Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Oh, good morning.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
House Democrats are working hard through the night, both on
the Energy and Commerce Committee and the Ways and Means
Committee to push back against this GOP tax scam where
they are trying to enact the largest Medicaid cut in
American history, north of seven hundred billion dollars, and independent
observers have confirmed that if the Republicans are successful in
(00:26):
passing this GOP tax scam, then more approximately fourteen million
people will actually lose their health coverage. Hospitals will close,
nursing homes will shut down. This really is a matter
of life and death.
Speaker 3 (00:40):
So they've been saying forever. It became a matter of
death when they inspired that guy who volunteered for Bernie
Sanders campaign to go and shoot up a congressional ball
field because they were talking like this. I'm just really
tired of these people. I'm tired of all of it.
I'm tired of the same damn fight every damn day.
And it's all these crooks and liars and all of
these people who make these stories up so that they
(01:02):
can get something that best benefits their special interests. And
Republicans aren't any damn better. If I'm being honest, I
know the big thing right now is to act like
to fetishize them and act like they can't do anything wrong.
But I've never been somebody who's an ass kisser for
Uncle Sam, and I don't plan on starting now. It
would be spitting on the graves of our founders if
I did that, So we're not doing it. But yeah,
(01:24):
I noticed that I saw a couple of pro life
organizations out there and they were talking about how, oh, yes,
you know, there are some Democrats that are trying to
include they don't want to cut down planning, parenthood funding
and all this stuff. And I'm like, you realize that,
you mean there are three Republicans that are holding up
the whole bill on that aspect of it. So there
you go. Welcome to the program, Dana lash with you.
(01:45):
It's actually already we've already been yeaded into the sun Kine.
It's like I'm already normally when I walk into the studio,
you guys are gonna bear with me. Normally, when I
walk into the studio, it's like very cold Sex penguin
cold cool. It's like a man came here and turned
up turned down the thermostat, and it's the only part
(02:08):
it's the only part of a structure in which I
reside that I'm allowed to control the thermostat, and then
I ended up I usually end up keeping it cool anyway.
Oh my gosh, it's so it's like ninety nine thousand
degrees outside already. We don't get a spring in Texas,
So they don't they don't tell you that. They don't
tell you this stuff. The AA overnight we went from
eighty three to ninety nine degrees. So if you hear
us panting or if we pass out from heat exhaustion, exhaustion,
(02:30):
that's what that is. Just you know, don't be worried.
We'll come to so. Uh, the we're gonna get into
the big what I big beautiful, but I don't know.
It's I just don't want to call it that because
there's a lot of garbage in it. And uh, I
was listening to actually not listening to I pol I
was reading rather a transcript from it was of Mike Johnson.
(02:51):
He was on one of the morning talk show circuits,
and he was talking about this bill because you know,
right now into what and do going what Kakim Jeffers
was saying, Oh, they're cutting medicare. They're cutting this. I mean,
that's literally what no one's doing. I wish, honestly, see,
this is what I can't run for office because I
would cut all of it and then everyone would scream
(03:12):
and cry and they would they everybody would be upset
because austerity is no fun. But I would. And in fact,
we're gonna talk a little bit about this because the
austerity issue is now in it's imperiling a race in Virginia. Yeah,
we're gonna get at all of that. We also have
all of the latest with Potus's Middle East travel. He
(03:34):
descended into Cutter today. That's going to be interesting because Cutter,
you know, they've that's where Hamas lives. Hamas lives and
Cutter that's where they live, and they've you know, it's
not like we don't really have a totally great relationship
with them in terms of them financing the deaths of Americans,
et cetera, et cetera. But I digress. But I think
(03:56):
his trip to Saudi Arabia was incredibly successful. I don't
think anybody would say otherwise, right, I think that was
a very successful trip. And that said, we're going to
see what comes of this trip to Kutter because you
know they're going to be talking about Gaza and the
situation there and obviously what Hamas. I'm sure that Cutter
(04:19):
is going to be doing its best to make sure
that Hamas's demands are represented. So we're going to touch
on that. I am not going to discuss the Ditty
trial because it's disgusting and I don't care about. This
is what happens when vanity and ego and evil all
come together in a perfect storm of gross I would
rather gouge my eyeballs out and eat them than to
talk about the Ditty trial. That's not an exaggeration. You
(04:42):
can add that to the list. Steve can add it
to the list just saying.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
How do you have an appetite after you got.
Speaker 3 (04:48):
Actually not someone A couple of people actually asked me
if I was going to talk about it, like why
would you think? Why would you want me to punish
you in that regard? Why do you hate yourself? Why?
So this all of this a lot, like I said,
a lot to run down now, just so you know,
a lot of what is in the bill, or what
(05:10):
they're trying to negotiate in the bill, is a lot
of draft it's a very much. There's it's a working
kind of like a working draft, so to speak. So
the UH one of the big things that you know,
for all the discussion about Medicaid, Medicare, et cetera, et cetera,
is UH entitlements. So the new spending plan, because I
(05:33):
remember that was unveiled just earlier this week, it's restructuring
the food stamp program. Daily Caller reported on this by
linking federal funding to each state's payment error rate, So
states that have higher payment error rates would receive less
in federal funding under the plan. So that's supposed to
(05:55):
incentivize them to root out, you know, the waste and
the fraud and the abuse. The House Agriculture Committee included
the proposal in its draft bill, and that's supposed to
be in the all in one legislative package. And again,
the food stand thing entirely by the federal government, the USDA,
the SNAP program, et cetera, et cetera. Democrats are mad
about this too, and I, for the life of me,
(06:17):
I can't figure out why unless they're taking the money
from the waste, fraud and abuse. That's what I'm thinking, King,
because they they now the way that this was. There
are some conservatives that are upset about this because they
said that it puts the states individually on the hook
(06:38):
for food stamp fraud. But that's not something that the
federal government. See. This is where it gets really tricky.
You're talking about a federal plan which is unconstitutional in
the first place, and then states that are administering federal
money through this plan that's supposed to have federal oversight.
So it's almost like the way it's structured weird. I mean,
(07:01):
can you would agree it's a weird structure.
Speaker 1 (07:03):
It's like the whole salt conversations. Yeah, you know what
I mean, where some states pay out but they get
more than they pay out, kind of a weird situation.
Speaker 3 (07:11):
They depending on what their income tax ye yeah, their
income taxs.
Speaker 1 (07:14):
And their load as it relates to that those welfare programs.
Speaker 3 (07:18):
Right right, right right, So the state, through the higher
payment error rates, they would receive less than federal funds
under the plan. And again this is all draft stuff.
The Republican plan wants the states, well, it would require
the states to cover half or not sorry, to cover
at least like at least a minimum five percent of
(07:39):
their food stamp expenditures, and then the federal government would
just then go and fund the rest of it according
to the way that the bills drafted. But if a
state has an error rate ten percent or above or
above ten percent, they have to pay. They're responsible for
twenty five percent of the benefits that they provide to
(08:00):
the residents of their state. Here's the kickers. Twenty eight
states go over ten percent. Yes, this is I actually
can I just say I thought it was way more
than that. Yeah, but other some of the others are
like at nine percent. There's a handful of them that
are at nine percent, twenty eight or over ten percent,
(08:21):
and some are way beyond it. Some are like fifteen,
some are way beyond it. And that's all. The most
recent data for that is from the USDA, and that's
from twenty twenty three. We don't have anything newer. They
haven't released twenty four yet, but that's all from the
USDA stats from twenty twenty three. And so like, for instance,
(08:41):
Alaska's guess what Alaska's error rate would be for this
the error.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
Oh man, don't tell me it's more than fifteen Oh.
Speaker 3 (08:51):
Dude, dude, what doooode?
Speaker 4 (08:55):
Dude?
Speaker 3 (08:56):
It's sixty percent, what more than half, more than half
sixty percent, So literally sixty percent of Alaska's food stamp
budget is waste fraud abuse. Now, New Jersey one third
of their benefits are misallocated. South Carolina it's twenty percent.
California has an almost fourteen percent error rate. So they
(09:19):
would have to fund twenty five percent of the food
stamp cost. That's like fifteen billion plus three It's like
more than three billion this year already under what it
would be. New York's is thirteen percent, so they would
have to be they would have to pay twenty five
percent of their eight billion in food stamp spending, so
they would have to pay two billion dollars to cover
(09:39):
the waste fraud abuse in that and then the states
with the lowest rates are still required to fund five
percent because as of right now they fund none of it.
They don't fund any of it.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
That's the so I'm hearing accountability in play here. Is
there anything wrong with this yet?
Speaker 3 (10:02):
Oh, it's so bad it puts states on the hook
for it, That's what I'm reading. That's what that's so
I hear. I think there's some of the capital l
libertarian folks that are part of the right coalition, and
then Democrats. That's that's the common that's what I'm hearing.
The most of Democrats suddenly are interested in Tenth Amendment issues.
Speaker 1 (10:17):
Yeah, this is a federalist just like.
Speaker 3 (10:18):
They suddenly don't like refugees.
Speaker 1 (10:20):
Now, we all know that, just like education, healthcare, and
everything else, works better the closer to local that you get. Yeah,
hand this over to the states, make them responsible, implement
this accountability so that they're effective for their own citizens.
I don't see a problem with any of this.
Speaker 3 (10:37):
Now Congress is going we remember we talked to Representative
Bethantine last week that had a piece on that that
went out on Substack, and there's also the interview that's
up at you two as well. But they were trying
to do two trillion. They wanted two trillion in spending
the way that it is right now, they're just looking
to cut one. So there's one faction that I think
is winning over the more fiscally sensible people, the people
(10:58):
who can do math, and the Republican Party wanted two trillion.
That people who can't do math just want one trillion
cut from overall federal spending. So they're trying to find it,
you know, every which way. And then you have three
Republicans that don't want to stop funding half a billion
dollars a year to Plan parenthood. And then there's like
a little bitty you know here, things here and there,
all special interest stuff are these people, so every here
(11:22):
this is going to be the fight. And so this bill,
which I think has taken too damn long. Honestly, can
I just say, if I'm a Republican and I'm in
Congress and I know that I'm going to have a
chance to cut spending even in two years, I would
have had a draft ready to rock. Then I would
have had a Plan B draft and a Planned C draft.
So if one was rejected, I would slap the people
upside the face, all the people in DC with another one.
(11:44):
And if they didn't like that, I'd slap them upside
the face with another draft and would just relentlessly keep
peppering them with US stuff so that it took them
too damn long. And I understand that they're all trying
to negotiate. You got too many cooks in the kitchen.
I mean, do you realize that the way that I understand,
we're going to talk about the Social Security stuff. I think,
can I just be I think the no tax on
tips is stupid. I don't know why you're singling out
(12:05):
one part of the workforce when everybody deserves relief, especially
those of us who paid an absolute a double snakes
load in federal taxes every year and get audited every
time of damned Democrats in the White House. Uh, no joke.
Eight years. Uh. The uh issue there is apparently now
you're still gonna have to pay taxes on Social Security
that's apparently like not included. So we're going to talk
(12:28):
about all of this stuff because I don't want to.
I know, but sometimes people kind of grown when we
get into the weeds. But there are some there's some
like you know, cup there's a cups game happening here,
and uh, you need you need to be aware of this,
and we're going to talk about it. We're also going
to get in, like I said, the latest with the
Middle East. In Virginia, there's trouble with the governor's race.
It's been now classified as lean Democrat. There is a
(12:51):
reason why, and there's a reason that a big red
flag for Republicans coming up if they don't learn how
to deal with this. This result right now in polling
is to happen across the country, so we have to
discuss all of this as we move forward, and of
course we have Florida Man. We're also going to be
talking about RFK junior and autism coming up later in
(13:13):
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Seventy percent of Americans are financially stressed, but forty percent
(14:18):
of those people are taking multiple days off work to
cope with it. If that's your plan, you're doing it wrong.
Speaker 5 (14:24):
Check out the Watchdog on Wall Street podcast on Apple, Spotify,
wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's quickfive.
Speaker 3 (14:35):
All right, So, first and foremost, the annual inflation rate
hit two point three in April, less than expected, lowest
since twenty twenty one. But the housing market is still
having some major issues. For again, this is all stuff
we need to dive into. But yeah, we're not out
of the woods. We're not out of the woods, and
depending on what Congress does, we may not ever get
out of the woods. California has this is a new
(14:58):
one for me, exploding birds. They have exploding birds. They
have an issue with exploding birds in California. They the
Avian mystery. It's in northern California. People say birds are
just blown up. Residents of a neighborhood in a Bay
Area community they said that they found multiple dead birds
in their yards. Security camera even recorded one of them. Uh,
(15:19):
and it fell to its death just right out of
the sky and there was a yeah wild. So they
said that they they're doing the necropsies on the dead birds,
and they're suggesting foul plays. So they think that there's
something going on. I don't know, do I care? I
mean I do to an extent, but it's north care.
I mean, they've got needles and feces up there. I mean,
what do you think is going to happen? Birds are
(15:40):
out there with all that stuff and come on. So also,
let's see the Oh how nice is that they waited
until Pete Rose was dead before removing his ineligibility right
from the Hall of Fame. So yeah, now they're going
to make Pete Rose and shoeless Joe Jackson Hall of
Fame eligible.
Speaker 5 (15:59):
Wow?
Speaker 3 (15:59):
Am I supposed to applaud that they waited until after
the guy was dead. I don't know. Google is going
to pay Texas one point four billion and a data
privacy statement, and the Texas House will spend all of
it in a second, completely erasing any games from that.
So just to anticipate that coming up, you know, poop
Booty Juice is running right and he's trying to grow
a beard. We'll talk stick with us. Of course, we
(16:19):
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Speaker 6 (17:36):
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Speaker 5 (17:50):
One that these cuts are wrong, and two that these
cuts are unpopular. Unfortunately, they might actually care more about
the fact that the unpopular than the fact that they're all.
Since they're both, this is an opportunity to get their attention.
We're all here for this town hall. I can't help
but notice that I'm not even elected official or running
(18:12):
for anything. I'm here. I can't help but notice a
lot of people who are elected officials, aren't you. He
wants there's a reason for that, right he wants They
don't want to have to explain this stuff.
Speaker 3 (18:22):
Yeah, he wants to be an elected official. He's running
in twenty twenty eight, or he's I think probably what
he wants to do is maybe be somebody's you know,
be on somebody's ticket. Maybe perhaps that's kind of what
I don't know. I'm guessing that was poot booty juice
with I don't know what the hell was on his face?
What was that dirt he needs to wipe his face off?
(18:43):
Was that he's trying to grow a beard because that's
the thing to do. He and Beata or Work and
John Osso they all come from the same boring progressive
white dude factory, like they come out like on conveyor belts.
I think, I don't where do they make these guys,
because there's so many of them, they have so many
of them on the Democrat side. Where do they come from?
(19:06):
They're just all the same dude, and he moved up
to Michigan because he obviously he wants to run. He
couldn't go any further in at all. He couldn't go
any further at all in Indiana, So he's going to
try I guess from there. I don't know. I'm just
(19:26):
just wondering. But he's just what he's talking. He also
was talking about at this town hall thing kilmar Abrego
Garcia audio sound bite one. Listen to this because he
was asked about this at this town hall.
Speaker 5 (19:45):
They're saying like, oh, well, this guy, you know, he's
a criminal.
Speaker 3 (19:49):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (19:51):
The whole point is that no one person, least of all,
no one politician, gets to decide that you're a criminal.
Speaker 3 (20:00):
Gosh, okay, I can't do anymore on here, I need okay,
you know what, you know what? You know what? Who
decides that? Who decides that? It's the law? The law
decides it. The law decides it. And the law said, hey,
if you enter into the country, it's actually a statute.
If you act or the country illegally, that's illegal. It's
(20:26):
like if I were to break into poot Booty Juice's
apartment across from whole foods actually doesn't live there anymore,
probably lives in some modern monstrosity in Michigan. But if
I were to break into his house and say, oh,
I am an undocumented guest, that would work, right, Yeah,
(20:46):
I mean it's not. The law determines that that's illegal.
So it's not someone there's not like some guy who
is like Scrooge McDuck on a throne of gold bullion
who's sitting up in the sky. Go hmmm, methinks that
person is a criminal and just you know, indiscriminately picking
and choosing you, moron. That's the law. I can't This
(21:13):
appeal to emotion is so lame, especially when you look
at how they're reacting to like those refugees coming in
from South Africa, which, by the way, I have. I
have a piece drafted for you. It's a little fiery,
so I'm sitting on it. I have a rule where
if it's real fiery, I'll sit on it for a
(21:34):
little bit and then I'll publish it. Because it was
one of those where I even like kicked a part
of it over to my husband. I was like, hmm,
is it too a little too much? I don't think
it can be enough with this issue. We talked about
that yesterday. But I noticed that as it relates to
boota juice, he didn't say anything. He wasn't discussing that issue.
(21:55):
He didn't bring that up. Don Lemon though, however audio
somebody twenty two he was this is Democrats now all
of a sudden they don't like immigration and they don't
like refugees a lot. Well, how did that happen? Listen
to him?
Speaker 4 (22:08):
This South African farmer bull, which is the most blatantly
obvious racist ever. It is blatantly obvious the way that
we treat white South Africans who are, by the way,
for the most part, and I am generalizing here, some
of the wealthiest people are well to do people in
(22:29):
the country. They speak their language, they own most of
the land and the property, and somehow they're being branded
a fast track to become Americans while they're trying to
cut down on immigration from other countries. You know, you
get that from where from the brown people?
Speaker 3 (22:46):
Okay, So if we've in the United States, we've been
here hundreds of years, right, and somehow we're still smeared
by the left as being outsiders, Dutch descendants, their families
have been there for over four hundred years in South Africa.
People who come cross the border here illegally, they're here
for five seconds, all of a sudden they act like, oh,
(23:06):
where's all rights? We know more than you. I am.
I am. Actually the more I think about it, and
I know we talked a little, we talked some about
this yesterday, the longer I think of it, the angrier
that it makes me, you know, these refugees, and we
talked about the violence, etc. And again I have a
piece coming out later today about this. I mean, they
fled literal, actual genocide, and you had tins of them
(23:29):
that showed up at the airport waving their flags. They
did the right thing. They filed for refugee status well
in their country of origin, and they received permission to
enter legally based on the very real and very very
visible threat of genocide. I mean, they hunt down entire families,
children included, and they brutally execute them. There was a
(23:51):
story of some children who were very very young who
got first front row seats watching their parents get hacked
to death m for because they're white. And you have
like these historically illiterate dei hires, you know, on MSNBC
and Don Lemon. They think that these like again, they've
been there for four hundred plus years and they think
(24:14):
they should like go back to Germany or whatever, unlike
the MS thirteen gang bangers who you know, have never
lived in the United States that come here and all
of a sudden they're more valuable than the citizens. So
it's they they finally, I mean this it's all about
race for these people. It's all about race for the left.
This isn't about uh, it's not about people, and it's
(24:34):
not about immigration, and it's not about refugees. It's about
how can we bitch more and try to make ourselves
victims more. That's all it is. It's all it is.
Can I just say a note too, because one of
the piece that I have coming out, one of the
reasons it's so fiery is I cannot stand the Episcopal Church.
I can't stand it. I think it's a cult. Quote me,
(24:55):
it is anybody that sits here and decides to or
dane trans priests and celebrate abortion the way they do.
I mean it's actually they've They've had entire votes on it.
It is their church. It's not an offshoot they or
Dane trans priests. They reject biblically defined marriage. They wholeheartedly
(25:16):
support abortion, they wholeheartedly support lawlessness and disorder, and they
think that accepting tens of people who are accepting who
are fleeing racial genocide is a bridge too far for
their supposed Christian charity. Because they ended that federal program
the other day, and they announced it this week, except
(25:36):
it doesn't wind down until September. They get federal tax dollars.
They got federal tax dollars to resettle people who are
entering here illegally. You know, all the discussion about these
NGOs and all of these these religious organizations that were
supposedly helping settle illegal immigrants, like, for instance, Catholic charities
and some of these others. I've been down at the
(25:56):
border and I've seen it in action, So I don't
need anybody to try to gaslight me what I've been
down there to see with my own damn eyes. I mean,
it is a racket. They're getting millions and millions of
government dollars, our tax pay dollars. The Episcopal Church was
getting our tax pay dollars in the forms of federal
grants so that they could assist these people who are
coming into the country, the deluge at the border illegally,
(26:19):
and they act like, oh, we're helping everyone. You're not, though,
you're pretending to help everyone, when in fact you're actually
facilitating criminality. And if you really wanted to help people,
you would have been calling for stronger border controls from
the get go. If you really wanted to help people,
you would have been doing a hell of a lot
more here to make sure that there wasn't an incentivized
program where people were coming over the border and then
(26:42):
they could just you know, stay here, work here, and
never actually have to be part of the system. So
this this fake church, I just don't I know. They
they blasted the administration. They don't want to have to
include the South African refugees because the Episcopal Church is
a racist cult full of trans priests and a rejection
(27:05):
of actual godly doctrine. It is get mad, it is,
and they don't deserve enough criticism. Wolves in sheep's clothing.
They're the kind of people that have the millstone yanked
around their neck and thrown in the depths of the sea,
according to the Bible. So they halted it and they
had their head of their episcopal church send out all
(27:27):
of these letters and oh, we're not going to do
this anymore. It's so mean. They had a steadfast commitment
to fighting apartheid, in racial justice and reconciliation, and we
can't take this step. You know, we're going to conclude
our resettlement grant agreements. I think that they should be
sent in iou, I want my money back. Why in
the hell are taxpayer dollars going to this kool aid
(27:48):
cult that pretends to be shepherds. Why anybody have an idea?
My husband was cautioning me. He goes, you know, you
maybe shouldn't be that harsh. You don't want to alienate people.
I want to alienate you if that's your doctrine, because
you need Jesus. And maybe maybe that wake up call
comes in the form of my caustic words on the matter.
(28:09):
I did eliminate the part of the program where I
called Marian Bood a sentient kinkle, so I was trying
to be a good person with that. But this is
the problem. I mean, how is that helping anything? And
then combine that with the media reaction to this and
the words I mean, the historical illiteracy is insane. One
(28:30):
of the reasons that we all know this And Kane,
I don't know, do you remember, like back it was
like in the late eighties and nineties. I just remember
with MTV somehow this came up on all of that
and there was like this pop culture pr campaign to
familiarize people with either what Nelson Mandela was doing or
(28:51):
the Anglican Church down there and apartheid. And that's how
we all know this stuff because we grew up. Am
I crazy? Because that's I swear to you, That's how
it was.
Speaker 1 (29:00):
Yeah, as a matter of fact, none of the news
ever even talked about it because it was such a
deep You may have seen it on like a sixty
minutes type program, but it was such a long form,
deep story you never really saw it until the pop
culture started bringing attention to.
Speaker 3 (29:13):
It exactly, so we knew about all of this and
to see people go, well, why don't they go back
to Germany like that Brad that was on MSNBC the
other day. They've been there for over four hundred years.
You clowned heard they've been there for over four hundred years?
What are you talking about? But they had a development
on this so their government and so their ruling party
(29:37):
is the African National Congress. They called all the white
farmers leaving cowards. And this is what they said in
their official letter that you'll get later today here actually
shortly if you're a subscriber at substack quote. What the
instigators of seek is not safety, but impunity from transformation.
They flee not from persecution, but from justice, equality, accountability
(29:57):
for historic privilege. Remember they everything from water to even trade.
Your farm's ability to sell products and trade is determined
by race. There are racial quotas. So even if you
have a farm there, it doesn't matter how long you've
had it or how long it's been in your family,
but you're only if you're white. You're only allowed to
(30:20):
trade so much or sell so much of your yield,
et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. You're only allowed to
water so much based on race. I mean, it is
so absolutely insane. And here you have this church entity
that is willing to look the other way because of race.
The Episcopal Church is everything that they claim to want
to fight. We need another Henry the Eighth with them.
(30:44):
Now that said I told you it was fiery. There's
a lot more where that came from. Just it's it's
I don't like false shepherds, but the uh I just
I am just fascinated with us. But they said, yes,
you know, we're not going to help these refugees fleeing.
It's against what we stand for. I thought that, you know,
(31:07):
your good Christian charity was extending to all those who
were in need. I don't know the other thing that
we have to get into. James Carville is begging Democrats
please ditch these words. Stop using these words. You guys
sound like loans. And now the party is angry at him.
Now people are starting to hit back at him, calling
him a grifter and all this stuff. I can't believe
(31:29):
that they're trying to make me defend somebody. This is crazy.
So we've got those we have days of these United
States and the latest with those Democrats that attacked Ice
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Speaker 6 (32:36):
Get the loaddown on the latest news with a side
of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to the Data Show
podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.
Speaker 1 (32:47):
Like SAMs through.
Speaker 3 (32:48):
The Ale Glass.
Speaker 1 (32:49):
So are the days of the United States. I'm gonna
have to I have a right to speak truth.
Speaker 3 (32:57):
Girls are growth.
Speaker 1 (32:58):
There's gotta be not belong.
Speaker 7 (33:00):
Against those girls, period.
Speaker 1 (33:01):
What a coward of a woman you are.
Speaker 3 (33:03):
Allowing them telling? Are woman telling?
Speaker 8 (33:05):
Are woman telling girls to go and compete against a boy?
Speaker 7 (33:09):
How embarrassing?
Speaker 3 (33:10):
How you're a mother, you're a mother, Stand.
Speaker 7 (33:13):
Up like a mother.
Speaker 3 (33:14):
I am a mother.
Speaker 5 (33:15):
I'm affecting girls.
Speaker 3 (33:16):
You want a boy?
Speaker 8 (33:18):
How many people support the boy competing against the girl?
Speaker 3 (33:23):
No, tell me to shut up.
Speaker 7 (33:24):
I was respectful to you.
Speaker 3 (33:30):
So the chonky lady, her son is running in a
girl's track meet because apparently she's not woman enough to
raise a boy. And I really think that that's what
a lot of a lot of a lot of these
trans issues are. The mothers are blanked up, their their attention,
see their attention wrse there get mad again, I hope
to alienate. Let's be honest about it. If you're if
(33:53):
you're raising a boy and you're raising them as a girl,
maybe someone else should raise your kids. It's a problem.
And that's all that's happening with this and that woman,
by the way, she was the one who was approached.
It wasn't the other way around. The Lady of the
boy of the male high school male who was running
(34:14):
in the girl's track race there, and the meet was
the one who went up to that woman, and that
woman responded back, that's it. And then the lunchbox wants
to act like she's being victimized. No, you're a rotten,
horrible mother. She's like, you need to care about kids.
What do you mean care about because you're abusing your son.
You're emotionally abusing your son by raising him as a
(34:36):
girl and allowing him who embarrass himself like this. And
also you're abusing the other female children by demanding that
they step aside because apparently the world is your son's
stage and everybody else has to accommodate. It's abusive. It
is absolutely abusive. And then to try to get into
another mother's face about it, No, hell no, Lunchbox, that's
(34:57):
not how that works, not how it works at all.
I am so glad that we did not have to
deal with any of those issues because Katie barred the door.
I would have. I don't know. I love that lady
who stood in between them because she was on the
mother's the girl's side, and she stood right in between them.
Because that lunchbox. Will kept stepping to her like she
was trying to intimidate her. Maybe that works in your
(35:20):
house when you're abusing your kid, but it doesn't work out,
you know, in meat space with everybody else and other adults.
But no, you're at this insistence that your abuse of
children means you're defending kids. That's like what an abuser
would say. That's like the kind of you know, mind
job an abuser would say. We have a lot more
on the way here. We are rolling towards our two
(35:41):
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Speaker 7 (36:44):
Did you really not have any idea that he was
not fit to serve a second term?
Speaker 3 (36:50):
Casey, We're looking forward.
Speaker 4 (36:51):
We have the largest medicaid cut in front of.
Speaker 3 (36:54):
Us, we have the cult federal government.
Speaker 1 (36:56):
All this because you lost the presidential election.
Speaker 9 (36:59):
And is that not Joe Biden's responsibility for deciding to
run again.
Speaker 3 (37:02):
We're looking forward.
Speaker 4 (37:05):
That's it.
Speaker 7 (37:06):
That's it.
Speaker 3 (37:08):
Wow. No, they don't. They don't want to answer questions.
I can't wait for the press to go apoplectic because
democrats aren't as the press people like. Don't try to
make your names now by pretending to be journalists. Had
you missed that boat, That boat sailed, it's gone. It's
not in the harbor anymore. It's away from the dock.
There's no there's no reclaiming it. The idea that people
(37:34):
didn't know is one of the dumbest things ever. I
guess they think everyone's stupid enough to believe it. It
is amazing to me. It's actually actually a medical marvel. Really,
how many people suddenly realized that Joe Biden had issues?
They took a new medicine. I don't know if you've
heard about it. It's called getting a book deal. And
(37:55):
like Jake Tapper is taking getting a book deal, and
a lot of these people that were in the Biden
administration and they all took got a book deal, and up.
Speaker 1 (38:02):
I find out if got a book deal is right
for me?
Speaker 3 (38:05):
Ask your doctor if got a book deal is right
for you. That's welcome back to the show, Dana lash
top of the second hour. Listen across the country. That
the stream is the three channel three forty seven direg TV.
The chats at Rumble though, all that good stuff. Yeah,
it's called got a book Deal. It's an amazing like
(38:27):
modern marvel of medicine, wherein you're able to see that
someone is barely like functioning, like barely cognitively there. It's
wild like they didn't know before. Apparently no one else knew.
I love how the press was like, you need us
to tell you these things. I saw him fall up
the stairs. I saw him forget where he was and
(38:47):
not be able to speak, and have somebody in an
easter bunny costume redirect him back to the White House lawn.
Saw these things. The press did too, And then they
said it was cheap fakes when we would post the
video of it, all those are cheap fakes. They're very
expensive real video. Sir, thank you. It's not a cheap fake.
It's a very expensive real video. But they were insistent that,
(39:12):
oh no, you are all wrong. You're all so wrong,
And I don't know, they were all part of the problem.
Audio somebody to eleven So Jake Tappers, you know he's
not just he's probably not a client. I got a
book deal. He's the president the company. Just this is
what I'm talking about. Here's a little montage. Just take
(39:34):
a little look. Sie.
Speaker 9 (39:37):
How do you think it makes little kids with stutters
feel when they see you make a comment like that.
Speaker 7 (39:42):
It's very clearly a cognitive decline.
Speaker 5 (39:44):
That's what I'm referring to it makes me uncomfortable.
Speaker 3 (39:48):
View of a it's so amazing.
Speaker 9 (39:50):
It's so amazing to me.
Speaker 5 (39:51):
That trying to figure out an.
Speaker 9 (39:53):
Answer a cognitive decline. INTI Biden embraces his stutter talking
about it, while Trump, mock said, exaggerates it.
Speaker 1 (39:59):
Deliver.
Speaker 9 (40:00):
He's sharp physically, I mean mentally. Yeah, I think the
question is physically right right or so right right.
Speaker 1 (40:06):
And the guy who's his.
Speaker 9 (40:07):
Chief opponent is only three or four years younger than him. Abe,
I mean, you have questioned President Biden's age, mental fitness,
ability to lead. Of those supporting Biden, you said, quote,
shame on all of you pretending everything is okay. You're
leading us and him into a disaster. Do you worry
that you damaged him at all? I don't doubt that
you got hugs and handshakes behind closed doors today and
maybe even publicly, some of them because they like you personally.
(40:30):
But I've heard a lot of really nasty stuff about
you from your Democratic colleague.
Speaker 3 (40:35):
I mean, just like we have like two minutest little
kids with stutters. How dare you point out that the
president literally has no idea where he is. How do
you think little kids with stutters feel about that?
Speaker 5 (40:48):
What?
Speaker 3 (40:49):
Yes, little kids with stutters? How dare you bring up
the question of the Koch in the White House with
baby infant Hunter Biden? What about all those children with
scoliosis up there? How do you think they feel about that?
What does that have to do? Shut up? What do
you hate stuttering children with scoliosis? I mean it just
(41:10):
like just keep checking them boxes, you know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (41:13):
And then later, oh I.
Speaker 3 (41:15):
Know, I like here Le Steve has this flashback from NBC.
Republicans float a quiet conspiracy theory. Okay, full stop, it
wasn't quiet. They float a quiet conspiracy theory that Biden
won't be on the ballot, and they talk about his
health and his cognitive ability. Oh my gosh, they just
I tell you what, Oh my gosh, this stutter, poor
(41:38):
Joe Biden's stutter, Poor America. Like no, come on, but now,
oh man, audio, somebody twelve. Now it's all different. What
cheap fakes? What do you mean cheap fakes? Listen to
this now?
Speaker 7 (41:52):
Who?
Speaker 3 (41:54):
Well?
Speaker 9 (41:55):
Obama's side of that story is he wasn't sure what
was going on, but he just wanted to get out
of there, and he wasn't going to get out of
there without Biden. So he grabbed him and it was
more just his impatience than anything else. But other people
who were there.
Speaker 3 (42:08):
See this is the starts to come around. Well, you know,
he really wanted to get off the stage. He probably
had to pierce something. I don't know, but it look
I mean clearly he was very nervous and about getting
off the stage, and he didn't want to leave without
his best friend Joe Biden, because you know they go
everywhere together, right right, right right, they go everywhere together.
(42:29):
I mean the lives and now they got books on it.
Now they have books on it. It is amazing audio soundbody,
uh fifteen? Do we play? We haven't played fifteen yet?
Or was that the one we played? This is this
a different MSNBC one? Okay, yeah, this is They all
are stunned. I mean, these reporters, everybody, they're stunned. What
(42:52):
watch and was up? You said in June last year
in my meeting with President Biden, I found the command
President building.
Speaker 4 (43:01):
Influenced making progress on key priorities.
Speaker 3 (43:04):
But in that same both Biden and fare would be done.
Speaker 5 (43:06):
And then recognizing George to a fundraiser, were you being
straight the American Look.
Speaker 3 (43:12):
We're just looking forward. We're just looking forward. Well, what
about how you guys all lied and you hid the
fact that Biden was in a severe cognitive decline. We're
looking forward? No, no, no, we need to ask this
question about this. It's all about looking forward, looking forward.
Would you hide another decline in cognitive ability for a
(43:36):
president of your party?
Speaker 8 (43:37):
Sir?
Speaker 3 (43:37):
That's the question I would have asked. I'd have been like, well, okay,
all right, Senator Schumer, looking forward, would you totally lie
your your beans off about you know, the cognitive decline
of the president of your party. Would you lie again
and hide that from the American people? You know, looking forward?
Nobody asked that question because the press is still kind
(43:59):
of scared of Democrats. This is why I don't like
anybody getting cozy with the government. And this includes and
this includes Republicans Democrat press. They follow over themselves to
ingratiate themselves with the Democrat Party. You've seen it right
to the point where they won't even I mean, the
guy fell up the stairs and you know forgot that
(44:19):
he tried to find a guy who was dead in
the audience at one point. I mean there's no shortage
of stories. You guys were there and they pretended that,
oh no, nothing to see here. Totally normal, totally normal
things happening here with Joe Biden, totally normal. It's asinine.
(44:40):
It's like, yeah, like Kane says, like you get pulled
over for speeding? No, no, no, I'm looking forward. You
just keep looking backwards. Can you use that excuse for anything?
Speaker 5 (44:47):
Really?
Speaker 3 (44:48):
Though, No, I'm looking forward.
Speaker 1 (44:50):
It really absolves you from any accountability.
Speaker 3 (44:52):
Why did you club that baby seal to death?
Speaker 5 (44:54):
Sir?
Speaker 3 (44:55):
Well, we're looking forward now. Yeah, stop living in the
past and being negative. And but my whole point is
that these the Democrat press, they're they're terrified of burning
that access to power. So that's why they covered and
looked the other way. Wait, they're they're pretending that they
don't know. Okay, we will too. They they had no idea,
(45:16):
they had They want you to believe they had no idea.
I don't want the right to be like that and
be so ingratiated with the government. You know, I had
somebody bragging to me one time that they went to
a cocktail party with some government thing, and I'm like,
you're bragging about hanging out with the government, like back
in the days of our founders, we'd probably burn you
at the stake. That's like worse than being a witch,
(45:36):
Like what are you? What are you talking about here?
But they I do they're never going to recover any esteem,
not that they had a lot anyway, but they're never
going to recover any respect that the American people would
have for them. Not after this. There's not not at all,
not after this, Not after this. He I don't know
(46:00):
somebody remark taparacs like he bought a ticket to the
concert when he was actually a member of the band.
That's exactly it. That's a great way to put it.
That's an absolutely great way to put it. Goodness, Yes,
when did you what did you know?
Speaker 7 (46:12):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (46:12):
And then Chuck Todd on Schumer, he's remember he was
also part of this. And now they're trying to really
ratchet up. They're angst because they think if they act
outraged and if they pretend that you don't know where
they were these past four years, that you're they're going
to be able to redeem themselves themselves and still be relevant.
(46:32):
This is audio. Somebody sixteen is Chuck Todd, Gokey.
Speaker 8 (46:38):
Is among the people that are responsible for this, the
leaders of the Democratic Party, the staff of the White House.
Speaker 1 (46:44):
And I have to say, I find everybody.
Speaker 3 (46:47):
His hair I am not. I know I was going
to talk about his response. But what in the world
is happening with that hairline? This is very important news.
What is happening here?
Speaker 1 (47:00):
We just comb it forward now like that maybe it
is a flowbie.
Speaker 3 (47:04):
You know, the only people who have haircuts like that
are the British kids in the projects, right, that's no
what to me, mate, it's that that hair it's that haircut. Anyway,
I had to say, it's somebody hunting the Uh. He's
pretending that he's so upset, like he's part of the problem.
(47:26):
You were all there, You were were all there. It's
like now they're trying to throw on red hats and
be like, no, wait, we were here the whole time.
No you weren't. You guys were calling us names and
saying that we were conspiracy theorists and the whole nine yards.
You guys did all of that. What are you talking about?
(47:47):
What are you talking about? No, they were there, they
were there, they were involved in all of it. So
I don't know this. I don't think that they're gonna no.
This is audio. Somebody ten Kevin Leary hit it. I
thought this is a great statement. Listen, bit of health.
It's that simple.
Speaker 8 (48:05):
If you seek the supreme office, the leader of the
free world, you give up the right for privacy with
your doctor on a cognitive health test. This poor man
was broken, and look look what happened to the country,
and look at how he's being beaten up. It's almost
a moral what we're doing to now to sell books.
I was there at the White House dinner watching this.
(48:27):
The same reporters who didn't report on him are profiting
from his decline. It it's outrageous what they're doing which dinner.
Speaker 3 (48:36):
Well, of course they are, because information is a product.
How it's delivered is another product. And that's one of
the things that I hope everybody realizes. There is no
pure news anymore. There hasn't really ever been, especially if
you understand the origin of the press in our country,
There's never been pure press, and there's never been a
(48:59):
more odious attempt to, I think, make money off of
news gathering than right now. It's it's always been a
propaganda battle, always ever, but now it's I mean they're
wanting to merch it out in a million different ways.
(49:21):
We're going to cover for it and make money. Then
we're gonna act surprised and make money, and then we're
gonna write books about it and act like we uncovered
and got the scoop of all the people who knew
the I don't believe in in regular I don't believe
in like that that journalism. There's such a thing as
the pure practice of it. I think there are some
(49:43):
people that are that prioritize news gathering and giving information
to the people more than they like to worship at
the altar of their vanity. But there's never been just
like pure news gathering. There never will be. That has
been a lie that has been perpetuated four years in
(50:03):
this country as a way to sort of sanctify the press.
And the reality is is that there in some instances,
like prostitutions, sometimes is a more really more honest trade.
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Speaker 1 (51:17):
And now all of the news you would probably miss,
it's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 3 (51:23):
Really don't think there's anything better than a Simple Minds
bumper track of New Gold Dream. Really don't think so?
All right, so the uh ooh Mission Impossible, The Final Reckoning.
Everybody's very excited about this. I'm actually going to I
rarely go to the theaters anymore, but I am going
to go see this. The first one was phenomenal, well,
the last one that they did the storyline AI or
(51:45):
if it was phenomenal, but he apparently hangs from a
helicopter in one of the stunts like they I watch
some video online. I dude, that's just absolutely insane. So
this is the eighth film. It's called The Final Reckoning,
and they're really Paramount, which I think owns the game
right now. They're really right. They got a lot writing
(52:07):
on this, so they said that it's been about four
hundred million dollars and they've had production delays, mostly to
the twenty three strikes. It's going to be one of
the most expensive films ever made. The first the seventh
one was phenomenal, so I think this will be really
good too. We'll see so data, so it's not just
a feeling. Data is showing that also boys and young men,
(52:27):
for the New York Times, are falling behind educational achievement.
Mental health transitions to adulthood indicate that many are not
thriving well, that's just what feminists wanted, wasn't It Wasn't
that what third and fourth wave feminist wanted. They didn't
want equality. They wanted to destroy men so they could
give themselves something to bitch about later, so that they
could always play weak, ineffectual victims. That's all they ever
(52:50):
wanted to be. It's sad because they said, now there's
enough data to show that. I mean, everything from school
to even perceptions in society, like toxic masculinity, everything is
designed to basically be abusive to boys. Education, hiring, you have,
Like now women are outpacing men in top positions in
(53:11):
major cities. Of recent male high school graduates, fifty seven
percenter enrolled in college, barely up from fifty four, but
now it's sixty six with women, which has doubled in
recent years. I mean, that's just the way it is.
Mental health harder for boys than it is for girls lately.
So this is a real thing, and I think people
need to get a handle on it. Also, your brain
(53:32):
is shrinking even if you exercise regularly. If you sit
too much, interesting, so get up if you don't want
to be stupid. Maybe that's kind of what it is.
We have a lot more on the way. Stick with
us Home Title Lot to your greatest asset. It is
your biggest asset that you have. Is it protected? That's
the thing.
Speaker 2 (53:52):
I mean.
Speaker 3 (53:52):
You have alarm systems on your car and your home.
I mean you lock your doors, but do you really
ever protect your title? And in today's AI, in CyberWorld,
it's actually super easy to do. It's becoming easier by
the minute. People can forge your signature on a document.
They can use a fake notary stamp, pay a small
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Speaker 6 (55:09):
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 3 (55:20):
Can you find a Syrian president right right?
Speaker 1 (55:23):
I think very good, young, attractive guy, tough guy. You know,
a stroump Pass, very stromp Pass fighter.
Speaker 5 (55:33):
He's got it.
Speaker 3 (55:34):
He's got a real shot at pulling it together. So potus.
As you know, he's over in the Middle East. He's
in Cutter today. He was in Saudi Arabia yesterday and
uh he is. He met the Syrian president and Cutter
and very interesting. You heard what he was saying about
(55:54):
him there, welcome back in a lash with you. We're
at the bottom of the second hour. So this meeting,
I think they they had also said that it was
the first time that the city and American president visited
Cutter and they rolled out. They had the little jet
(56:16):
escort as well, all of you know, they had the rollout.
I don't think it was like the Saudis though, because
the Saudis had that mobile McDonald's.
Speaker 1 (56:24):
It was still pretty impressive, though. This took place at nighttime.
And the way they had the whole path lighted up. Yeah,
go ahead, go ahead, what is this the horses and
the whole.
Speaker 3 (56:34):
Nine Yeah it was I mean, yeah, okay, that was fancy.
Speaker 1 (56:37):
Yeah that's something. Wan's putting that up on the screen
here in a second.
Speaker 3 (56:41):
But still that slow roll there, the slow roll you
have the beast what is it? Yeah? Rolling through and
very interesting meeting. I don't know, because this, you know,
will a lot of people are saying that this uh
(57:06):
new leader of Syria is somehow different. I mean, there,
he's a Jihati though, right, I mean there it was
just one. You had two factions of Jihatis that were
fighting for control. So I don't know, I mean, I
understand that, you know, there's there's got to be stuff done,
and they're trying to make deals in all of this,
But I don't know the he's one of the Turkish
(57:29):
backed Uh, it's been called him Marauder. What we'll see,
it's just weird. It's it's it's a weird dance that
he's got to do going over there. But it was,
you know, they're they're Gihattis uh, and they had all
of these terrors that were operating across the rock Syria, Somalia.
Speaker 4 (57:46):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (57:47):
Well, I mean, you know, time is gonna tell whether
or not anything calms down. But I don't know. I
guess they said that he's more a little bit more
neutral than some of the other gi Hotis. We'll see,
but the Assads are out. They fled to Russia, so
we'll see. He had he had announced yesterday that he's
(58:07):
ordering a cessation of sanctions against Syria in order to
give them a chance at greatness. And while he was
giving these remarks, and this was at the side of
US Investment Forum, NBS was applauding and he actually even
I think it stood up at one point to applaud
that he got a standing ovation, so hmm. Interesting. So
(58:31):
the cell they had celebrations around Syria after they announced
the end. I mean, I I don't even I don't
even know how that's going to impact them. They have
most of the people that live in poverty at this point.
But interesting, a lot of people were saying that it
was a shift in the narrative from being how the
(58:53):
United States was always looked at as an interventionist, whereas
now they it it looks like more of a peace broker.
And I think that Mark Rubio has a lot of
hand in that as well. But yeah, he's meeting in
a number of leaders. He met several other Middle Eastern
leaders in read, met others and Cutter. The talks are
(59:16):
ongoing and then we'll find out what if anything has
been determined about Gaza. But very very interesting. I mean
he's talking about make it helping that the Syrians have
a possibility of greatness, is what he had said. I
still don't want the plane, the plane. I really don't
want the plane though. I think that's just a bad look.
(59:37):
And I think that's a bad look. But we'll see
how this goes. I mean, maybe a little forty chess
Syria has always been kind of a puppet for Iran
for a very long time, not just for Iran really,
I mean ultimately for Russia and Iran, and they worked
with Hezbolah. And now if they are going to be
(59:58):
removed from that and they're not going to be supplying Hesbala,
that really does kind of put her on more in
a box. And I think that the entire Middle East
will see some stabilization from that. So you have Saudi
pressure on Syria because they helped facilitate this sort of
(01:00:20):
this this meeting, and they don't want to be embarrassed
and they don't want it to look like a failure.
And I don't think if you know, they started getting
jihattistic in over in Syria. I don't know, We'll see,
but it's a very interesting game of statesmanship that's taking
place over there. Very interesting game of statesmanship. But I
(01:00:44):
don't know. Maybe they can, maybe he can make it
a functioning country. Again, we don't know, and not by investment,
not by you know, nation building, uh, but maybe perhaps
in this way, it does look like the Saudis are
really kind of stepped up in this regard, which you
know they should We've always been asking where's the Arab
league in dealing with US? Why is it must it
always be the United States? So they had NBS, they
(01:01:08):
had the Syrian president Al Sharah and Erdawan of Turkey.
He was on the phone, but they all had photos together.
So there apparently they are. They're looking to sign a
they're open assigning the peace deal with Israel, stopping any
kind of backing or facilitation with anything with Hesbola Booth,
the Iranian Guard. That's pretty significant, I think, and that's
(01:01:31):
one of the things that Potus has encouraged Syrian president
to do. All foreign tourists, sorry tours, all foreign terrorists
have to leave Syria. Any of the gas and terrorists
have to go. They must work with the US to
prevent the resurgence of ISIS, sign on to the Abraham Accords,
and assume responsibility for all ISIS detention centers in northeast Syria.
(01:01:54):
That's a pretty big start. I mean, can you actually
though full divorce the people who came to power basically
through jihadism in Syria from jihadism. That's going to be
the big question. And I think by meeting with him,
I think it was something I don't think that the
(01:02:14):
President walked into that meeting lightly. I think it was
something that the Saudis were really really working on, and
that was It also makes the Saudis kind of like
the de facto players with the United States in terms
of stabilizing the arena, whereas everything has been so everything
has just been so volatile, with Iran, with HESBLA, with
(01:02:36):
Russia getting involved. It also kind of sidelines Russia as
well a little bit because now you have the Asads out,
Russia doesn't have a puppet there in the Middle East.
And if you have a very close relationship with the
United States and the Saudis, and the Saudis are facilitating
a closer relationship with Cutter and I understand, I get
all the tear, but you have to this is the
world we live in and you have to find some
way to operate in it for the security of the nation.
(01:03:00):
And with Syria that's going to be that's a big
thing indeed. So we're going to see how this pans out. Also,
let's see, we've got a couple of other things. We
were talking a little bit about twenty twenty eight. Where's
the story at that. I just pulled up here it is,
so I don't know if we have audio of that.
I don't know if I sent audio of this. In
(01:03:20):
Gavin Newsom now wants to stop enrolling immigrants who entered
illegally into a state funded healthcare program that was supposed
to start. Apparently this comes by way of the Associated Press.
I was supposed to start I think next year, and
now he's against it. They want to stop the enrollment
(01:03:42):
of illegal immigrants into the state funded health program and
charging people already enrolled a monthly premium for the following year.
What what now this? They have a huge price tag
on this in California. California is broke, broke, and I
think what A lot of what is happening here is
(01:04:03):
Gavin Newsom is trying to save his backside, and I
think he's because he's blaming the tariff policies for the
short falls for their I know they have they used
to have a surplus of billions. It's kane. Gavin Newsom
is blaming the tariffs for California's shortfalls. Yeah, Trump's tariffs.
Speaker 6 (01:04:22):
You know.
Speaker 3 (01:04:25):
They were having this problem in California long before Trump
was even back in office. Guys like way, uh, I mean,
they've been in effect. Well, they came into effect six
weeks ago, but they haven't even been in effect for
six weeks because there's been pauses for negotiations. So I
don't even know how that they're blaming Trump's tariffs for
(01:04:51):
the billions of dollars in a budget shortfall. That doesn't
make any sense. They've been this is this precedes trumping
in office. I mean, but you know what, what he's
this is weird because it's pushing him. He's not going
he's not having to come to Jesus moment. He's not
(01:05:11):
changing his spots. He realizes that he's got has to
put space between this failure and him give some kind
of plausible deniability. He wants to run for president, and
he's he has to go. I've been talking about this.
I think I was. I mean, I think I've been
the first to actually talk about him as a serious candidate.
I've been saying that it's going to do do it
(01:05:33):
for years, He's going to do it for years, and
he's like the homeless encampments. Now with this, he's desperately,
desperately trying to reinvent himself and stake that flag in
the middle. Of course, you knew this. Anybody's been paying
attention to knows those. And he also now considers like
a male encroachment on female spaces. He thinks that's just
(01:05:57):
not fair. He's moved. He's really trying to run to
the center on all of this. He you know what
the crazy thing is. I was talking to a friend
of mine who lives in LA and she was saying, well,
you know, people out here will suddenly like him because
he doesn't have dementia like they'll they'll look back at
(01:06:21):
their other guy, Joe Biden. Oh gosh, it's so bad. Well,
you know, yeah, I knew something got his problems, but
at least his brain's all there. That's how they're Oh boy,
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Speaker 1 (01:07:35):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida man.
Speaker 3 (01:07:45):
So this Florida man. They got into a fight at
a school drop off. This was in Boca Raton. A dad.
This is like the most privileged thing I've ever heard of.
A dad allegedly punched by a BMW at a book
of Raton's school drop offline. Yeah, it got crazy. Now.
(01:08:07):
When I first saw the headline, I saw a headline
that said a parent had been punched, and I immediately
thought it was women because men. I don't know if
you all know what y'all's wives get up to and
the drop off line at school, but some of all
his wives need driving lessons and attitude adjustments. Oh my gosh,
get your women in check. I have seen and I
when I used to do school drop off, Oh my gosh,
(01:08:29):
I watched women honk at each other as a Christian school.
They honked each other. They were not playing men. So
I was actually surprised that this was two dudes in
full honesty. So this was Monday morning that a father
got punched by a rate driver Palm Beach Kuiny sheriff
had to respond. They said that they responded to a
report of battery at waters Edge Elementary School and when
(01:08:52):
deputies arrived, the victim was dropping off his kid. A
BMW cart in front of him. The victim honked his
horn because I guess he was getting ready to drive,
having the guy cut in front of him in in
an attempt to talk to the BMW driver later identified
as Kareem Mohammed. The victim pulled his car alongside the BMW.
(01:09:12):
He drove in front of it and then Muhammad got
out of his vehicle and began like throwing punches. Approached
the victim's car and began throwing punches. Sorry, service is
not Gaza. You needed to calm down, and that's anyway
he ended up getting arrested. He was totally arrested. They
had to track him down through his license plate. This
cool crossing guard had to take a photo because the
guy fled the scene. So now he's been accused of
(01:09:33):
burglary with asalt battery and damaging property of over two
hundred but under one thousand. Like, just chill, just chill
in the carpool line, just calm yourself. We could do
a whole show on that. Let's see the Florida man
goes on a cashing out spree, smashing and rating cash
registers in a Walmart store and what has been described
(01:09:55):
as the worst robbery technique ever broad Daylight. It's a
viral clip that started on Reddit, and a guy smashes
all these cash registers to pieces and stealing all the
money inside of it and then leaving. He stuffed money
into the pocket, into all of his pockets and he
(01:10:15):
walked to another payment point, smashed it up until it opened,
took out the money and he did this on like
a number of other drawers. I mean, he was there
for a long time doing this. I just I'm not
quite sure how this is allowed to go on that
long without any kind of like security or anything. That
was stunning to me. He had like no money, and
(01:10:35):
he went from register to register asking for change for
a one hundred dollars without presenting the money. And then
he went wild when they said, well, you need to
give us the one hundred dollars to make change, and
then he went crazy. He destroyed ten registers and took
money out of ten registers. Police finally arrived on the
scene as he was leaving. He tried to evade, but
it was tased. That's like for I mean, how long
(01:10:57):
does that It was like a while, That's like a
long It was a very long time that this is happening.
So I don't know. Tomorrow, I'll tell you about the
gator that has a chair stuck on its head. Third
hour on the way, stick with us as we move,
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RNA dot com slash data. Welcome back to the program, Dania,
last year with you. We're at the top of this
third hour here and channel three forty seven is the
(01:13:06):
stream the chats at Rumble. I got to tell you,
I was laughing at this stupid UH headline a little
bit ago from NBC News. NBC News is tracking changes
in the prices of eggs and bread and ground beef, chicken,
and other grocery items to monitor the impact on consumers
food bills. Oh my gosh, they started it's weird now
(01:13:29):
that Biden's not in the White House, Now that a
Democrats not in the White House. Now they want to
track this stuff. Now they had told you before when
everyone was like, gee, why are the eggs so expensive?
They were all, no, they're not, You're stupid, They're not expensive.
They're just totally fine. You're saving thirteen cents on your
hot dogs and fourth of July. And now they're like, well,
let's look at the price of these things. Now they
(01:13:52):
want to do some journal lisamining cane is what they
want to do. I really feel like they you know,
this is something that y'all where this during Why, by
the way, why didn't they do this when Biden was
in the White House. Why weren't they tracking any of
this when eggs were going through the roof? Where where
was this concern about the effect on consumer prices? Biden
(01:14:13):
was in the White House for four years? Did they
just now sit around and go, wait, you know what,
let's let's targe, let's track these prices. Can you make
a good point.
Speaker 1 (01:14:26):
It's funny they're using data because minds you, there's quarterly.
We get data quarterly.
Speaker 3 (01:14:31):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (01:14:31):
So we're talking Trump's first hundred days. That's a quarter.
So we're still actually hungover from data and very weak
data on that drag from the last administrator.
Speaker 3 (01:14:43):
So what you're telling me is that this price drag
is still left over from the Biden administration.
Speaker 1 (01:14:51):
Yeah, large part of it. Yeah, absolutely, because energy plays
a huge part in how these groceries and other items
get to our stores.
Speaker 7 (01:14:59):
No.
Speaker 3 (01:15:00):
Wow, I wonder if if only we had like an
entity or like people who did jobs that were about
writing the things the government was doing. Yeah, right, that
would be so I think beneficial to have that. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I was looking at the House ways and means thingy.
I don't know if you saw that their little fact
(01:15:23):
sheet that they put out where they're talking about the
one big beautiful bill. I don't And again I know
it's a draft, but why are people paying taxes on
Social Security? And also I'm hearing that the top tax
rate there's not going to be any kind of tax
cut for the majority of Americans who pay into taxes,
which I'm not happy about at all. If taxes are
(01:15:44):
raised or if they are not cut, no, go to hell.
All of all of the Republicans in DC don't care,
don't care, so they said, I can. I I just think,
first off, abolished the IRS and get rid of the
income tax. Just if you're going to go go all
the way. Don't have asset right to do this tepp
at little lukewarm stuff. So I see the no tax
on tips. I've never liked this idea because I think
(01:16:06):
you shouldn't single out one particular worker class. I think
it should be everybody, you know, no tax on tips. Okay,
so if you're a server and you're pulling in fifty k,
why should you not have to pay taxes? But an
educator who maybe pulls in seventy has to. You know,
it doesn't make sense to me. I just like, what
about the what about the line cooks? What about those people?
What about you know they're so terrified of cutting any
(01:16:30):
kind of welfare for themselves. This is what we get
and then they're struggling even with that. Their say, middle
and low income seniors are gonna be able to deduct
an additional four thousand. From what I understand, with that,
they're basically just it's not actually they're not actually able
to it's a it's a basically a waiting period. They're
(01:16:51):
not getting a removal of their taxes on I can't
believe that. People. It's the dumbest thing when you think
about taxes on social Security, it is the dumbest thing.
That government forces you to give your money up and
then they tax you when they give it back to you.
Speaker 1 (01:17:05):
It is this, it's extortion without interest.
Speaker 3 (01:17:07):
At least the mafia is nice about it. And then
they give you protection. You know, they'll protect your store.
I mean, yeah, it's extortion, but they'll protect your store. Hell,
the government doesn't even do this. The government's one big
giant mafia that operates with less honor. Let's just put
it like that. It's true, it's true. This is so stupid.
So the lower tax rates and brackets those will stay, apparently.
(01:17:32):
I I'm not. This isn't enough for me. None of
this isn't enough for me. This is why I tell
you Republicans are two left for me, especially fiscally. It
is they're way too left, way too left. The uh,
let's see the tax cuts. I don't they're talking about
incentivizing expansion, growing operations in America, et cetera, et cetera.
(01:17:53):
I don't know. I'm just I feel at first off,
I feel like this bill, the seniors get the shaft again.
Everybody's been debating it, but honestly, you're getting a deduction,
but you're still that you still have a tax liability.
So that doesn't make I mean, Kane, that's how I'm
interpreting this. Am I wrong what it is?
Speaker 1 (01:18:15):
I mean, you can't really interpret it any other way.
This didn't go far enough, and I think it's because
we don't have the spine that it takes in order
to push what is necessary through based on all of
these deals we know that are coming, and I mean
just the bellweather of the larger ones that have already happened.
Speaker 3 (01:18:33):
The promise was no tax on Social Security for seniors. Yes, okay,
this isn't it.
Speaker 1 (01:18:39):
No, it definitely isn't.
Speaker 3 (01:18:41):
I got to call balls and strikes. This is what
the Republicans are putting up. That's not it.
Speaker 1 (01:18:46):
So were they giving this as a concession, because that's
not how the original one read. The original one read
that there was cuts for Social.
Speaker 3 (01:18:54):
Security tax and the original draft I don't think it
was that. Well, not in any bill that I've seen
that's in committee. I mean there's still they're still debating
and negotiating. So maybe I don't know, Maybe it maybe
something like that makes its way in. Maybe it doesn't.
But the way that it is right now, it's still
it's still going to get hit with a tax. They're saying, oh, well,
(01:19:17):
you can do a deduction. That's you're still getting hit
with it. You're still being taxed on it. You still
have a tax liability, is my point. So make that
make sense. I have I have my friends, my group
of friends. They are divided into two factions. One of
them are more like me, pretty independent. They just go
(01:19:39):
for the more fiscally saying thing, the more fiscally conservative thing,
too conservative for Republicans. And then I have my friends
who literally wrap their vehicles with Maga red and it's
the true thing that's happened. I love them, and they're
they're at each other's throats. I actually left the text
group this morning. I'm like, I've gotten forty what did
I get?
Speaker 8 (01:19:59):
No?
Speaker 3 (01:20:00):
It was over four No, sorry, fifty two notifications. I'm like,
I cannot, I can't do this. I can't because then
there and then they'll they'll like, you know, like don't
you agree, like sidebar, No, I stop, I'm I'm on
air not doing this with you. I had to leave
the group. I'm like, I can't. They're arguing me back
and forth about it, but I it's not the same
as what was what they all campaigned on.
Speaker 1 (01:20:21):
I suspect they'll have to break this up. It can't
be one big beautiful bill. If they're trying to do this,
they have to do it like this incrementally because they
can't do it like this in one big beautiful bill
and then we're done until when September? When's the next one?
Speaker 3 (01:20:36):
Come on September?
Speaker 1 (01:20:37):
So no, if we're going to do this incrementally, then
say you're doing it incrementally. It might be more palatable
to some people, but you're right, this isn't what we
were promised.
Speaker 3 (01:20:50):
Yeah, and I I am this and cutting at least
two trillion, which was what was promised. That's not happening.
And I really liked what Senator Paul said yesterday about
all of that. In terms of what's being caught up
in litigation. It's like, well, it's you know, we can't
(01:21:11):
do this, it's something that we can do regardless. I
mean the litigation comes from trying to say that the
president is doing it unilaterally, which he isn't. But he's like,
you know what all we have to do is just
do it. But I told you, look, if you go
back to Greece, hang on, let me pull up my
notes here. When you go back to what Greece did?
When was this in twenty eleven. So they had the
(01:21:33):
EU's austerity requirements and they were because Greece was broke.
They were absolutely broke. They had debt, I mean the
public to debt, the debt to GDP ratio I think
it was I mean just last year it was one
hundred and fifty three percent. It's insane. They just they
(01:21:56):
were having It was an economic collapse. They had loss
of tax revenues, they had entitlement spending. I mean it was.
They were in debt so badly it was just crazy.
So they were going to cut public spending. And this
was the it was first proposed in May of twenty ten.
They were going to cut public spending in Greece. Well,
(01:22:16):
everybody lost their minds. So they had this huge anti
austerity movement, which is not like what you would see
here with the left, like people out there campaigning for
more government spending, more government involvement. So they had an
anti austerity movement that kicked off. There were riots, youmember,
all the riots like people burn. It was like watching burn, loot, murder.
They weren't just like protests. They they burned. I mean
(01:22:41):
they were throwing rocks at cops. They were burning things.
They were there's vandalism. They were going to cut public
spending and race taxes for their austerity, for the EU
austerity requirements, because the European Union was like you got
to get your stuff together, and they the Greek Parliament
voted to accept all of it, and then everything went
(01:23:02):
crazy and people did not want austerity. They did not
want that. The Greek government demanded a bailout package from
the European Union. They said that there were all of
these requirements that went along with accepting it. So they
said they had like four or five rounds of austerity
(01:23:22):
measures that they ended up. They had an increase in
the vat all of that. People were rioting over it.
They were upset. There was a lot of unrest and
they looked at they looked at austerity as deprivation. When
you have government spending so much on entitlements, you become
(01:23:44):
used to it. When government takes care of you, you
become used to it. And violent, violent riots broke out
as a result of that. And this is why I
was telling people. They think that they want a cut
and spend. Like all of these people they go out
and say, yeah, we want somebody who's going to cut spending,
and then when it comes down to it, oh my gosh,
(01:24:05):
when you talk about going and looking at medicare or
stopping any kind of waste, fraud and abuse or whatever
it is, they lose their minds. Like you have three
Republicans right now in the House that are not going
to consider any spending bill that defunds play into parenthood.
Michael Ohler is one of them. That's crazy. You have
(01:24:28):
others that are like, no, we're not going to touch medicare.
We're not going to touch any of that. We have
to uh. Josh Holly from Missouri's like, no, we got
to have something for the working poor. I thought you
wanted austerity. I thought you wanted to cut spending. I
thought you wanted to get away from the entitlement welfare
structure that the system has morphed into this mission creep.
They everybody always talks a really good game, but when
(01:24:51):
it comes down to it, they're too scared to do
anything about it. And then if they lose their seats,
the next people do the same thing. They all talk
a really good game, but then they're too scared to
do anything about it, and the cycle continues. We've been
hearing this forever, didn't I tell you the last time
that we had this dead sealing debate, that they were
doing this before the election. We have to wait till
after the election, right, so okay, February. Oh, let's wait
(01:25:13):
till spring. Now here we are in spring and we're
debating this. Now they say, well, we may not be
able to get everything this round. We're gonna have to
kick it to September. I told you, literally, verbatim, that
this is going to happen, and it's happening because this
is how it's always happened. There's not going to be
any meaningful cuts. None of the stuff that does recommended.
It's a stunt. It's nothing but a stunt unless it's
made permanent. And there is not the balls in Congress
(01:25:36):
to make it happen.
Speaker 4 (01:25:37):
It is.
Speaker 3 (01:25:38):
I hate to tell you this, It's not going to happen.
They are not going to get two trillion cuts. They
won't do it. Even if they can, which they can,
they will not do it because it's fatocompley, just like
how they promised you Obamacare. They were going to repel Obamacare.
My gosh, Kane, we've been hearing about the repill Obamacare
since twenty ten when it passed. Here we are all
(01:26:00):
these years later and nothing. And in fact, half of
the problem with R and D and pharmaceuticals and everything
else is because of the excise taxes and Obamacare. Medical
devices shot up an expense because of the excise taxes
in Obamacare. Pharmaceuticals, medicines got more expensive because of the
excise taxes, and Obamacare health insurance got more expensive. Overall
(01:26:20):
because of the structure of Obamacare, the refusal to allow
different companies to compete across state lines, the refusible to
allow portability, which by the way, that was incorporated in
not one but three separate Republican bills that were proposed
at the exact same time, but Democrats wouldn't let them out.
A committee to be considered a discuss on the floor,
So spare me the whole Well, Republicans didn't offer anything.
(01:26:41):
They did, but not enough of them had the balls
to actually carry it through. Just like how even fewer
of them have the beans to do it now. So no,
and then now this whole thing, well, we're no tax
on social Security? Well yeah, we're going to tax social Security.
That's in this. We're going to reduce your taxes, but
only for a specific working class, very Specif it's a joke,
(01:27:02):
it's not enough. I'm not going to pretend to be
excited about it for clicks either. I mean, some people
can hold themselves out that way if they want to,
but I'm not. We have more on the way as
we roll towards the bottom of this hour, our partners
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(01:28:29):
Dana's into and.
Speaker 1 (01:28:31):
Now all of the news you would probably miss. It's
time for Danta's Quick five.
Speaker 3 (01:28:36):
I mentioned this headline a little earlier, and we're going
to dive into this more tomorrow, But the Virginia governor's
race moved from toss up to lean democrat. Now why
is that, Well, apparently it is because of the issues
of job losses from federal workers and the stubtails into
what we were just talking about with Republicans being too
scared to make cuts. Virginia is set to look to
lose about thirty thousand jobs this year because of all
(01:28:58):
of federal employees, government employees. It's what it is. And
so apparently that's a huge reason according to the Political
Report as to why this race is now being classified
as a lean's democrat. This is why Republicans will sacrifice
like common sense fiscal measures for power every time civil democrats,
(01:29:19):
but Republicans too, and they at least Republicans make false promises. Uh. Also,
let's see here this. Uh when we talked about some
of this some of this is old. Uh yeah, some
of this is this is old stuff. So Disneyland apparently
removed the silhouette of Walt Disney because people were saying
(01:29:39):
that it looked like Trump. This is it was this
thing on me. It's supposed to be Walt Disney holding
making Mouse's hand. Yeah. Apparently on x everyone was saying
that they thought that it was it looked like Trump
and it was just a silhouette. But they said that
it drew immediate attention for its peculiar headline. Hmmm. Coming
(01:30:01):
up RFK Junior and Autism with our contributor Lorraine coming
up next. Stick with us. Gold Co is making it
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Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 3 (01:31:20):
Welcome back to the program, Dana lash with you. We're
at the bottom of this third hour. You can listen
Coast to coast the stream channel three forty seven the
chat at Rumble and again, we are not responsible for
those people. We don't those people are make them mand
That's all I'm gonna say. If you are a subscriber
over at Chapter and verse over at Substack. There was
a really good piece and I heard from a lot
(01:31:40):
of folks on this, including some of my very good friends,
uh who either have like spouses that are on the
spectrum or they have children that are on the spectrum.
Because this is it's a weird thing. They're very excited
to see America incorporate some healthy standards, but at the
same time, some of the discussion on some of the
issues is and this all stems from let me go
(01:32:03):
back to this April twenty first Health and Human Services announcement.
So they said under the NIH director doctor j Batachara,
that they were going to create a new in the
phrase was a new disease registry focused on autism. And
a lot of people were up in arms, understandably about
(01:32:24):
this because first off, why are we making a list?
Number one?
Speaker 2 (01:32:27):
What is?
Speaker 3 (01:32:28):
I don't understand what the obsession is with registries. But
also when you're describing a particular issue, it's like you
can't use a blanket term to describe it while you're
also simultaneously stating that you want to help alleviate it.
It just that doesn't help. So there's a really good
piece from our contributor, and you know Hershey moderates the
(01:32:51):
chat as well. Lorrain U are who I'm not rolling
my rs, She said, I didn't have to that. It's
called RFK Junior's Troublesome Autism Registry and if you haven't
read it yet, it is a must read deep dive
on this issue, and not just her experiences as well,
but also why it's a problem that NIH is looking
(01:33:15):
to deal with this issue nationally in this way. Lauren
Riar joins us Now via video. Lorraine, good to see you.
This was a great piece. There was a lot of
really good feedback on this. Give me your first thought.
I appreciate it when you when you first heard this
like disease registry. I mean I I have family and
(01:33:37):
friends that either have kids with autism or themselves they
have autism, And from my experience, that's how none of
them have ever described this issue. How did what did
you first think of when you heard that?
Speaker 7 (01:33:48):
Yeah, the biggest problem to me is how RFK just
talks about autism a period. He seems to have, I
don't know, the worst stereotype to apply to way too
many people. He keeps he keeps quoting that like twenty
six percent number, which he got from the CDC study.
But the CDC study put everybody labeled level three autism
(01:34:12):
into that twenty six number, And like, I have a
child who's considered a level three autism and she's used
to be considered high functioning autistic, so she doesn't fit
that profile that he's talking about At all I've said
before too, if you meet one person with autism, you
(01:34:34):
meet one person with autism. So I know that our
my family's experience with autism because I have autism, I
have my oldest has autistic, is autistic, and my my
my middle child is also autistic. We're all on the
higher end of the spectrum. I can completely understand why
(01:34:58):
people who are on the lower end of the spectrum
are all very very much want something done. I can
understand that because I mean, there's so much out there
and it's hard to watch your kid be that way
and not be able to do much. But the way
(01:35:19):
that RFK is talking about everything, I don't think he's
actually looking for what people think he is. I think
he's looking for I think he's already got an answer
in mind, and he's looking for data that will support that.
Speaker 3 (01:35:33):
Interesting because he uses the phrase and you touched on
this as well, on the phrase profound autism. It's a
new term that you wrote, was coined in twenty twenty two,
and you write that's meant to refer to people who
need twenty four to seven care, who can't live on
their own, and you talked about these This is where
you said, the stereotypes that he's referring to belong, but
(01:35:56):
you also say able the CDC seems to classify everyone
in life three as such, and then there's even more problems.
Speaker 7 (01:36:04):
Yeah, well level three is like you're non verbal or
barely verbal, like I mean, in my case, my daughter
can talk, but she doesn't talk to people she doesn't
know it shouldn't talk often, So she got classified as
level three, but she's nowhere near anything like what he
(01:36:29):
describes as you know, this profound A profound autism is
meant to basically for the kids that are like or
the or the people that are the IQ is under
fifty and that's what profound is must mean. And the
whole reason for this, whole this, this term profound is
(01:36:50):
because the DSM five kind of screwed us all up
and dumped us all into one big pile and then
tried to sort it out with these levels and they
they don't really do much.
Speaker 3 (01:37:00):
Yeah, and that's a problem we're talking with. Lorraineo Are.
If you're listening moderator over at the chatt at Rumble
and a contributor at Chapter and verse as well, you
really dove deep into this because you noted too the
study that he cites, you know, the number of these
diagnoses have been increased over the years, but that profound
again going back to that newly coined phrase, that's actually
stayed relatively study. But they his claim is that it's
(01:37:23):
a growing epidemic. How do you take that.
Speaker 7 (01:37:29):
I look at the data, and he likes to say, oh, well,
it can't possibly be because of better diagnostics. But and
in fact, in that article I have, there's a chart
from California that shows how it's increasing, and I plotted
on that chart where the DSM five diagnostics changed for
(01:37:50):
autism and where federal money got involved for the school systems,
because prior to nineteen seventy five, school systems did not
take special needs kids. Yeah, it was very rare for
a school to take a special needs kid. And once
nineteen seventy five, the first Education for Disabilities after whatever
(01:38:13):
iget I forget exactly what it's called, was passed, the
federal government started funding this stuff and that's when school
systems start looking for it. And a lot of kids
with autism these days are diagnosed in the school system.
And so you know, between that and the no Child
(01:38:33):
Left Behind, which under no child left behind, anybody that
was a special need. You still had to get standardized testing,
but you had a modified test and your score counted differently.
And so because of that, it kind of gave the
(01:38:54):
school system an incentive, a financial incentive, and to start
labeling as many as they could.
Speaker 3 (01:39:02):
Wow, that is I mean, that explains a lot, quite
a lot. And you get into that with this piece
over a chapter and verse over at substack. For those
of you who are turning in are just tuning in,
there's also the issue you touch on because this I
think that doctor A. Botatara and RFK Junior it seems
like they're kind of walking back this registry because the
(01:39:23):
first thing I thought of when I saw that when
I and of course you touched on this in your piece,
but the thing that popped in my head was, Okay, well,
what about like privacy like HIPPA and patient privacy, like
how does that factor into like creating a registry? What
would that solve?
Speaker 7 (01:39:40):
Well, the problem isn't so much the registry. They do
have disease registries for other issues that they follow, and
that's not necessarily the problem. The problem is and I
can see the good and bad to this, but doctor
a Botuchata wants the He wants to create a real
world platform where he wants the NIH to become a
(01:40:02):
one stop shop for all of the health data that
researchers might need, and he also wants it to be
able to track patients in real time. And he says
that inside this real world platform, the personal identifying information
would be stripped out so that researchers can't find it,
(01:40:24):
but it's going to be in there because they're going
to be getting data not just from Medicare and Medicaid,
They're going to be getting data from the VA trcare,
private healthcare industries. You're smart, watch wow. They plan to
get data from They plan to get data from everywhere,
and they want to be able to connect you, that
(01:40:46):
patient across all of those different sources so that your
information is all tied together, which means that whatever way
they do that has to be inside the platform where
when they get my stuff from my private doctor versus
my Tricare doctor, they can link my name together and
then put that same anonymizing ID onto that documentation. So
(01:41:12):
that's a problem because the federal government's been hacked like
a lot, like twelve hundred times in the last seven years.
So yeah, it's crazy. So I don't trust for one
bit that they wouldn't get hacked. And on top of that,
he says he seems to think this is going to
help by saying that, oh, we're not going to let
(01:41:32):
anybody download your information. They have to access it from here.
So that means that whenever they want to work with data,
they have to be online, which means the database has
to be online twenty four to seven. Do we really
think that's not going to get hacked? Like that's going
to be air too problem?
Speaker 1 (01:41:50):
Wow?
Speaker 7 (01:41:52):
And the thing is people need to realize this doesn't
just apply to autism. He's planning to extend this to
every chronic disease that they're doing research on. So diabetes
is going to be in there, arthritis, anything that they
do research on, any chronic disease. He wants every all
(01:42:13):
the data for it to be in this platform.
Speaker 3 (01:42:15):
And that worries me because we've said, as you noted,
I'm still trying to process twelve hundred times in seven years.
That is insane. I think of the Social Security information
that was hacked and leaked, IRS information that gets hacked
and leaked who's to say that, I mean, depending on
who we have in the White House in twenty twenty eight.
I mean, we saw during COVID things be leaked and
(01:42:36):
be weaponized and used against people. Who's to assure us,
what's the guarantee that this wouldn't be the same. I mean,
I don't see any exactly.
Speaker 7 (01:42:43):
There's he's like, oh, well, we're going to have state
of the art protections. Sure, sure, And I'm sure they
had state of the art protections on our Social Security
data that got ackted. Yeah, So you know, I don't
really trust it.
Speaker 3 (01:42:55):
I don't trust that.
Speaker 7 (01:42:57):
It won't get hacked. I don't understand the benefit for
what he's trying to do, because, like one of the
things he said is that with data in so many
different sources, the NIH that has to buy access to
that data, and then they wind up just so they'll
buy from company A, and then they'll buy from company B,
and when they get the data from both companies, they
wind up finding out it's exact same data, so they
(01:43:19):
paid twice for the same data. And so I understand that,
I get what he wants to do, and I understand it,
but at the same time, it's a bit concerning.
Speaker 4 (01:43:31):
It's kind of like.
Speaker 7 (01:43:31):
How the NRA right now or not the NRI, the
two A the national Gun Registry stuff. How the federal
government can't have an actual gun registry, but technically there
is one because all the FFAs have to keep all
that documentation and then once they shut down those, they
shut down the little small gun shops. All that data
(01:43:53):
gets sent to the federal government where they're digitizing it
because hey, it needs to be searchable. So what we
have there is just a it's non centralized, but it's
still a gun registry. It's just not centralized. Well, what
we have now is still like a database for health.
It's just not centralized, Yeah, which helps to prevent so
(01:44:16):
much of it from getting hacked. But they want to
just centralize everything into one place.
Speaker 3 (01:44:21):
That's terrifying, terrifying realization. One last quick question too. It
feels like their heart is in the right place when
they talk about how to best assist people in autism community.
But I feel like this it seems like it's a
very universal, almost kind of one size fits all, or
they're trying to figure out how to kind of distill
(01:44:42):
it down to make it like the easiest and most
kind of universal application, and I feel like, out of
every thing that's out there, this is like so individualized
that you just can't approach it that way.
Speaker 7 (01:44:55):
Yeah, it's difficult because, like I said, the frustrating thing
with RFK is he keeps saying genetics is a dead end.
Genetics is a dead end, But we already know there's
so much evidence out there that genes play a really
key role in everything.
Speaker 3 (01:45:13):
They have found.
Speaker 7 (01:45:15):
They found one genetic mutation that is the difference between
how autism presents in men and women. They have found
hundreds of potential mutations that might be affecting how autism works.
They found at least seven genetic mutations that appear in
like families that have hereditary autism, like my family does.
(01:45:39):
So genetics is definitely key factor here. There is a
possibility that environment could play a role, but we also
know that your environment can affect your genetics, and so
there's studies that can be done, Like the whole vaccine thing.
Everybody likes to quote Andrew Wakefield and his study was
(01:46:02):
so bad and so debunked, and I wrote about that
in the first piece I did on this. But we
don't have any studies that show what vaccines might do
to our genetics. We don't have any vaccines that show
what vaccines might affect on our genetics over time throughout generations.
And that's something that could be studied, but we're not
(01:46:24):
going to get that out of this crew. They are
so insistent. He has actually legitimately says that he knows
that it is an environmental toxin. He knows it's something
environmental because like he's compared autism to smoking cigarettes.
Speaker 3 (01:46:41):
Yeah, that's yeah. You can't you can't do that.
Speaker 7 (01:46:45):
You can't trust anything that comes out of this because,
like I said, it seems like they already have decided
on what the answers are.
Speaker 3 (01:46:52):
They want to try to find the data to fit right.
The piece is RFK Junior's Troublesome Autism Registry. It's a
very good would thorough read on this issue and you
should definitely read it from Lorraine Euri are always a pleasure, Loraine.
This is a great piece. You do, great work. Go
and reader over at substack, chapter and verse. Find her
in the chat. You can see the tat folks in
the back over at Rumble on the Daily. Lorrain, always
(01:47:15):
a pleasure, my friend. We'll talk with you again soon.
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Speaker 6 (01:48:20):
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Speaker 3 (01:48:34):
So make sure you go sign up over at substack,
chapter and verse. It's where that piece is at. Lots
of good stuff comes out there on the reg so
make sure you read it. That's a very in depth piece,
by the way, with RFK Junior and autism, I'm mustrade
all right today in stupidity.
Speaker 1 (01:48:48):
Can well us? We have several cuts of audio for this.
I just figured we won't play any because it was
Chuck Schumer. Today. We talked about Chuck Schumer when questioned
about so was Biden actually you know all there when
he was president and Schumert forward back then insisted that
he was. Now he doesn't want to be held accountable
(01:49:10):
for that. He says, we want to move forward. So
that's going to be the newt.
Speaker 3 (01:49:13):
We're moving forward. That's not going to say anytime I'm
ever wrong about anything, I'm We're moving forward. We're moving forward.
That's what we're doing. Folks that doesn't for us today again,
find us over substec chapter in verse, like and subscribe, YouTube, Facebook,
all that good stuff. I'll be back behind the mic
with you tomorrow. God bless