Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
About the great, big, beautiful bill you know that we're
trying to get passed. It'll be the biggest tax cuts
in the history of our country. And hopefully it'll get done.
And the Democrats are fighting us, and if it doesn't
get done, it's going to be a sixty eight percent
tax increase. So that's going to be the Democrats. But
I think we're going to have it done. I think
the Republicans are going to vote for it, and it'll
(00:21):
be the most consequential bill I think in the history
of our country.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
Leader Soon says he wants to get it done by
July fourth. Do you think that's possible.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
I think it is that. I think he's doing a
fantastic job, and Mike Johnson, Speaker, is doing a fantastic job,
and they're both getting together. Well, there's great unity in
the Republican Party. The Republican Party is a much different
party than it was.
Speaker 2 (00:44):
So he's keeping the criticism to Democrats, but there was
a hint of Republicans. You know, you got to get
this passed, otherwise it's going to be a big giant
tax increase. He's right in saying that, and I'm glad
that he's I'm glad that he's throwing it down because
(01:06):
it needs to happen, and he needs to start bringing
pressure on some of these lawmakers. Although in the Senate
he was talking about Fune in the Senate, I think
it's a lot easier in the Senate obviously with the
House with a narrow majority. But he was talking to
Christian Welker there taking her through the White House talking
about the big beautiful bill. We got some domestic news
on that front. Welcome back to the program, Dana lash
(01:28):
with you or at the top of this first hour
on Monday. Yeah, again, it's you know, it's not my
fault that it's raining and very British here in Texas.
Caana and I are going to start getting accents on
this Sanco de Mayo, so it's going to happen. So yeah,
don't need a taco salad today, A you're going to
be a bigot at least only you can only eat
(01:48):
half Kane for your Hispanic side. So welcome Dana lash
with you. Remember, Okay, first off, I can't talk. I
can't even discuss anything else today until we talk about
that infamous day back in twenty sixteen when this cane
Potus said, you know, the best, the best taco salads.
I gotta say it like he would, are the taco
salads as Trump Tower. It looks like a mighty fine
(02:10):
taco salad. Can I just be honest? He did this
in twenty sixteen, and the Left lost their minds to
the point where this trended on x for like two
days straight. And he goes, I love the Hispanics, is
what he said. Why was the left so mad about this?
They were so mad? Why? I mean, he's eating a
(02:31):
taco salad and he's like, I love the Hispanics. It's
a great Okay, what's the bad thing about a taco
salads or delicious cane? Although technically maybe not a traditional
meal in the way that it was served him, but still,
you know, it's the thought that counts. It's the spirit
of the thing.
Speaker 3 (02:46):
You know, look like a very traditional taco bowl.
Speaker 2 (02:49):
Yeah you know, I mean, you know, probably it looked delicious.
I would like to have a taco salad now, Sanko
to myo, so happy, Sanko to Maya. There you go
right there. Uh, it's uh, he got a million things
here that he's trade deals. Oh, here's one that I
wanted to. This is I thought very a very interesting move.
(03:09):
I read this over the weekend, so a big They're
not the only ones. Land Rover also did something similar.
So luxury one luxury car maker. They said, it's making
a huge call. I saved you a click. It's Mercedes Benz.
They're shifting production of one of its vehicles to Tuscaloosa, Alabama,
by twenty twenty seven. That's interesting, very interesting, And they
(03:33):
said that obviously it's in response to tariffs, but they
said that there are some other complicating factors. They didn't
say which model would move there. They said the production
of a core segment vehicle will move stateside. They think
that by day. I mean, like the experts. They think
that the move is going to impact the production of
the GLC that's their best selling car in the US,
(03:53):
and that it's a compact SUV that's made in Bremen, Germany,
and so the specation is that that is the model
that they are moving to Tuscaloosa, Alabama. That's gonna that
is very interesting. They said that they reported selling over
sixty four thousand units in the US, up fifty eight
percent from the year before, and Alabama they said, uh,
(04:18):
might you know that's that's looks like where they're going
to be moving their production. They're they're in and out
of factory. They said they're reviewing the moves. Obviously it's
in response to all of the stuff with the tariffs,
and they said that it could affect some of these
other moves, could affect gl E, glsgly Coop, Mercedes Mayboch
GLS and all of those call Alabama home as well.
(04:41):
So they're moving more over. That is very good land
Rover too. They pulled this story up because land Rover also,
I think they said that they because they had paused
Jaguar land Rover had paused shipments because of the tariffs,
and now they have restarted all of those resumed exports
(05:02):
to the United States, according to all the According to reports,
the London Times first had the story. They said that
there was so it's gonna be like a month behind,
but they said the US was a key market for
luxury brands. Twenty five percent tariffs are still in effect,
so they're gonna get here, but it's gonna it's gonna
(05:22):
be a little pricier. It's gonna be just a little pricier.
I have to say, so, uh, that's one of the
things that they're that's what they're looking at. And so
those are some that's a that's a good signal, that's
a good first step. Now, Potus says that there could
be some of these trade deals that could be announced
this week. We need them announced now. I understand that
(05:43):
you don't want to announce things too early and you
don't want to jeopardize anything, but we we need these now.
This is some stuff that we need. We got to
have this all now, and and we I think the
sooner the better because that's just gonna make it's gonna
make it that much easier for Republicans going into mid
terms because otherwise, yes, it is all about elections. Otherwise
you're going to have impeachment palooza. They'll impeach him for anything. Clearly,
(06:07):
they already demonstrated that they don't need a criminal action
in order to do it. So he said that some
of these deals with trading partners could very well be
announced this week, and he didn't specify any of the
countries the schedule. He announced today that the NFL Draft
is going to be held in DC in twenty twenty seven,
and he met with this morning, a ballerina who spent
(06:31):
a year in a Russian prison because she was accused.
She has sent like a little donation to Ukraine and
the rescues threw and the they threw in the pokey
an actual ballerina. So there you go. But he hasn't said,
he hasn't given any specificity as to what those that
what those trade deals could look like.
Speaker 4 (06:53):
Now.
Speaker 2 (06:53):
One of the things that we do know is that
they've been pushing these budget cuts, cuts to the FBI,
cuts to the DOJ. The latest from the Washington Times
getting into all of this. These are these I mean,
we all knew this was coming, these proposed cuts. It's
part of a one hundred and sixty three billion dollars
that they're looking in reducing federal federal spending for this
(07:18):
for well, those are slices of it. The overall budget
five hundred and forty five million in cuts to the
FBI other Justice Department agencies. It's one sixty three billion
in total, so they said, while still reducing crime at
all and reversing the weaponization of the FBI as well,
(07:39):
So the FBI headquarters in Maryland, apparently that's also going
to get halted. He says, it's three hours away from
the agency's present location. It's stilly to keep building it,
he had said, So this is gonna be kind of
interesting to see how there's these cuts that have been proposed.
And then of course we also have ATF. Apparently there's
a four hundred and sixty eight million dollar funding reduction
(08:00):
that has been proposed for the ATF. And they said
that the proposal is that it was uh, well, because
it was. It was weaponized. The ATF was absolutely weaponized.
I have a story for you later on to discuss
that further. The ATF is a joke. I you know,
I I've talked with ATF agents. I don't care how
good of a heart you may have when you're pushing
(08:22):
nonsense that's rendered and valid no matter what you're If
you think that you know, oh, I'm going to go
in and work in the ATF and the inside, you're
already working for an unconstitutional entity. So what do you
think your presence in an unconstitutional entity is going to
change about said unconstitutional entity. It's still unconstitutional and the
way that they have pursued what they believe is law
(08:44):
and order has been to the detriment of the rule
of law and due process. I shall I go on.
So there's cuts also for DEA, all kinds of stuff,
So a lot of purpose. But again we have to
have all of this codified. I can sit here and
run down on this laundry list. I am not one
of those people that gets excited about temporary things. I
(09:06):
want to see it all made permanent. And I got
to tell you, my patients is running thin with some
because we knew we didn't have a lot of time.
It's I'm running my patients is running really thin with
a lot of these Republicans because not with this not
getting done, it's all there. It's they're going to use
it to tank his h to take the rest of
his administration. Now, the other big thing that he proposed,
(09:30):
let me put this up. So this was CNBC interesting.
He's ordering one hundred percent tariffs on foreign made movies
to save dying Hollywood. This was something that was announced
over the weekend. He said there was a concerted effort
by nations, by other nations, and it's a national security threat.
He said, it's a messaging and propaganda. He said he
(09:51):
was authorizing relevant government agencies such as the Department of
Commerce to immediately begin the process of imposing a one
hundred percent tariffs in all films holmes produced abroad that
are then sent into the United States. Now I understand that.
I also think that you're not going to be able
to solve a cultural issue at the top. You can't
solve an issue that is kind of at the bottom
(10:13):
by just trying to regulate at the top. I mean,
I understand it. I think that first off, taxes need
to be just abolish all around. Let's have a graduating
you know it all does all come down to that,
because it comes down to that with the business climate too.
There have been a number of agencies including there's one
that's been that's just right up the highway from US
in Las Colina, Smeil Gibson and his team that are
(10:37):
doing the sequel to The Passion of the Christ. I
think it's the same team that was behind Apocalypto and
some of the other ones that he did, and they're creating.
They have this production company that they're launching in Texas
to make you know, these types of movies. One of
the biggest problems and I think when what Trump is
talking about by looping in the Commerce department is a
(10:58):
lot of the financing comes from over seas, and because
the financing comes from overseas, that gives a lot of
these you know producers, you know, you can you can
donate you know, millions of dollars to them to this
budget and you can be named as a producer. A
lot of it. That's that's done actually, and they influence
obviously the outcome of the movie. One of the most
famous ones, you know, obviously top Gun tencent and they
(11:21):
ended up pulling a lot of support out of that,
and they didn't get it. They didn't get a Chinese
opening because they weren't going to take the time when
these flag off of Mavericks Jacket. At first they did
in some of the early screen tests, but then it
played so poorly with the public they had to go back.
They had to go back to the cutting room, cutting
room floor and pick pick up the Uh well, I
guess they don't edit celluloid anymore. But they had to
go they had to go back and restore it digitally
(11:42):
because they had taken it off and it enraged people
across the United States. But then that enraged ten cents.
So but I understand this. I also think too, it's
not going to just be fixed from the top. This
is something it's a cultural problem in the United States.
You know, you can't it's like putting a band aid
on it by trying to fix it with regularatory policy
at the top. And I understand people are like, yes,
(12:04):
we want immediate you know, we wanted to change, and
we wanted to change immediately. Don't don't fall into the
trap and thinking that it is the same that you're
going to get the same thing because you're sacrificing speed,
because you're you're going to sacrifice uh, you know, getting
everything that you want because you want it done fast.
(12:25):
It's that immediate gratification. This is stuff that's been in
the works in the United States for years and you're
not going to undo it in just one you know,
one term. It's just not going to happen. But I
do think making it overall to make things here in
the United States so that people don't have to seek
overseas funding that in turn influence what we make is
a good thing.
Speaker 5 (12:45):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (12:45):
We got to get into some of this other stuff
because people lost their minds over the AI Pope. But
did you hear what they're doing with Jesus Christ Superstar.
Well yeah, in addition to Cynthia Irva, What does living
better mean to you? Is it more money? A bigger how? Phos?
Nothing about this? What about how you feel? Physically? Every day?
Life is so much better when you feel good. When
(13:06):
you wake up feeling great, you can do more of
the things that you love and you're ready to take
on the day. If pain is affecting your life, see
how Relief Factor can help change that. Relief Factor is
a one hundred percent drug free daily supplement that helps
your body fight pain. Naturally developed by doctor's relief Factor
supports your body's response to inflammation and it doesn't just
(13:27):
mask pain for a short time. It helps to reduce
or even eliminate it, and it's safe to take daily.
In fact, the longer you take Relief Factor, the more
effective it is. Over one million people have turned to
Relief Factor. Feel better every day and you'll live better
every day. Try and Relief Factor is easy. Get their
three week quick start for only nineteen ninety five. That's
(13:48):
less than a dollar a day. Called one eight hundred
four Relief that's one eight hundred the number four relief
or visit relief factor dot com.
Speaker 3 (13:58):
And now all of the news you would pay probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 2 (14:03):
Okay, so, first thing, an air traffic controller is warning
that a major airport is unsafe for travel, claiming that
you should avoid Newark at all costs. That it's just
a hot mess. It's not safe. It's not a safe
situation for the flying public, said Tom Costello. He said
it's due to Stafish shortages. I think they've always had issues,
though correct. I think they always have. A robot attacked
(14:25):
somebody in China. A humanoid robot was filmed attacking its
handler while trying to break free from its restraints. Wan
is going to show you those on this. It is crazy.
It goes nuts sad at that. That's me when someone
says green Day's punk. This is also why I don't
get a rumba. I don't get a rumba because of this.
It showed this thing lashed out at a dude. He
(14:46):
had a duck and it was it raised its arms
you can see, and it was just trying to thrash
around and break free from the crane holding it. That
is insane. I'm telling you this is what's gonna happen.
Your rumba is eat your face. One day, you're gonna
wake up in the morning and it's gonna be wrong
right over your face, killing you to death. That's what's
gonna happen. I'm just warning you right now. They're gonna
(15:08):
overthrow you. We've seen this movie before, you guys, we
saw before Skype shut down after twenty one years. I
can't believe Skype was a run for twenty one years.
Uh yeah, Microsoft Skype. It two billion people used it.
It was launched forever a million years ago. I cannot
even believe that there are people alive right now who
(15:31):
like Skype is older than them. Yeah, that's so weird
to me. So Skype is gone. Now, let's see a
guy impaled himself on an iron fence because he was
taking a selfie at the coliseum in Rome and he
just sort of fell over one of the areas. People
have got to be kiderful, especially in ancient sites. Stick
with us. Gold Coat is making it easy to take
that first step toward protecting your savings. Just fill out
(15:53):
a quick form, no commitment, just free information, and then
they'll ship you your free twenty twenty five gold and
Silver kit straight to your door, no shipping fees, no strings,
just a free infoKit to help you understand how gold
and silver can fit into your financial plan. I'm a
big believer in doing your research, and this kit is
(16:13):
a great place to start. So I'm really excited to
be partnering with gold Co because not only do they
support my show, which I truly appreciate, but they've made
the whole process of buying precious metals super straightforward. Because
if you're a fan of the show, gold Co is
also going to tell you how to qualify for unlimited
free bonus silver on eligible orders. If you qualify, you
(16:33):
can even get a free half out silver Ronald reagancoin,
totally free. Don't wait. Take that first step towards protecting
and diversifying your savings with gold Co. Visit Dana likes
Goold dot com to learn more. That's Dana likes gold
dot com.
Speaker 6 (16:48):
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 5 (17:00):
Many people don't know, I mean much is not covered.
You're paying for every food and every bit of food
that you eat. You you know, you're not paying for
housing and the staff in it, but everything even travel
if you're not traveling with the president. If your kids
are coming on a bright Star, which is the First
Lady's plane, we had to play pay for their travel.
Speaker 2 (17:22):
Wow, I am just like the first well almost like
the former First Lady, because I still had to pay
for my house, you know, as a human living here
in the United States. It's former First Lady, Princess Michelle Obama,
her highness or whatever. And uh she's talking about she's
I don't I don't. I've never understand. I don't get
(17:42):
people who have the world served with them on a
silver platter and yet still the bitch don't get it.
Welcome back to the program Channel Lash with you. Bottom
of this first hour. She was she's is that her podcast.
I don't even pay attention to her podcast. I just
is that hers she was. She's always behind some microphone
talking about her heart, her life is every day, every
(18:04):
every time that we have these sound bites go around
and this is a new one, and she's complaining about
the fact that she had to begads pay for food
and travel. What you know what when when my kids
and I when my family when we went to go
(18:25):
we took our kids to thirty a down in the beautiful,
beautiful Florida area, beautiful in near Dustin. It's just a
gorgeous place down there. Can you believe that we had
to pay for our own travel? I was like, what
and then and then get this, we had to pay
(18:45):
for our own food. What the outrage?
Speaker 3 (18:50):
The oppression you had to deal with.
Speaker 2 (18:52):
It's an outrage. It's totally outrage. Can you I was shocked,
Like I thought all of these things would be given
to me for free and it wasn't. No, she's complaining
because I guess she had a different idea of what
she thought being the first lady was gonna be like
like she was, all of that stuff was going to
(19:14):
be just given to her. She was complaining about having
to I mean, it's still private air travel. You had
a fly your They walked out with like twenty something
million dollars. I think they're okay. Didn't how much money
was he banking on book deals and speeches. I think
y'all are gonna be okay. I mean, y'all got a
mansion in the Hamptons. That's on the Atlantic beach front.
(19:35):
They also bought oh my gosh, what was Tom Selleck
that Hawaiian show he did came Magnum p I. So
the house that he apparently lived in for the show,
like I guess it featured on the show. That's the
house they bought in Hawaii, and it's like right there
on the coast. In fact, there was a bit of
(19:56):
a scandal because they were doing so to the shoreline
that actually encouraged erosion and was against state law, but
they were allowed to kind of do it anyway because
they're the Obamas. So you have two beachfront properties in
addition to the big ol' historic place that the pad
that they have in Chicago. And they're complaining that they
had to pay for food and travel, like some people
(20:17):
don't even have a house and you're complaining that you
had to buy food and all of that for I mean,
what do you think that it was? This idea that
positions in government are supposed to be everything subsidized, like
you're a member of the royal family, is asinine. I mean,
you are serving the public. It's not supposed to be
(20:39):
a free for all. I mean, I realized that Democrats,
over the course of some years have transformed the expectation
of public service to free for all. But it's not
supposed to be like that. It's actually supposed to actually
kind of be a burden. And then people figured out
a way to you know, monetize everything and grift off
of it. How much did you figure out Trump? He's
(21:02):
donated his White House salary, his presidential salary.
Speaker 3 (21:06):
So over two terms it would be three point two
million total.
Speaker 2 (21:09):
Can I just say, to be president of the United
States and have to deal with all of that. I'm
actually shocked that it's only three point two and that's
probably before tax too, right, yeah, yeah, yeah, so that's
pre tax. It's roughly half, roughly half of that he's
going to walk away with. But still, I mean, you know, again,
it's supposed to be kind of burdensome you're serving, and
(21:31):
it somehow changed over the years to where now people
want to get in on the grift and they just
go right from college into public office. And I just
don't get it. So she's complaining about having to pay
for this stuff. She is always complained she grew up privileged,
she doesn't know poverty. The Obamas don't know poverty. He
(21:52):
was raised by what his grandparents, his grandmother or grandfather,
which one was it, vice president of a bank. His
mom was this like bougie university professor. I mean, he
had the most elite privileged childhood. They would die if
they had to grow up in the poverty for instance
that I knew, or regular middle class life that many
(22:14):
of you out there listening know. They wouldn't be able
to handle that. They grew up in privilege from the
very beginning. They have no idea what struggle is. They
have no idea what poverty is. They have no idea
about any of it. And they have this idealized expectation
of what public office is supposed to afford them as
opposed to what they can bring to public office. I
frankly am tired of hearing her bitch and moan about everything.
(22:38):
She has to be one of the most negative people
I've ever I can't stand people like that. I cannot
stand and granted I'm a curmudgeon and I'm a cynic,
but to not find joy in anything. I mean, you're
the first lady of the United States and you're still complaining.
She acted like, oh the world. You have, the country
loved you, and they voted your husband in office twice,
(23:00):
So can you stop with the tiny violins. You are
the most pampered, privileged person ever. You can never do
anything wrong, and you're mad that you were to buy
some sandwiches for your damn self for the love, it's
just good night. I just it's just shocking. But it's
also insulting because it's like, oh, this is what you
(23:22):
have to offer me for the you what you were
getting into running for the White House. But maybe be
a little bit grateful for it for the experience, instead
of complaining that you had to fly your fan. And
by the way, when when she's talking about flying her
kids out, I remember there was one time when she
had complained because they were flying to Hawaii for vacation,
and I remember it came up that somebody had asked
(23:44):
about something and she had made an offhand remark that they, yes,
they you know, they paid for their daughters to fly
out to Hawaii. And she said it so bitterly and
with so much resentment that I thought maybe you ought
to take a step back. You have the means to
do it and the resources to do it. You are
(24:06):
the one person of the one percent in this country.
Every argument that you try to make for identity politics
is turned on its head because of your life. And
you're still complaining nothing's ever going to be good enough
for these people. You know, if they have problems in
their marriage, no wonder. She is like the ultimate Karen,
never happy, constantly complaining nothing's ever good enough. It's just
(24:32):
enough already heavens. So over the weekend, Trump tweeted out
what was it, the AI image of him as Pope
as a joke, and all of the people who hate
religion somehow wanted to pretend to be very upset for
(24:56):
the Catholics. I don't know if you guys saw this.
So Trump tweeted out, it's very you know, very very nice,
Renaissance looking image of him as Pope with the number one,
and tweeted it out or had it on his platform,
and it went out from there and all the left
got mad, you know, the left that hates all religion anyway,
(25:18):
suddenly they were mad. And I was thinking about this
when I saw this headline this morning. So there's a
Hollywood Bowl production of Jesus Christ Superstar now in Hollywood
because they're out of original ideas. They've had to sort
of switch and modify their expectations of originality, and so
now instead of originality, they just went controversy because they
(25:40):
think the two are synonymous. I mean they're not, you know,
I mean Wick by the way, you want to talk
about like real controversy. Wick Ate a baby bird that's controversial.
Probably more artistic than you know, I know, he did
that whole other story. Probably more artistic than what the
Hollywood Bowl is planning to do with Jesus Christ Superstar.
They have Cynthia Irvo, a black bald lesbian, a BBL
(26:01):
who's playing Jesus. And then Adam Lambert, Yeah he's playing Judas.
That actually seems fitting, you know tbh. But but everybody
was mad about Trump with the AI Pope. Again, you
got a BBL playing Jesus, but Trump with the AI Pope.
Make that one makes sense. I mean it was a joke.
(26:25):
He was making a joke. This they're not making a joke.
They're trying to offend. They're not even making a statement.
The whole point is they want to offend. I really,
we've gotten so domin our culture. A lot of this stuff,
especially with this production they act like they're being thought provoking,
and that that is again a substitute for originality, or
(26:45):
controversy is a substitute for originality. Animals can be, they
can do shocking things. Shock is cheap art. Shock isn't
even art. It's a cheap imitation of art. It's when
they can't actually do the artistic thing, so they settle
for the cheap imitation of it and they pretend that, oh,
you're shocked, that's compelling. It doesn't. Is compelling a necessary
(27:11):
requirement to be considered art. I don't think so, not necessarily,
especially when used and abused in this case. But all
of these people that dragged him. I woke up looked
at the because he tweeted it out in the morning
and he you know, he doesn't sleep. He just blinks
for long periods of time and that's it. But I
(27:32):
saw that what was it, Pope Trump or Trump Pope
was trending, and I'm like, oh boy, what happened? So
I looked and I saw the AI image. I thought
that's funny. And then the left was mad, Oh my gosh, sacrilegious, blasphemous.
What else were they saying? Like I'm running going through
the rolodex of adjectives in my mind. All of my
Catholic friends thought it was funny. And I have some
pretty hardcore Catholic friends, like I, look, I'm not Catholic.
(27:54):
Some of my family was raised Catholic. My husband's family
is Catholic, part of them. I was raised Southern Baptist.
Fun but and we're non denominational, we're Church of Christ.
But you know, I and my Catholic friends have always
been so nice and explaining, Okay, this is why they're
wearing the pointy hats, because I'm like, what's up with
these hats? And that's a little jacobana where what's explain that?
(28:17):
And they think it's funny, and they explained it to me.
But none of them were offended by any of this.
They were like, Okay, he's making a joke. He's not
trying to offend. He's making a joke, like didn't you
order the flags half masked for the pope or something
to that effect and all. But but the left they'll
do like uh, Jesus Christ Superstar. What was the other
one they did Joseph in the Amazing Technicolor dream Coat.
(28:39):
Then there were there were a couple of other productions,
and then there were some art. There were some exhibitions
that were supposed that were poking fun at like Catholicism
or religious artifacts and things like that. The Left never
was offended over any of this, But it's only because
Trump is that's the only thing. They only only because
(28:59):
he's the thing that that to them, He is the
ingredient that can sour anything. They will immediately if it's
something they've been for their whole lives, they will immediately
argue against it if he's involved, because that's how tribal
people are, if they even have to. If the Left
has to agree with Trump on anything, they view that
as they lost on that issue. And because they're that
(29:21):
narrow minded, like if you agree with someone on a
particular issue and you have common ground, it doesn't mean
you're giving anything up. It just means that, wow, both
of you have the same thought on this issue. Now
you didn't change your position, they didn't change their position.
You just have the same thought on an issue. But
the Left doesn't look at it that way. They look
at it as if they're green with someone who's across
the aisle, then that nullifies their position and they don't
(29:46):
want to look like they're wrong or that they have
been modified in any way. It is bizarre. They are
a walking psychological study the left is they really are.
So I don't know. I I am just it's just
I don't want to hear anybody get I'm just tired
of them complaining about Pope Trump Trump Pope or whatever
(30:08):
it is a few other things because there's a potus
is busy over the weekend. He said. Also, they want
to reopen Alcatraz. He said, it's something that he thought.
We have this audio. Can we play this? This is
sorry audio SoundBite million five eleventy twenty fourteen. Thank you, Steve.
(30:29):
Where did you get the idea for re opening Alpha
Tres Just an idea I've had, and I guess because
the guts.
Speaker 4 (30:35):
Is so many of these radicalized judges.
Speaker 7 (30:38):
They want to have trials for every single think of it,
every single person that's in our country illegally.
Speaker 4 (30:44):
They came in illegally. That would mean millions of trials.
And it's just so ridiculous what's happening. And it's long
been a symbol Alcatraz of whatever it is.
Speaker 7 (30:56):
I mean, you know, it's a sad symbol, but it's
a symbol of law and order, and here it's got
quite a history. Frankly, so I think we're going to
do that.
Speaker 2 (31:06):
And when Sup posted, are you posted? Okay? I think
it's kind of cool. Aff there's a lot of sharks
in the waters too, super shark infested. I don't know
if y'all know that super shark infested. So he says
he wants to open it up for some of the
most ruthless, violent criminals. Is it though? I heard it?
Speaker 4 (31:26):
Was?
Speaker 2 (31:26):
Like really, I watched about a year or so ago
because I love haunted history stuff, and I watched a
Haunted History think about Alcatraz, and they were saying that
it is in great disrepair. So I don't know what
it would take to make it work. I mean, does
(31:46):
it really need to be that workable. I just think
if you're a super violent criminal, the consequences you're not
going to the rits, you know what I'm saying? So
do I care? Just does the security work? Are there
shock fences?
Speaker 3 (31:56):
Part of me makes me believe he's saying this because
he's got a different motivation.
Speaker 2 (32:00):
What is your theory?
Speaker 3 (32:01):
I don't know what the motivation is or what he
wants to. But I think there's something that he wants
to either do with that land, either sell it or something.
But I don't know if the prison is really the
endgame here. I'm still a little suspicious.
Speaker 2 (32:15):
I mean, wasn't it. I mean because I think part
of the reasons that they couldn't even use it anymore
was because it I mean, even like the infrastructure. I'm
talking like electricity, water, it was all really bad off.
But again, you know, you do crime, You're not going
to the RITZ. I am all four cruel and unusual
punishment when it comes to rapists and pedophiles. So maybe
that's something, you know.
Speaker 3 (32:36):
Make punishment fit the crime exactly.
Speaker 2 (32:38):
You know, that's what I look at our partners that
help bring you the program, our friends over at All
Family Pharmacy. They've got you covered. Whatever it is that
you need. Is it any of the medications or therapeutics
that the system try to keep from you drying lockdown?
You know, things like ivermectin and hydroxychloric one, which are
so completely safe to take. I mean, they've ben a
lot of pregnant women. They sometimes will suggest hydroxychloric one
(32:59):
for them. You know that because you can't rush through
experimental injections and hand Pfizer multi billion dollar paydays if
you if you don't ban therapeutics. This is the thing,
like they just not well. They didn't just dismiss alternatives,
they outright destroyed them. They wanted you to rely on
the government and just listen to whatever they were ordering
you to do. Well, things have changed and there's All
(33:20):
Family Pharmacy. All Family Pharmacy is your daily maintenance medications.
They also have the AVERMACT and hydroxychloroquin antibiotics. Everything simple,
fast and affordable. No insurance, no problem. They got straightforward pricing,
online ordering, shipping in just two to four days or
overnight in a pinch if you need it. Everything is
made in the USA. All of their medications are manufactured
right here in the USA, ensuring high standards, equality and safety.
(33:42):
Visit Allfamilypharmacy dot com slash danta for ten percent off
using promo code data ten. Don't wait, be prepared, protect
yourself and your family today. That's All Familypharmacy dot Com
slash Dana. Use coupon code Danta ten to save ten percent.
Speaker 6 (33:55):
Get the load down on the latest news with the
side of laughs. Whenever you want, subscribe to the Dana
Show podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.
Speaker 3 (34:06):
Like SAMs through the Hour glance. So are the days
of the United.
Speaker 8 (34:10):
States, hear says, panic button that you'll immediately be able
to hit that is going to alarm the police and
is going to be connected directly to the local precincts.
Speaker 6 (34:23):
When you do the combination, it's going to give you
access to the cameras in the store to see what
is taking place and how we can get an immediate.
Speaker 2 (34:32):
You know, it's quicker than that. A gun. A gun's
faster than that. Again, it takes an average twenty in Manhattan.
The average time for police responses insane as well. We
have a lot more coming up this and more come
second hour. Don't go anywhere. Stick with us, friends. Over
a Preborn a great organization that helps women who are
at that crossroads. They're faced with an unplanned pregnancy, and
(34:55):
we want women to choose life because we believe in
the power families, and we believe that women are a
lot stronger than the left and our society gives them
credit for. And so Preborn are. They operate clinics in
just the highest abortion cities across the nation, and they
provide life saving ultrasounds. They are the gospel leader of
(35:15):
the pro life movement. They saved over sixty seven thousand
babies last year, and they provide ultrasounds to mothers so
that mothers can hear their infant's heartbeat. And when that happens,
a mother who hears her baby's heartbeat, she's twice as
likely to choose life. And your support makes that moment possible.
Twenty eight dollars, that's all it takes to provide one ultrasound.
One hundred and forty can help save five babies. Your
(35:39):
gift gives a mother the chance to hear her baby's heartbeat,
and it gives the baby a chance to be heard.
And the only way that the baby can they have
sound with their heartbeat. And so you are helping two
save lives. Preborn has a four star charity rating, so
you can give confidentially, and when you give monthly, they
send you stories and pictures of the lives that you
helped to save. Your generosity literally changes futures, families, generations,
(36:04):
and helps to create legacies. Join Preborn in their mission
to sponsor one thousand life saving ultrasounds before Mother's Day,
Mother's Days just this weekend, So just one heartbeat can
change your life forever. And you can help give now
our preborn dot com slash Dana, or you can donate
by dialing pound two fifty and say the word baby
or give securely again preborn dot com slash Dana pound
two fifty say the word baby to help save lives.
Speaker 7 (36:26):
He's huish fine and where he is, you'll do a
good job. I don't get sent at that.
Speaker 9 (36:34):
I didn't lost confidence in you.
Speaker 7 (36:36):
Why did I lose confidencies going to the United Nations
reference to me? I think it's personally. If I had
a juice for myself of doing it, I'd rather have
that job than they. He didn't resign. I just both
of those outastic fash give people are so bad, you know,
if you're trying to make a big deal out of something,
(36:57):
you are so bad. That's why he watches you and
who you w who are you with? You know who furst?
I didn't know that I did.
Speaker 2 (37:10):
He's just like so just I didn't even know there
was a hearst what He's just so dismissive. Welcome back
to the program, Daniel last year with you. We're at
the top of the second hour. There is a he's
talking about Mike Waltz. Uh and he was talking with
the press a little not a scrum, but like some
of the press that's there on Uh oh, I'm air
Force one. Good heavens, I almost said white white Forest one.
(37:34):
I was thinking white house air force whatever. It's rainy
and blaming that anyway, Daniel Lash with you on top
of this second hour now, and of course, uh you
can listen across the country a station Areo channel thirty
forty seven, Direct TV, the chats at Rumble, YouTube, Facebook,
all that good stuff. But he was saying, oh, you're
you're making something out of nothing with Mike Waltz. Him
(37:57):
getting the UN ambassador in some ways is a kushier,
fancier thing than what he had prior. I mean, that's
kind of my opinion on this. I think it's in
some ways it's like way, it's ill a cushier But uh,
I do think what this does, We've talked about this before,
(38:18):
is it highlights a divide in the Trump administration that
they're gonna have to fix. They all need to be
on the same page as it relates to Iran, and
there's a suspicion that one of the reasons Waltz was
moved from this role to I would say more of
a leased or a leashed role rather is at the end,
(38:41):
is because of Iran. Because he's one of those who
he guessed bomb bomb bomb Iran, right, that's or Iran
like Lindsay Graham. Lindsey Graham always wanted a bomb I Ran.
But there's definitely a divide in the Trump administration on this.
There was a very interesting, a good piece over at
Washington Examine or Trump Needs his Team on the same
(39:02):
Iran page where they dive into this specifically about Waltz.
And it's not just Waltz. There's other people within the
administration that are pretty absolutist on this stuff. Rubio's kind
of in the middle of it. I think that he
leans a certain way, but I don't think that he's
showing his cards just yet. But the idea of being very,
(39:24):
very aggressive and essentially getting us into a war with Iran,
there are absolutely people in the administration that are leading
that way. Trump is not Trump is, He's not an isolationist,
But what is the clear objective for getting into Iran.
What to stop them from uranium enrichment They've been doing
enriching uranium this entire time. And why is it our
(39:45):
responsibility to send our blood and treasure to do it?
When the nuclearized Iran is a threat to the Saudis
and the Arab League? Why can't the Arab League do it?
Why is it the United States' responsibility to wipe the
backside of the rest of the world world with our
blood and treasure every single time. I'm sorry, but I
don't really care about the lives of anyone over in
(40:06):
the Middle East as it is worth anybody here in
the United States. I would not spend one American soldier's
life for that of anybody that is not a United
States citizen. That we do not have our interests completely
outlined and articulated might be harsh, but that you know.
Speaker 4 (40:26):
What, the.
Speaker 2 (40:28):
Onus is on the shoulders of the people who are
trying to make the case to get involved in this conflict.
What do you think is going to happen if we
start striking Iran? The Houthis are one thing. That's why
iron always uses these proxy groups like you know Hasbola
or the Huthis or all of the other million different
little factions of warlords that they have. So there's and
(40:53):
Steve Whitcroff's in the middle of it, and everybody's fighting.
They're really fighting over Iran, and it's starting to now
be a just traction and it's I feel like each
side is all one way and and there's no middle
ground or anything. Trump is, for his part, Trump is
definitely not. He's not on the same page a Waltz
(41:15):
is or some of these others are. And I don't
think he's ever going to be prevailed upon to move
to that position. He is very clear that no, we're
not gonna and I'll talk about striking the Huthis, but
that's very very different as opposed to carrying out strikes
like against Tehran, right, very different. But he's threatened to
impose secondary sanctions on any country that buys Iranian crude,
(41:38):
and that's I mean, that's I think way more of
a rational, reasoned response than maybe what Waltz was kind
of promoting. But they're supposed to they had a fourth
round of discussions that were supposed to happen last week
and but Oman canceled them, and so we'll see. But
(41:59):
this it does highlight the split dialogue versus detonation is
how Axios puts it and how they're going to try
to manage this threat. And I see these little hit
pieces going out too. Here's another thing that I would
like to I think that his administration needs to be
cautioned about. So in the Trump administration, one of the
(42:19):
tools that and I don't think Trump does this. I
do think his surrogates do. I know for a fact
a surrogates do. They will shop, not even credible opo,
but they'll shop hit pieces on other people in the
administration if they're off this, if they're off page, they're
not on the same page. Like I saw a piece
(42:40):
I don't know if it was a Daily mail that said, oh,
Mike Waltz was you know he would. The reason that
he was removed from this position by Potus is because
he was trying to coordinate with Israel to go after Iran.
And that seems to be a pretty high and mighty
bs take. But somebody shopped it. Somebody put that out there,
and we'll eat it up. I don't want to see
(43:02):
leak start happening again this term like they did his
first term, because they were distracting and it just dragged
him all over the place. And he I mean, it
wasn't until after, you know, we had a rough midterms
that he had to just focus on judicial the second
half of his first term. So I mean he's I
think he's listened to everybody make their arguments, but he's
(43:23):
clearly not moving on Iran. It's not happening. I think
they had a sit room meeting this morning on Iran.
And there's I mean, you have people like I think
Vance is in Vance is more in line with Trump
and that he wants a diplomatic resolution and still thinks
that that's possible. You have Wick Coffee sort of you know,
(43:47):
goes back and flits back and forth, but otherwise stays
kind of in the center. And then you have Waltz.
Rubio is leaning more towards the Waltz side, I would say,
and Lindsey Graham and Tom Cotton, which they're very, very
aggressive towards Iran, and they think that Iran's weaker than ever.
We shouldn't compromise. Uh we either they either dismantled their
(44:10):
nuclear program entirely or we strike them. That's kind of
that camp's proposal and Obviously you have Vans and others,
including Potus that are like, yeah, yeah, No, I think
the diplomatic solution because that's a big commitment. I mean,
you're committing to war. That's that's and we're sorry. The
United States is not in a in a place to
do it. Everyone keeps talking about recruitment. We're not there
(44:33):
with recruitment. Hell, we don't even have all the batties
weeded out at d D and Pentagon yet before we're
going to start embroiling ourselves in uh, you know, a conflict.
And I want you to think of this. This conflict
isn't going to just be limited to Trump's term. If
you if if you would have Waltz, and you would
have Rubio, even in Graham and Cotton, if they all
got their ways. Uh, and they were and and you know,
(44:55):
we issue the ultimatum, you either either deconstruct your nuclear
or program or we're going to strike. Guess what That
conflict will outlast Trump's term and then you will prob
I mean, depending on what Republicans do. If we're getting
involved in a conflict and we don't have any permanent
tax cuts or anything else, guess what you're gonna have
a Democrat president in twenty twenty eight, are you Are
(45:18):
you looking forward to having a bunch of things that
Trump did to strengthen the military, but it was only
done by EO immediately reversed by that same pen and
paper by a Democrat president. Because that's exactly what's going
to happen. And then all of these men and women
who signed up to serve our country under Trump and
under sect of Hegseth, they're going to have the rug
ripped out underneath them and they're going to be shoved
into a meat cannon. That's exactly what's going to happen
(45:41):
under a Democrat administration. So everybody needs to get their
asses wit and wits about them right now. This is ridiculous.
There's two camps. And I will say that people who
are all excited for war, they couldn't bust a grape
in a fruit fight. All these people that are so
excited about admiring our country down into another conflict. These neocons,
(46:01):
and that is the correct way to use that term.
They are nation building neocons. They are entirely ignorant of
the fact that some cultures don't want democracy, some don't
want democratic processes in a republic, because they don't want
a republic, and you have to modify how you deal
with them accordingly. You can't apply the same kind of
(46:22):
sanitized Western view to every single nation on God's green Earth.
It's just impractical and unworkable. And these people that want
to get involved, they think that everything they're the hammer
and everything's in nail. They have no idea, no idea,
not a single one of them. There was a forty
five minute conversation last weekend between Witkoff and the Foreign
(46:45):
Minister of Iran, and that was, I think, since the
Obama administration, the highest level of discourse. But it's it's
I mean, he's they want a nuclear deal. They have
a two Iran has a two month line. Yeah, they
have a two month grace period before the deadline to
sign it. And they're trying to get this wrapped up.
(47:07):
And it doesn't help that you have some you know,
neo cons in the administration that are very loudly banging
war drums. So when it comes down to it, I
don't Waltz's removal had nothing to do with signal. I
think it was the administration reshifting people, shifting them around
to further underscore Trump's position on Iran and not the
neocomposition on Iran. That's what it comes down to. So
(47:32):
by the way, uh, Lorraine was because Trump and that
not audio sound by it was like Hurst. I never
I had to say, I never heard of Hearst either.
Lorrain's got it. She's like, yeah, they own a bunch
of magazines, television channels, television stations, including the San Francisco Chronicle.
Well that makes sense because Hurst was California based, but
they also owned as Choire. I didn't know that, and
they owned fifty percent of the A and E Cable Network.
(47:53):
Did you know that king twenty percent of Disney Company
Sports division ESPN. I didn't know that Hurst Publications. So
that's we're going to talk to Stevin Yates about that.
A little bit more coming up as well, that divide
that we see in the administration, with a few other
(48:16):
things also coming up. We get some cultural stuff. Apparently
gen Z's whining about Starbucks. I don't know, I don't
know why. Our partners that help bring you the program,
our friends over it, super Beats. You guys are familiar
with the Superbats, Folks, the super Beats tartoos. Well, now
they have the Superberine and it's available at the Sam's Club.
And your metabolism affects everything, you can support it with Superberine.
(48:40):
It's five dollars off at Sam's Club through April twenty ninth.
It's just twenty four ninety eight. It's plant based, doctor formulated.
It has a unique form of berberine and Italian olifruit extras.
You get additional antioxidant and cardiovascular support. It's a unique berberine.
They've clinically studied it and it delivers nearly ten times
higher absorption than standard burberine, so that means you only
(49:02):
have to take one capsule day. It's highly concentrated, easy
to swallow, and if you're worried about GI distress, it
includes grape seed extra for greater tolerability. Visit Sam's Club
to restock your heart health support with super Beats hard shoes,
and expand your routine with the new Superberine for healthy
metabolism and blood sugar support. And don't forget Supermarine is
five dollars off at Sam's Club through April twenty ninth.
Snag this offer at Sam's Club while it lasts start
(49:24):
today and get on the road to better cardiovascular health support.
Speaker 3 (49:28):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 2 (49:33):
So as you all know, sovereignty won over journalism at
the Kentucky Derby. That was pretty crazy. I love the name.
I love the symbolism that it has that's just so perfect.
Bodies of animals everywhere. Toxic algae bloom is taking a
toll on southern California's marine life. That's this. Doesn't this
(49:54):
happen in the golf too? Because I remember reading about
some of this stuff. They said that it's I mean,
it's like poisonous. They're talking about sea lions and some
animals and you know, like all kinds of stuff, toxic fish.
That it's just that. And it's this algae bloom that
you know happens every now and then, not just you know,
near California, but in the golf as well. The rise
(50:15):
of single parents. This is an interesting piece, uh that
Caine marked because I think there's financial times and I
think there's a lot that goes into it than just
you know, like economics or like various life choices. I
you think that there's an inability of people to connect
with people. I think that that's true because they get
(50:37):
into that with this story. People who like work work work,
and then they don't really like I think a lot
of it is driven by you know, digital everything, digital
digital life, digital socialization. People aren't connecting the way that
they used to. And I don't think that that's like
specifically the younger generations as well. I've been hearing stories
(50:59):
like older generations now too, Like even boomers are starting
to deal with some of this stuff where people are
just like they want to just stay home and they'll
connect digitally or they'll just you know, it's just very interesting.
But that's also leading to more and more people choosing
to not have like the traditional nuclear family. They just like,
you know, single parents is like the thing to it's
(51:21):
like the thing to do. I don't know, there's a
lot that goes. This is bigger than just a quick five.
This is interesting. A twelve year old boy New Zealand
creates an AI pillbot to stop his grandmother from taking
the wrong medication. This is this was so sweet. Little
twelve year old boy, Gabriel Anthony. He invented a robot
and it programmed it via AI to help his grandmother.
(51:42):
It calls it Pilbot. He says, she has poor I say,
she takes a lot of pills because their conditions, and
sometimes because she can't really recognize the pill and see it,
she'll take the wrong one. So he has Pilbot and
it recognizes what medications she needs and which ones. You know,
she has to have a flash and magnifying glass identified pills.
So he said that it actually takes a photo of
(52:04):
the pill, it recognizes the pill based on its training,
and it checks her pills before she takes them. That
is amazing and he needs to get an award for
that because I love that so much. That's how you
properly young people use digital and have those advancements. Awesome.
If you don't have real idea you're gonna have a
lot of travel headaches after amaze even the real id.
(52:25):
Isn't that just I go back and forth on this.
Isn't it just a way to like coal uce everything federally?
That's what I think. I don't know. We've got a
lot more on the way, stick with us more in
store partners that he'll bring you the program. It's our
friends over at Berna Gunn it's a great thing to
have a diverse weapons or ray and this is what
Burna offers you because you know, you carry, you'll carry blades,
(52:47):
and you'll carry different calibers. Not everybody has the luxury,
by the way of being able to live and work
where you can take your firearm with you all the time.
I have some very pro pro two way friends that
live in DC and New York and they're not able.
They have one of those difficult to carry license to
one of the difficult license to carries, and they still
(53:09):
are barred from carrying like pretty much everywhere they went
on got to burn a gun. Now, there's a couple
of different kinds. You know, they have rifles and all
of that, but I think for the purpose of self defense,
you need to check out this the SD or the
new Burnout cl that's the compact launcher. This is very
similar actually to my forty three X in terms of
size and slimness. It's you know, almost seven inches long,
(53:31):
it's about cell phone length. You know, it's compact, and
it's if you know, the burn A gun. They shoot
chemical irritant projectiles that can deter threats from up to
fifty feet away. So it gives you a chance when
municipal and private property restrictions are trying to disarm you, right,
you still have some way of protecting yourself. And this
is you know, it's fifteen round shot capacity per cartridge
(53:54):
and everything is made right here in the US of A.
It has a red dot, there's no recoil and powered
by agesus CO two. So again, fifteen run shock capacity
per cartridge. Now, if you order before May eleventh, you
can get the Mother's Day promotion. You can get a
free ninety five count. You got these projectiles that you
(54:14):
can buy with it, take it along with your purchase.
That's a forty ninety nine value. But it gives you
the legal flexibility because as you know, it doesn't care
about gun free zone signs, doesn't require background checks, no
waiting periods, no permits, so it's accessible to everybody. Visit
Bunda dot com slash data check out the new burnacl
b y r NA dot com slash data. Order by
(54:35):
May eleventh for your free projectile kit to go along
with it. It's a forty nine ninety nine value. Bunda
dot com slash Data.
Speaker 6 (54:42):
Keep your finger on the pulse with a Data Show
podcast delivering timely news with insightful analysis whenever you want,
straight to you on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get
your podcasts.
Speaker 3 (54:54):
I know that you are only one hundred days in,
but as we sit here today, who do you see
as your se cess or?
Speaker 2 (55:00):
Mister Pratt?
Speaker 1 (55:00):
Well, it's far too early to say that, but you know,
I do have a vice president and typically would be
and JD's doing a fantastic job. He would be at
the top of the lie could very well be. I
don't want to get involved in that. I think he's
a fantastic, brilliant guy. Marco is great. There's a lot
of them that are great. I also see tremendous unity.
(55:23):
But certainly you would say that somebody's the VP if
that person is outstanding. I guess that person would have
an advantage, but I think the other people would all
stay in unbelievably high positions. But you know, it could
be that he'd be challenged by somebody. We have a
lot of good people in this party.
Speaker 2 (55:39):
He has. Isn't claiming an error, by the way, and
I know that the media is trying to run that
as another way to divide, but he's not claiming an error.
An agi, al right, he's not saying that. That's you're
just saying, look, it's too early, you know obviously you
know the VP et cetera. That's Trump talking to Kristen Walker.
Welcome back, bottom of the second hour. Although I entirely
(56:01):
reject Mark Rubio, entirely a million with all my heart
reject him, I have a very personal view of it.
And my view is I was there in person, and
it was the Parkland town Hall, and he was there.
I was there, I was speaking after him, and that's
(56:21):
that infamous town hall and he was on stage in
the crowd. Remember leading up to this, Just to give
you some insight. Leading up to this, they had Robert Runsi,
who was the superintendent of the school Deutsch Ted Deutsch,
who called me a quote unquote bitch, screamed it at
me when I was on stage and he was sitting
(56:44):
right next to my husband, and my husband was had
to say a prayer that he didn't punch him in
the face. He screaming at me, and he got up
on stage and they riled up that whole arena like
a rally. You thought the Wellstone funeral was in poor
taste when Democrats used that Paul Wellstone funeral to rally.
(57:06):
Remember that whole thing came back in the day. This
was like worse because they were exploiting a mass tragedy.
Nobody talked about how much worse it was what Democrats
did at that Parkland town hall. They went out there
and they gave campaign speeches and they were railing against Republicans.
They were railing against gun owners. They called gun owners terrorists.
(57:27):
This was before the Scenn cameras started rolling. I was
listening to all of this and it was me and
my husband backstage, and as part of my job at
that time, or a job at that time, I had
to represent firem owners and it wasn't a choice. And
when the camera started rolling, they didn't tell everybody that, oh, well,
we had all these politicians go up and make all
(57:48):
these speeches, and so everybody's like just bear, you know,
just ready to rip out. They were ready to like
hump there, they were ready to just ooh. They It
was like a five minutes take and I can't remember.
I think he was up there with Deutsch and Rubio
was up there, and everybody got a chance to speak,
and they were screaming at Rubio. They were booing him,
(58:11):
cussing him. Oh it was bad, and they were saying, well,
what about red flag laws and what about universal background checks?
And I watched the mob bully him away from the
Second Amendment live on stage. I watched him with my
own eyes on live television. I was there. I watched
(58:32):
him give them everything that they wanted. He agreed live
on stage to red flag laws and universal background checks.
That's not an exaggeration. He agreed to it. And then
they cheered him, and my heart fell into my stomach
because I still had to go up after him. And
my husband turned around and looked at me and he said,
(58:52):
your job just got that much harder. I'm like, gulp,
I know. And I had to go out there and
I didn't give an inch. And after that, my view
of him changed dramatically. And because of that, he's good
in this role, but he's a subordinate. Because of that,
(59:14):
I could never ever ever endorse him. I watched him
sacrifice all of our rights and our self defense because
he bent both knees and bowed his head to the
mob because it was convenient and easy for him to do. Now,
(59:39):
I know everybody the trend is to cheer him and
applaud him, and I think he's doing a fine job
as Secretary of State. He is a subordinate I think
when push comes to shove, I think he cracks under
serious pressure. I watched it happen. I had a view
that no other American in this country had, And ever
(01:00:02):
since then I was very critical of him. He will
not have anything to do with me. His people will
not have anything to do with me. And I wasn't mean,
I wasn't harsh. I just said, I've never been more
disappointed in a lawmaker in my life than I was
with him at that moment, the moment that his country
(01:00:23):
needed him the most, the moment that gun owners, that
Americans who want to make sure that they're safe, that
needed him the most, he capitulated. And you can't You
can't crack. If you're going for the highest office in
(01:00:44):
the land, you cannot crack. And he did. So he
can never be their I'm not going to get into
some of the moderate part of his record that's not
very maga, but on that reason alone, that was more
than just he failed on an issue that was a
test of character, and it was a test of personal strength,
(01:01:08):
and he failed. Now, I think he is in his
element that he was born to be in. As Secretary
of State, he's a surrogate, though he takes his orders
from the administration, and I think he's fine there. But
I will not apologize to anyone for my position on
this because no one else was there as I was
(01:01:30):
right there on the side of the stage watching it.
So no grifter can hold a candle to that real,
actual experience. So no, he can never be here. I
would never support it. I would not support it. I
couldn't vote for it because I've seen it. I mean,
(01:01:51):
when you crack like that, it's no different than a Democrat. Now.
I think it was interesting what Trump said about Vance.
He said, well, you know, he said he's very brilliant.
But if he noticed, he's said it in two or
three different ways. It's early. He wants to just see,
you know. And I think that's completely finding me for
krane a loud. The man's not even been back in
the White House for one hundred days and you're already
like trying to push him out the door. Okay, who's
(01:02:13):
your successor, who's your successor? Give him a minute to
do some stuff. Okay, but that's the press. You had
to know that that question was coming. I thought he
handled it fine. I thought the way that the media
is trying to present it, they're trying to make it divisive.
They're saying, oh, look, he already named two people right here, Oh,
these are his heirrors. That's not what he said. He
(01:02:34):
said there's a lot of good people. And I know,
because it's going to be brought up, some people are like, well,
why didn't he mention DeSantis. He didn't exclude him. He
just mentioned his VP, which is natural. And then the
guy who literallyas in the press because he assumed a
million different temporary positions in addition to Secretary of State
right now until they can get these other rules filled.
(01:02:55):
So yeah, he's right there all the time. That's not unusual.
I get it. So I think that the way Trump
handled that answer was completely fine. There was nothing, there's
no drama there. He didn't exclude anybody, and he said
it's too early, and he said potential, potential, potential. He
never claimed anything. So sh don't get baited by the
(01:03:17):
press into thinking that Trump said something that he did not.
Can you heard the same thing, correct? Didn't he say it?
Like three different times? He kept it like he purposely
was trying to keep it as open as possible. And
it's still not going to be good enough for the press.
They're still going to try to find some way to divide.
(01:03:39):
Don't bite into that nonsense. I thought it was completely
fine the way he did it. And honestly, I got
to tell you, I think the signal Gate thing, in
the way that you know he was handling Mike Waltz,
especially if this comes down to reshifting things as it
pertains to Iran, that was a very smooth move, don't
(01:04:03):
you think? So okay? Because he wouldn't he didn't get removed.
My thought he didn't. He didn't get removed because of
signal Gate. It's because of Iran, because of his position
on Iran. That's how he got That's why he got moved.
So you know, there's this is all. It's it's all.
That's the way it is, just the way it is.
(01:04:24):
All right, A couple of things because we got we
have time for some red state rhinos.
Speaker 7 (01:04:28):
One.
Speaker 2 (01:04:29):
I just got a couple of things here. So serious,
isn't it. It's like red state rhinal hunting, noir So
a couple of things they are considering you know, obviously
several different bits of legislation. They have a Reader Act
(01:04:50):
which is being proposed. This is coming from Kristin Bentley,
who is a committee woman in the first Senate District
and SB three. It's a fix to the Reader Act
for Texas. Now, you know, we focus on rhinos obviously
for this red state rhino hunting, and I'm not ignoring
(01:05:13):
other states, and there are other states that we're going
to get to, but we focus on with put a
particular emphasis on Texas and Florida because they are the
biggest red states and you can't lose them. You particularly
can't lose Texas. So SB thirteen they're looking at requiring
consistent review procedures and basically giving and also making it
to where parents have to sign off on non academic
(01:05:37):
materials that are presented in schools like you're like elementary
as well, so that we can get rid of the
age inappropriate sexual material that is constantly being introduced in
school that's you know, ultimately gets into all i mean
(01:05:57):
the trends stuff and all this other stuff that's in schools.
And there are of course, you know some it's in
the Public Education Committee. It's SB thirteen and there are
some it's nobody's fixed their name yet, but there are
some lawmakers that are trying to push back against this
that are Republicans of all the things. It's kind of
amazing that this is something that just consistently keeps happening.
(01:06:20):
Now in Florida. I can't even believe I'm about to
say this. They actually had a big win in Florida
because their speaker, Danny Perez, finally was forced to yield
on property taxes. So you remember the Florida House Speaker,
a big rhino, who was fighting forever against any kind
(01:06:43):
of property tax relief for Floridians. He said it was impractical.
He's lost the battle, and so now the Select Committee
on Property Taxes they are now allowed. They're looking at
proposals to overhaul the entire property tax structure for the
st of Florida. One of the things that the governor
had said is that they were I mean, they require homeowners,
(01:07:05):
you're constantly paying rent, constitutional protections for Florida homeowners require
their approval of voters. In twenty six Floridians need relief.
So they're pushing They're exploring everything from like a thousand
dollars rebate whatever it is until they can get up,
until the committee can formulate a permanent structure, they overhaul it,
and they can get it passed in the legislature. They
(01:07:25):
had been blocked by the speaker, the Republican Speaker of
the House, for or forever, and now he lost this
battle and so now it's going forward. So that is
a huge, huge thing. And that goes to a lot
of grassroot people in Florida who started hearing about this
and they started burning down his phone lines. And when
he started seeing the pushback from Floridians in that state,
(01:07:49):
his knees buckled. So you have the power to do this.
You just got to do it, and you got to
get your friends and your family to do it, because
it doesn't matter how powerful the Speaker of the House
is in particular state, they're never going to be as
powerful as you are. When you bring that heat the
way that these people have been bringing on him, you
can get it done. So that's a big win. So
now they're pushing forward and all of that as we
(01:08:11):
move our partners that bring you the program, our friends
over at kel Tech, Great Company, Great All American Company.
They got the pr fifty seven the rotary barrel pistol,
the lightest five to seven on the market, forty percent
lighter than competition. It's perfect for concealed carry. You can
actually really concealed carry this five to seven. It's awesome.
Unique toploading design replaces the traditional magazines with stripper clips
(01:08:32):
for a slimmer carrier profile, slimmer carry profile, and a
twenty plus one capacity MSR pas only three ninety nine.
It's super sweet. And this is when you absolutely have
to have. And you know, kel Tech it's all about
made in America, family owned values at their best. These
are American materials, American workers, American labor, American production, the
whole nine yards. America needs more companies like kel Tech.
(01:08:54):
Learn more at kel Tech Weapons dot com, Innovation Performance Caltech,
k e Ltec Weapons dot Com. Tell them Dane to
send you.
Speaker 3 (01:09:02):
It's his laugh mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida.
Speaker 2 (01:09:10):
Man, wow, oh my gosh, this is crazy. A Florida homeowner,
because you know, iguanas are invasive species in Florida, that's
what they're considered. A Florida homeowner found ninety eight iguana
eggs in their backyard and when they called the Humane
Iguana Control of Division of Florida Fish and Wildlife, they
(01:09:31):
said that that was literally the most they had ever
seen in on one site. And it was from I
think they said, three three different females that they because
they I mean, they tell people to hunt these things.
Three female iguanas had nested in burrows. They were all
(01:09:51):
interconnected and each had their own clutch, and they they
said it's a record, the most ever they've never found
in the history of the state. Said iguanas are more
than a nuisance. They dig burrows that damages infrastructure, landscape, destruction,
health risks. You know, they can like the salmonella on
the skin and all that stuff. They said that one
(01:10:11):
even compromised an actual dam before and it was a
two million dollar They had two million dollars to text
Para money to fix it. Isn't that crazy? So that's
a Florida man was arrested because he had three different
wives and three different counties. And that is a big
bad no. No, oh uh, they I think did we
have this before? I think we had this one. Yeah,
(01:10:31):
I think I had this one last Friday, So we
don't need that one again. Also, let's see here at
another another one this hmm couple. Hang on, I don't
want to where that one was gross not reading that one.
A Florida man was accused of ramming into a Boca
Raton fire engine. Apparently he was triggered. I've never seen
(01:10:53):
a guy with such a large forehead in my life.
It was a roadside outburst. It landed him in handcuffs,
yelled at firefighters, hit their fire and sped off. And
there was a call later on into police that said
a vehicle was forcing other cars off the road. And
they got this guy, forty year old Christian di Orsini,
(01:11:13):
and he was screaming at firefighters. Uh. And that's when
he backed into a fire engine, tried to speed off.
They ended up did They did catch him, and he's
got a very He had a DUI left this scene
of an accident, property damage, all kinds of stuff. They
so he was under some kind of influence per CBS twelve. Yeah,
I would say so. And I'm not gonna have time
(01:11:36):
for this one. Tomorrow. I'll tell you about the one
who assaulted a gate agent at DFW, which you can't do.
So we got a lot more on the way. Third
hour next stick with us the only I mean literally
the only Christian conservative cell phone provider out there, and
it's Patriot Mobiles. So like, if you're upset that people
spend money on Netflix or Amazon, you're gonna get matter
that you're spending more of your money on a cell
phone service that donates to like gun control and DEI
(01:11:58):
and CRT and all. This Patriot Mobile has affordable plans
for everybody. That's great, everybody wants to save money in
this economy. But they also have great nationwide coverage. They
operate on all three major networks. You get your connected
wherever you go. You support what you believe in. This
is all about better coverage and more more choice in
(01:12:19):
terms of what causes you support, what causes matter to
you because your money isn't working against you at the
ballot box. Like for instance, they helped empower They worked
with grassroot parents in our town when they were fighting
or all fighting to take back our school board from
people who I can't even tell you some of the
stuff that they wanted to teach in the classrooms because
we have decency rules for airwaves. But that being said,
(01:12:41):
they empowered the parents to be successful in taking back
the school board here and they work with people all
over the country in addition to providing top notch cell
phone service seamless switching one hundred percent based US customer
service team. Keep your number, your phone however you want
or upgrade. It's never been easier to switch. So visit
Patriotmobile dot com slash Dana orgon them to Patriot and
get a free month of service using promo Coddina. Make
(01:13:04):
the switch today and defend freedom with every call and
text you make Patriot Mobile dot com slash Dana nine
seven to two Patriots As you've decided to reopen alttrast,
can you always.
Speaker 9 (01:13:14):
Do that decision?
Speaker 2 (01:13:15):
Did I say what to reopen Alcatraz? How will you
use it?
Speaker 9 (01:13:19):
How did you come up with.
Speaker 1 (01:13:20):
The Well, I guess I was supposed to be a
movie maker.
Speaker 4 (01:13:23):
We're talking. We started with the movie making all End.
Speaker 1 (01:13:26):
I mean it represents something very strong, very powerful in
terms of law and order.
Speaker 6 (01:13:32):
Our country needs law and order.
Speaker 1 (01:13:34):
Alcatraz is I would say, the ultimate right, Alcatraz Sing
Sing and Alcatraz the movies.
Speaker 4 (01:13:41):
But it's right now a museum, believe it, and a
lot of people go there. It has the uh most
violent criminals in the world, and nobody ever escaped to
one person almost got there, but they, as you know
the story, they found his clothing rather badly ripped up,
and it was a lot of shark bites, a lot
(01:14:02):
of a lot of problems. Nobody's ever escaped from Alcatraz
and just represented something strong having to do with law
and order. We need law and order in this country,
and so we're going to look at it. Some of
the people up here are going to be working very
hard on that. And uh, we had a little conversation.
Speaker 2 (01:14:21):
I think I think it's the shark bites, a lot
of shark Well, there's shark infester water right there. I mean,
I'm just saying it is, isn't it, Kane. I mean,
you know, the sharks are hungry right there. That's all.
They got our needles and feces on them.
Speaker 3 (01:14:36):
That's where they're looking to get their bites in.
Speaker 2 (01:14:38):
Yeah, they get they got to get your bites in.
And then the little watch goes off and says, you
did it. I don't know what's happening. Oh my gosh.
Welcome back to the program. We're at the top of
the third hour. It's the weather. It's uh, welcome back,
Danie lash with you or again top of the third hour,
greetings and salutations. A little quick sidebars. So you know
(01:15:02):
we are studio. We have Wick here, a rescue popin.
This dog is. We've had to teach him how to
be a dog in a way because we got him
from a shelter and he never like went outside without
a person before. So the first time I let him
go outside, you know, like go out, it's your backyard,
you know, and you can go use the rushroom, he
looked at me like I was crazy, Like we get
(01:15:22):
here a woman like you got to walk out with me.
I can't do this by myself. And he is petrified
of storms. I've never I mean he just shakes. He
just just tucks his tail and just shakes whenever there's
like thunder, whenever it's storming, and then you know, if
whatever was going on, we got to stop it and
make sure he's chill. And he doesn't like being in
(01:15:45):
his kennel except to go to bed at night, that's
the only time. And most dogs want a safe space.
Wick does not want to be in his kennel, So
I've made a pillow fort for him, like a whole
pillow fort that he can get in and hide. So
I'll let you know how that works out. I'm like, well,
I don't. He doesn't want to be in his kennel,
(01:16:07):
so the next best thing is a pillow for it.
Speaker 3 (01:16:09):
Well, how many pillows have you used in this pillow fort?
Speaker 2 (01:16:12):
A lot? And there's like a blanket And I am
an expert pillow for it builder. I don't know if
anybody knows this. It's a particular skill set that I have.
You know, I've made many many pillow forts, not just
as a child but also as a boy. Mom. I
have made some pillow forts in my time, and so
it's a really cane. It's a spectacular pillow for it
(01:16:33):
in which Wick can find security from the storm since
he doesn't.
Speaker 3 (01:16:37):
Does he calm down in the pillow fort?
Speaker 2 (01:16:39):
Well, I don't know. We're trying it for the first time,
so we're going to see. That's what I did on Brick.
I'm like, I went and cobbled together, if I do
say so myself, a pretty spectacular pillow for it, and
we're going to see if that may be because he
wants to be under stuff, and if he sits by
you when it's storming, you have to basically hug him.
You have to put your arm around him and hug him,
or he'll try to melt into your head. It's just
(01:17:01):
like he tries to get right there by you. Poor
guy's he is just I and someone was telling me
a thundershirt. People who have never dressed toddlers are like,
get a thundershirt for your dog. Dressing a dog is
as bad, if not worse. Sometimes, I think than dressing
a toddler, well, unless it was my youngest and I
(01:17:24):
I just don't know if that's going to work out.
So I didn't even know what it's a shirt that
hugs you tight.
Speaker 3 (01:17:29):
Yeah, I guess it's supposed to be like those compression
blankets that make you feel like you're being hugged.
Speaker 2 (01:17:34):
I feel like that's not going to work for him.
He's he's a very smart dog. He is super smart.
He learned how to open gates and all kinds of stuff.
He's incredibly smart. But yeah, so he's just except he
doesn't recognize just a basic storm. He's smart, but you know,
so we'll see how that goes.
Speaker 3 (01:17:53):
So give him a break.
Speaker 2 (01:17:55):
Well, I mean, it is kind of out of nowhere.
It was, you know, sunny this morning, and all of
a sudden a storm comes rolling through again, and they'll
thunder is so woud that sometimes it carries over air.
It's crazy. So anyway, that's that's my life right now.
I'm just making sure my dog doesn't have an existential
breakdown when I'm on air because of the thunder. So
if one day you guys happen to tune in and
(01:18:17):
you hear like some whining in the background of the mic,
if you're not watching, or if you just see a
giant yellow dog here in the seat with me, it's
because the pillowfor it didn't work. It didn't work, and
so he's he's got to be. He's got to be
and he just sits there. It's the funniest thing. He
doesn't move. It's like he thinks if he's still, the
storm won't see him, like the oh big roll of thunder.
(01:18:37):
He acts like if he's just super still, the storm
won't see him. And he just he sits as still
as a cigar store Indian. He just sits there, and
we'll not move, so he'll just he'll he'll probably look
like a fake dog, So it may happen now, it
may happen here in the next the next few, so
bear with us. It's our high maintenance show dog. Oh
my gosh. Now Lorraine says for her dog, it's the
(01:18:59):
electricity in the air more so than the thunder. I
didn't even think about that really, the electricity in the air.
I just think it's a muggy anyway. So all right,
So potis having uh the having a little press a
ail right there, and he's discussing alcatraze. I just again,
(01:19:20):
I don't think you need to make it all up right,
Just make sure you got the the electric fences work,
and I think you're good, right, I think so. In
the locks work, yeah, I think that. Yeah, I think that'll.
I just don't even know how much that would do.
Are we Are we running out of prison space?
Speaker 3 (01:19:38):
I think, I mean, we've been letting prisoners out for
all kinds of different reasons, right, and overpopulation's been one
of those reasons.
Speaker 2 (01:19:47):
Yeah, I just yeah, I mean I don't know. I mean,
maybe it, you know, maybe maybe we do. But I'm
not against it. I'm not against it. Pots it down
with Kristen Walker, uh, and it was grilling him about
a number of different issues. Can we have audio somebody
to six because I need to hear I need to
hear what he says about Chasman Crockett. Go ahead, play
(01:20:09):
this one.
Speaker 1 (01:20:10):
I can't name I can't name one Democrat. I mean,
I look at the Democrats. They're in total just array.
They have a new person named Crockett. I watched her
speak the other day. She's definitely a low IQ person
and they said she's the future of the party.
Speaker 2 (01:20:27):
She's dumb. How is that possible? It's what he just said. Now,
speaking of Crockett, was this at her audio? Somebodye I
think this, oh seventeen so she was speaking at a
commencement ceremony. You know, just this sounds like a particular
just like I guess what a regular commencement material. Listen
(01:20:48):
to this.
Speaker 10 (01:20:49):
Were going to be people that tell you that you
don't belong, and I am here to tell you, Ova
and Ova and Ova, that you absolutely belong. There are
people that are going to tell you that there is
not a table in which there is a seat for you.
But I am here to remind you of Montgomery and
those folding chairs. Let me tell you, did we know
(01:21:11):
how to use a chair, whether we pulling it up,
are we doing something else with it?
Speaker 2 (01:21:19):
Okay, So I guess she thinks that. So this was
her graduation, her commencement speech Sunday. This is she was
in Mississippi twenty minute speech and she's like unnecessarily wordy,
like instead of you know, at a table in which
there is a chair, you could just say a seat
(01:21:41):
at the table, you know, at a table, and using
a bunch of words strung together poorly does not make
you sound smarter, It makes you sound dumb. Just say
a seat at the table. That's it. But she's talking
about this, uh the fight that when she's talking about chair,
she's do you remember this twenty twenty three fight that
was in Montgomery, Alabama, And it was it was boaters
(01:22:03):
that fought with uh, I guess, like a dock worker
and a couple of other people. Remember this. It was
a bunch of drunk people that fought and then there
were chairs involved. I don't even know. And it had
to do with a parking spot at the dock, like
somebody was trying to dock their boat and somebody else.
There was like a large river boat and then there
was a smaller private boat and everybody got into a fight,
(01:22:24):
and they everybody made it a racial thing. And because
they said, well, the you know, the city has a
history of racial violence. I don't necessarily. I mean, I
don't know if it was a race thing more as
much as it was a drunk person, drunk people entitled thing.
I don't know, but I mean, I guess, you know,
she needed it to be that. She referenced that that's
(01:22:45):
what she was talking about with the folding chair, Like
that doesn't even meet makes sense. You're talking about a
drunk fight over a dot over dock space and a
what But why is that the message? First off, who's
telling people that they don't that there isn't a seat
for them at the table? Oh sorry, a table at
(01:23:07):
which there's a seat also known as a chair that
you could have the seat at. I don't get it, Kane, Like,
what why is that the who's telling anybody this? The
only people that are saying this for people like her,
The only people that are going, oh, there's no room
(01:23:28):
at the table. It's just it's it's her. She's the
one who's telling them those but that.
Speaker 3 (01:23:33):
She did respond to him on on X oh oh yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:23:39):
She did respond to him on X Yeah, well her
her remarks were stupid when she's talking about the chair,
but she said she tweeted, as Kane noted, she tweeted, quote, Gosh,
for you to be in charge of the whole country,
you sure do have my name in your mouth a lot. Okay,
first off, let's stop with the first sentence. He doesn't
even know your name. You just knew your last name
(01:24:01):
and he only mentioned you one time, So get over yourself,
and can we stop saying name in your mouth? Like
that's so stupid? Just shut up. I'm so tired of
people trying to sound hard ass, and like I'm going
to say something that I think other hard ass people
say and if I say it, then I'm gonna borrow
the heart ass inness. Just stop, And then she goes,
every time you say my name, you're reminding the world
that you're terrified of smart, bold black women telling the
(01:24:23):
truth and holding you accountable. Like what like he mentioned
you one time, he mentioned her one time, like he
wig snatched you, and why are you still talking? Like stop,
he didn't even mention your whole name, So she snatched
her own wig at her speech, Like I've never seen
(01:24:44):
anybody wigs, like do a self wig, snatch an s
ws harder than this woman does, like it just does
not keep my name out of your mouth. Okay, that's
not even how that works. But okay, just I feel
like I'm watching like shit Creek the show fold in
the cheese. David, Well, what does it even mean? I've
filled it in keep my name out of your mouth?
(01:25:07):
What does that even mean?
Speaker 3 (01:25:09):
The funny thing is that every time she talks about it,
it's proving his point.
Speaker 2 (01:25:14):
Well, yeah, I mean she's she talks about him all
the time. He just referenced her one time. One time,
He just mentioned her one time, and she loses it
on X loses it. She was so excited that even
mentioned her last name. Nobody remembers her first name, and
the only reason that they remember her last name is
(01:25:34):
because it's Davy Crockett's name first. And it's a little
bit jarring to realize that somebody with the last name
Crockett is such an idiot and so entitled. I mean,
she's literally like a trust fund socialist. I told you
she grew up in the ritziest area in Saint Louis,
and she went to the most expensive and exclusive private school. Ever,
(01:25:57):
I mean MICDS is that where all the politicians' kids went,
all the CEO's kids went, all the debutantes, all the
billionaires and the millionaire's kids, all the ballplayers kids were
at in my CDs, like everybody was at. If you
had money and you had your parents were famous, you
(01:26:18):
were at in my CDs. That was like the school,
and it was it's super expensive. It's like more expensive
than a four year university. It is insanely expensive to
go there. Beautiful campus, but I had to do a profile.
One of my first jobs after college was writing a
celebrity profile on a performing artist and they went to MICDS.
(01:26:39):
And when I walked into that school, I was blown
away because it was like a world away from how
I grew up. I mean, so, yeah, she's name. I
think she tries to costplay like she's hood. Well she does.
She tries to costplay hood and she's not like AOC,
tries to costplay like she's tough. It's like, stop, it
(01:27:00):
just looks so bad. It's so bad. So the she
that was her commencement address. I just can't believe that
you would reference drunk people fighting with folding chairs over
doc space at a commencement address and then act like
that's somehow representative of racial struggle. I mean, if you're
it doesn't even make any sense. And she was in Mississippi, right,
(01:27:21):
and she's referencing something that was in Montgomery, Alabama. I
don't understand. That doesn't none of that makes sense to me.
Of course, you know, not the brightest bulb in the box.
Not really audio somebody eighteen. Oh, she kept going listen,
this is nuts. It's easy to play because she says
stuff that's so crazy. Oh wait, we got to move,
don't we. Oh, hold that hold that thought, Hold the thought. Sorry,
(01:27:41):
Steve is dying. Steve gotta yell at me. We gotta
move because Steve will have a stroke and we won't
have any quick five gold Coat is making it easy
to take that first step toward protecting your savings. Just
fill out a quick form, no commitment, just free information,
and then they'll ship you your free twenty twenty five
gold and silver kits straight to your no shipping fees,
(01:28:01):
no strings, just a free infoKit to help you understand
how gold and silver can fit into your financial plan.
I'm a big believer in doing your research, and this
kit is a great place to start. So I'm really
excited to be partnering with gold Co because not only
do they support my show, which I truly appreciate, but
they've made the whole process of buying precious metals super straightforward.
(01:28:23):
Because if you're a fan of the show, gold Co
is also going to tell you how to qualify for
unlimited free bonus silver on eligible orders. If you qualify,
you can even get a free half out silver Ronald
reagancoin totally free. Don't wait. Take that first step towards
protecting and diversifying your savings with gold Co. Visit Dana
likes goold dot com to learn more. That's Dana likes
(01:28:45):
gold dot com.
Speaker 3 (01:28:47):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 2 (01:28:53):
So NIH closes experimentation labs that are accused of brutally
killing thousands of eagles for over forty years, so horrible.
It was announced that they closed their last in house
beagle lab on the NIH campus. This comes after days
days after Dog said that they're investigating these experiments in
the White Coast waste projects. So that's great news. Let's
(01:29:15):
see also solar panels to be fitted on all new
homes in England by twenty twenty seven. That's mandatory. You
will be forced to comply. Stephen Yates joins us. Next. Look,
your house is your absolute biggest asset. Why in the
world you wouldn't have it locked down? I don't know.
I mean you you lock your car up and you
make sure that you know your car is protected. You
(01:29:36):
make sure that you know if you own a business,
your business is protected. I mean, your money in a
bank is protected. But what about your home. The problem
in today's AI driven CyberWorld is that it's easier and
more prevalent than ever to just swindle somebody out of
a home title, steal it outright. Your equity is the target.
They can forge your signature on a document. They can
(01:29:58):
It's easy to get a fake notary stamp, they pay
a little fee with your county, and then your home
title has been transferred out of your Name's as easy
as that. One forge signature is all it takes. The
sad thing is that most people don't even know that
it's happened. They don't know that it's happened until they
start getting foreclosure notices because they're using your equity the
scammers to take out massive loans some of them. There
even stories of people who have had their properties sold
out from underneath them outright, and you are left to
(01:30:21):
deal with the very expensive aftermath. Most people can't afford
to litigate it and protect They can't after it's done.
Most people can't afford to protect themselves. It's that bad.
This is why you need home title Lock. Home title
Uck can protect you. Use home title lock dot com.
You can get a free title history report and a
fourteen day trial their million dollar Triple Lock Protection, so
(01:30:43):
that's twenty four to seven monitoring of your title, urgent
alerts to any changes, and if frauds should happen, they'll
spend up to a million dollars to fix it. So
visit home title lock dot com today and use promo
code data.
Speaker 6 (01:30:57):
Brighten up your timely news consumption with a Danish podcast
where every update comes with a little dash of not
so serious on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 2 (01:31:09):
Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash with you or
at the bottom of this third hour listen Coast to Coast.
You can also find this channel thirty forty seven on
DirecTV X rumble, all that good stuff. So very interesting
headline that I had a double check to make sure
it was real. Chinese officials are reportedly seeking to discuss
fentanyl and in the fentanyl ingredients amid all of this
(01:31:30):
stuff with the trade war. Apparently it was reported that
their Minister of Public Security has made some inquiries over
the past few days. Now, I don't know what that means,
like can we talk to you about fentanyl? Can we
have a talk? How does that even work? So to
talk to us about this. Our very good friend Steven Yates,
you know him. He's on the show regularly. You can
find him on x at Yates Comms. Yeah, Yates Comms.
(01:31:54):
And of course he worked in not one but two
previous presidential administrations, and he is the senior research fellow
at the Heritage Foundation. He joins us, now not be
a Skype because Skype is now dead. Stephen, It's good
to talk with you. What does that mean when they say, yeah,
we're interested in talking about fentanyl, Like okay, so talk.
Speaker 3 (01:32:13):
Yeah?
Speaker 9 (01:32:13):
Well, for you and me and everyone with common sense,
that should be the reflex for the Chinese communists. They
seem to have been taken a little by surprise. And
I say this not to make excuses for them, because
I don't and would never and I'd rather they go
die under a tree. But they seem to have been
scratching their heads that Americans might be serious, that they
(01:32:35):
shut the flow of this poison that has been killing
hundreds of thousands of Americans. And that's not actually negotiable.
We don't need to talk about it, just do it.
And if you do it, then we can go on
and negotiate other things. It was a bit of a test.
Speaker 2 (01:32:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (01:32:48):
So here they waited through the first hundred days of
the Trump administration, not doing the things they knew that
the Truck team was telling them they needed to do,
and escalating the rhetoric on all the other forms of tariffs.
And then they start sending their surrogates to DC to
talk to the tanks where they have China programs that
(01:33:09):
actually come and go to China, unlike mine, and they
and they start saying, hey, well, what does Trump want,
what does the administration need? What are we really trying
to negotiate? And for whatever reason, they'll come around and
they'll have their friends come ask me, because they don't
ask directly to me, and I say, well, you know,
this isn't rocket science, said right from the outset, very
(01:33:31):
first tariffs that were that were levied were linked to
stop the fentanyl precursors. This isn't really an academic debate.
They know who's doing it, they know where they're doing it,
they know where the money's being laundered, and they can
stop it one hundred percent in a day if they're
so motivated. And if you wonder, look how quickly they
locked down the entire city of Shanghai when they wanted
(01:33:52):
to or needed to. Look how they stomped on Hong
Kong when they wanted to or needed to. This isn't academic.
So that's the dance that we're playing right now. I
think the President wants to make a deal to rebalance
the economic relationship, but I think he correctly, and I
hope he sticks to his guns about it. Said, this
fentanyl thing is not actually negotiable. Do something meaningful that
(01:34:12):
we can verify and measure, and then we'll talk about
the other things.
Speaker 2 (01:34:16):
Yeah, that makes all the sense in the world. Because
they were saying I think it was Fox and others
that were reported these, you know, Chinese government officials were well,
what does the administration that we're asking, what does the
administration want us to do about the inputs for fentanyl? Well,
stop sending them to the cartels. I mean, it's just
that simple. Maybe stop having that kind of a relationship
(01:34:36):
with the cartels. It's interesting too, whenever they talk about fentanyl, Steve,
and they never mentioned that aspect of the equation. They
never talk about their association with the cartels, which they
kind of treat the cartels like that, like they're their
own independent sovereign entity.
Speaker 9 (01:34:50):
Right Well, and they seem to have no shame in
that association. Now we shouldn't expect communist parties to have
too much shame. But at the same time, that is
the other reason why I think that to no precursor materials,
not the stuff that's used to treat pain and surgeries
and hospitals or whatever else, but the illicit precursors should
be listed as WMD, because then we are listing not
(01:35:12):
just the vehicles for bringing these things into our country,
the cartels, but also the substance themselves and a double brands. Okay, China,
you want to be a world leader saying you're upholding
rules and norms, you're trafficking in weapons of mass destruction,
and so go ahead, Europe. You want to warm up
to someone trafficing weapons of mass destruction, that's that's your
(01:35:33):
association now. And I think that that might might might
do something that has been more than just get talks going.
But really we're dealing with bad people who've been willing
to kill a lot of Americans already. We shouldn't be surprised.
They make this hard and they don't operate under our logic.
Speaker 2 (01:35:48):
The New York Times had we're talking with our friend
Stephen Yates. The New York Times had the headline is
China looks for way out of US. Troy Dudlock fenla
CoA be the key is their willingness to discuss spentyl
You think kind of maybe the beginning of waving them
waving a white flag on this trade war.
Speaker 9 (01:36:08):
Well, from what I hear and my information is as
imperfect as everyone else is in this region.
Speaker 2 (01:36:13):
I feel like you know more than everybody else. Let's
be honest about it. Going on.
Speaker 9 (01:36:18):
The Gold Coasts seem to shift in the in the
life we live now at light speed and trump speed
for news cycles. But what I think has been very
very clear, is that the President is interested in talking Toshijinping.
He's just not interested in conceding in advance. The Chinese
side is trying to intimate they're not interested in conceding
(01:36:39):
in advance. But I think that the President has rightly
held out fentanyl is something different. It shouldn't be negotiable.
And so if they want to have talks about what
to do about fentanyl, they're wasting their time. They know
what needs to be done and with whom, and they
can do that. And if they won't do that, what
should that tell any reasonable American, European, Asian or otherwise
(01:37:02):
about how can you negotiate and deal with this kind
of government? If they won't do this, if they were
poisoning your children, would you negotiate free trade with them?
It's insane and so it has to be the prerequisite
from my point of view. I'm not the president, no
one elected me, and he hasn't asked for my advice.
But for free of charge, mister President, I think you're
(01:37:24):
on the right track and stick to your guns on this.
Speaker 2 (01:37:26):
That's a good I would say that they should listen
to you. I mean, you were there before and you've
had other potuses listened to you. We're talking with our
good friend Steven Yates at Yates comson x on So
in the Pacific, we have obviously the threat of China,
and then we focused so much on the Middle East.
But then recently and this is where I wanted to
get kind of your experience and expertise on this, because
(01:37:47):
you know, with the dismissal of Mike Waltz being where
he is now he's going to be the UN Ambassador.
I don't feel like that all happened because of the
signal leak. I feel like that happened because of Iran
and how you have these two different factions in the
administration that don't seem to be on the same page
(01:38:07):
with us. Trump and I think Vance for the most part,
seem to be more of let's approach this diplomatically. We
don't want to either look like we're going towards conflict
with Iran or have or commit to anything like that.
But then you have others, you know, more like Tom
Cotton and some other folks that are there, Lindsey Graham,
who absolutely you know, every to them, everything is a
nail there, the hammer they want to bomb bomb bomb
(01:38:28):
her on. I mean, it seems like there's these two
factions competing in the administration. What do you make of
this and what does that forecast for how we're going
to deal with them?
Speaker 9 (01:38:40):
Well, this is a hard challenge. You're not wrong about
the mixed forces and the reason there are those mixed
forces because the United States has tried a lot of
different things, and what we know with a certainty is
the things that were tried before mostly didn't work. The
thing that worked the best was Trump one point, Oh's
Maximum Pressure and Abraham Accords combo seemed to put us
(01:39:01):
our allies in the region in the best possible position
at least since the nineteen seventies. And that's not for nothing.
But it also didn't solve the problem, and the problem
might not be solvable with acceptable risk on our part.
That's the reason why it's a hard job to be
president and it's a hard job to advise presidents. I
have no idea what the true sort of tender was
(01:39:24):
that lit things off to make a change. For a
national security advisor, I would say that whenever there is
really sensitive negotiations going on, everyone is at risk of
getting a little out on their skis or out of
step with the president, and this administration in their first
hundred days had like three or four very sensitive and
complicated negotiations going on at the same time. Never seen
(01:39:47):
anything like that before, and so the risk of sort
of crossing wires at some point and wanting change is
going to be really high, and it's going to be
high for whoever has that position under those circumstances assess So.
But in dealing with Iran, I think the President is
trying to see is there some kind of deal to
be had? I actually kind of doubt there is. What
(01:40:10):
are our allies looking form at Israel is still having
to try to defeat Gaza, and there's still a lot
of people in the international community trying to hold them
back from doing it, and Iranian threat of having a
nuclear weapon that's obviously aimed at Israel and aimed at
the United States, and so this is this is not
(01:40:30):
easy stuff, and China and Russia aren't making it any easier.
So this people talk about three dimensional four dimensional chess.
I don't understand that. I could never play it, But
this is kind of what the president is facing, and
I think it's really hard. Most of the building blocks
he's trying, I think are on the right track, but
we can't count on the bad people coming along and
(01:40:51):
getting with the program.
Speaker 2 (01:40:52):
What are I know that Oman was hosting I think
the last like a week ago, they were hosting some
talks I think with Steve Wikoff and others. From what
I was reading, there was supposed to be another round
of talks this week and that ended up ultimately being
canceled because you mentioned the Abraham Accords, and I'm thinking,
you know, and nuclearized Iran is is way more dangerous
to a lot like you know, I go back to
(01:41:13):
like the Sunni Shia conflict, and they're way more dangerous,
and you know, to this, as much as they are
dangerous to Israel in the United States, I would imagine
they're super dangerous on those terms to Saudi Arabia as well.
It just seems like all that's reported about their involvement
is just hosting talks and maybe doing some mediation. It's
just is there more to it than that that's just
not getting reported.
Speaker 9 (01:41:35):
I strongly suspect there's a lot more going on with
our major allies in that region. Why I say major,
I mean those that have the financial and military means
to make a meaningful difference in shaping the region, and
so I think the United Arab Emirates punches above its
weight in that regard. I think Saudi Arabia is vital
in trying to keep some sense of balance. This isn't
(01:41:56):
a question of do you love every part of every
kingdom that you deal with. It's a matter of do
you have a coalition that can keep the darkest genie
in a bottle in order for the rest of us
to have an alternative path to peace and prosperity. And
with those, I think the President is scheduled in the
not to distant future to go spend several days over
in the Middle East and will have very I think
(01:42:19):
in depth and serious and I think very blunt talks
with leaders over there that will be on the Iran
situation and what's the end state for the Gaza situation,
and what America can do and can't do, and what
they need to do and listen to them also. I
mean that's the undertold story is people talk about Trump
(01:42:42):
being a certain way, but he actually is doing a
lot of listening to the allies that are serious about
sharing risk and resources to address these things, so he'll
hear what the Saudis and the Amorades have to say
and what the Israelis have to say, and that's vital
to trying to chart this path forward.
Speaker 2 (01:43:00):
There you go, Stephen Yates, always the experts, So you
need to be telling the administration. You need to be right.
I would feel better. I would feel better knowing that.
Speaker 9 (01:43:08):
Student culture tuning in and you know, this is managerial election.
It's excellence free of charge.
Speaker 2 (01:43:13):
There you go right there at Yates Comms on x
go and find him. He has all kinds of good
stuff that he puts out there regularly. Steven, always a pleasure.
Thank you, my friend. Good, Thank you you too.
Speaker 6 (01:43:24):
Brighten up your timely news consumption with a Dana Show
podcast where every update comes with a little dash of
not so serious on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get
your podcasts.
Speaker 2 (01:43:36):
Welcome back to the program. A little week care a
lot from Faith No More, which was so great. By
the way, So we're talking about I eat a late lunch.
I had the weirdest eating schedule because We're on air
in the middle of the afternoon and I'm going to
say something that's probably very unpopular. The sink go to Mayo.
But I'm going to say it. Yeah, I love Taco
Bell and it's amazing and I'm tired of pretending that
it's not Caina and I no, no, no, no, no no. It's
(01:44:01):
like I pull up and I have them, Like it's amazing, right,
it's like so fast.
Speaker 3 (01:44:07):
Wait, you just pull up and then you have them,
have them so good.
Speaker 2 (01:44:12):
Oh my gosh. It's like when you pull up to
a fast to Molly spot and they're like here and
you just have them and oh, man, by the way,
your mom, I want to hire your mom and make
some more to Molly's. By the way, she makes the
best one.
Speaker 3 (01:44:23):
See that's the kind of and people know this, especially
ones that grew up in Mexican families. You're just like, look, okay,
Taco Bell is great.
Speaker 2 (01:44:30):
I know he's dying.
Speaker 3 (01:44:30):
You're drunk at one in the morning or whatever, and
you need it. You know.
Speaker 2 (01:44:35):
He's dying right now.
Speaker 3 (01:44:36):
Something that kind of resembles Mexican food. Then yeah, that's
what you do. That's what you do.
Speaker 2 (01:44:40):
It's so good.
Speaker 4 (01:44:41):
Though.
Speaker 2 (01:44:41):
It's like I'm not saying I don't even classified as
Mexican food. It's just its own Taco Bell it's just
like its own thing. I mean I would true, yeah,
I wouldn't necessarily say that it's yeah, but oh my gosh,
like it's so good, Like they do weird stuff with
their breading. That's like Chiloupo once said, it's a fried
(01:45:03):
taco shell or soft tortilla whatever, it's so good. I
feel like they should advertise on the show, but they don't. Yeah,
if I live next door to Want, oh my gosh,
oh my gosh, I would be five thousand pounds, I
would be on like My Big Life or whatever the
hell that's called. I love it. I could I get
into weird ruts?
Speaker 3 (01:45:22):
What is it? What's your go to when you go
to tac about?
Speaker 2 (01:45:24):
Oh my gosh, what isn't I love the any of
the cantina things that they got, the fresco stuff, the gordiita.
I love refried beans so much more.
Speaker 3 (01:45:35):
Hard taco or soft taco.
Speaker 2 (01:45:37):
Hard taco is a joke. Hard taco is a joke.
It is a trick on you. It's a joke. What's
the trick that it's bad? It looks like you think
it's gonna be good and it's not. It's bad. That's
what it is, but I'm gonna get so much hate.
I don't even care. I don't even care. It's so good,
I'm not I'm tired of pretend that's not And you
can get so much. You can get so much for
(01:45:59):
it anyway.
Speaker 3 (01:46:00):
So it is as far as fast we because it's
the cheapest out there.
Speaker 2 (01:46:03):
Right now, and it's healthy. You can get a bowl
and not have the bready healthy words so dead a sentence, Maha,
I think we just killed Kine. We're gonna need to
call the nine one ones.
Speaker 3 (01:46:17):
Look, I'm not I don't want to no pun intended
crap on taco.
Speaker 2 (01:46:21):
Bell, but no pun there. Tell beef, sell beef, my
friend sell beef, beef and chicken.
Speaker 3 (01:46:28):
Chicken clucked at one point it was definitely a pun there.
Speaker 2 (01:46:30):
Yeah, it wasn't. All right, go ahead with your today
and stupidity already, all right, hater.
Speaker 3 (01:46:34):
Well here, all right, here's listen to this. Okay, this
is Jensaki. Now you know that the media has been
doing this for the past three or four years. They
did just denied as a matter of fact, if you
even said that Biden had some cognitive decline, you were attacked,
you were shamed, all of it and now, of course
there's plenty of books out there now saying this. Listen
(01:46:56):
to what she says here. Jensaki cuts one.
Speaker 5 (01:46:59):
I never saw that person, not a single time, and
I was in the Oval office every day that was
on that debate.
Speaker 2 (01:47:05):
Stay, I'm not a doctor.
Speaker 3 (01:47:08):
Books place quickly, and she's still to this day claiming
that she didn't see a thing. I don't trust you.
Speaker 2 (01:47:13):
No one believes that. And if they didn't see it,
I don't want these people anywhere near making decisions for
the rest of the nation. Yeah, that's stupid. How did
you not see him? I mean, the man didn't even
know where he was? All right? Does it? Force? Tonight?
Sign up with subseac, Chapter and Verse, Facebook, YouTube, like
and subscribe. I'll be back with you tomorrow. God bless