pack meet and they called it the meatpacking
district for a reason. And now it's just no, it's
not gonna now. It's not Now it's all like bougie
(15:49):
and offices and everything else. So the last one is
that's kind of sad. I don't know why, but that,
you know, because nobody's I mean, pretty soon they're gonna
call it something different. Butterball. It's facing oh boy, it's
facing a Thanksgiving turkey boycott, of course, it's discussing sex
abuse allegations resurface. It's slaughterhouse workers torturing and sexual abusing turkeys.
Speaker 7 (16:14):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (16:17):
Wow, Peta. I don't dislike PETA, but I think they
go way over the top with stuff. But they launched
an investigation in their Butterball's Ozark, Arkansas location, and they
said that they were I mean, torturing them. They weren't,
you know they would. I can't tell you everything that
(16:37):
they did, but you probably have an idea. I just
find that to be heinous. That's heinous, Like we don't
need to do that. I like eating meat. Don't try
to like make me hate you and make me not
want to eat your turkeys. Quit you know, just be nice.
You can still work with animals and be nice. You
can still prepare them for slaughter and be nice. Right,
It's like the Patrick Swayze roadhouse, Matra be nice because
(16:59):
these people make me want to not be nice. And
our brains love taking shortcuts with everything because we're lazy.
We're a lazy species. We are coming up. We got
a lot more on the way. The story of socialism
is failure, which led ultimately to the First Thanksgiving. We're
going to get into that all kinds. Oh Alec Baldwin
says that we're ignorant people. Americans are an ignorant people. Yeah,
(17:22):
we'll stay with us. We've got a lot more our
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(17:45):
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Speaker 8 (18:49):
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Speaker 3 (19:01):
I got to tell you, I'm still mad about this.
Welcome back to the program Dana Lash with you. We're
at the top of this first hour, actually sorry, bottom
of this first hour. Caina and I were talking about
this on break because this I don't know why, but
this has made me mad and I'm still mad about it.
You ever like read something and you're like, you know,
still mad, stay mad? Yeah, that's yeah, this is uh,
(19:28):
this is after I saw what's his name, Frank, Frank
chunk'sn sorry, verbal type on it stays.
Speaker 9 (19:35):
This is.
Speaker 3 (19:38):
He put this thing out. I'm pulling this up right. Okay,
here it is. I wanted to make sure I get
the article work because it was CBS. I kept thinking
it was ABC at CBS and they were saying, oh, yeah,
you know, Thanksgiving dinner prices they're dropping. Oh my gosh,
no they're not. And then they were trying to do
like a cost of ten that the average cost of
Thanksgiving dinner for ten is going to be fifty eight
(19:59):
dollars and it's nine percent less. And you're supposed to
applaud for Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. You're all supposed
to applaud. Are you applauding because you can feed? Apparently,
in some kind of psycho world you can feed ten
people for fifty eight dollars for Thanksgiving dinner. I've had
some smart asses on X go oh yeah, you can
(20:21):
all you got, and I want to slap their teeth
out of their faces, out of the meat sack that
they call ahead. And here's why, because they're lying, I
told Canaan. Then I'm like this one guy was running
his mouth that is like, well, I was able to
get gravy for a dollar. First off, what do you
mean get gravy? You poser? What the heck is that
you make the gravy? What is the get gravy?
Speaker 10 (20:41):
What is that?
Speaker 3 (20:42):
Oh? My gosh? All right, anyway, gosh, I just who
would want to eat at that guy's house? He's like,
the guy doesn't clean his ice maker. He's one of
those guys. Anyway, they were running their mouths at Cana
and I and I said something kind of mean, and
I should I felt like I should repeat it. Most
normal people would try to stuff that deep down within.
(21:03):
I celebrate it. I happy Thanksgiving. And I told and
I said, you know, the only the guys he doesn't.
This is a dude who does not shop. He's never
prepared a meal. This dude has never been in side.
Speaker 10 (21:14):
You know what.
Speaker 3 (21:14):
He's got his stay at home, repressed female taking care
of everything back for him at the house so he
can pretend to be a progressive maile on X and
try to lecture everybody else what they're doing for Thanksgiving dinner?
How high are you to think ten people for fifty
eight dollars? Now, you could maybe get close to it,
but you ain't getting it for fifty eight dollars unless
(21:34):
you're getting You're pulling stuff out of your garden and
shooting your own birds, just saying yeah, no joke. We
were looking at the prices like I think for ten people.
First off, let's establish something. I think the idea of
how much a single person, how much turkey a one
(21:55):
singular person eats, is greatly misunderstood in this nation, greatly misunderstood.
And I'm not gonna lie if you put a pound
of turkey meat, because I am the person who eats
like the vegetables and the meat, and I try not
to mess around too much. I might sneak some yams.
I try not to mess around with it too much
because you know, starts is not as not as healthy.
(22:16):
But if I'm one of those people, I don't know
how much I should tell this. Okay, so I will
eat like a man, right? I Look, why are you
so eager to volunteer that? When have you seen me
eat like a man?
Speaker 4 (22:33):
Every time I've ever seen you eat? What do you mean?
I feel like it's so it's to the point where
it actually invokes competition, and me, I'm just trying to
think where I'm like, I need to eat more of
a man than Dana.
Speaker 3 (22:48):
I mean I could sit down and I could put
away a pizza. I just have discipline and choose not to.
It's a choice every day.
Speaker 4 (22:53):
Yeah, I have less discipline.
Speaker 3 (22:56):
I mean, if there's you know, sweet potatoes, I love
those things like that. I don't like turkey except on Thanksgiving.
Hate it. Hate turkey Thanksgiving. Something flips in my brain.
I'm like, love it. But if you put a pound
a turkey on a plate and hand it to me,
that's gonna look easily. Why is because we're like, oh, well,
this person will eat a pine. Y'all, you're gonna eat
(23:17):
more than a pound. I'm going to tell you this.
And it's protein, and it's okay, it's good poultry. It's protein.
You're all right, you're gonna eat more than a pound.
Someone sitting down figuring out how much, you know, how
what the size of bird we should get, and I'm
looking like, well, what do you think maybe two pounds
on average? Yeah, I want to chat to weigh in
(23:41):
on those.
Speaker 4 (23:41):
But you have to understand that when you get the
full weight of the turkey, it's the bones too. You're
not expecting people eat bones.
Speaker 3 (23:47):
So there's like a good, well, well there's someone at
the table.
Speaker 4 (23:49):
I don't like, yes, gonn four seed the bone, but
it's the I think what it boils down to is
a certain percentage of the bird is actually bone. So
you can't take if you've got a twenty three pound bird,
maybe eighteen of that is meat something like that.
Speaker 3 (24:04):
Yeah, so see, you got to think about that stuff.
That's a very good point, sir, very good point. So
a couple I don't know. I'm just thinking, like, for
ten people, you're probably gonna need a twenty pound plus bird,
twenty to twenty four pound bird. Those are like twenty
two dollars at the grocery store near me, depending on
(24:24):
what kind of potatoes you get. I mean, if you're
gonna do, if you're gonna do sweet potatoes, you're looking
at without tax, it's about ninety cents potating. They're actually
they were a dollar forty nine they were. They're on
sale potato. Yeah, you could get six dollars without tax
(24:46):
a five pound bag of like the rest at potatoes, right,
because you got to have your mashed potatoes so you
can create your gravy crater. And that's how kids, you
can tell if someone's a communist. If they're not creating
a gravy crater with their mashed potatoes, they're not American,
they're not human. They're probably from Mars and they're Commis.
That's like the worst of all the things, right, they're
(25:07):
communist aliens, like from Mars. Yeah, they need to be told.
Everybody knows this. So I'm not even getting into like
if you do a vegetable, like if you do green beans,
if you and I try not to do processed food
as much as possible because it's horrible for you and
it's just better to to make it, and like we'll
do like we're doing a broccoli cast role this year
(25:27):
because we always did, like a green beans and nobody
eats it. Nobody eats green beans. My mom is always like, oh,
I love the green beans. Doesn't touch a bean? Make
them for every year. Woman, don't touch a bean. And
I'm like, she tells all that, you know, she's telling
the kids, Oh, I love Nana loves the green bean.
Now you don't, Nan, I'm watching you. You're not eating them.
Speaker 4 (25:47):
I'm not a fan of the French cut ones, But
I do like like the blue Lake cut green beans.
Speaker 3 (25:51):
I mean, I'll eat them if I feel like I
have to. Otherwise I'll scoot them around on my plate
and pretend not gonna lie, not gonna lie. So it's
like a broccoli cashle. You can make your pumpkin pies.
We usually do a chocolate pie. All this is getting
upwards up over the fifty eight dollars. And I ain't
even getting into the wine or if you have any
(26:14):
Bruce Ki's, any kind of adult nectar. I'm not even
getting into any of that soda that sounds weird to say, Sody's.
If y'all's getting some Sodi's, you know what, it's Thanksgiving,
evve I can do that. I'm gonna slide right into it.
You know, if y'all, if you're all gonna get some Soady's,
then you know whichever sodisians all want.
Speaker 4 (26:32):
If you're more North, it's pop.
Speaker 3 (26:35):
That's who calls it pop. People in the North, No,
do they really call it pop? Yeah, like pop.
Speaker 4 (26:41):
There's a lot of people that have migrated from the
North to the South that call it pop still, But yeah, get.
Speaker 3 (26:46):
Them peoples pop for them, it's sody or coke. Everything's coke,
even when you mean pepsi, because I like pepsi. It's
all I'll have a coke. Now I want that other coke.
I've literally had members of my family say this and
I'm like, you mean pepsy because it's it's not called
other coke. My point in going through all of this
is that these stooges at CBS who are like, oh, yeah,
(27:11):
we're going to stall fifty dollars for ten people, so perfect.
What are you eating? What are they eating? They're trying
to act like that it's historically affordable. If you google
that or google if you put it on X. All
these people are saying the same thing. Oh, it's historically affordable.
Historically affordable, it's down five percent. Prices did historically change
(27:35):
definition while we were sleeping. Let's check, because I wait,
does historically still mean the same. I'm just gonna put
it in here. Yeah, I mean in accordance to or
with respect to history. So yeah, they're trying to make
this a really big thing for you. Oh it's a stort,
but that does that's just like, you know, a man
(27:57):
can't be a woman, This can't be historically low it's
not Uh, it doesn't make any it doesn't make any sense.
So this idea, and I'm just looking at all the prices.
This is just that, Mike. And I'm not looking at
bougie stuff. This ain't at like Whole Foods or Central
Market or none of that stuff. This is at your Kroger,
you know, at your at your at your all these even.
(28:18):
I bet at all these it's even. And I like
all these people. Sometimes I think toss shade on all these,
all these is good, But people toss and shade on
people act like they're mad that they got choices for
affordable food stuffs. So it doesn't matter where it is.
Speaker 10 (28:33):
I mean, the the.
Speaker 3 (28:35):
You're not spending, you're not going to be spent. That's
a that's a stretch. Here's some water, and everyone gets
the thinnest slice of turkey because we've got to make
this meat stretch, okay, and uh, here's our stuffing and uh,
we just got I will say, the sliced cranberry sauce.
That's always that's what maybe a little maybe a dollar
(28:56):
fifty without tax? Actually what is that? Let's look that up,
because well, I just don't know why they're trying to lie.
Now they're trying to lie to you about how much
you're spending. There were people who were like, I got
a family six and I was already at you know,
one hundred and and seventy something, and you know this
is with and now I'm gonna have to go out
and get extra me because we got other people coming,
(29:18):
and then that's going to you know, increase it even more,
et cetera. I mean, everybody, when I commented on this
on X there were so many people in the thread
that were sharing like this is we have eight people,
we have ten people, We're having twelve people, or having
six people, we're having three people or whatever, And every
single one of them was spending more than the fifty
eight dollars. And none of these people were going to
(29:39):
Whole Foods and buying like the super bougie stuff, you
know where they go and they massage the turkeys and
give them a scout massage and it's like a Warner
Brothers cartoon. They're not doing any of that. I mean,
it's just regular grocery store. Nobody's spending. So why this
push right now? Nobody's believing this. This just looks so stupid.
Has the korenge pr remarked about it yet, because I'm
(30:01):
waiting for her to take the victory lap at the
press conference. I'm just waiting for that to happen. I
don't know, but there it is. We have more on
the way as we roll towards the conclusion of this
first hour, and as we do so, we're able to
do it because you have people who bring you the program.
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Speaker 8 (31:31):
Get the load down on the latest news with a
side of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to the Data
Show podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast,
like SAMs through.
Speaker 4 (31:43):
The au Glass. So are the days of the United States.
Speaker 3 (31:48):
In Man regards, the selection cycle did not go as
I had hoped.
Speaker 9 (31:52):
In response to Trump's national immigration policies, Frederick Mayor Mike
O'Connor pledging to carve out space in his local budget
are a legal advocacy fund, which would use tax dollars
to pay undocumented immigrants attorneys fees as they find deportation.
Speaker 3 (32:09):
Woo, well, this is going to be forever a fight.
That's the Maryland mayor. Yes, tax dollars are going to
be used to pay these legal fees. This is taxation
without representation. That's not what we pay our dollars for.
And this is why I honestly think, why are we
(32:31):
paying taxes for it to be used in ways that
are not ways that we the governed, through the power
of our consent, have consented to.
Speaker 1 (32:42):
You.
Speaker 3 (32:43):
That's not the agreement is that you're going to act
in accordance with the law. You will enforce laws on
national sovereignty, on legal entry, and you have this amount
of taxpayer dollars to use for strictly that purpose. That's
(33:03):
not what this is, to pay the legal fees. So
do you think that if I illegally entered Mexico that
Mexico would use Mexican nationals taxpayer dollars to pay for
my defense? Or if I tried to illegally enter any country?
What about Saudi Arabia? I think Saudi Arabia would pay
(33:27):
for my legal defense. What about Argentina? What about China.
The leftloves China. I think that they would pay for
my Why is it the country in which you enter illegally?
Why are they responsible for paying for the legal fees
of someone who willfully and knowingly broke the law. That's wow.
(33:48):
Such an an abuse of elected authority, Such an abuse.
How do these people keep voting for this stuff and
thinking that it's these people are so cavalier with everybody
else money. Notice it's always these people on the left
that support this. Oh yes we have to have higher taxes,
Oh yes, we need to be able to pay this,
But none of these lazy grifters will ever themselves write
(34:09):
a check to the treasury. The treasury would accept it.
You actually can give more. I don't know if people
are aware of this, but you can't actually give more
in terms of what you pay in taxes than what
you're And you can tell them to keep it, and
you can tell you you can even reject your refund.
But no one on the left does this. Notice that
(34:29):
they act like they are somehow incapable of doing this
unless the federal government or some government entity forces everybody
to do it. Well, then that's not you choosing to
do something of your own free will. That's you being
forced to do something. And this is one of the
(34:51):
reasons why government's a horrible facilitator of charity. You're removing
from people any any kind of incentive, any kind of
anything to do something themselves. If these people wanted to
do it, let them do it. They can fund it.
But why are they not doing that? Why is the
leftnot why are these leftists that are is this mayor?
Do you think this mayor is paying extra.
Speaker 1 (35:12):
To have.
Speaker 3 (35:14):
His money used for the defense of people who legally
entered the country. I mean, I don't know what defense
they could have. I mean, yes, I completely entered the
country illegally. Yes, of course, I don't know what defense
they could have. This is this is a huge problem
we are We're we're the leftist facilitating our demise through
policies like this. I mean, coming up, we've got this
(35:36):
story about how they are actually and I know NYPD
believes this. I mean, this should just assumed fact that
Trenda Raguan all these other gangs from you know, like
Venezuela and elsewhere, they've been recruiting youth in these shelters
that they're putting illegal aliens in and storing them there.
(35:56):
It's just this is wild to me. We saw what
happened in Germany when they started doing this stuff. We
saw what happened in Britain when they started doing this
stuff free and fast and loose with their borders. We're
doing the same thing. We're witnessing the same thing happening
here in the United States. This just is it makes
me not why the hell are we paying taxes? That
this is what our money is used for? Why I asinine?
(36:23):
And then this is the exact same government that expects
you to understand why, Oh, we've got to give more
money to Ukraine. Oh, we've got to got to do
We've got to give more money to Ukraine. Oh, we've
got to give more money here. We've got to donate
more money here, more tax dollars. I tell you, I know,
I'm gonna have a lot of talk about it Thanksgiving dinner.
(36:44):
Aren't you now? Coming up? Speaking of Thanksgiving dinner, do
you realize that this nation was founded by failed socialists,
They failed horrifically learned their lesson, and that from that
capitalism took route. I'm going to explain all of that
(37:06):
because it plays into the Capitalist Thanksgiving. We got all
of that and more coming up. Stick with us, Welcome back.
We're at the top of this second hour. You can
listen Coast to Coast channel thirty forty seven Direct TV
as well. Make sure you check out the podcast. I mean,
you're already listening somehow, so you kind of know. Also substack,
chapter and verse. Always good stuff over there. This is
(37:26):
breaking news. A ceasefire between Israel and Hesbela is expected
to take effect within hours, according to a US official
per CBS News, it's been widely reported. Now they said
it's supposed to be announced today. Now it's not Israel
and Hamas, it's Israel and Hesbla. Hesbela is the Iranian
backed terror outfit that's in that's up to the north
(37:47):
of Israel, so it's in Lebanon. But apparently this is
supposed to halt the conflict there within hours. Apparently they've
come to I mean, I'm sure we'll get more information.
It's axpeck to be announced today that they've secured a
ceasefire in Lebanon, ending the fighting between Israel and Hesbela
(38:07):
for now under the deal. It is a being reported
as a full and permanent ceasefire implemented immediately. Sixty days
permitted for the full withdrawal of Israeli forces, a gradual
withdrawal to allow Lebanese forces to mobilize and move into
secure the area, but the trigger time is immediate, set
to take effect later today. The first peel off of
(38:29):
Israeli troops was to begin within the next ten days,
and Hesbela is expected to pull its forces and have
a weaponry back about twenty miles from the Israeli border.
They said that the Prime minister had already convened the
country's security cabinet to discuss the proposal, as they have
to agree to any sort of ceasefire agreement, and they
(38:51):
said that Lebanon's government also had to unilaterally approve the deal,
and officials say that that is expected, and the ceasefire
this is would be this is the deadly's conflicts since
nineteen ninety and Lebanon, so this would end this. NETANYAHUO
is going to be dressing addressing his nation actually probably
within the hour, which is about eight pm their time,
(39:11):
one pm Eastern and actually now really twelve pm Central
one pm MESEM so about now. And the French didn't
help negotiate the deal, but apparently they're going to be
part of the implementation somehow, and that's pretty much pretty
much it. They said that they this was something that
(39:32):
blink And told reporters after they met when they were
in G seven, they met with their G seven counterparts
in Italy, and he was saying that they were moving
towards brokeuring this diplomatic effort. So that's the latest. Apparently
it's going to be a ceasefire between Israel and HESBLA,
the Iranian terror regime there in Lebanon. So it's Thanksgiving
(39:56):
eve eve and one of the things that I always
like to go through when I homeschooled my kids up
up until junior high, this is one of the lessons
that we looked at every single Thanksgiving. And it's based
on the writings of William Bradford, who was the governor
of Plymouth. And as you know, that was like the
first big, I guess colony that was being established here
(40:19):
in the United States. And I had said before we
went to break that the United States, actually the society
here was it was actually started by failed socialists who
really horribly failed and they had tried, they tried socialism.
There was extensive historical writing on this from William Bradford,
(40:44):
who was the governor at the time, who talked about
all of this when they first came to the New World,
and this was like in sixteen twenty. You know, yes,
they were fleeing religious persecution, but they also wanted to
get away from the old world and create something new.
And so that is where the Plymouth Colony. That's how
(41:04):
that that that came to be. And they were big
adherents of Plato's Republic and they wanted the ideal communism
that they, you know, claim was found in the Republican
which is ironic. But they said that, you know, in
the beginning, when they were all establishing this colony, that
they would not have either private property, they would not
(41:26):
have any sort of self interested you know, gain, nothing
like that. And the diary of the governor at the time,
who's the head of the colony, he noted that they
the colonists were collect they collectively cleared and they worked
the land. And they said, however, they ran into a
(41:46):
problem because you would think, you know, no one's going
to own everything. Ever, it's going to be kittens and sunshine,
hold hands and seeing kumbaya hippies ya, and that it
was going to be, you know, perfect little, glorious society.
And it wasn't.
Speaker 9 (41:59):
It was.
Speaker 3 (42:00):
It was absolute hell. And Bradford noted at the time
that as they were collectively clearing the land and working
the land that they quote brought forth neither the bountiful
harvest hope for nor a spirit of shared and cheerful brotherhood.
There's a reason why in every society you have people
(42:22):
who want to work, and you have people who don't work,
and the people who do not work. There might be
some different reasons, but in a lot of it, I
think that they are in some respects. And I think
that the people who don't work because of some kind
of uh, you know, illness or something anything that's that's
(42:43):
the exception to this rule. There are a lot of
people and this is all how I define all the
progressivism that are just lazy. They're lazy. They don't want
to work, They want to be taken care of. They
think that the point of government is to take care
of them. And they first got the taste of this
and this Plymouth colony, the less industrious. Bradford noted, members
(43:05):
of this colony they would come to work in the
fields late. They were slow and easy in their laborers,
he noticed, because they knew they didn't have to work hard.
They did not have to exert as much effort as
they would have to had they were they forced to
rely upon their own labor. They knew that they and
(43:27):
their families, no matter what kind of effort they put
into work in the land, they and their families were
going to get an equal share of everything whatever the
group produced. So where is the incentive to be more
diligent in your effort when you're going to get an
equal share regardless. And the colonists that showed up on
(43:53):
time or early and worked hard and stayed late, they
began feeling incredibly resentful of the less industrious bunch of
colonists who did not want to work. They were mad
that their efforts would be redistributed, redistributed.
Speaker 9 (44:11):
To their.
Speaker 3 (44:14):
Lazy neighbors. So then they lost their incentive. So they
started coming in late, and they were less energetic in
clearing the fields and working the land. Bradford noted in
his diary quote for the young men that were able
to fit for labor and service, did repine that they
should spend their time and strength to work for other
(44:36):
men's wives and children without recompense. The strong or men
of parts had no more division of food, clothes, et
cetera than he that was weak and not able to
do a quarter the other could. This was thought in
justice the aged and graver men to be ranked and
equalized in labor and food clothes, et cetera. With the
meaner and younger sort. Thought it some indignant and disrespect
(44:59):
unto them. And for men's wives to be commanded to
do service for other men, as dressing their meat or
washing their clothes, they deemed it a kind of slavery.
Neither could husbands brook it, so they had resentment. They
immediately fostered, not brotherhood, but resentment. They de incentivized hard work,
(45:22):
and if you can imagine, the harvest was sparse and meager,
they had to ration equal shares, and it was not
enough that first winter to ward off starvation and death.
They were only at this barely two years, and they
realized they had to do something else. They could not
(45:43):
go through another winter where they were starving to death
and burying people. Because even though the resources were a plenty,
no one wanted to do the work. So what they
did is they did they tried something completely new. Instead
of the hippie kumbaya hand holding stuff. They thought, why
not allow people an allotment of land, and then from
(46:07):
that allotment they would keep whatever they put into it.
So they introduced something radically different to the colony. Again,
this was barely after two years. Barely two years they
introduced private property and the right of families to keep
the fruit of their own labor. Bradford in his diary wrote,
(46:29):
and so assigned to every family a parcel of land
according to the proportion of their number for that end.
And this had very good success, for it made all
hands very industrious, so as much more corn was planted
than otherwise would have been by any means the governor
or any other could use, and saved him a great
deal of trouble and gave far better content. The women
(46:50):
now went willingly into the field and took their little
ones with them to set corn, which before would allege
weakness and inability, whom to have compelled would have been
thought great tyranny and depression. End quote. So the first
harvest that they had introduced private property. Bradford noted in
his diary that the Plymouth Colony they had a bounty
(47:15):
of food. They were trading with each other, They had
their own little commerce. Not only did they have so
much food, they had more food than they knew what
to do with. Industry was the order of the day.
There was dignity, and what they were doing they weren't
having to get a handout from their fellow man. They
were all equal in their ability to create, or produce
(47:41):
or contribute, and they got to keep the fruits of
their labor and bless other people that may have struggled
with one thing or another. And so when harvest's time came,
Bradford noted that they had surpluses, and they all began
trading with each other. He writes, quote, by this time
harvest come, and instead of famine, now God gave them plenty.
(48:04):
And the face of things was changed to the rejoicing
of the hearts of many, for which they blessed God.
And the effect of their planting was well seen. For
all had, one way or another pretty well to bring
the year about. And some of the abler sort and
more industrious had to spare and sell to others. So
as any general want or famine hath not been amongst
(48:26):
them since to this day. They rejected the socialist utopia,
which interestingly is Latin for something that doesn't exist, for actual,
real world individualism. And he said that what they had
(48:47):
tried because the Greeks had promised that you could achieve
a paradise through collectivism as opposed to being an individual.
And Bradford was like, you know, this has been tried
sundry years, and they may well convince of the vanity
and conceit of Platos and other ancients. He said that
(49:08):
the taking away of property bringing commonwealth would make them
happy and flourishing. And he said, but that was not
to be. And they realize that this kind of approach
is incompatible with the human spirits. It's charity is not compulsory.
(49:30):
You can't force people to do it. That takes away
the spirit of charity, it takes away the dual purpose
of it. And Bradford concluded with let none object. This
is man's corruption, nothing to the cure itself. And he said, God,
in his wisdom, saw another course fitter for them. Talking
of the colonists, they chose to bless other people, they
(49:55):
chose individually of their own volition, to help others and
engage trade and do all of this. That is the
animating spirit of liberty. And it's a difficult thing. If
you could bottle it and sell it, that'd be great.
It's a difficult thing to catch because there are people
who want to be taken care of. There are people
(50:15):
in this country who think that by being citizens of
this country that you already are, you're somehow like a
ward of the state. And there is risk and freedom,
and that's the beauty of freedom because there's also comebacks
in freedom.
Speaker 6 (50:33):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Dana's quick five.
Speaker 3 (50:39):
Why hello there? All right? So, so Elton John apparently
lost sight in his right eye. Yeah, he says he
can't see anything and his right eye, but he does
wear phenomenal glasses. Let's just put that like that. The
seventy seven years old. He said that he spent he
was battling an infection and he hopes he's going to
be able to see and he can't work on new
(51:01):
music because of his limitations with his vision. And he
said he lost his eyesight in his right eye in
July because he had an infection. He was in the
south of France. So I don't know. Just wow, that's
a bummer. Better start writing music because everybody else out
here blows. Sir Elton. Drivers are drivers stranded and they
walked out of airports to find their cars missing. At DFW,
(51:23):
fifty two cars worth five million were stolen by an
organized crime group. This is why I literally will never
drive a car to airport. This this is what I
have always planned for happening. If people think, got no,
what if an organized crime network steals all your cars?
So drivers were stranded, They walked out of the airports
to find their cars missing. And then they said, and
this was at DFW, they said five million dollars an
(51:46):
organized crime group stole all. Isn't this what Fast and
Furious was all about? Who isn't this is the movie.
They've been drunning this investigation since February of last year.
They've identified fourteen suspects. The group is based in Houston
and they were using a license plate reader. Three men
arrested thanks to this license plate reader alerted police of
(52:08):
a suspect vehicle entering the airport and they were able
to get three occupants. They're still looking for the rest,
but yeah, that's insane. So they would just show up
and the people's cars are gone. Their cars are just gone.
This is wild. Let's see a couple other Oh, a
man has five hundred bikes for Africa, refused at the
(52:30):
port because they were deemed unfit for purpose because some
of them needed repairs. They were bikes that they were
going to Africa and they couldn't be They had to
be scrapped. Five hundred. That's insane. We have a lot
more in store, including some stuff in Florida applied to
the nation.
Speaker 8 (52:44):
Stick with us the Danish show podcast You're Fast, funny
and informative news companion for those always on the move.
Subscribe on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 3 (52:57):
Welcome back to the program. Dana Lash here with you
and you can listen terrestrially coast to coast every single
state in the Union. And you can also watch the
Simulcas channel thirte to forty seven, direct TV x, Facebook, Rumble,
YouTube everywhere. One of the things that fascinated me about
this last election was, I mean, drill it down to
(53:18):
get in the weeds a little bit. Was the claim that, oh,
there are so many hunters that were not registered to vote,
And isn't that crazy? It didn't seem to be the
big issue in Florida because Florida is really the blueprint
for the nation and how things need to operate. I mean,
I'm just looking at the stuff that they've done in Florida,
and you know, it dawns on you. This is common
(53:39):
sense outreach. Why are we not copying this in every
Why are we not doing this in Texas, Texas? Why
is Florida beating Texas? It's not supposed to be like that.
And I bring this up because all the attention with
regards to Florida was in Amendments three and four, and
that was the abortion stuff and the big Weed bill,
the big weed of me. But what didn't get a
(54:02):
lot of attention was was this victory that they had
a constitutional amendment that protects hunting and fishing. And I
think this is like the twenties some odd state in
the Union that actually has made this a constitutionally protected thing,
which you would think it already is, but it's not.
But good on Florida for making this happen. But what
gets me going back to my point is I was
(54:24):
looking at how they did their outreach, four and a
half million text messages, five hundred thousand male pieces. They
sent it out to sportsmen and to women, to hunters,
to anglers, to you know, everybody, people who had not
even voted before. Think about how much and that was
for amendment. To the turnout that they were able to
(54:44):
generate through that and just they really siloed it in.
They and they got that turnout and now it's protected
and it went over that sixty percent threshold where the
other amendments did not even near it. One of the
people who was spearheading this, this huge victory is Luke
Hilgeman and he's with the International Order of Teddy Roosevelt
(55:05):
and you can find them on I almost said Twitter
on x at iotr official. I'm going to not call
it Twitter at some point. Luke Kilgeman joins us no
obvious Skype. Luke, congratulations. This is a huge victory and
it didn't get a lot of attention, but it amazing.
You guys did such great outreach with this where everyone
else seemed to like struggle to get hunters and anglers
(55:25):
to register to vote.
Speaker 7 (55:27):
Yeah, Dana, thank you so much for having me on
and you hit it spot on. The right to fish
and hunt is now forever protected in Florida as the
twenty eight, twenty fourth state to adopt constitutional right to
hunt fish and our outreach was different.
Speaker 1 (55:41):
We depended on grassroots leaders.
Speaker 7 (55:43):
Folks from all Florida, Folks from multiple different groups that
were out there with us fighting the good word about
fishing and hunting being in jeopardy. There is a radical
movement out there that was trying to criminalize hunting and
fishing in states like Oregon, Colorado, and multiple other Western states.
And what we did in Florida not only surpassed the
(56:05):
vote totals for abortion and we by nearly a million votes,
it also surpassed the amount of votes that Donald Trump
was able to receive in a historic victory in Florida
by nine hundred and thirty.
Speaker 11 (56:16):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (56:18):
That's huge, that is And one of the reasons that
you were so successful, and this is something from the
memo that you had sent out your organization, was how
you were strategizing the manner and tone of your messaging.
Tell me about that.
Speaker 7 (56:34):
Yeah, So when we went to the field, we found
out very quickly that talking to people about fishing and
hunting as being a humane and natural way to manage
Florida's wildlife. Saw a huge spike in the amount of
support that we had even for people who don't fish
and hunt, and we stayed disciplined to that message. We
built an influencer network of people, more than sixty influencers
(56:56):
in the state of Florida with a combined reach over
thirty five million people who shared that messaging, shared our
messages out there with their followers, and then we did
over three hundred grassroots events targeting not just anglers and hunters,
but citizens all across the state, talking to them about
the threats to fishing and hunting and why this was
such an important part of Florida's identity and locking these
(57:18):
traditions down forever in Florida. And I think the biggest
political part of it data was that we found one
point seven million hunters and anglers in the state of
Florida who are low pro pensity voters who weren't even
registered to vote. We had half a million of them
who weren't registered to vote. We were able to register
twenty five thousand new voters and turn out a significant
(57:39):
number of those one point seven million low per pensity
voters who put us way over the top of the
sixty percent preshold.
Speaker 3 (57:45):
That's amazing. This is one of the most successful voter
outreaches and victories that I've ever heard, because from what
I understand, just like the support and the votes for
this just beat any other kind of proposal, any other
amendment like this before, I mean, really set a record.
Speaker 7 (58:01):
Absolutely did, and we had more people join us to
defend fishing and hunting rights.
Speaker 1 (58:06):
In the state of Florida.
Speaker 7 (58:07):
Nearly seven million people voted yes on Amendment two, which
means that it was a historic vote where we had
more people voting on this amendment than any other state
that passed before.
Speaker 3 (58:17):
I read that the amendment had majority support in all
sixty seven counties. That's insane. I've never seen so many
people agree on something like that so much of my life.
Speaker 1 (58:29):
Yeah, Yeah, we were blessed again.
Speaker 7 (58:31):
We had an incredible team of people who were dedicated
to protecting and protecting hunting and fishing rights across the
state that were working tirelessly to make sure that this
victory happened.
Speaker 4 (58:40):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (58:40):
And the best part now is IOTR plans to take
this blueprint to the rest of the twenty six states
that don't have these protections and try to get them
on the ballot as soon as we can.
Speaker 3 (58:50):
That's amazing that twenty six states do not have these protections.
That kind of floors me because when I was reading
that it was the twenty fourth state, I'm like, wait
a minute, this isn't all fifty. This is really shocking
to me. You also added twenty five thousand new registrations
of these are younger men, men under the age of
twenty five. These It's amazing because they don't vote, and
(59:11):
they were, they registered and they voted. That this demo
never votes, and they voted for you.
Speaker 1 (59:16):
You got them to vote absolutely.
Speaker 7 (59:18):
You put fishing and hunting on the ballot. You educate
them about the threats to what they love to do.
And these guys are going to show up at the
polls and they are going to vote to protect those
rights forever, like we saw in Florida.
Speaker 1 (59:29):
And while they're there, I think they're going to.
Speaker 7 (59:30):
Also cast ballots for conservatives who protect these these traditions
across the board. And I'm really excited to tell the
story about what we achieved in Florida and look forward
to rolling this out to multiple states.
Speaker 1 (59:41):
Here in the next couple of years.
Speaker 3 (59:43):
I can't wait to see you do that. Also, I
have to note that the margin of victory that you
had and your outreach with this up until everyone always
talked about the blueprint in Colorado when they had progressives
come in and they were anti gun, anti hunting, anti everything,
and in two election cycles they were to flip everything.
You didn't need two election cycles. You actually And I
(01:00:04):
was comparing like their outreach to the outreach that was
taking place with these amendments in this last election. I mean,
it's not even comparable. I mean, you just you beat
them to death rhetorically, you I mean, you smoked them.
The margins are it's not even there. That to me
is so now we can stop talking about the Colorado
Blueprint and we can just only talk about the Florida
(01:00:25):
Blueprint because this is the only one that has consecutively
worked in every single election.
Speaker 1 (01:00:30):
Amen. Amen.
Speaker 7 (01:00:31):
And what we saw as four hundred million dollars was
spent on behalf of Amendments three and four. As you
mentioned in the early part of the interview, they had
four hundred million dollars spent to try and pass.
Speaker 1 (01:00:41):
Abortion and weed in Florida.
Speaker 7 (01:00:44):
We did this with about eight million dollars and just
really doubled down on the grassroots strategy and connecting people
with the information about why these traditions are so important
the future of the state and the future of our country.
Speaker 3 (01:00:56):
I love this.
Speaker 4 (01:00:57):
Well.
Speaker 3 (01:00:57):
This is a huge success, and it kind of got
lost in all the three amendments three and four, which
you know, I get, and they were very important things
to talk about, but this was this is also hugely significant.
And what's even more is that the younger generation that
never shows up, you got them to show up and vote.
You got them registered to vote, you got them show
up to vote. You've got the low propensity voters to
(01:01:17):
go and vote. I mean, these are historically demos that
you can never count on. And not only could you
count on them, but you're gonna be able to count
on them in future elections and you're going to be
able to expand on these victories. This is this is huge.
Luke klligwan, this is this is huge. I mean, congratulations
on this because I don't know, I just haven't seen
a victory by this margin. And it's good to win.
It's good to have some win.
Speaker 7 (01:01:39):
It feels great to do that and again we look
forward to taking this and passing in as many states
as we can very soon.
Speaker 3 (01:01:44):
Absolutely, Luke, thank you so much. International Order of Teddy
Roosevelt or T Roosevelt IOTR appreciate you. Happy Thanksgiving, Thank
you very much.
Speaker 1 (01:01:52):
Happy Thanksgiving data of course.
Speaker 3 (01:01:54):
Now this is amazing. And I've talked to you all
about the Colorado Blueprint before and how the left was
always so they I mean they literally wrote a book
about it, They bragged about it, they wrote a book
about it. They went and they did the Sunday morning
talk show circuits and all that stuff, and they had
sixty three straight sixty three years of Republican governance, and
in two election cycles it flipped to blue and they
(01:02:18):
started going after guns and hunting and everything else, and
it just became unbearable and they tried to You had
a huge coalition of Republicans, conservatives and libertarians, very grassroots,
and it was I think as in Glendale, Colorado, that's
where it kind of all seemed to coalesce, and they
were organizing to push back, and they got some things
(01:02:38):
like they recalled the Center pro Tem and they got
a couple of other state lawmakers out, but they weren't
able to do every because it was almost too little,
too late, But they are still fighting there and they
the left bragged about that, and then they said, oh, well,
we were able to do this to Colorado, We're going
to do the same thing to Texas. They weren't able
to flip Texas, but they have made it difficult. But
(01:02:59):
they weren't able to lip Texas. And in Florida the
opposite happened, and they did it in one election cycle
by margins greater than that than what we saw with
the Colorado blueprint. So this is the way forward. Did
you hear the difference in money? What was it? Four
hundred to eight?
Speaker 9 (01:03:19):
Wow?
Speaker 10 (01:03:20):
What is with?
Speaker 3 (01:03:20):
Okay? The left burning money and losing elections. Harris is
twenty million in debt. She blew a billion dollars. I
mean payingoff celebrities. You know, I get it. You know
that's this is wild. I mean, I'm telling you, I
just find it's just wild. But this this is huge.
And also Florida's expanded super majority is being called possibly unprecedented.
(01:03:48):
They already had a super majority, they've expanded it now.
Not every person that has an R after their name
is a good lawmaker. As we know, we've seen that before,
especially after we were debating everything with the Senate majority race,
right the Senate majority leader. But to have a super majority,
there are going to be there's going to be a
(01:04:08):
little bit more of a protection for the lawmakers that
are that are Republican, are from real purple areas, like
the ones that have not wanted to be open minded,
for instance about permitless carry in Florida or reciprocity or
something like that that have always kind of dragged it
that's been Maybe maybe that'll change.
Speaker 9 (01:04:31):
Maybe.
Speaker 3 (01:04:31):
I know with the red Flag loss, somebody is going
to have to bring a lawsuit in order to to
flip some of that. That's going to have to be litigated. Uh,
but man, this is this is huge though. To expand that,
I got to get good quality conservatives in those state seats.
We have a lot more on the way.
Speaker 4 (01:04:52):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida.
Speaker 1 (01:04:59):
Man.
Speaker 3 (01:05:00):
I feel like this goes into a headspace with regards
to like super serious gaming that I ever wanted to
go into. So I just really quickly there's this story
where this one gamer who's Kane. You're gonna love his
name moist critical oh ye yeah, claims that he was
in this case Billy Mitchell versus Carl Jobs and he
(01:05:23):
they actually had him passing gas on camera used as
evidence in this court case. For real, he testified against
this guy Namedilly Mitchell in an ongoing court case in
an included footage of him blowing his own horn so
to speak on camera uses evidence and the yeah they
(01:05:44):
I okay, uh yeah, I'm not. We can't play any
of the video where he talks about it, no, because
of the way he talks about it. But it's a
suit that is there there arguing over four hundred fifty
thousand dollars in damages because the the It was a
suit raised by Mitchell who said that jops YouTube videos
about him cheating at Donkey Kong were defamation. A grown
(01:06:06):
man made a video, but another grown man cheating at
Donkey Kong and now it's a four hundred and fifty
thousand dollars defamation case. And another gamer had his own
farts used in court as evidence. Not even making this up.
That is there.
Speaker 10 (01:06:22):
You go.
Speaker 3 (01:06:22):
Now, if you think that your family what you got
to deal with at Thanksgiving is bad, you could be
that one of these guys could be it. I'm just saying,
you know, a Florida man has wanted for stealing money
from a tip jar because he's a loser from a
Florida establishment. It's a guy who stole money from a
tip jar to Fort Myer's establishment. He literally, I mean,
grabbed her on camera six hundred dollars and left. He
(01:06:44):
just took six hundred dollars and left. White t shirt,
white cat, blue shorts, blue shoes. He's got identifiable tattoos.
They're still looking for him. You're supposed to call crime stoppers.
I on care, like nobody cared. Do you think people
care that they're surveillance cameras or they're so ubiquitous that ever,
people just don't care anymore? Is out why?
Speaker 4 (01:07:01):
I think it's more they don't care anymore.
Speaker 3 (01:07:03):
I mean, I don't know. It just okay, let's see here.
I got a call boy. So this guy, a Florida man,
is busted because he tried to run over kids waiting
for the school bus. Another I don't know. They said
it was a bizarre and harrowing scene, said deputies Lake County, Florida.
A man was arrested Friday morning. The Lake County Sheriff's
(01:07:25):
Office says it was a bizarre and heroing scene at
a school bus stop. They tried to run over kids
at a bus stop in an area of Mill Street.
The man then allegedly went to a nearby location where
he had grabbed an attack to female teen as she
walked to her bus stop. Fifty nine year old Arthur
James Young was finally apprehended and the moms, all the
parents were just in hysterics. One of the women, Vivian Little,
(01:07:48):
said her son A King, called and said that somebody
just tried to run him over. He's a crazy dude.
He's just traced trying to run everybody over and chasing everybody.
So they were all running for their lives. This poor
kid like crying on the phone with his mom like
they've got can you imagine. So then he was in
a black Dodge Ram pickup and he actually grabbed one
girl and tried to choke her, and so they said
(01:08:10):
that the police responded. There was a concealed carry permit
holder apparently who fired a gunshot to try to stop
the attack, fired around or to try to stop it.
Just wild. This is just so He's been charged with
aggravated assault, child abuse, kidnapping, and several other charges. I
need a break after that story. Good night. He's like
(01:08:33):
slapping and choking everybody.
Speaker 4 (01:08:35):
I'm reading a head on the story. It says here
that the sheriff say they've had interactions with him before,
and apparently the mom has known him for a long time.
That was like some information to hide in the story
where at.
Speaker 3 (01:08:47):
The end, Yeah, I really want to read this story,
but I just don't know. It's about a Florida inmate Caane.
Speaker 4 (01:08:55):
Oh, I know, which wouldn't talk about so Oh, we
only have about thirty seconds here.
Speaker 3 (01:09:02):
Okay, twenty nine year old Daisy Link and this other
per I don't know who this guy, John Deepaz. They
were inmates at Turner Guildford Night Correctional Center and apparently
they're facing murder charges. Essentially, she's she's the Florida inmate
is pregnant. She says she's a miracle baby, and she
(01:09:23):
says that the conception happened through an air vent from
a fellow prisoner. And I'm gonna leave it there. We're
just gonna be done with the Florida man right now.
Third hour on the way, I thank heavens think.
Speaker 11 (01:09:37):
Not only am I not interested in your opinion, I'm
not even gonna call you by your name. You're twenty
three years old. I don't really give it what you say. Dang,
And let me tell you another huge shoot the CAG
is when people said campaigns need to reflect progression vacue.
Speaker 1 (01:10:00):
No they don't.
Speaker 3 (01:10:02):
James Carvill. Maybe some of those young staffers should listen
to him. He's a hoot, dude. He is one of
the funniest people. He was also when I was the
token conservative at CNN, like back in twenty twelve, he
was the nicest person there. He was so nice and
so kind. He and his wife were wonderful. I know
you probably wouldn't think that he is.
Speaker 10 (01:10:21):
He is.
Speaker 3 (01:10:21):
He just didn't like these dumb staffers that go in
and they want to act like they know more than
he does about this stuff. He used Carville actually used
to win elections. Now they don't anymore. Now these people
don't anymore. We'll go back to the program, Daniel Lash
at the top of this third hour. Oh my goodness,
make sure to catch us on the chats at Rumbull.
You can find us on x as well terrestrially across
(01:10:42):
the country Channel three, forty seven Direct TV. So yeah,
I'm just it's pretty They need to listen to him.
But he's mad. He's just done. I made mentioned earlier
about the pendulum maybe perhaps swinging the other way. I
wanted to play audio sound by nine for you because
this is the Walmart, the CEO of Walmart. They are
(01:11:04):
rolling back their deipolicies, believe it or not, and they're
just the latest US company to do this. Listen to this.
Speaker 6 (01:11:15):
First.
Speaker 12 (01:11:16):
Let me say, like many companies all across the United States,
we've been on a journey and we continue to be
on a journey. And what we're trying to do is
to ensure that every customer, every associate feels welcome here
to shop and to feel.
Speaker 1 (01:11:30):
Like they belong.
Speaker 12 (01:11:31):
And that term belong We've been talking about belonging now
for almost two years. Early twenty twenty three, we started
talking about belonging, and we're going to continue to make
the best decisions we can that makes everyone, our customers,
our associates feel.
Speaker 3 (01:11:45):
Like this is an environment than this is me as CEO.
I don't give a reds asked about belonging. Just buy
our stuff end scene. That's it. That's the quote. That's it.
Tell you you sell things, you don't have to affirm
anything for anyone. Can you imagine someone to go into
a Walmart and looking at the products. I don't know.
(01:12:07):
I'm looking at these bags of dog and cat food
and I just don't know if they affirm how I
choose to get it out in my private life. I
just don't know. I just don't feel like it's affirming
me because it's a product. It's a product. It doesn't
have to affirm you, Cynthia. It does not have to
affirm anything. You're making a purchase. That's it. I hate this,
(01:12:32):
Like they said that some of the they've removed some
product like chest binders for kids. Can't even believe that
was the thing that they had or had to take out.
They're not going to extend the Racial Equity Center, which
I don't even know what that is, and it launched
in twenty twenty. They're going to ditch the terms in
Canaan Wan who are basically white adjacent. They hate these
(01:12:56):
terms like they bristle if you say latinx.
Speaker 10 (01:13:03):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:13:03):
They don't even want the the letters D and E
and I at all together, no more, and they're gonna
for focus on the term belonging. Why do you have
to focus on any term?
Speaker 13 (01:13:15):
Why?
Speaker 3 (01:13:15):
I feel like, you know, Elmo when he gets real excited,
Karma a frog when he's dancing for Christmas and he
just gets really excited. I feel like that. Why does
there have to be any term? Why? Why do you
have to Who did this? I mean, I get it
they're getting away from it, But do you have to
give someone the crutch of a term?
Speaker 9 (01:13:35):
Right?
Speaker 3 (01:13:36):
You see what I mean? Why do you have to
have it? Belonging?
Speaker 10 (01:13:38):
What?
Speaker 3 (01:13:40):
What's about belonging? You know who belongs here? Anyone who's
got money to buy your products?
Speaker 1 (01:13:45):
What?
Speaker 3 (01:13:47):
Belonging?
Speaker 10 (01:13:48):
What?
Speaker 3 (01:13:49):
That's how that works? And I know that?
Speaker 11 (01:13:53):
Did you?
Speaker 3 (01:13:55):
Why are you here at the Walmart? That's what the
Walmart greeter should ask. Excuse me, why are you here?
I'm buy some of your stuff? Okay, you belong right,
That's how that works. So what gets me is so
now they have John Deere Ford other companies, the Caterpillar company, Caterpillar, Caine.
(01:14:22):
What do the Caterpillar people do again?
Speaker 4 (01:14:26):
The heavy construction equipment?
Speaker 3 (01:14:27):
Oh, heavy construction equipment? Yeah? Why do they have to
have DEI stuff.
Speaker 4 (01:14:37):
That is a great question. I think we know the answers.
They don't. They don't need it.
Speaker 3 (01:14:43):
I mean, who was like, well, let's see we uh
here a Caterpillar, we make a big heavy construction equipment.
We got to start using these phrases Latin X and
starting all this stuff. I feel like if you're focusing
on that, then you're not focusing on making your stuff.
So they're doing DEI changes. They're requiring that all corporate
(01:15:05):
training be oriented to focus on business operate because it
wasn't before. What that's amazing to me. Yeah, So they
they've they have to they're bringing in an external speaker
to talk to the Caterpillar employees, the Caterpillar people and
uh now they've got to have approval from senior vps
(01:15:27):
who make sure speakers are vetted, et cetera, et cetera.
They must have had some humdingers before if they got
to go through all that. I just it's amazing to
me that everything like Cores and Ford the uh they
ended their participation in the and this is a long
one human rights campaign Corporate Equality Index. What is that, Dana?
(01:15:52):
What is the human rights campaign Corporate equality index. Well,
that is the annual survey and report used to measure
or quote policies, practices and benefits pertinent to lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgender queer lbgt Q plus employees. I don't even know
what any of that means. All I heard was that's
(01:16:14):
all I heard. Actually I heard. I understood myself just
then better than I did with us. Yeah. Yeah, the
UH I guess that they that's like the behavioral thing.
Have you seen that with UH? Their? They have the
required cheeriod. It's our roadmap and benchmarking tool for businesses,
(01:16:34):
And I guess they give you a score. You get points,
inclusive benefits, things like that. H Apparently you get alphabet benefits.
I don't even know what that means. What are alphabet benefits?
Speaker 10 (01:16:46):
Do you get?
Speaker 3 (01:16:48):
Supporting and inclusive culture? Twenty five points possible? What about
shutting up and not being annoying? How many points do
you get for that? Wondering corporate social responsibility? This kind
of goes on to, you know the stuff that we
talked about, like why is it that out of all
of the charging stations that we had, how much was
it seven billions something like that allocated to spend on it,
(01:17:10):
and we only got two of them built. And that's
because they and this is a true thing, you had
to give your the government could only consider contracts from
businesses that I guess had one of these like a
specific score, and they checked all of these identity politic boxes.
So well, if you're like a regular lesbian and you
are up against a one armed lesbian, then guess what
(01:17:34):
the one armed lesbian is going to get the contract
and you're not. If you're a lesbian, you're up against
a dude who says that he's a woman, Guess what
the lesbian loses. It's the dude just says he's a woman.
Why because he checks a bigger identity politic box than
you do. See like that, that's the stuff. And then
you had to have like translators and have all this
stuff in your business that have nothing to do with
your business. You're literally building a charging station. Why do
(01:17:57):
you have to put on like community events. You're a
company that builds charging stations. Companies don't need to put
on community You need to demonstrate your uh, your community,
your social responsibility. You need to stf you. No, this
is so dumb, golly belonging. How many times. Did you
say that word in that clip is a few? Yeah,
(01:18:20):
there's a few times. I mean it was almost like
a call to action, right good night. I don't know.
But so you got General Motors or No Ford, that's
the other one. That's uh, they're they're dropping out. Oh,
speaking of car companies. So the New York Times is
claiming that automakers want Trump to keep EV mandates, but
(01:18:42):
apparently that's not true. New York Times were in this
story saying, oh, yes they want to. They're having a
coordinated lobbying push to convince potus potus elect to maintain
all these climate rules, forcing these EV purchases. But apparently
that's not exactly true to the Free Beacon because Stalantis
(01:19:05):
said that, yeah, we're not pushing for any of this stuff.
They completely contradicted the New York Times report, they said,
and the New York Times said that Stillantis was actually
going to lobby the Trump administration to keep these mandates,
and Stillantas said that's a lie. Stillantis told Free Beacon,
we absolutely are not doing that. That is a lie.
They said, we are not amongst the lobbyists and all
(01:19:25):
these people from these car companies. If there is one
that's pushing for this. No one's buying the damn things.
If you want an EV, you know, to fart around
with fine, nobody cares, but don't force all of us
to get EV's. They're ugly cars. They're ugly, ugly, ugly. Golly,
they're so ugly it kills my soul. Oh my gosh.
(01:19:46):
I see them and it's like everything about modernity that
I hate, soulless design. They all look like those Eva
bots from Wally. They all look like that. They all
look the same, right, it's some Stepford wife stuff. Everybody's
got their step fird live EV. It's one of the
reasons why I like, oddly enough the cyber truck, because
(01:20:06):
it's a giant middle finger. It's literally shaped like a
child's imagination, and it's brutalist, and it's kind of ugly
and completely ridiculous. And is it aerodynamic? I think there's questions,
But it's so ridiculous. It actually mocks modernity in a way,
(01:20:27):
doesn't it. At least that's my interpretation of it.
Speaker 1 (01:20:30):
Right.
Speaker 3 (01:20:31):
It goes a lot deeper than a banana duct tape
to a wall, just saying nobody's buying these cars. Though,
and I just I whenever I would have to get
if I had to take my car to the shop
and I would have to get they always try to
give you an ev oh man, And I'm a brat.
They know when I'm coming through the door, like, oh
my gosh, do not give this woman an EV loner
because she hates them, and she will complain for every
(01:20:53):
second that she's in this office. Oh my gosh, because
I can't stand them. I can't. It's weird. Kane.
Speaker 2 (01:21:00):
Hmm.
Speaker 3 (01:21:01):
I'm just saying I don't care. I don't really care
about any of this stuff. I'm all oil and gas
is renewable. It's renewable, and it's great. It's it's a great,
plentiful affordable energy in the United States without the the
uh convincing of federal mandates they've we've already been coming
up and pioneering clean environmentally uh more environmentally respectful extraction
(01:21:26):
methods before anybody else ever did, before anybody in government
thought of it, we were already doing it. You know why,
because we like to maintain the business right. You know
that if you're just damaging the earth and you're not
taking care of stuff, and you're just you know, sloppy extraction,
all this stuff, you're you're not going to have much
to work with in the future. And so it's all
about you know, prolonging, and it's about you know, making
(01:21:48):
sure that you know you you have an industry and
you're not just destroying everything to the point where you
can't have one anymore. They did that, they didn't have
to have the government pressure them to do that. The
government comes in and acts like it scored something. Oh, look,
we're going to pressure these people to do exactly what
they're already doing. Well, I mean, some of the stuff
actually makes it to where your cars are more fuel inefficient,
(01:22:09):
which is a whole other issue, but nobody wanted. Once
people are in one of these EV's still antess is like,
we ain't lobbying for nothing. Why aren't I doing nothing?
Speaker 6 (01:22:17):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 3 (01:22:23):
Chinese Pizza Hut launches deep fried frog pizza. I could
go my whole life without this story. It's there. It's
China's Pizza Hut franchise. They're literally starving deep fried frogs
on their pizzas. The and there's also photos of it,
and I don't want to look at it. Oh no,
(01:22:45):
they said, it's a for a limited time. It's a
it's just a specialized pizza and it has a red
sauce bace parsley and a whole fried bullfrog on top,
and then two habs of hard boiled a with black
olives appear as the eyes of the frog. That's absolutely nasty.
That's so gross. That's so nasty. So yeah, that's look.
Speaker 4 (01:23:06):
I like frog legs still, get me wrong. I think
frog legs are good, but.
Speaker 3 (01:23:09):
I don't like that. And then you put eggs in.
Speaker 4 (01:23:11):
Eyes a whole bullfrog pizza.
Speaker 3 (01:23:15):
No, that's okay. A South Carolina town's entire police force
has resigned. They're looking at it's the it's PD town's
entire police force. M yeah, the the PDPD, the entire
all the pdpds. Uh where they resigned. The police chief,
(01:23:37):
Bob Hale, broke his silence on Thursdays Andy and he
was resigning after a year of taking over. They said
the town councils created a hostile work environment. They made
significant cuts to their funding, and they're having trouble during
their jobs because they can't get resources, and they said that, Like,
one guy was on his way to a call and
his and he said his car just stopped work down
(01:23:59):
and doesn't work anymore. And they're not they have no
resources and they wow, just okay, it's the PDPD, you know,
take care of them. How the happiest people spend their weekends,
they treat them like vacations. You've got to learn how to.
And this is one of the reasons why you don't
really see me that often on social media over the weekend.
I make a conscious effort to choose not to do it,
(01:24:21):
because you don't want to get burned out. Right, nobody
wants to get burned out, especially if you do it,
you know, every day, and you've done it every day
for twenty years. That and that's it is true. Like
to treat your weekends as much as you can, like
a have a vacation mindset on the weekend or on
your days off, have a vacation mindset. Do not do work.
(01:24:41):
Usually everyone likes to rush through all this tasks that
they have through the week to get done, and they
do them on the weekend. I think you need to
actually partition those out all throughout the week so that
your whole day off.
Speaker 13 (01:24:52):
Isn't that?
Speaker 3 (01:24:53):
Because I think it's it is incredibly important. It is.
Let's see this, a guy, a guy who's charge you're
stealing a shocking cart of red Bull leading O'Fallon Caine
police on a one hundred money mile per hour one
hundred twenty mile p hour pursuit. Red Bull gives you wings,
but not a pass. That's a difference.
Speaker 5 (01:25:12):
Stick with us.
Speaker 3 (01:25:12):
We've got more in store.
Speaker 8 (01:25:14):
Not Able to catch all three hours of the Dana Show,
subscribe to the full podcast and get news and laughs
delivered in short, easy to digest episodes ideal for your
busy lifestyle on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.
Speaker 3 (01:25:29):
Most people, if they had shot and killed a woman,
they'd probably, I don't know, maybe go to ground for
a little while, maybe forever, not run their mouths about stuff.
But if you're Alec Baldwin Audio Sound Body eight instead,
you're going to do this.
Speaker 1 (01:25:45):
You might not learn from the news.
Speaker 13 (01:25:48):
Television news in the United States as a business they
have to make money. And again not to go into
great detail about that, but there's a whole there's a vacuum,
is a gap, if you will. Information for Americans Americans
are very uninformed about reality what's.
Speaker 1 (01:26:09):
Really going on?
Speaker 3 (01:26:10):
So we're uninformed about reality? What does that mean? He's
in Turin, Italy and Turin and he's saying that Americans areformed,
we're stupid about reality. What is he talking about? What
do you mean what reality? We all got some question
we asked some questions. What is he talking about?
Speaker 4 (01:26:30):
What the election of Trump?
Speaker 3 (01:26:35):
I mean, he can be mad about it, but that
doesn't mean that people are uneducated.
Speaker 4 (01:26:38):
Because they I agree with you there, but he clearly
believes what he's saying.
Speaker 3 (01:26:43):
I mean you would he hasn't changed and shooting and
killing that woman on the side of his film Rust,
of which he was executive producer, and also culpable that
he hasn't changed. He's still a hothead, he still is
a bad temper, he's still completely irrational, reckless. Nothing's changed
(01:27:04):
with him at all whatsoever. It's just like I can't
see any these celebrities that are like this. Uh like,
for instance, audio somebody eleven. I don't normally play anything
from the view, but there's this eyes rolling.
Speaker 13 (01:27:21):
I think what what we're all saying is we're going
to sit and wat, We're gonna wait and see because
we can't do anything else.
Speaker 3 (01:27:27):
Except I'm not gonna wait and see. I mean, this
guy is.
Speaker 8 (01:27:33):
Like, there's nothing to be done until you know what
you're fighting.
Speaker 3 (01:27:37):
It's it's pissing and the wind doesn't help.
Speaker 10 (01:27:40):
You're just.
Speaker 3 (01:27:42):
What I'm saying is I have no false expectations that
at seventy eight he's going to.
Speaker 4 (01:27:47):
All of a sudden.
Speaker 3 (01:27:53):
On the corner. That likes to pretend that she wasn't
a big butt kisser for a White House role, and
she never her dad does World in that day. She
would never be on that show if her dad did
not do worldnide daily and wasn't like a digital publisher,
I mean, absolute nepo baby. And the only reason she
really tries to obscure her history in butt Cassene to
(01:28:14):
get a job in the last administration. This is the
difference between loyalty and submission. She'll submit, but she's not
you know, there's no loyalty. She'll submit but there's no look.
And then she turns around and goes on the view
and does what she does. So I don't know, I
I do they do any what do they else do
(01:28:34):
they do on that show? Why do people watch that show.
I've never understood it. I've guest hosted it, I've never understood.
My favorite was when and Barbara Walters was still alive.
So it was a bit ago and I was Jenny McCarthy.
I was on with her. I sat right next to her,
and she was amazing. She was very supportive of and encouraging.
She didn't hang out with the other women either. I
got the sense that they didn't like her, like she
(01:28:56):
gets you know, they people give her a bad rap
because of her mtv ds or whatever. But she was
at actually the nicest and most common sense person that
was on that show. She legit was and she was
super kind. But Barbara Walters was like, so tell me
do you like shooting guns? And they're playing behind me
on the big screen, me literally shooting every gain I own,
well most of them, like a rifle's, pistol, everything. And
(01:29:18):
I'm like, yeah, I guess a little bit. You're like,
you mean, what kind of question is that? But you know,
it's interesting. I pushed back. I was very polite, but
I pushed back when I needed to. They just could
not understand me. And when I said, oh the more,
when did you when they when they asked me, well,
when did you actually become more conservative? And I said, oh,
the more educated I got. Oh my gosh. The whole
(01:29:40):
audience gasped and the women there went, oh, oh, what
do you And I could tell they were going to go,
do you mean that we're stupid? And I was like, well,
I just think we're on different intellectual tracks. What they
were trying to figure out if I was insulting them.
I was, but I was doing it in a nice way.
But it was just I don't know, I don't know
(01:30:01):
what and the issues like they who watches the television
shows that they have the actors on to talk about.
The only thing I watch is if Taylor shared and
makes it or if it's about baking or history, and
that's it. I don't really watch anything else. I don't
even watch Hallmark Christmas stuff anymore. Really, I do enjoy
looking at all the new titles because they're all the same. Right,
(01:30:24):
have you guys started your Hallmark Christmas stuff? Have you
played any Christmas music game? So that's the thing. So
when we roll back here after Thanksgiving, do we immediately
start with the Christmas music? Should I have my trees
in the background? Do we go full on Happy Birthday
Jesus immediately, Like what do we do?
Speaker 4 (01:30:41):
There are stations across the country that started right after
Halloween playing Christmas music.
Speaker 3 (01:30:46):
No one does the Twelve Days of Christmas anymore?
Speaker 4 (01:30:48):
Why you mean the.
Speaker 3 (01:30:50):
Song or like the practice?
Speaker 4 (01:30:52):
I don't what's the twelve days ago?
Speaker 3 (01:30:54):
Twelve days of Christmas? You celebrate and that's like your
holiday period, and it's from the birth and then after
celebrating the birth, and we just celebrate up to the
moment of the birth and then we're like, Okay, we're done.
You see what I mean? Yeah, why can't we go
back to that? I mean time, I guess.
Speaker 4 (01:31:12):
More days of celebration?
Speaker 3 (01:31:13):
Okay, twelve Well, I mean, just be a little bit
more realistic about the lead up, you know what I mean,
Like I don't need to be seeing the Christmas trees
out in September each day like a small gift?
Speaker 4 (01:31:22):
Like does it work? Like every day's a small gift?
Speaker 3 (01:31:25):
Yeah, Like that's why they had the twelve Days of
Christmas song. Well, I mean that's a I mean, I
guess if you want to be there, there can't be
But that's you know, raddle.
Speaker 4 (01:31:38):
I remember those Advent calendars though I remember as a kid.
Speaker 3 (01:31:41):
Yeah, but it it it should be. I mean that's
how it was. I mean there used to actually be
twelve days of Christmas. But now you've had holiday creep, right,
So it used to be all like, you know, sometime
in December, you'll do it. And then and I think
I had to do with art with fake trees and
(01:32:01):
then artificial trees looking really nice and going onto the market,
and so people didn't have to go get real trees
anymore because it didn't seem like your Christmas stuff was
limited to how long your tree would live. Yeah, so
now you get artificial trees. It doesn't matter, right, doesn't matter.
But that it's the birth of Christ and then the
coming of the Magi and that's the three Wise Men.
So that's the twelve ties of Christmas. So it starts
(01:32:23):
with the birth of Christ and it's supposed to end
with the coming of the Magi and the and it
it begins on the twenty fifth, and it's supposed to
run u until what the sixth, and then you've got
the four weeks preceding Christmas. That's advent. Some of it
I think has brushed off as Catholicism. But that's not
how it was always. It wasn't always like that. I
(01:32:44):
mean even during you know Henry the eighth time, and
he was all of this. I mean they so, I
don't know they. I just liked the idea of twelve
days of yeah, cause you're you lead up to oh
she had her baby, all right, it.
Speaker 4 (01:32:59):
Is like every day or every other day's turch sure.
Speaker 3 (01:33:03):
Sure, and then you would have u. I don't know
if you get the Lord's the leaping and ladies dancing
and all that stuff, but that's how it went traditional Anyway.
My whole point of bringing this up is, uh, I
haven't really put We have our lights up, but we
haven't really put anything else up. But that's gonna change.
That's gonna start changing beginning mith week immediately because the
(01:33:28):
Christmas stuff has got to go up. I'm just ready.
I think everybody's ready. It was a really weird political cycle.
Everybody's ready for it. But the Hallmark stuff, I'm telling you,
it's the person who owns a snow club factory and
she comes the girl comes in from out of town
and she meets the snow club factory owner and he's
a really nice guy and do sparks fly. I don't know.
(01:33:50):
Watch this Christmas movie and these people have like completely
ridiculous jobs. I literally watched one where the dad I'm not,
I swear to you hands this guy. The dude carved.
He was like a literal wood carver of toys, and
he had this big, two story craftsman style house in
the Northeast. I'm like, dude, you would not have that
kind of You're not making that salary carving hand carving
(01:34:11):
toys and it's just you and your little workshop. Shut up.
It looks like someone went and staged it as part
of a Santa's Elf village for photo ops for families
near the pet smart stop it. And yeah, and she
assumes her dad's workshop and the house and all this,
and I'm to believe that. I'm to believe that right, No,
(01:34:33):
that will not abide. All right, we got some other
serious stuff here too. I'm sorry, I don't mean to
spend so much time on all of that, but you know,
we also get some of this audio out of the way.
Although Steve says they should make a Hallmark movie about
the villages, The vigic America's Friendly.
Speaker 4 (01:34:53):
Is so taugh I call that not all old people
are innocent. That's what they want.
Speaker 3 (01:34:58):
I know, you think that old people are in this.
We're not here to talk about that. I audio sound.
Let gosh, what am I going to do? It's like
I want to end the show on a happy note,
and I don't want to be like now back to hell.
Here's audio soon by four where Venezuelan gang members are
recruiting kids in illegal alien shelters. Let's go ahead and
(01:35:20):
actually play it well.
Speaker 8 (01:35:21):
Going concern over among the YPD over Venezuelan gang activity
across the city.
Speaker 5 (01:35:26):
Police believe some gang members are recruiting children living in
migrant shelters.
Speaker 4 (01:35:30):
As Jennifer Bisraim reports, the gang has blended in with
asylum seekers who began arriving here in twenty twenty two.
Speaker 3 (01:35:36):
Kind of funny how you don't know when you're not
demanding you know, people's documents and all this other Stuff's
kind of crazy. I don't know who's a gang member
and who's like the innocent. Well, I mean, nobody's innocent
if you're breaking into the country and entering illegally, but
just saying, you know, what is that that's shocking to
people that are reporting this like this is new and shocking.
(01:35:56):
It's not new, but it's shocking that you think it is.
This is what people have been telling talking about this
whole time, and anytime they brought it up, you called
them like bigots and xenophobes and everything else. And it's
been going on this whole time.
Speaker 4 (01:36:11):
Caine, You're dying what It's just weird that so they
insist on not just background checks, because we have background
checks to buy firearms here, but they want universal background
checks for actual American citizens who are law abiding, but
for they don't care about background checks of people they
don't know from other countries coming here illegally.
Speaker 3 (01:36:30):
Yeah, apparently not, that's not happening. That's that correct sir. Yes,
doesn't make any sense at all. It's not supposed to
Not supposed.
Speaker 8 (01:36:40):
To subscribe to the Dana Show podcast because who says
you can't make fun of people while staying informed on
your own personal time. Subscribe on YouTube, Apple or wherever
you get your podcast.
Speaker 3 (01:36:53):
Is there really any better intro than this this song
by GNR Guns n' Roses. Is there really any Nay?
I don't think there is really don't welcome back to
the program. This is how I would have come into Thanksgiving,
by the way, just start, you know, kicking that solo
and then immediately just start ripping apart the turkey. Right oh,
(01:37:14):
here it comes. The whole band's getting rooted for it,
and it's gonna go crazy telling you what this is
the way to do it, way to do it. You know,
Holidays used to be a lot more relaxed, and nothing
would used to not all be everybody would stress out
over politics and all that stuff. I think that like
the greatest generation had no patience for that. My grandparents
(01:37:35):
did not allow that. You're gonna get hit by woodenspoon
if you start acting up, if you start making a fuss,
as my grandmother would say, if you start if you're
starting to make a fuss, you're you're fixing a fuss.
You're gonna get slap with the woodspoon. A woman did
not play. I've seen many of people hit in her
kitchen with wooden spoons and h her. This just feel
(01:37:56):
like they just now it's like everybody's got a prem
like I hear with my political beliefs, and I hope
we can get along this. You can get along if
you want to get along I also think it's a
creation of media. Media creates it as a way to
further just haunt you even when you try to get
away from them. So some of the things that we've
touched on, so Israel and Hesbela there, they've got a
(01:38:17):
ceasefire now net Yahoo already announced it, and apparently Biden's
going to be I guess he's going to be speaking
on it here shortly. But it is the ceasefire between
Israel and Hesbela, and then they're going to start kind
of peeling back their respective forces. And that's so that'll
be and that's of course in southern Lebanon, northern Israel.
(01:38:40):
And so we have this, we also have MSNBC says
that it was unaware of Harris's campaign contributions to Al
Sharpton's nonprofit, but they won't say whether or not they're
taking action. Really, Oh, they were unaware that they He
got one hundred, he got a half a million dollars
before she did a softball interview with him. Half a
(01:39:02):
million dollars. How much does she give to Oprah? She
gave it to Harpo, but it was to Oprah. Yeah,
so that's and then let's see we got the transgender
bathroom things situation. I think Nancy Mace can stop talking
about the transgender bathroom stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:39:18):
Now.
Speaker 3 (01:39:20):
Kine's like, yeah, I mean I get that she's wanting
attention and wants to seem like she's like being very rebellious.
But they already solved the issue. They came out with
the rule and they're like it's done. And she's still like, Okay,
we get it. You realize there's some other serious stuff
happening in the house that could also use your attention
if you want to act up over some macked up
over some of these other pieces of legislation that was
(01:39:41):
solved by a simple rule change. That's all they did,
and one and done. Now let's look at some of
this other stuff that you know that's that's in the
house right now. There's some important legislation there. Let's maybe
get get on some of that. I don't know, I
get a little try too hard from that one. Does
that mean to say, yo, you all are thinking it,
(01:40:03):
stop it, y'all are thinking it. It's a little try
too hard. Just you know, just I kind of get that.
I get that impression. So anyway, that's you know, and
then of course, Uh, the couple other things. Let's see
we've got we were talking about the DEI Walmart rolling
that back. Very good. Oh and then CARE guys remember CARE,
(01:40:24):
the Council on American Islamic Relations. Yeah, yeah, yeah, they
were once linked to Hamas. They have to reveal their donors.
They're being forced to reveal where they get their money
from because an ex employee blew the whistle and said, oh,
they're accepting form, they're accepting foreign funding, and they have
to This is what happens in defamation suits. So Care
(01:40:46):
this was after a defamation suit. It filed against a
former employee to shut them up. It backfired. So see
when you file, when you're file in a defamation suit,
you're opened up to discovery. So now they have to
reveal all their so versus a funding. They decided they
thought they would file a defamation suit against this former
employee and now they've Now they've got to open up
(01:41:08):
their books and now you got to find out where
they're I'm sure we're going to be surprised. I'm sure
it's nothing that we've ever suspected, right, Kane, probably going
to be total things that we just we are still
going to be shocked, I'm sure said nobody ever. All Right,
today's stupidity king.
Speaker 4 (01:41:24):
All right, while this is cut to dam Goldman is
a Democrat, so typically I don't really have to say
much more than that, yeah, for you to get a
gauge as to where he is intellectually cut two is
Dan Goldman offering the only possible explanation for this particular action.
Listen to this.
Speaker 10 (01:41:42):
I think it is a shame for justice in this country.
It establishes that Donald Trump is above the law. The
Supreme Court put him above the law in that opinion
that Paula just mentioned, but now he appears to escape
full accountability for what we Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:42:01):
So them not getting their drummed up charges any validity
is now Trump being above the law. Right, So this
is what the left will tell you, maybe even at
Thanksgiving dinner. Don't fall for it.
Speaker 3 (01:42:14):
It don't fall for it, folks. I hope you have
a wonderful and blessed Thanksgiving. We are grateful for all
of you and that we get to join you every
single day and hang out God bless I will be
back on your next Monday.