Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Student was a guest in the United States on a
student visa. No one's entitled to a student visa.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
You students based on which Trump's the supreme law of
the land, which is the construction coming.
Speaker 1 (00:13):
Up problems on our campus, We're going to revoke their
She didn't do any of that.
Speaker 3 (00:16):
She wrote a bet, she wrote, and I'm talking to
you about her particular case.
Speaker 1 (00:21):
And you got the fact.
Speaker 2 (00:23):
You reclaiming my time. You revoked her student visa because
you wrote an ed?
Speaker 1 (00:28):
Would you haven't We were revoked the visa of anyone
who's in this country as a guest.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
Are you going to.
Speaker 2 (00:33):
Revoke the visa of somebody who made that the case?
Speaker 1 (00:36):
Look at it, I'm looking I'm looking at crazy.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Actually, it's not just about revoking excuse claiming my time.
If these are legitimate law enforcement agents carrying out proper arrests,
why are they hiding their identities.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
Because in radical crazies.
Speaker 4 (00:52):
Cartels have been doxing them. Where the hell have you been,
f f s because cartels have been doxing them. I'm
not the only one that's paying attention to this, right,
I mean, I don't think I am. I had the
headline we talked about this on air, how you had
cartel members doxing ICE agents and how a lot of
these protesters, some of them were wondering, well, are these
(01:13):
protesters also you know, getting these guys information and sharing
it with the cartel et cetera, et cetera. That was
a real thing. That's why they hid their identities because
jack boot thugs like Prima Jail Paul, these people, they
have no idea, they have no consideration for the people
that are enforcing the laws that they're actually supposed to
(01:34):
be upolding. So yeah, that's why they have to hide
their identities. That's why they have to wear masks. It's
because of that nonsense that people like her continually helped
to facilitate, and it is just it's outrageous. Welcome to
the show, Dana Lash with you. We are at the
(01:54):
top of this first hour, and we've got to talk
about the next steps for the landing vat of the bill,
which I'm only marginally I'm still not okay with it
because it's still trash. We still have green New Deal
stuff in it, green New scam stuff in it. They
(02:16):
reduce the amount of green New scam, but there's still
green new scam in it. We're going to discuss all
of that and what's next as well the next steps
for this, because you know this has to go. Just
because it passed the House, it doesn't mean it's over.
So usually what this means because of the process through
(02:37):
which they are passing this bill or not pass shepherding
this bill through the reconciliation process. So they only have
to have fifty one in the Senate as opposed to
the sixty. So what they're going to try to do
they they have to take it. The Senate has to
take it to they have to take it into another
markup session. They're gonna go it's gonna get shred and
(02:59):
probable I would I think it's going to get shredded.
Speaker 3 (03:01):
By the Senate.
Speaker 4 (03:02):
And then after that you have to have a couple
of procedural votes before you can before we even get
to the point where the Senate is going to vote
on it. So that's uh, And I'll go over that
a little bit more in depth. That I had a
lot of people going, what's next, what's next? Well, what
that's what's next? So it's we're not we're not there
yet with it, and there's still a lot of back
(03:25):
and forth to do, particularly as it you know, as
I said, as it heads towards the Senate. And then
of course we had this situation with this shooting that
took place, just absolutely horrific, This shooting that took place yesterday,
yesterday evening or yeah, yesterday evening. It was just so sad.
Uh this story of this couple. And I was reading
(03:48):
to the other said things. I was reading that he
was going to propose that that was all very real.
Speaker 5 (03:53):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (03:53):
People were trying to say that it was like an
orchestrated thing for uh uh hold, I mean thinking tears
or trying like an emotional thing. And it wasn't like
they legitimately he was going to propose, you like a
ring in his pocket. This is a horrible story of
these this couple that was they were shot and killed
because they were Jewish. And then we got to get
(04:16):
into the COVID stuff. So we got to, oh, gosh,
and I have some stuff on Saint Louis. Can't I
have so many things?
Speaker 3 (04:20):
All right?
Speaker 4 (04:20):
So first let let's talk about this story, this incredibly
heartbreaking story that came out.
Speaker 3 (04:27):
This is in DC. This is just I mean, there
are two of people killed.
Speaker 4 (04:32):
There was this targeting of this Israe Israeli embassy staffers
and it was outside of this the Capitol Jewish Museum.
And the guy, I don't even want to say his name,
he's a thirty year old. He screamed free Palestine after
he shot and killed them, and then when he was
(04:53):
in police custody, he kept screaming it. He was screaming
free Palestine. He kept saying it over and over again.
And the staffers, Yarin Licinski and Sarah Milgram were publicly
named as the victims. And obviously it's been the President
made a statement about it. I mean, it's it's They
(05:13):
were going to get engaged next week, like he was
going to propose, like he apparently a quote. And the
report that came out on this first was the New
York Post. The New York Post was the first one
to report that he had a ring in his pocket.
He literally bought it this week, and he was going
to be proposing. The guy entered the building. The killer
entered the building. And here get this, so after he
(05:35):
opened fire and after it was you know, you had
all of the chaos, he went into the building and
the people who were attending this event at the museum.
They thought that he was a victim, and they gave
him water and they were comforting him because they thought
he was that he had been injured by himself. They
(05:55):
didn't know he was the killer. He was inside for
like fifteen minutes, and he was apparently I don't think
he was in a state of shock.
Speaker 3 (06:02):
I think he just adrenaline heiin.
Speaker 4 (06:04):
He realized what he just did, and then he asked
somebody to call police, and then he confessed and they
took him into custody.
Speaker 3 (06:09):
After that point.
Speaker 4 (06:13):
It's just absolutely heartbreaking. But what do people can I
just I'm gonna say, what do they think was gonna happen?
You had all of the Hamas propaganda about oh there's
fourteen thousand dead babies. That was a made up number.
Most of what you read is entirely made up. And
(06:33):
I'll remind everybody most of what you have seen happen
is a direct result of what happened on October seventh.
There weren't This wasn't an issue October sixth. It was
October seventh. And the longer this and I think the
reason this is dragged out so long is because you
have all of these other cooks in the kitchen that
(06:55):
are trying to tell a sovereign entity what they can
and can't do to defend themselves. I'm guarantee you that
if I were to go to my neighbor's house and
bust down their door and kill their children, that they
would probably want to fight back. But see if you
put this in the context of, however, how the world
treats Israel after Hamas decides to do terrorist things again,
because they're a terrorist organization, the media would be like,
(07:18):
how oh my gosh, they would tell them. They would
tell my neighbor, how dare you fight back against her?
How dare you escalate? That's how it's always been, That's
how it's always been prosecuted in the press. And I
think that's why this is dragged out for so long
as long as it has. And there is a real
(07:38):
instance of Jewish hatred that's becoming normalized, and there is
a real.
Speaker 3 (07:44):
Increase of it.
Speaker 4 (07:46):
In I mean, I think in younger generations there's more
and more of it. And it's kind of wild to
see the stuff that I'm seeing. And when people say
phrases like globalize the infantile and by the way, that's
a protest slogan that has been set at these college campuses.
They say things like that, they say they say that
(08:08):
globalize the Infantada, and they say things from the river
to they see. What do you think those phrases mean
when you say those things? What do those phrases mean?
That you're talking about the obliteration of an entire people,
That's what it means. And this became so normalized with
the press sanctioning it, politicians sanctioning it, colleges sanctioning it.
(08:32):
Acting like targeting people on college campuses is a substitute
for free speech.
Speaker 3 (08:37):
I mean, the whole thing. I'm just I mean, what
was it?
Speaker 6 (08:40):
Yet?
Speaker 3 (08:41):
Was it last year?
Speaker 4 (08:42):
The guy set himself on fire that I don't want
to say his name either outside of the Israeli embassy.
He set himself on fire, and everyone like they celebrated
him like he was some sort of hero. And then
you you don't want to know. One of the reasons
why I don't like the Qatari jet because who the
hell do you think is promoting and financing the whole
globalized the infantata movement on college campuses.
Speaker 3 (09:04):
Cutter, It's cutter.
Speaker 4 (09:09):
They're they're Katari funded astro turfed protest and they they
they're organized all across the United States. This has been
reported on endlessly and we just took a jet from them.
I don't know, so yeah, this is this has been mainstreamed.
This kind of hatred has been mainstreamed. It's so sad.
(09:34):
I mean you after this event, they took the guy
ind to custody. They said he was yelling free Palestine.
How long have you heard that?
Speaker 3 (09:42):
This? Uh?
Speaker 4 (09:43):
And then he went in and he was receiving comfort
and care from the people inside the museum. He said
he needed water in a safe space, and then later
he whipped out his little picnic blanket and then was
yelling free Palestine.
Speaker 3 (09:55):
And then he was escorted out by police.
Speaker 4 (10:00):
It's just it's amazing, amazing. There's video of him being
taken into custody, and he was still yelling as he
was being taken into custody. He was still yelling at
He's still screaming free Palestine and all of this, I
mean just.
Speaker 3 (10:14):
For what for what? Thirty three years old and he's
from Chicago. They were.
Speaker 4 (10:21):
Raiding his apartment this morning apparently, and there's all kinds
of stuff I mean, he's a huge supporter of Hamas,
he's a huge supporter of Hezbollah.
Speaker 3 (10:32):
He's you know, he's I don't know. And then of course.
Speaker 4 (10:36):
Lorraine noted that Hassan Piker was just in Chicago to
give a talk. They're trying to make him like the
left Joe Rogan. In fact, you know that there's like
a whole platform, a whole outreach to try to find
the left Joe Rogan. The left doesn't realize that Joe
Rogan was the left Joe Rogan. But this guy and
that and his sound Piper was in Chicago to give
(10:58):
a talk and apparently didn't you have a hoothy terrorist
on his stream? I think, So, you know, this is
this is what people do for clicks, because they want
your eyeballs, and so they debase themselves like this.
Speaker 3 (11:12):
It's ridiculous. It's ridiculous. So this is just it's insane,
absolutely insane.
Speaker 4 (11:17):
And then of course, you know you have the ongoing
story of this, you know, these protests at college campuses
and people who are violating the terms of their stay.
That's apparently he was also part of the this. I
saw this last night. The Party for Socialism and liberation,
which is just basically more glitter on the turd that
is socialism. And they're also super big, giant anti Summites,
(11:40):
major lefty. He had made a political donation. The only
donation you ever made that was on the records was
to Joe Biden in twenty twenty. And I know that's
really important to the left. And this said I was
reading on Instagram.
Speaker 3 (11:55):
It says this. Loraine noted this to the.
Speaker 4 (11:57):
Guy he was He was protecting his girlfriend when it
all went down.
Speaker 3 (12:02):
He was trying to shield her and protect her. Oh
my gosh, just absolutely heartbreaking.
Speaker 4 (12:07):
So I don't know, like, if you start saying this
stuff enough and you're like globalize the infantata and you
say these things, I'm just curious, Like, you know, at
some point somebody like this guy, here's this, and of course,
you know, you crazy is are going to do crazy things.
But this isn't just like crazy sentiment and crazy platitudes
that are shouted. It's a call to action. It is
a call to genocide, and this guy took it seriously.
Speaker 3 (12:31):
We have more to.
Speaker 4 (12:32):
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Speaker 7 (13:43):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 4 (13:49):
So apparently a daughter was charged with assault in a
fork attack. It's a fork attack, everybody. She attacked her
mother and it was in Canyan County. Three felony accounts
related to domestic violence. Where's the wooden spoon? Because they
feel like wooden spoon beats fork all day long. Wielded properly,
wooden spoon may be the most dangerous weapon in a
(14:11):
human's arsenal. And if you disagree, then you were never
disciplined as a child. Ever disciplined as a child. So anyway,
this person is getting there, they're going to court and
they've been arranged. So thirty five or thirty five years old,
and you're trying to stab your mom with a fork,
what's the matter with you?
Speaker 3 (14:26):
That's a matter. You didn't get the wooden spoon enough.
Speaker 4 (14:29):
An activist set eighty feet up in a tree near
Port Angelus for two weeks for what we don't know, Well,
I mean we do, but no, it's something to do
with the trees. It's the Olympic Forest to Fuender network
of conservationists. And this dude lived two thirds up a
fur tree? What an address?
Speaker 3 (14:49):
Yes? Can you send that to? Two thirds up the
fur tree?
Speaker 4 (14:51):
And Port Angeles protesting the sale of a swath of
forest by the Washington Department of Natural Resources. They call
it apparently a legacy forest.
Speaker 3 (15:01):
Blah blah blah.
Speaker 4 (15:01):
They're protecting the trees. They said, it doesn't make financial says.
I don't know, but I'm just I wouldn't camp in
a tree. I tossed and turn.
Speaker 7 (15:09):
Did he bring two weeks of food and diapers?
Speaker 8 (15:11):
Like?
Speaker 7 (15:11):
What did he do?
Speaker 3 (15:11):
Well?
Speaker 4 (15:12):
I mean, I guess you could just hang over the
side and you know, oh, come on, pray and spray.
Speaker 3 (15:17):
I don't know, like I I'm just assuming.
Speaker 7 (15:20):
I'm sorry I even asked.
Speaker 4 (15:21):
Well, you did ask a question, Kane, and I did,
in all of my knowledge, answer your question to the
best of my ability.
Speaker 3 (15:27):
I'm sorry that it made you uncomfortable over there.
Speaker 7 (15:29):
Thankful and sorry.
Speaker 4 (15:30):
A bearded dragon saved its owner from a house fire.
I've heard of some things before. I kind of want
to call shenanigans. So a bearded dragon, apparently his name
is Spike. He woke up his owner Donald from a
nap because he jumped on his face, insisting that he
wake up.
Speaker 3 (15:47):
Now.
Speaker 4 (15:47):
I would just think that this is shenanigans from a lizard.
Donald opened his eyes and saw his bathroom was on fire.
He extinguished the flames before they spread to the rest
of the home. He apparently slept through the smoke alarms,
but not through his bearded dragon jumping on his face.
Do you think that that's what the lizard was doing
or was the lizard like, I hate you and I'm
gonna try to suffocate you to the best of my ability.
Speaker 7 (16:10):
I'd like to believe it's true.
Speaker 4 (16:12):
I mean, now he's got salmonilla all over his face.
That's my first thought.
Speaker 3 (16:17):
I'd be like ew, a.
Speaker 4 (16:20):
Man was attacked by a swarm of bees and it
killed him.
Speaker 3 (16:24):
This is horrible.
Speaker 4 (16:25):
He was in Eastland, Texas, mo on the lawn and
apparently he made a hive quite angry.
Speaker 3 (16:32):
This is so sad.
Speaker 4 (16:34):
He was again mowing the lawn. Officer did finally pull
up to the scene. They said that around they had
reports of a collision and it caused all kinds of stuff.
The guy was being sworn by bees. Because it all
had to do with this guy mowing the lawn going
over hive. His face swelled up. He could hardly see
it was just inaphylactic that killed him. So sad, so sad,
(16:54):
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Speaker 5 (18:08):
Under the taxing and spending levels in this bill, we're
going to rack up the author say twenty trillion dollars
of new debt over the next ten years. I'm telling
you it's closer to thirty trillion dollars of new debt
in the next ten years. Mister speaker. We're not rearranging
deck chairs on the Titanic tonight. We're putting coal in
the boiler and setting a course for the iceberg. If
(18:32):
something is if something is beautiful, if something is beautiful,
you don't do it after midnight. I pose this bill
has expired.
Speaker 4 (18:44):
Well he's right, because they did do it after midnight.
Nothing good happens after midnight like that. This is my
grandfather always said. He's like after midnight and nothing good
that ever happens. Welcome back to the program. Did in
a lash with you.
Speaker 3 (18:56):
Channel thirty forty seven is the stream and you can
also find the chat over at Rumble and you can
find us across the country.
Speaker 4 (19:04):
So the big beautiful bill passed the House. It's going
through has still a way to go before we maybe
potentially see it head to the President's desk. And with this,
I mean it, I don't know how they were able
to get it through.
Speaker 3 (19:24):
You have the what they.
Speaker 4 (19:25):
Call the Salt Caucus. You have the House Freedom Caucus,
which was the caucus that was created during the Tea
Party days. And there's there are the fiscal Hawks. They
were able to get some of the House Free the
House Freedom Caucus members on board by reducing a little
more of the green news scam from this bill, which
(19:49):
there's still green news scam in this bill, it's only
you're talking about a reduction of hundreds of billions and
still paying hundreds of billions. But there it is two
fifteen to two, two fourteen vote, and it's going to
get trashed in the Senate. We'll see how it goes.
Thomas Massey and Warren Davidson were the two Republican votes.
Speaker 3 (20:13):
They and for the people.
Speaker 4 (20:14):
I gotta tell you first off, I feel like this
is a reverse tea party thing because I wrote about this.
I wrote about this over at Substack. I sent it
out last night, and I called it accurately the resurrection
of the big spending pre tea party Republicanism has begun, and.
Speaker 3 (20:29):
It absolutely has.
Speaker 4 (20:32):
I am watching people that are in the Republican Party
try to gaslight me and say that that too big
to fail kind of spending is conservative and you're a
squish if you don't support it.
Speaker 3 (20:47):
Remind me.
Speaker 4 (20:48):
Actually, I don't need to be reminded, because I was
on the first phone call that launched the Second Tea
Party and helped organize it in numerous cities across the
country on my own time and my own dime, I
might add, and we were all up in arms over
it wasn't We didn't start being angry at Barack Obama.
We started being angry at Republicans. People were in the
(21:09):
street long before that election happened. And that has been
so whitewashed by the press. It's crazy, even the conservative
press or right leaning press, i should say. And all
of the initial criticisms were all directed towards big Republicans spending.
We redefined what Bush League was the too big to
fail right, another runaway GOP insanity, and then it later
(21:33):
turned into a criticism also of that continuation that was
personified in Barack Obama's administration.
Speaker 3 (21:41):
They wanted to excuse these.
Speaker 4 (21:42):
Republicans at the time over extended government because they thought
that was a good use, that was a justification of
growing government so long as you're advancing Republican party platform issues.
But they didn't have the foresight to realize that Democrats
could do the same.
Speaker 3 (21:57):
Damn thing.
Speaker 4 (21:59):
Really really stunning, and it didn't. It ended up not
even mattering if those issues were moored in any type
of fiscal conservatism or even the Enumerated Powers an Article one,
section eight. It didn't matter as long as it as
long as it moved the ball down their part of
the field, then they were okay, and they could justify
expanding government like with the Patriot ac expanding government reach
(22:22):
and surveillance, too big to fail, all of this stuff.
And so it's really stunning, and I mentioned this yesterday
with Marjorie Taylor Green. It was really stunning to see
some Republicans get mad at lawmakers like Thomas Massey because
how dare he and these other politicians take those campaign
promises seriously.
Speaker 3 (22:41):
Dann them.
Speaker 4 (22:42):
We told them we weren't going to tax social Security
and we did it anyway. Dann them for asking us
to not or uh shakes fist and I talked about this,
like I said on X and yesterday as well. The
goal they wanted to get it done by a Memorial Day.
I don't know whether or not that's gonna happen with
the Senate. We'll see, but I was told yesterday by
(23:04):
members of the House that there was not a clean
bill with just the doche cuts or anything else because
they were told members were told by the White House
explicitly that they were not ready to incorporate those yet.
And I talked with more lawmakers than I can count
on one hand about that, just going to say it so,
(23:27):
a lot of the big spending members that were in
the House had no issue with any of this, no
issue they had no issue with, including special interests or
wealthy distribution demands. So I want to talk for a minute,
because what is in there still is the taxes on
Social Security. And we had Chip roy on yesterday and
he was talking about some of this, and he was
getting eat up on eating up on social.
Speaker 3 (23:48):
Media about it.
Speaker 4 (23:49):
Now I'm mad and I'm not what I'm going to
explain to you what this Bird rule is now sidebar,
I think and you know, again I'm not a parliamentarian
by any sort, but I just think that, you know,
if Congress creates a rule, they can uncreate it, even
if it's in something that they want to make statutory, right,
(24:12):
I mean, just undo it.
Speaker 3 (24:13):
Then it's my thought anyway.
Speaker 4 (24:16):
So the Bird rule was created back in nineteen seventy four, yes,
probably by that guy the Congressional It was in the
nineteen seventy four Congressional Budget Act.
Speaker 3 (24:25):
And what the Bird Rule.
Speaker 4 (24:26):
Does is it prohibits provisions in reconciliation bills that are
defined as extraneous to like not germane in total to
budgetary reform. And that includes changes to social security. And
so this is why this affects the Big Beautiful Bill,
(24:49):
because the Big Beautiful Bill is being advanced through budget reconciliation.
And when you're using the reconciliation process, and they're doing this,
by the way, so they can bypass what you know
is going to be a Senate filibuster. They're going to
pass it with a simple majority and that's fifty one votes.
Speaker 3 (25:06):
And so if you have.
Speaker 4 (25:08):
Any provision in it that alters social security and even
like looks at taxes on benefits, I know apparently that
is interpreted as a violation of that.
Speaker 3 (25:20):
Rule, and this Senate can remove it. So that's the
Bird rule.
Speaker 4 (25:24):
So that was what chip Roy was referencing yesterday when
he said the mechanics make it difficult. He's not giving
you excuses. He's telling you what idiots in Congress have
done before him and how this rule.
Speaker 3 (25:38):
I don't know why that rule. I don't know.
Speaker 4 (25:40):
I don't know what it would take to get them
to change it. All I know is that that's the
rule that's in existence now and that is why. And
it's from what I understand from another lawmaker, it's more
than just a congressional rule because it was passed the
way it was, it's actually law now. I don't know
if there's been a previous vie violations of it to
(26:02):
the extent you know that we're here, you know, at
this arbitrary deadline for this. But that is why he said, Yeah,
that's what the mechanics make it difficult. The mechanics that
he's talking about is the Codified Bird Rule, which means
that if the Senate finds something in here that is
that is related to Social Security or anything that can
(26:23):
be misconstrued as not germane to the purpose of budgetary
reform the whole point of that reconciliation bill, they can
strip it out. So they wanted to avoid that altogether.
So what they did is they decided to give a
pitily little deduction. Now, I had people saying, well, that's something,
and I've been told that for forever. It's something, it's something.
(26:43):
How long have we been told that by Republicans it's something. Oh,
You're get something out of it. I'll be damn. This
has been a long time that some of us have
been I've been in an activist since my twenties. I
have been told this the entire time. I mean, it's
this is crazy. So yeah, we're tired.
Speaker 3 (27:02):
Of hearing it. Now.
Speaker 4 (27:05):
The thing that makes me mad about it is even
knowing this and the Republicans when they campaigned on all
of this, when they campaigned on reconciliation and they were
talking about getting this, getting no taxes on Social Security,
et cetera. They were telling you this knowing full well
they would not be able to do it in the
(27:26):
manner that they were also campaigning on doing it. They
were saying all throughout the campaign they were going to
do it with budget reconciliation, and they knew the entire
time that they couldn't do it. They lied to you.
And some of them are politicians that are beloved to you,
that lied to your face. I'm just telling you what's up. So, yes,
(27:48):
you were lied to. Absolutely. Are they going to come
back with that, No.
Speaker 3 (27:52):
They're not. Oh my gosh. I love the oh my gosh,
blessed baby hearts.
Speaker 4 (27:57):
I love the innocence of people who are like, well,
they're just going to go back and redo it.
Speaker 3 (28:01):
God love you.
Speaker 4 (28:02):
I want to be able to look at the world
with those rosy glasses, right, I want to be able
to look at those glasses and see like peppermint roads
and sparkles in the air, and you know, the money
does grow on trees. That must be the type of
world that people live in. To think that our Congress
is going to go back and do this all over
again as they embark on a midterm cycle. Not going
(28:24):
to happen. That's sweet, but it's not going to happen.
From what I understand. Taxes on retired military pay. I
think also they're still in now. They did change and
I will update this. I e haven't had a second
to update this post. At substack, they are including the
Hearing Protection Act in there. That was a step in
the right direction. That did make it in the bill.
(28:45):
So the Hearing Protection Act as now, I'm going to
tell you literally at like six forty five last night,
it was not in there. It was not in there
last night when I'm writing everything and I'm preparing for
the show, because I was talking to lawmakers in Congress,
like I would like to know. I want to know
what to tell your voters because we have X amount
(29:06):
affiliates in your state, or I want to know because
we know who's watching digitally. You know, there's millions of
people that tune in every single day, and we want
to make sure whether it's terrestrially and then digitally, I
want to make sure that you're telling your voters you
know what's up. And there was some that was shaved
off of the Green new Scam, But the Green New
(29:26):
Scam you can't say that it's not funded in this
because it still is. The Other thing is the and
I will dive more into this. The salt deductions. It
gets so aggravated at the salt deductions, and I feel
like people don't understand how this works because it absolutely
is a wealth redistribution scheme. I've had kin I've had
people tell me all last night, and they are the
(29:48):
people who I think are Mike Lawler fans of no
no offense.
Speaker 3 (29:51):
He's trying to deliver for his state. But it's wrong.
Speaker 4 (29:55):
In Texas, for instance, Let's just look at it, because
we don't have an income tax rate, so let's look
at property. Do you know that California their property tax
rate is actually lower than ourses in Texas by a
full point.
Speaker 3 (30:07):
Seriously, Oh, your girls spent a lot of time in
the weeds last night.
Speaker 4 (30:10):
So California's overall property tax rate is point seventy five,
Texas is one point seventy four. And the fact that
we that we lack an income tax is the only
thing that actually kind of slightly insulates us. California's their
tax levels are actually only smidge higher because of that,
And that's it.
Speaker 3 (30:28):
Now.
Speaker 4 (30:30):
My congress person is not all over the media demanding
that Texas be relieved by everyone else across the nation
of the burden that Austin, Texas has created. You see
how that works. I am not demanding to pay less
and you pay more. That's the wealthy distribution right there,
if you need to explain so simply. Furthermore, this BS
(30:52):
narrative that blue states have been bailing out red states.
Speaker 3 (30:54):
Why the hell do you people need salt deductions? If
that's true?
Speaker 4 (31:00):
Seen now, the cap of this this this was I
think as a twenty seventeen cap, that the cap that
was instituted in twenty seventeen, and that was the same
bill that also had the tax deductions with it or
the sorry the tax decreases with it, the tax cuts
(31:20):
from Trump. That was the first step in forcing these
states to account for their own fiscal mismanagement by capping
x amount, and then the states had to deal with
the rest. This is what they wanted to introduce to
change all of that. So this is a that's a
(31:41):
and the assault made it in. But my issue is
that a lot of these Republicans, instead of saying, oh,
we know this sucks, this is horrible and I think
we oversold you, they're attacking the people that are like,
wait a minute, you promised, and where's the return on
that promise. They're attacking the people that are trying to
(32:02):
keep them honest. This is like the Tea Party all
over again. I'm seeing the Republicans do the same thing.
They're trying to put themselves up on a pedestal and
act like they're being like some kind of principle to
what I mean, if you're at all continuing Biden's spending levels,
whiskey tango foxtrot, you can't get mad at people for
wanting to hold you honest. Come on, and I'm not
(32:25):
doing this thing where I'm going to ask kiss a
bunch of Republicans or anyone in any elected position and
act like this says, oh my gosh, it's so great.
This is not the biggest tax cut in history. I
don't even know where that came from. That's the dumbest
talking point I've ever heard. Twenty seventeen was great, it
just wasn't made permanent by Congress. That has enraged me
since then. Now all of this other stuff, we're going
(32:46):
to talk about it more. There's a four year limit
on it, so any benefit that you do get from
any kind of tax deductions has a four year limit.
They did that so they could try to lower the
cost when they send it to the CBO. We're going
to talk about that here coming up. I know our
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Speaker 6 (34:23):
Get the loadown on the latest news with the side
of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to their Data Show
podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.
Speaker 7 (34:34):
Like SAMs through the hour Glass. So are the days
of the United States. Part of the dramatic scene in
the Oval Office. Today the tense confrontation President Trump ambushing
the President of South Africa.
Speaker 9 (34:46):
Next another Oval Office meltdown, President Trump ambushing the President
of South Africa.
Speaker 7 (34:52):
President Trump is being accused of conducting something of a
diplomatic ambush a South Africa's president in the Oval Office.
Speaker 10 (34:57):
To be with you, I'm Katie, sir, President Trump, orchest
traded another Oval Office ambush today.
Speaker 4 (35:02):
Today, Donald Trump meeting with the President of South Africa
and attempting to ambush and humiliate that leader.
Speaker 11 (35:10):
To Zolensky territory, where essentially he was a bit ambushed
inside the oval office.
Speaker 3 (35:15):
Probably, Hm, why was he ambushed inside the oval office?
What what I mean?
Speaker 7 (35:21):
New script went out?
Speaker 4 (35:22):
Yeah, everybody was like, oh my gosh, we just got
they love genocide now yay.
Speaker 7 (35:26):
Talking points are a thing.
Speaker 3 (35:28):
I cannot stand the talking points of this press. It's
just so asinine.
Speaker 4 (35:32):
So coming up, we're going I'm going to tell you
a little We're going to go a little bit more,
tell you about the latest with that big beautiful bill,
particularly about the the sunset of a lot of some
of the cuts that are in there, especially like for instance,
no tax on tips, over time car loans, the child
(35:53):
tax credit, the standard deductions. There is going to be
a four year it's only for four years. The reason
they did that was to artify lower the cost when
they send it to the Congressional Budgetary Office. Now think
about when that sunset's where does that put us on
the calendar? Oh my gosh, yeah, now you're hit Now
it's hitting you. So we're going to talk about that.
Speaker 3 (36:12):
Coming up.
Speaker 4 (36:12):
We got a lot still to hit second hour on
the way stay with us, Hey, folks, So I want
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Speaker 8 (37:12):
It is a critically important negotiation. I was very clear
for over two years that I would never support a
tax bill that did not adequately lift the cap on salt.
We put pen to paper yesterday, met with leadership, worked
throughout the course of the day to come to an
agreement that would lift the cap on salt and provide
(37:34):
real and immediate and lasting tax relief for hardworking middle
class families. The agreement would lift the cap for me.
Speaker 4 (37:43):
So that was He's part of the Salt Caucus, and
they did get their little salt deductions in. But that's
Mike Lawler who was saying yes, because we can't cut
our taxes in Albany. That means all of you guys everywhere,
you guys have to You can't deduct as much as
we can.
Speaker 3 (37:58):
You can't. You got you.
Speaker 4 (38:00):
We don't want to pay that much because we can't
do anything in Albany. That's like me complaining that everyone
else know, you guys should pay more in me a
little less because our property taxes are so high in Texas.
That's a that's an Austin problem. That's not an everybody
else outside of Austin, Texas or outside of Texas problem.
(38:20):
I just if you're out there bitching because you're stay
I mean, why look you live in New York. I
can't even believe that they pay like forty percent of
their income in taxes. How do you live there? I
think one percent is too much. One percent is too much.
The government's domating money that it didn't earn. That's welfare.
(38:43):
That creates a lot of resentment. Yeah, man, there's a
lot of places to go with us. Welcome back, Dan
to lash with you. We are at the top of
the second hour. Let me tell you about the big
beautiful bill. Let me give you the latest. And we
got some other stuff to hit too. So a lot
of the Green New Deal got scrapped out of it.
(39:04):
M I don't know how. There's not a there's still
a lot there, but a lot got scrapped out, but
a lot still there. The Hearing Protection Act was included.
That's the suppressors not being considered a National Firearms Act item.
I here's what So here's the really bad thing. So
(39:31):
all the no taxes on tips. Everyone's like, yay, we
got no tax on tips, which I still think is ridiculous,
Like why are you just identifying one part of the
working public. Let everybody should get you know, no taxes
on anything a policy irs But here we are the
standard deduction, the car loans, the child tax credit, which
I also think is another.
Speaker 3 (39:51):
I don't like, the wealth. I don't like these insane.
Speaker 4 (39:55):
Rube Goldbert Rube Goldberg wealth redistribution schemes that we come
up as that of just cutting taxes for everybody, right,
all of that stuff that is only an effect for
four years. Why is that, Well, because they needed a
certain score from the CBO, the Congressional Budgetary Office, which
(40:18):
is going to tell you what the score of this
bill is, how much it's really going to cost. And
remember how I've said over and over again, at the CBO,
it's like prompting AI. It'll only tell you what you
give it based on the parameters that you give it.
So they only limited that to four years, and they
kept all of the they kept all of this spending
(40:38):
for DoD customs and border patrol ice, and they have
the tax handouts, and it's all for four years so
that they could artificially lower that score. Now that's all
going to expire in four years. This is like the
twenty seventeen tax cuts all over again. This is going
(40:59):
to expire in four years, all in twenty twenty eight. Well,
damn Kane, what happens? What happens in twenty twenty eight?
Speaker 3 (41:08):
What's that? What's significant? Significant about that year?
Speaker 7 (41:12):
It runs with resdential selection.
Speaker 4 (41:17):
Oh oh wow, it's you're telling me that that's a
general election here. Yep, we're going to be in a
presidential elections cycle and all of this is going to
bust apart. Huh, Well, they have no foresight at all
in Congress, do they none.
Speaker 3 (41:38):
Let's just let's just thloughly do it for four years.
Speaker 4 (41:41):
Instead of cutting in the actual spending, let's just put
a time limit on how much tax cuts, how much
tax cut time people have.
Speaker 3 (41:49):
That's what they did. You have a time limit on
tex cut time so they could get an.
Speaker 4 (41:54):
Artificially lower score from the Congressional Budgetary Office.
Speaker 3 (41:57):
That's literally how that works.
Speaker 4 (42:00):
So, by the way, this bill would not have even
gotten this far with any meaningful anything if it had
not been for like a handful of lawmakers in the
House raising hell the tea Party ones, the ones that
the Tea Party put in there, you're welcome, and uh yeah,
(42:20):
we're still adding a butt ton to the deficit. Gosh,
can you imagine think about this in twenty twenty eight.
We're gonna be rolling toward I don't know what's gonna
happen after midterms if Democrats take the House. My gosh,
imagine if you have Democrats who control the House and
you have Trump in the White House, you're going towards
a presidential election, and they have the concessions are.
Speaker 3 (42:42):
Gonna have to be made. They're gonna they're gonna give
up everything.
Speaker 4 (42:46):
I'm just telling you now, you know the It would
make a difference to me if this was one of
many small cuts and spending, you know, death by thousand
paper cuts, if they were using that sort of approach.
(43:06):
But they're not. They're so scared to cut spending that
there's I mean, they couldn't even pass what the recisions
package was, nine billion. They couldn't even pass that. They
couldn't even do that. They did not want to use
(43:29):
the debt ceiling as a negotiating tool to cut spending.
And so now we're gonna have about four trillion dollars
in new debt in this bill. They won't use any
they I would be holding everything hostage. I'd be like you,
like this debt ceiling, be ashamed if anything happened to it.
(43:51):
I mean I would be threatening. I would be see
this is why I can't be an elected office. I
wouldn't be whipping votes. I would literally be whipping lawmakers.
I would be like caning like Sumner and the and
the and the in the damn chamber.
Speaker 3 (44:05):
So we can't, you know.
Speaker 4 (44:07):
So yeah, they're they're they're not going to use anything
else for levers because these people do not know how
to negotiate. They don't know how to play ball, they
don't know how to play the game of thrones. They
go in there, well, I don't know. I guess maybe
let's put a limit on text cut time so we
can fudge the numbers to the CBO and pretend that
it's a great get. And then everyone's like yeah, because
you know what, you guys are overburdened already, all out there,
(44:28):
busts in your asses. You don't have time to sit
here and watch every little Michiavellian machination that these stooges do.
Speaker 3 (44:35):
Fortunately it's my job.
Speaker 4 (44:37):
But that's and they think that you're not going to
pick up on this stuff, and they're counting on people
like me not telling you either. And then there are
people who have turned into such cheerleaders for the Republican
Party that they don't want to lose any clout by
being critical, so they try to they try to wash
everything up as being awesome. Gosh, this is awesome and historic.
(44:58):
I'm not going to lie to you now. I like
that the Hearing Protection Act was put in there. That's
a great thing. But if you're going to if you're
if people are expecting.
Speaker 12 (45:06):
Me to exaggerate praise for the purpose of clicks, go
die in an AIDS fire because it's not happening, not
at all.
Speaker 4 (45:20):
I mean, there's other fires came, you know, the worst one.
I just I there was an amendment. Do you know
that Trip Roy out of Texas. He had an amendment
two have the courts out of the deportation cases and
the UH have the courts out of the deportation cases
(45:44):
and really beef up state enforcement laws. And no one
in the administration ever pushed for it, and nobody else
in Congress ever wanted it, so that the whole agenda
of deportation is pretty much da So it's like you
can increase, you can spend all the money on ice
that you want to, but if you don't have any
(46:07):
reform in the judiciary.
Speaker 3 (46:08):
What's the point you know what I mean?
Speaker 4 (46:11):
If you're going to spend all this money on enforcement
but you're not changing the judiciary to actually like stop this,
then what is the point?
Speaker 3 (46:20):
So I I don't know. It's this bill is reminds
me of too big to fail. This is the type of.
Speaker 4 (46:31):
Bill that the Tea Party would have been organized in
fighting against back in eight I know nine absolutely, but
we're told no, no, it's great. It's not though, is it?
But it's better better than what the original turd sandwich
that it was with slightly less turd. I mean, is
(46:51):
that what you're telling me? I just this just doesn't
that doesn't suffice anymore. What I don't like is being
were sold in light to like, don't come out and
tell me like, oh, we're gonna do all this amazing
stuff and all the but not really, and then if
we do a couple of things, it's only gonna last
for four years.
Speaker 3 (47:12):
Man. I gotta tell you, I feel.
Speaker 4 (47:17):
Really bad for any Republican in twenty Well no, not really,
Uh No, I don't. I don't feel bad for you
if you're in Congress right now. Nah, I don't feel
bad for you all you deserve it, but uh, it's
gonna be a really rough life for them in twenty
twenty eight when they got to fight with all this,
when they got to deal with all this, can imagine
the fight that this sets up with Democrats in the
House and the Senate.
Speaker 3 (47:37):
All they got to come back hat in hand. We
need more tax cuts, sir.
Speaker 4 (47:41):
We were stupid and we only put a four year
limit on it. We got to extend them again because
we can't make anything permanent, because we're losers.
Speaker 3 (47:49):
What do you think Democrats are gonna do?
Speaker 4 (47:51):
Okay, sure we're gonna help you in a presidential election
when we're trying to win the White House and everything else,
we'll go ahead and make some compromises with you for that.
Speaker 3 (47:58):
No, that's not gonna happen.
Speaker 4 (48:00):
Come on, so, I I mean, if they weren't gonna look,
I have a friend who was like, why didn't they
go out on all out in immigration? If you're not
cutting spending, which I agree, why not go out all
out in immigration? Then if you're not gonna cut spending
because now we're I mean the wall, we're.
Speaker 3 (48:18):
Gonna any money for that, any other money?
Speaker 4 (48:20):
I mean, come on, there's a lot of stuff here,
But Dana, there's some good things. Why can't you focus
on the positive? Wow, this basket that we're all riding
to Helen is woven really nicely. Does that suffice?
Speaker 3 (48:33):
There you go?
Speaker 4 (48:34):
Look I said something positive. I love the way this
is woven. Really nice raffia for this basket, cane. Have
you noticed? I probably couldn't choot through it if I tried?
Speaker 8 (48:44):
Wait?
Speaker 7 (48:45):
Where's this basket going to Hell?
Speaker 3 (48:47):
So nice?
Speaker 4 (48:48):
This ride to Hell is super cushy in this linen
lined basket.
Speaker 3 (48:53):
There you go, whoa, I did it.
Speaker 7 (48:57):
I was positive, big, beautiful bad.
Speaker 4 (49:06):
Oh my gosh. So I don't want to be I
don't like to tell you bad news.
Speaker 3 (49:12):
You know.
Speaker 4 (49:12):
I don't like to tell you this stuff, but you
know we need to. I gotta be honest with you
about it. But I'm with all of this that they
had in here. I do like the full suppressor full
repeal of suppressors from the NFA that was in the
Manager's amendment of the bill. Now we still got to
get there some more rules committee stuff in that, but
we'll see if that of all that survives. But I
(49:32):
don't know this the numbers don't lie, And regardless the defict,
it's gonna get worse. And all of the.
Speaker 3 (49:41):
Tax relief is is a four year limit.
Speaker 4 (49:45):
So guess what, we're gonna make sure my computer's turned
up to please, because when we start rolling into twenty
when we start rolling into twenty twenty eight, we have
all of this fight on our hands. We're going to
have a presidential election cycle. We're going to be fighting
for control of the House, fighting to keep the Senate,
(50:07):
and we're going to be coming and asking can you extend?
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Speaker 7 (51:37):
And now all of the news you would probably miss
it's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 4 (51:43):
Gosh, Kane, I was too busy being a rat. Here
on break, Okay, here we go. Oh, we're gonna talk
about that lady who couldn't press the tornado button in
Saint Louis. We're gonna, yeah, lady, We're gonna talk about
her in a moment. All right, let's see here, we've
got a Memorial Day weekend travels expected to break records.
I just can't wait for the plane fighting videos. Everybody
(52:04):
was playing fight. I can't wait because you know there's
gonna be some stuff that pops up. Somebody's gonna yell
World Stars. Somebody's gonna be screaming that they gotta move
a seat.
Speaker 3 (52:13):
You know it's gonna happen.
Speaker 4 (52:14):
They said that the travel this year, it's gonna break
the record. Forty five million people are gonna hit the
road between Thursday and Monday next week. They're projecting about
forty one point forty five point one million people are
gonna travel at least fifty miles from home, and that
forty four million people. The last time this was so
crazy was two thousand and five. So they said that
(52:36):
most people are gonna pack up and fly hundreds of
miles away. Others are gonna take a road trip to
visit friends. I don't do road trips like that to
visit friends. If I'm doing a road trip, I want
to visit nobody. I just yeep me off into the
stratosphere somewhere anyway. I just am only here for the
whole video where the person is not real. I'm only
(52:56):
for that. Airlines are bracing for these summer of Hell,
the summer of heill. So it's usually a boom for
the airlines. This year could change that, they said, and
they began projecting strong growth. But one issue after another,
like making tiny seats. Oh my gosh, I saw a
headline where they're where some airlines are experimenting with what
(53:17):
they call stand up seats, where you stand the whole flight,
and so like for every one regular seat, you could
basically squeeze two people standing in a seat. It looks
like you're on a jockey like a little like you're
on a bicycle seat. Not even kidding. They're actually experimenting
with that. Hands to sky, I'm.
Speaker 3 (53:32):
Gonna get the link.
Speaker 4 (53:34):
But they're talking about cancelations. So it's this summer of
hell and they're just antiicaty oh Wan's got it, Want's
got This is what I'm talking about. Look at what
they're trying to experiment with now, it's called the skyrider.
Speaker 3 (53:47):
Look at it. They're crammed in like so that, man,
I can't even get a bag in. What if you
have to work on your flight? Why would you do
that to people? Beat? These people, we got a lot
more on the way. Stick with us. The super Maarine.
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Speaker 4 (55:30):
So welcome back to the program, Dana Lash with you
were at the bottom of this very weird second hour.
Speaker 3 (55:35):
So As you know, Cain and I.
Speaker 4 (55:39):
Both come from the illustrious city known Cane.
Speaker 7 (55:43):
I Saint Louis, yes, ma'am.
Speaker 3 (55:46):
Not Saint Louis. That's just in a song Saint Louis.
Speaker 4 (55:51):
Saint Let's gets a lot of tornadoes, or as my
grandmother would say tonight, ER's sounds really similar to tomatoes now
that I'm about it, but anyway.
Speaker 3 (56:01):
Also delicious.
Speaker 4 (56:02):
But they had a lot of storms and a lot
of people are cleaning up, and I mean some towns
have been really just ransacked. I think, what there's a
town in Ironkinny, Missouri, does Ark, Missouri, which was obliterated
by not this last tornado, but the one before that.
And I think they got some fall up from this
last one too. So a lot of storm damage, a
lot of recovery, a lot of destruction. Well, then there
(56:26):
was this story that came out because there was there
were a lot of questions as to you know, preparedness
and response right very important. You know, there's a reason
why you got tornado sirens and alerts and things like that. Like,
for instance, the town that I live in, they they
send you out text messages with inclement weather, a lot
(56:49):
of them. Sometimes you don't need to send out that many.
But I digress. Well, something bad happened in Saint Louis
and it had to do with this very DEI ish commissioner.
Five people were killed in these tornadoes that happened last week,
and the DEI commissioner of the city Emergency Management Agency
(57:11):
and her staff they were at a workshop and they
just totally forgot to activate the tornado sirens. Oh sorry,
the commissioner uses they them pronouns. Yeah, they just got
thrown out on their they them's because they didn't press
the button alerting everyone that there was a tornado, which
(57:35):
you have to be near a button depressed to tell everybody, Hey,
there's a tornado. We don't have the technology to do
it like remotely at anyway, so I wanted to This
is That's what happened.
Speaker 3 (57:45):
After the devastating storm.
Speaker 4 (57:46):
The emergency management director, they them Sarah Aavam Russell, they
them failed to activate the tornado sirens, and residents had
no idea whiskey tango foxtrot, what's happening now? They placed
they them, they them Sarah, they them on paid administrative leave.
Speaker 3 (58:09):
I know that sounds like vacation.
Speaker 4 (58:12):
More time for her to go to Texas Outback or
Outback Steakhouse at Texas Roadhouse or whatever. Here's the audio
she U they them SEEMA, they them audio somebody twenty seven.
Speaker 3 (58:25):
Here's some audio on this listen.
Speaker 10 (58:27):
The SEMA office is very small and so at a
majority of the time we work closer to business hours
unless the need arises, such as what we're doing now
or special events. A lot of that work takes us
out into the community, so we aren't necessarily in our
office space at all times. We do have a very
small staff. I have received reports of people that did
hear it. I've heard from a lot of people that
(58:49):
said they haven't heard it.
Speaker 3 (58:50):
Hm, hm, excuse me, it's ma'am.
Speaker 12 (58:54):
So it is, ma'am.
Speaker 4 (58:55):
The SEMA director was placed on hate administrative leave, and
in a statement, the mayor, Kara Spencer, said that SEEMA
quote failed to alert the public to dangers. Let me see,
(59:16):
your agency is called Chexsnotes City Emergency Management Agency, so
you manage emergencies as an agency for this city. It's
pretty self explanatory.
Speaker 3 (59:32):
You have one job uo jobs, one cain uno jobs
on jobs. That's all you have.
Speaker 4 (59:47):
And she couldn't do that she couldn't hit the button
because they were out a workshop. I mean, in Saint Louis,
it's a little bit different from Texas.
Speaker 3 (01:00:00):
Texas.
Speaker 4 (01:00:00):
You'll be outside, it's a sunny day, and all of
a sudden, the fates conspire to kill you.
Speaker 3 (01:00:04):
Out of nowhere.
Speaker 4 (01:00:06):
Big clouds roll in before you can run screaming to
your car, and rain drops as big as animals just
pelt you to death. And in Saint Louis, you can
see it coming from a mile away. It is a
build up. It doesn't really come out of nowhere. Born
and raised there, it doesn't really come out of nowhere.
I mean, you see it coming and you have, you know,
(01:00:27):
have time to at least think, at least maybe we
should maybe we should activate that good old emergency management
system is a part of the checks Notes City Emergency
Management Agency. And they them sayah, they them didn't do that,
So people were not alerted to the public danger. Now
(01:00:52):
that's your one job that you have. So theyre placed
on leave and they said that it comes there. Launching
an internal investmenttigation into the actions of Sarah bade them
Sarah her on the day of the tornado because the
sirens they did not sound as a tornado busted up
(01:01:13):
major parts of Saint Louis.
Speaker 3 (01:01:15):
There was no siren none. You have one job. She
was at it now a workshop.
Speaker 4 (01:01:24):
So Russell contacted the fire department to activate the sirens later,
but apparently the unclear communication nobody really you have to
do all of that. There's not like you know, I mean, hell,
you have a life alert button. You can fall down
somewhere and laugh alert and people will come get you.
Speaker 3 (01:01:42):
You don't have nothing like that.
Speaker 4 (01:01:43):
For tornado in places like Saint Louis in the spring,
you basically have to wear one to just oh, there's
a tornado.
Speaker 3 (01:01:50):
I mean, it's like that. There's so many. When I sidebar.
When I was a little kid, I was in a tornado.
Speaker 4 (01:01:55):
I've been in I've been near a tornado once and
in a tornado once and it was our daycare and
I watched. So we had giant concrete tubes that you,
as a kid, I could stand up and an adult
would have to crouch down.
Speaker 3 (01:02:08):
But the tornado rolled those things. I've never seen anything like.
Speaker 4 (01:02:11):
It didn't bother the chain link fence for the playground,
but it rolled the concrete tubes that we would literally
roll and play.
Speaker 3 (01:02:17):
I've never seen anything like that happen in my life. Crazy.
Speaker 4 (01:02:21):
And then another time when I had just had my
second son, there was a tornado that came through and
we lived in rural near outside of Festus, and I
saw a tornado from my backyard. I saw the funnel
cloud from my backyard, and we all had to go
get in the basement and I had to break open
my collectible Mason window figuring to keep my oldest son
from crying. His head office never got over that loss,
(01:02:42):
but remind him of it frequently.
Speaker 3 (01:02:45):
But it worked.
Speaker 4 (01:02:47):
The Uh, why was there any kind of ambiguity. That's
one of the things that they cided there was ambiguity
in the directive to act Caine. Let's play a game. Okay,
you're a fire department. Yeah, I'm the they them city
whatever management management emergency person.
Speaker 7 (01:03:04):
That authorizes these warnings.
Speaker 3 (01:03:06):
Yeshead bringing bring fire department. I think there's a tornado.
Can you press the button?
Speaker 7 (01:03:13):
Will do?
Speaker 3 (01:03:17):
And seeing that's how it works? You know this person?
Speaker 7 (01:03:20):
I do.
Speaker 3 (01:03:21):
Actually, you got a photo with they them they here.
Speaker 7 (01:03:24):
Yeah. Years of doing radio, did twenty eight years of
radio in Saint Louis. You do these emergency preparedness segments
on occasion, and we brought her in every year for
the Saint Louis Emergency Management preparedness messaging that they're, you know,
to do.
Speaker 3 (01:03:41):
Do you find her competent?
Speaker 7 (01:03:43):
I didn't find her incompetent. I don't you know.
Speaker 3 (01:03:47):
Let's take you. I have a picture with a small boy.
Speaker 7 (01:03:50):
Yeah she's short. I mean I'm tall, but she's short.
Speaker 3 (01:03:53):
It's like a like a small boy short.
Speaker 7 (01:03:56):
Let see what you're doing.
Speaker 3 (01:03:57):
I'm just saying.
Speaker 7 (01:03:58):
But yeah, I I didn't particularly find anything incompetent about
her at that point. I mean, these are some major mistakes.
Speaker 3 (01:04:06):
This is kind of a joke that five people dead.
Speaker 7 (01:04:09):
No for sure, and this is something that she's gonna
definitely have to answer for. Like I don't know how
you get on paid administrative leave after this.
Speaker 4 (01:04:18):
But especially when you're a DEI hire. They like they
put kin is with this small child want throwing.
Speaker 3 (01:04:25):
The photo up?
Speaker 7 (01:04:26):
Look at that.
Speaker 4 (01:04:27):
Yeah, yes, night, there's five people dead and you can't
do it. But they send out all of this other
pride stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:04:31):
All the time.
Speaker 7 (01:04:32):
That's twenty fifteen right there.
Speaker 4 (01:04:34):
So they send out all this pride stuff all the time.
So I sent you that you guys have It says
prepare with Pride, and they're talking about I guess when
you go out for Fourth of July or something like that,
and it says prepare with Pride hydrate during the festival.
We're like, wait, like what does that have to do
with Why does it have to be like a Pride
thing with the trans stuff on there? Why does that
have to I don't know, Like it just seems like
(01:04:54):
there's a lot more emphasis placed on like this is
how we have sex, and we have to make sure
it's incorporated even in how we hydrate, hydrate with how
we have sex.
Speaker 3 (01:05:06):
Make sure you stay hydrated.
Speaker 7 (01:05:07):
Like a lot of that was just an effort to
make you know the agency itself seem I.
Speaker 3 (01:05:13):
Mean, why is it? Why do you have to have
this DEEI?
Speaker 4 (01:05:15):
Stuff like does the Tornado button get pressed less if
it's a straight person as opposed to someone.
Speaker 7 (01:05:21):
Who is they then apparently not.
Speaker 3 (01:05:24):
I just like, what is it?
Speaker 4 (01:05:25):
Does it if I don't care what your intersectionality bs
whatever is, unless it means you can press that button faster.
If somehow being a they them gives you gives you
like a speed buff, then fine, whatever saysn't damn dark tide.
This is not like, oh, let's see I got a
blessing now on my weapon. I get to have this
(01:05:45):
you know, endurance buff and I have you know, stemming
a buff and ooh I got a boost an arm.
Speaker 3 (01:05:52):
That is not how this works. They act like they're.
Speaker 4 (01:05:54):
Add ons that like improve somehow function and instead it
doesn't isn't at all.
Speaker 3 (01:06:02):
It ignores.
Speaker 4 (01:06:04):
So many times we have seen well qualified people get
ignored because they didn't check an intersectionality box. Well, yes, sir,
we see that you're you literally lasso tornadoes single handedly
and submit them. Uh you, but again, you're applying for
this emergency management position.
Speaker 3 (01:06:23):
But how do you have sex?
Speaker 8 (01:06:24):
Though?
Speaker 4 (01:06:26):
I'm sorry, you don't have sex the right way. So
you're just qualified. We're gonna go with this young day
of them over here. Instead, who can't press the damn
button to warn people that there's a tornado barreling down
the highway towards them, to kill them all?
Speaker 7 (01:06:40):
And mind you, it's not just about president button. Like,
let's say she's out and about like she was, you
can call the fire department and they'll activate the sirens.
Speaker 3 (01:06:48):
I feel like they're trying to blame the fire department.
Speaker 7 (01:06:51):
It could.
Speaker 4 (01:06:52):
I mean, it's not like, Wow, the weather's sunny today,
We're gonna go out to a workshop. That's not how
Saint Louis weather has ever worked on God's green Earth
at in a history of humankind, in the history of
dino kind, It's never worked that way ever. You know,
it's bad weather. It's gonna be a bad day when
you wake up, you know it, because the weather's gonna
(01:07:12):
just blow. It's gonna be horrible.
Speaker 3 (01:07:15):
Let's go to a workshop. I'm gonna get it.
Speaker 4 (01:07:17):
I mean, I also, can we talk about why do
you have to be physically near a button?
Speaker 3 (01:07:21):
Right?
Speaker 7 (01:07:23):
Well, Saint Louis did put a statement out they said
moving forward that they'll.
Speaker 3 (01:07:26):
Explicitly, now that these people are dead, the.
Speaker 7 (01:07:28):
City policy now will explicitly be the department of the
fire department issue the warnings.
Speaker 4 (01:07:35):
By people had to die so they could remember who
could issue what warnings.
Speaker 3 (01:07:39):
Bang up, job, guys, man.
Speaker 7 (01:07:42):
That's rough.
Speaker 4 (01:07:43):
Well, yeah, man, not as rough as finding five dead
bodies in the rubble of a tornado that they weren't
right about.
Speaker 7 (01:07:49):
That's what I'm talking about that.
Speaker 3 (01:07:51):
I'm just trying to wrap my mind around this.
Speaker 4 (01:07:53):
This is insane. This is insane. Somebody in the checkos
now the new promnouns now are has been that's right.
They got thrown out on their day thems now it's
it has been good heavens, So they suspended this, and
I mean, the devastation is just it's just crazy.
Speaker 3 (01:08:12):
I don't know.
Speaker 4 (01:08:13):
They were like, oh, there's a breakdown in communication. How
the hell was there a breakdown in communication on this?
Speaker 3 (01:08:18):
Wow? What's that big funnel in this guy? It's a ternator?
Sound the alarm? How do you get that wrong?
Speaker 4 (01:08:26):
It's not like there's a lot of steps. It's not
like the Hadron collider. You're not running anything crazy.
Speaker 7 (01:08:32):
This particular agency didn't have a lot to do at all.
And the thing was that the bar was so low
for what you had to do that nothing was required
of you until it was and then you failed.
Speaker 3 (01:08:44):
Right, you have one job, one job, one job. That's it.
That's it. I'm so done with this stuff.
Speaker 4 (01:08:52):
I mean, clearly this broad then they.
Speaker 3 (01:08:56):
Is I don't care about your stupid pronouns. Just do
your job.
Speaker 4 (01:08:59):
Do your damn job, unless again, any of your cosplaying
gives you a buff.
Speaker 3 (01:09:04):
Of speed or you know anything else. No, nobody cares.
Nobody cares. Stop it.
Speaker 4 (01:09:15):
And an aside to this, how weird is it that
we actually think about that when you're hiding, when you're
hiring for diversity. Well, wait a minute, how do you
have sex and the manner in which you get it on?
How does that help you do your job of pushing
buttons during emergency weather systems? I'm not kidding you, that's
(01:09:36):
literally you're like Dana. That sounds absurd, Yes, because it
is absurd. The whole damn thing is absurd.
Speaker 3 (01:09:44):
You are so correct. Just do the job, Just do it.
Just I just can't. I can't.
Speaker 4 (01:09:53):
I just I'm done. All right, we have more on
the way, so we roll the words floor it. Maybe
Florida man will say, you know what, Florida man would
have press the button, probably with a gator, But he
would have pressed the button, maybe would have had him
left a meth fingerprint behind. He'd to press the button.
Burn a gun. Look, it makes sense to diversify your weapons. Lay,
(01:10:14):
I'm not going to tell you not to carry. I
think you should carry a gun, and I think that
you should not be afraid to use it in defense
of yourself or loved one. I try to avoid gunfree
zone areas because they're dumb and it's unconstitutional, and these
people don't do anything to protect you. They just want
the virtue signaling of saying gun free. But I also
don't want to make a political statement not carrying and
(01:10:36):
then get turned into a statistic so berna is it's
a self defense weapon. It's a shape like a gun,
like you got the Burner rifle, you got all these
other kinds. But I think for the purpose of this,
the Burna SD and their new compact launcher, the Burna
a CL, that's what you need to focus on. And
they shoot chemical earten projectiles that can deter threats from
(01:10:57):
up to fifty feet away. Doesn't care about stupid gun
free zone sign. It doesn't care about any of that.
There's no background checks, there's no waiting periods, you don't
have to pay a tax stamp, there's none of it
sent right to your front door. And you are able
to still have a means of protection when a private
property wants to disarm you, or a local or municipal restriction.
(01:11:17):
And for college kids too that are too young to
carry but also live alone, this is a great idea
for them as well, and it's super affordable. You can
check it out. They have like different accessories and colors
and all that. The BURNACL it's like maybe just under
seven inches long, really thin, and it's there's no I mean,
there's no recoil. Easy target acquisition an SD that's one
(01:11:39):
of its best selling self defense options. You can look
at all of them at Berna dot com slash Dana
by r in a dot com slash Dana.
Speaker 7 (01:11:51):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida, man.
Speaker 4 (01:12:00):
I mean, it's not a bad place to fall asleep.
If you're gonna fall asleep drunk in your car somewhere,
why not a Popeyes.
Speaker 3 (01:12:05):
I mean that's what this one dude thought. It was
imported Saint Lucie.
Speaker 4 (01:12:08):
A man's late night food run ended up with jail
time instead of some Popeyes chicken.
Speaker 3 (01:12:12):
Man, they do have some good chicken. Officers say that
his name is Love Florial.
Speaker 8 (01:12:19):
It's not.
Speaker 4 (01:12:21):
Passed out behind the wheel and the Popeyes drive through
while the restaurant was closed. Now the car was still
running and in drive open liquor containers and drugs all
in plane view. Apparently mister Floriale, not to be confused
with Loreal mister Love Floriale, was coming from a night out.
He's running a club wristband. He was arrested and taken
(01:12:42):
to Saint Lucy Jail, where he's charged with a dui
in possession. So, I mean, maybe he's just waiting for
them to open. You know, I'm just gonna pull up.
He had a little nat wait for them to open,
you know, get me chicken in a biscuit. I don't know,
maybe just saying. Apparently Rockstar changed one of their GTA
six characters after a floor to man.
Speaker 6 (01:13:01):
What did money?
Speaker 4 (01:13:02):
Gosh, this is like so perfect Grand theft Auto fans
are convinced that one of the characters in GTA six
was changed after Rockstar Games got called out for money
over likeness. I don't even know, because I don't play
this game at all. It's never I've never allowed my
kids to play it. I'm like, now, we're not If
you're going to shoot baddies in the face, that's one thing,
but you're not going to get to play as a
gang banger with a prostitute.
Speaker 3 (01:13:21):
Not going to happen.
Speaker 4 (01:13:23):
But they had like fans have been really like obsessing
over trailers and screenshots and they think that there's one
character that's based on this TikToker and the guy said
that he used his light, that Rockstar used his likeness
and once wanted to get paid, and so they looks
like they took him out of it.
Speaker 3 (01:13:41):
So interesting.
Speaker 4 (01:13:42):
We have a lot more on the way. Third hour
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Speaker 8 (01:14:41):
Question.
Speaker 13 (01:14:42):
Sure, the President showed a video that he said showed
more than a thousand burial sites of white South Africans
and he said, we're murdered. We know that that was
not true and that the video wasn't doing that, So
I wonder why did the president choose to show It's
not through the video was showing a burial site. It
is unsubstantiated that that's the case.
Speaker 11 (01:15:00):
No, it's it is true that that video showed the
crosses that represents claimed The video showed images of crosses
in South Africa about white farmers who have been killed
and politically persecuted because of the color of their skin,
and those crosses are representing their lives. Those crosses are
(01:15:23):
representing their lives and the fact that they are now
dead and their government did nothing about it. Are you
disputing that there's no fact.
Speaker 13 (01:15:31):
That the video showed what the President claimed it showed
because it did not show that. But even more what
I'm asking is who.
Speaker 11 (01:15:36):
It did show that showed white cross is representing people
who have perished because of racial persecution.
Speaker 13 (01:15:41):
The videos that the president shows and what protocols are
in praise when there's unsubstantiated information being put out for
the world and more leadership.
Speaker 11 (01:15:49):
Give me what's unsubstantiated about the video? The video shows
crosses that represent the dead bodies of people who were
racially persecuted by their government. In fact, the Associated Press,
of all places has a picture of that very monument,
and the caption from the Associated Press is each cross
marks a white farmer who has been killed in a
farm murder. So it is substantiated not just by that
(01:16:12):
video and the physical evidence that everybody saw on display
in the Oval office, but also by another outlet in
this from the Associated Press.
Speaker 3 (01:16:18):
So you should take it up with them.
Speaker 11 (01:16:20):
If you believe the claim is unsubstantiated. And that's a
ridiculous line of questioning, John.
Speaker 4 (01:16:24):
Yeah, because it's not unsubstantiated. I mean those So what
they're talking about is this video that is online that
the President showed in this press avail with the South
African President yesterday, and it was a video that showed
the aerial footage of a displayed featured white crosses for
(01:16:48):
the people that have been murdered over white farmers that
have been murdered over their land.
Speaker 3 (01:16:52):
This is absolutely true and it's supported.
Speaker 4 (01:16:55):
I went through with you, I think it was last week,
the UH statistics, including the murder rate of South Africa,
particularly as it pertains to farmers, and it absolutely is
one thousand percent true and it's substantiated. The media doesn't
(01:17:16):
want to acknowledge it, and the fact that they're saying
that what was she trying to do? Say that Potis
claimed that that was a cemetery.
Speaker 7 (01:17:25):
That it was a burial site.
Speaker 3 (01:17:28):
He never said that.
Speaker 4 (01:17:30):
He said that represents the farmers that have been killed,
is what he said. We played this audio. Hell, we
watched it live and then we played the audio, so
we heard it repeatedly. He never said that it was
a cemetary or some sort of like burial whatever. He
said that every one of those crosses represents a white
(01:17:53):
farmer that was killed.
Speaker 3 (01:17:54):
What she's trying to do.
Speaker 4 (01:17:57):
Is saying that she's trying to act like it was
that he's saying it was a cemetery, It was an exercise,
a memorial exercise. But regardless, they're trying to get all
hung up on rhetoric when that doesn't change the fact
that it happened, and that absolutely represents lives lost in
(01:18:21):
this Welcome back, Dan'll last with you at the top
of the third hour chats at Rumbull channel three forty seven,
the stream of the radio program. I don't know if
you've seen, they have been working over time. First off,
the legacy press twitch. He had to write up of
all the legacy press that said this was an ambush,
(01:18:42):
and we played that audio for you. Ambush, ambush, ambush, ambush,
not just in the video but also in terms of
the excuse me printed press. Oh, it's all ambush, ambush, ambush.
Trump ambushed the South African president. He ambushed him, ambushes.
(01:19:02):
I mean that's that headline over and over again. I'm curious,
how is it an ambush? How is it an ambush
showing him this stuff? I mean, he knows that it exists,
because he's on cameras having spoken to it. He's on
camera Ramafosa defending the land expropriation bill that he signed
(01:19:27):
into law at the start of this year.
Speaker 3 (01:19:30):
This very year he signed it into law.
Speaker 4 (01:19:34):
So I'm curious as to how it is an ambush
to show people video of politicians in South Africa saying
publicly on camera what we all know that?
Speaker 3 (01:19:46):
They said? How's that an ambush? That is so stupid?
What do they think was going to happen?
Speaker 4 (01:19:55):
I do think it's interesting how they all started saying
the exact same thing, right, It almost sounds like it
was coordinated.
Speaker 3 (01:20:02):
Look at that ambush? Ambush? They are you telling me
that they all organically made this determination? Do you believe that?
Do you think, all.
Speaker 4 (01:20:13):
Independent of each other, they just thought, you know what, ambush?
You really think that they did that? Do you really
believe that?
Speaker 3 (01:20:21):
Because if you do, just hold up. I have a bridge.
It's amazing. It's for sale. It's an iconic bridge. In fact,
you perhaps have seen it. I'm not joking. I'm totally serious.
Speaker 4 (01:20:33):
It's in San Francisco, right, beautiful span bridge. It's gorgeous.
I'll let you have it for twenty million. It's mine
to give go ahead, So don't run a home tadle
lock on it.
Speaker 13 (01:20:45):
Though.
Speaker 9 (01:20:45):
So this.
Speaker 4 (01:20:49):
Other thing that they were going on and on about
was Elon Musk being in the Oval office and I
was thinking about his expression because he was staring down Ramafosa.
Speaker 3 (01:20:58):
This is a guy who was the A and C is.
Speaker 4 (01:21:01):
Really meeted out quite a lot of hell on that
area and on an Elon Musk. I mean, he's he
grew up in this area. Is one of the reasons
why he left. He's been pulling back from investing in politics,
and some people are asking they're trying to act like
that it's a sign of defeat.
Speaker 3 (01:21:16):
He always said. Came When did he say he was
going to be leaving and stepping back.
Speaker 13 (01:21:22):
In May?
Speaker 5 (01:21:22):
Or?
Speaker 7 (01:21:23):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:21:23):
Can you remind everybody what month? That's what month it is?
Speaker 7 (01:21:25):
It's May.
Speaker 4 (01:21:27):
Oh, so Musk said that he would be stepping back.
He said this before the election, that he would step
back in May, and it's May now, and he stepped
back in May, the month that he said that he
was going to step back before the election, and even
after the election he said he was going to step
back in May, and that Doge was going to wrap
up everything by June. So they're going to freak out
(01:21:48):
when Doge does what it says and they wrap up
in June.
Speaker 3 (01:21:52):
Hmm.
Speaker 4 (01:21:53):
Interesting, he's uh, he was in the they're trying to
act like they've been wanting to to have a divide,
and they definitely want to act like they have a
scout from him, and he had said he had even
noted that Musk was saying that he doesn't see a
reason to do more political spending, and he hasn't really
(01:22:15):
said so much that. When he was at the Qatari
Economic Forum, he had said quote, I think I've done enough,
and I think he has. I mean, he's done more
than in terms of spending than almost anybody. I just
don't know how you're the Republican Party and you're looking
at us and you're like, why aren't we gonna all?
I mean, he came in to do this, and why
aren't we gonna do more? I'm just curious about that.
(01:22:36):
Just curious about that. But this idea of the press
going in and trying to act like, oh, the premise
is that it was staged and these people were never murdered.
They have not covered the genocidal issue in South Africa
for years. I don't expect them to start now, but
it was nice to have it thrown on their face
because these are people who always claim that they care
for the underdog and they want to fight for the underdog.
Speaker 3 (01:22:58):
But that never happens. Ever happens. Reminded me also of
this story. I wanted to pull this up because we
didn't have a chance to get into this. Let me
go to this.
Speaker 4 (01:23:09):
I actually made mention of this on my personal Facebook page.
Have you guys seen the stories of the from all
all of the stuff that's coming up from the COVID stuff, like,
for instance, how.
Speaker 3 (01:23:27):
The I'm going to pull this story up?
Speaker 4 (01:23:30):
Forgive me how the administration, the last administration knew the
risks of myocarditis and others and other risks. They knew
about these potential risks from these shots, and they took
steps to downplay them. According to a new Senate report
that is out from Senator Ron Johnson's office, Federal Health
(01:23:53):
Agency since February of twenty twenty one were alerted to
large reports of myo karditis in young people. And there's
a separate I pulled this up. There is a separate study.
This is from CBS. FDA expands COVID vaccine warning about
heart side effect risk for young males particularly.
Speaker 3 (01:24:17):
So there's always a risk, always a risk.
Speaker 4 (01:24:19):
Our family had it naturally and we did not get
the shot because we have natural immunity. We didn't just
decide to chuck science to go along and virtue signal
with a bunch of people who are happy to yeat
themselves into oblivion. I feel bad for the people who
are forced to take it, and I understand the reasons
that some wanted to take it. You know, that's the
(01:24:41):
difference between I think us and them. I never judged
anybody for taking it, but I got to tell you,
I mean the hell that we caught, and I know you.
I think everyone that's in the same boat has the
same experience we caught. My family caught so much hell
because we did not at the injection. We literally had
(01:25:02):
longtime friends drop us for being friends, like scream at
us on the phone, saying that we were going to
endanger the entirety of the public because we didn't get
the shot. Now, our so called friends pretended to be
so concerned about us, but they were never concerned enough
to ask if we ever actually had it ourselves, thus
(01:25:24):
natural immunity, or they were also not concerned enough to
ask if there were any kind of health complications, which
for two people in my family there absolutely were. There
were health complications, and we were doctor advised absolutely not
for this injection by our doctor, one of whom is
(01:25:47):
a cardiologist, said absolutely not. And our so called friends
never actually cared enough about our health to actually ask
if there were any complications. We just got yelled at
and dragged publicly, or they tried to because we wouldn't
get the injection. And now we knew all this stuff,
(01:26:07):
but now it's coming out because people they don't have
to worry about losing political capital to tell the truth
on it now. And I got to tell you I
really badly. I so badly want to say I told
you so. I so badly want to do it. But
how crazy is it? And I've talked to people all
around the country since then, and I can't tell you
how many people told me something similar. And in some cases,
(01:26:31):
you know, with ours, we had longtime friends that they
couldn't be friends with us anymore because we didn't get
the vaccine. I'm not even kidding vaccine and air quotes.
But I talked to a woman when I was in Virginia,
when I was visiting out in Virginia kwarv and I
spoke to someone who had said that her sister had
(01:26:55):
actually stopped talking to her because of this, and she
hasn't talked to her sister since like twenty twenty one.
Her sister, who is like two years older, she got
the injection. The younger one did, and the younger one
the woman I was talking to you, she's like, I've
had COVID twice, she said. In fact, she goes, I
am positive that I had had it because her husband
travels for work. She's like, I'm positive that I had
(01:27:16):
it before it became a big thing, like right when
people started talking about it, I'm positive I had it.
She ended up getting it again anyway, and she was like,
you know, I guess we don't believe in natural immunity anymore.
And her sister and her sister's family just raked her
through the coals, and she said they basically disowned us.
So they haven't spoken since twenty twenty one. Her sister
(01:27:37):
still will not have anything to do with her, has
her mask on, still has a Facebook profile photo she
said that has her mask on in it.
Speaker 3 (01:27:46):
I don't get that.
Speaker 4 (01:27:48):
But it's like, we never judged anybody who got it,
but we were judged plenty for not getting it. And I, like,
I said, I think people need to be have a
little bit more grace and discernment for those of us
(01:28:08):
who for reasons of our own.
Speaker 3 (01:28:10):
And look, you don't have to.
Speaker 4 (01:28:11):
Justify someone's disrespect and callous lack of concern by providing
them with your entire health history. It should be enough.
They should be satisfied with You're my friend, and I
agree with your decision. And what I realize is that
these people were never my friends anyway. And anybody who
treated you like that because you had the same position,
(01:28:33):
they were never friends to you anyway. They never cared
about you anyway. We have all these stories. They're expanding
the vaccine warning now. Oh now, the FDA is all
about saying it's not safe. Now now, they don't want
to mandate it. They don't want to suggest it for
younger people. Now ooh, they don't want to suggest it
for older people either. They don't want to suggest it
for anyone. And they have all of these Cleveland Clinic
USC study looked at the vaccines. There's also a separate
(01:28:56):
study that said the infection is linked to a sharp
increase in long term risk of heart attack and stroke,
separate from and I think it's on the severity of
which you had it separate from the issue of.
Speaker 3 (01:29:09):
Getting the shot.
Speaker 4 (01:29:11):
So I'm just saying, you know, some people did not
want to jump into the unknown, and shame on those
who judged them for that. Are partners over at Patriot Mobile.
It's the only Christian conservative cell phone service in the country,
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Speaker 7 (01:30:24):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 4 (01:30:30):
A drug smuggling cat which kind of sounds like a
British band name, was caught trying to sneak into prison
with heroin strapped to its back. It was trying to
climb over the barb wire fence and Coasta Rica with
a backpack full of heroin and they had to cut
it off.
Speaker 3 (01:30:44):
The cat. I don't know how they thought that that
was going to work, but it.
Speaker 4 (01:30:47):
Was trying to get entry to the penitenttery there and
they caught them. It had sixty eight grams of heroin
a bunch of pot and they said they believe that
this cat was trying to smuggle drugs to inmates.
Speaker 3 (01:30:58):
Now, I don't know what some thing that Kane.
Speaker 4 (01:31:00):
It's just a cat with a backpack of drugs, you know,
I mean, can a catwalk around with the backpack of
drugs and space bugs on Unbacteria found on China space
station never seen on Earth with a unique ability after
astronauts swabbed the cabin. That'll be the next thing that
they come get us with. There I go, space bugs,
stick with us.
Speaker 3 (01:31:17):
More in store.
Speaker 6 (01:31:19):
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 9 (01:31:30):
Sert Larry has been debate over that song that anti
apartheid chant right, and for people who don't have a
historical context, it does potentially appear more literal. Talk to
us about the debate that has happened inside of South
Africa with the recognition of how it appears to people
(01:31:52):
when they hear those words.
Speaker 14 (01:31:57):
It is an inflammatory song without a doubt, and many
in South Africa, even black South Africans, don't think it
should be sung in a post apartheid world thirty years
plus after apartheid, But there are many who grew up
under those years of white minority rule who understand the
historical context of this song. Kill the Boar, killed the Farmer,
(01:32:18):
that Julius Malema has made popular again. It sort of
fell into disuse. It's not been that commonly sung after
the end of apartheid in nineteen ninety four, but it's
brought it back again to reanimate the issue of the
majority of land in South Africa still being owned by
white farmers.
Speaker 3 (01:32:36):
Okay, what I'd love that?
Speaker 4 (01:32:37):
Well, you know, it's the historical context, you know, and
that it would you know, it's of course you might
think you stupid people that they're talking about it literally
because you lack the context. So, yes, what is the
context of kill the bow or kill the farmer? I mean,
(01:32:57):
it's not like a yo gabba gabba tune. What do
you think it means?
Speaker 3 (01:33:03):
Hm, we may never know.
Speaker 4 (01:33:05):
It's just the mostly peaceful genocide, you know, That's all
it is. That's just all so wait, so you're not
supposed to take it literally, like from the River to
the sea too.
Speaker 3 (01:33:15):
You don't take that literally? What that's so stupid?
Speaker 4 (01:33:18):
No, no, no, it's you know, it's a it's a
lifely lachestor if you're upset about kill the bower and
then mimicking the sound of gunfire and then up on
which you followed that with kill the farmer and more
gunfire noises. Uh, you just you know you're lacking the
historical context, that's all. So what what context?
Speaker 8 (01:33:39):
What is that?
Speaker 4 (01:33:39):
How does that make it more acceptable? Well, and then
you heard what the guy said it towards the end. Well,
as you know, the land is still they've been there
for over four hundred years, over four hundred years, and
the brutality being perpetrated.
Speaker 3 (01:33:59):
Upon them is rific. You however much you load the media,
it is never enough. It is never enough.
Speaker 4 (01:34:07):
So I don't understand what their context would what they
think makes it better. I don't know, but that's that's
how they're going with it. Yeah, kill the bone. No, no, no,
it's just a just a change, I mean just a
little song. Yeah, just a song you wouldn't be able
to get, You wouldn't be able to use it excuse
(01:34:29):
with anything else, not at all.
Speaker 3 (01:34:33):
They're going to try to deny it.
Speaker 4 (01:34:34):
Imagine though you came out, what did you say there
was an image that you came to the Oval Office
for money instead you got.
Speaker 7 (01:34:40):
Yeah, you came to the White House for money instead
you got four K video of genocide in your country.
Speaker 3 (01:34:46):
Yeah, they want to deny it. That's what it's all about.
Speaker 4 (01:34:50):
Can I show you can we go back to this
one thing that we hadn't hadlines real quick? This is
audio Sunday twenty one showed you some of this. I
need to have a conversation about the standing airplane seats.
Are they trying to get people to go all falling
down with Michael Douglas in the sky.
Speaker 7 (01:35:08):
This will do it?
Speaker 4 (01:35:10):
So budget airlines are considering launching these controversial I'm looking
at the name of Skyrider two point zero standing seats. Yeah,
and I don't know what the ticket price would be.
They are being introduced by manufacturer. They want to increase
(01:35:32):
passenger capacity by twenty percent, and they unveiled it at
the Aircraft Interiors Expo several years ago.
Speaker 3 (01:35:41):
And they said it's an innovated seat. It allows an
ultra high density in the aircraft cabin and it opens
up the traveling experience to a wider passenger market. Okay, Caine,
And I know one has.
Speaker 4 (01:35:56):
The video of how I watched this guy struggle with
a bag in there you Okay, So if I'm flying,
I do work typically unless it's on vacation, and I
don't know this guy, if you're watching the simulcast, how
in the world do you even open your laptop or
anything to work in that?
Speaker 8 (01:36:16):
You don't.
Speaker 7 (01:36:18):
How do you uncompress your spine? You don't.
Speaker 4 (01:36:21):
Next, they're going to be we're strapping passengers to the
wings to increase our capacity and open up a whole
new market of passenger class. Yes, you're gonna get buckled,
and you get a hold onto your suitcase tight. We're
going to strap you to the wing.
Speaker 7 (01:36:38):
Wing straps are only ten bucks with budget airlines.
Speaker 4 (01:36:41):
With budget airlines, and you get extra leg room if
you're strapped onto the wings, fresh air, no drinks or bathroom.
But you won't notice because you'll probably defecate your bridges.
Speaker 3 (01:36:53):
Before we even leave the ground. I it looks like hell.
Speaker 4 (01:36:58):
I think I don't like being enclosed in small spaces,
and I think I would.
Speaker 3 (01:37:04):
Riot. I think I would immediately.
Speaker 7 (01:37:07):
I barely want to be on a plane. When I'm
seated comfortably.
Speaker 3 (01:37:10):
It's like you're sitting on a banana. Uh huh.
Speaker 7 (01:37:12):
Even if I'm seated comfortably, I hate being on the plane,
Like this is what do I want?
Speaker 14 (01:37:18):
Now?
Speaker 7 (01:37:18):
Two additional people closer to me?
Speaker 4 (01:37:22):
And people are weird on planes. I mean, this fellow
can't even get in. He's trying to squeeze himself in.
Speaker 13 (01:37:28):
I love it.
Speaker 4 (01:37:28):
You knew that, you know, you know that when they
unveiled us at the EXBO, they were like, okay, Bob,
why don't you just slide in there and let's see
if you can get all you know situated. And he's
you know, they were trying to show how easy and
nice these seats were. That guy was on the struggle
bus like instantly trying to wedge himself in there. Now,
the first chick, there's nobody in front of her, so
she can sit in it fine. Her legs are even
(01:37:50):
extended out further than this guy.
Speaker 3 (01:37:52):
Look at this guy can't even get in the seat.
He's struggling to even get in the seat. He can't
even get in it.
Speaker 7 (01:37:59):
I thought we were moving in the direction where no
came we need bigger seats because you remember those people
that with the large bottoms that they they're just huge
butts and they have to buy two seats, you know
what I mean? Like, that's the that's the direction we
were moving.
Speaker 6 (01:38:13):
What is this?
Speaker 3 (01:38:15):
So what happens if you're one of those individuals?
Speaker 1 (01:38:18):
Oh?
Speaker 7 (01:38:18):
You need that damn whole row in front of you.
Speaker 4 (01:38:21):
Yeah, and you and you're trying to like get and
then what happens then? Because are they gonna have to come?
I'm gonna pull up this. What happens then?
Speaker 3 (01:38:29):
If that's if that's you, if that's you, if that's you,
then what happens?
Speaker 4 (01:38:33):
And you're you know, where you're sitting next to someone
that they can't in a like a normal seat, they
would take a couple of the seats. I can't I
can't even believe that this is the thing that we're
all considering. So, I mean, I don't know, but in
Turkey it might not be a problem. Did you hear
what they're doing in Turkey? What so overweight people are
(01:38:56):
publicly weighed in order to slim down under new rules
in turn Turkey, and they have inspectors patrolling public spaces.
Speaker 7 (01:39:03):
Wait a minute, is that what this is? Without actually
weighing people, without actually weighing.
Speaker 3 (01:39:08):
People, they well, in Turkey, this is a separate story.
Speaker 7 (01:39:12):
No, I know about have to think about that. This
is what they're doing. Instead of weighing you, they're making
these tiny seats that make it impossible. So you look
at them you're like, well, I can't go in there.
I'm too big for that. Yeah boom, Now fat people
aren't flying.
Speaker 4 (01:39:26):
They rolled out a nationwide plan to stop and weigh
people in public, with inspectors telling them to slim down
if they're found to be overweight. Health workers in Turkey
have been deployed across each of the country's eighty one
regions with weighing scales and tape measures as the drive
to assess ten million people by July tenth is underway,
passerby or stopped by medical examiners for spot body mess
(01:39:49):
index checks. What if you don't want to do it? Though,
I don't think that's probably going to be an option
for you to not do it, But they said, yeah,
they everybody. Everybody that and then they're asked, they're told
to go to a dietitian or whatever, and then they
have to lose weight. But yeah, they've they're in shopping malls,
they're out in the streets. There are people who've been
(01:40:11):
posting pictures all around Turkeys shown that they're being guided
onto weighing scales, having their height measured, and then they're
weight calculated and they're told to slim up and they
go well, like drivers are worn of speeding traps. You know,
they're warning people about being overweight. Can you imagine? It's
(01:40:31):
an anti obesity campaign that officials describe as a national fight,
and they're running it under the tagline know your weight
and Live Healthy. It started on May tenth, and they're
going to serve a one in eight Turks. Anybody with
a BMI over twenty five are referred to as state
run family health center and a healthy life center where
they get nutritional counseling and follow up services.
Speaker 3 (01:40:51):
Now the Turks are mad.
Speaker 4 (01:40:53):
They're saying that this is the government being out of
touch with the daily realities of soaring food prices and
wage stagnation and the impact has on healthy eating, et cetera,
et cetera. And the Irduwan government has been criticized because
they're like it's super public. They're weighing everybody in public.
They're like fat shaming you in public. Now, I'm all
about being healthy, and I don't like the whole body
(01:41:13):
positivity campaign that celebrates morbid obesity. But I also think
if I don't like the government walking around at all,
like saying, hey, get up here, Sally on this scale,
and we're.
Speaker 3 (01:41:24):
Gonna weigh you.
Speaker 4 (01:41:26):
Tammy Karen Yamish, get up here on this scale. We're
gonna weigh you, and then everybody sees it. Now the
World Health Organization, if whatever, however you want to take this.
They estimated that thirty percent of people in Turkey are obese,
and so they said that, Yeah, that's how they're they're
(01:41:46):
going to They think that this is they think this
is gonna work.
Speaker 3 (01:41:48):
How would that work in the United States?
Speaker 4 (01:41:52):
I would imagine somebody's scale would get broken. If somebody
tried doing that. I think I would knock the scale
out of their hands and like, get away from me. No,
you can't because a hippa. I mean, there's no way
you could do something like that.
Speaker 7 (01:42:03):
But I'm totally less bothered by weighing people before they
get on the plane. Then those damn seats you first,
not over the seat.
Speaker 3 (01:42:10):
No, I'm not, well, they don't weigh you before you
get on the plane. This is a whole other planet.
Speaker 8 (01:42:13):
I know that.
Speaker 7 (01:42:14):
But there's no possible way that I could ever ever
think of flying on a plane like that. There's no like,
think about it. Now, you're fitting how many more people
in the plane twenty thirty. So now we have an
issue of a weight problem. We have now more people
in the plane. Now I'm concerned about.
Speaker 4 (01:42:31):
How many times have you heard too where they have
to adjust the weight of the plane. Yeah, and they
have they ask people to get off, and I'm like,
wait a minute, you're only asking like four or five
people to get off. So you're telling me whether or
not this thing sinks or flies, falls out of the
sky or not is dependent upon four people to be
on this plane.
Speaker 3 (01:42:47):
It makes me worried.
Speaker 7 (01:42:48):
Physics is still a thing.
Speaker 3 (01:42:49):
Oh a little bit, just a little bit, Yeah that, Yeah,
physics is the thing that bothers me. So I don't know.
But they said that.
Speaker 4 (01:42:58):
One of the things that the Turkish people were hitting
back at is they were saying that a lot of
the professional athletes they have technically qualify as overweight based
solely on their BMI because they have much more muscle mass,
which weighs proportionally more than fat, which is true.
Speaker 5 (01:43:14):
Is that?
Speaker 4 (01:43:15):
So yeah, they wouldn't be taking that into consideration, would
they do? You see how stupid these government like a
government run program like this is.
Speaker 6 (01:43:21):
It's so dumb, not able to catch all three hours
of the Dana Show. Subscribe to the full podcast and
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Speaker 3 (01:43:37):
Little B fifty two is this is such a great song.
I remember when I was a kid, this was on
my walkman.
Speaker 4 (01:43:43):
I made my own little tape through great effort, and
whenever we would do little family road trips in that
with my mom, i'd have I always had BE fifty
two's on it, and I always had this song. Such
a great song. Welcome back, Dana, lash with you. Did
you hear about this story of a democratic city that's
giving low income residents one hundred and fifty dollars a
month to spend on trips to Disneyland. It's in Los Angeles.
(01:44:09):
They get one hundred and fifty dollars monthly travel stipend
to spend on Disneyland.
Speaker 3 (01:44:16):
Woo, best use of money.
Speaker 7 (01:44:19):
Right came did a story like last week where this
guy one day at Disneyland, he spent fourteen hundred dollars
because it's so expensive there. What's one fifty going to do?
Speaker 3 (01:44:29):
Well?
Speaker 4 (01:44:30):
I don't know, but it's nice that they're doing it,
isn't it. It's a part of their Democrat the Democrats
Mobility Wallet pilot program, and they offered one thousand qualified
people a prepaid.
Speaker 3 (01:44:44):
Debit card and they could use it for the metro
uber Greyhound Disney. Yeah, I see no.
Speaker 4 (01:44:54):
And then UCLA did A did some research on it though,
and the first round of the project is over and
now all this financial stress has once again burdened the community.
Hmm it it didn't work. I for one, am completely shocked.
(01:45:19):
I mean, I thought that all of these all of
the income inequality would be solved by this, and that
all the drugs and all of that would stop.
Speaker 3 (01:45:33):
And I just thought all the everything would be fixed, Kane,
and they didn't fix it.
Speaker 7 (01:45:39):
It's weird. It's like every time government throws money at
a problem, it seems like there's a pretty common outcome
every time, and it's usually failure.
Speaker 3 (01:45:49):
It's like it doesn't work.
Speaker 4 (01:45:51):
It's really wild how that happens, right, So they said, uh,
some participants said that he was real happy because he
got to go to Disneyland.
Speaker 1 (01:45:58):
Does it?
Speaker 4 (01:45:59):
Did it also make make sure that you had food
now permanently? Do you have to worry about food and
all that kind.
Speaker 3 (01:46:04):
Of I'm just curious. I'm just thinking some questions, some
questions about it, you know, I'm just I don't know.
I don't know, Okaine, I don't think that that's how
that's all supposed to work.
Speaker 4 (01:46:14):
I'm just saying that's not the that's not the best
way to spend money, especially when you're Los Angeles and
you're broke and you're running a deficit and you're in
the red and you have no money, you can't even
afford water desalination, and you blew like I don't know
how many billion on a road, a railroad that's not finished.
Speaker 3 (01:46:31):
It doesn't go anywhere, high speed rail. I mean, you
know what else is there? Yay?
Speaker 4 (01:46:36):
So I'll follow along whether it's on substack. There's an
update on substack the post that I had last night
about the big beautiful bill and if it passes the Senate,
probably the best place to catch it. I think I'm
gonna put something up at Facebook, the official Facebook page.
I will not be behind the mic tomorrow, but I
will be back Tuesday for this Memorial Day weekend in
(01:46:59):
which those who gave all we honor those individuals.
Speaker 3 (01:47:03):
God bless them. In the meantime, we have to day's
stupidity came.
Speaker 7 (01:47:06):
Yes, ma'am, and it could have been a couple of
different cuts from the view, because those harpies are a
couple fresh short of a happy meal. This, though, is
the South African President. This is him caught on tape,
and wouldn't it be weird? And this is the stupidity
that I'm pointing towards our media. This is so easy
to see and get, but yet they don't want to
report on its as a matter of fact, they want
(01:47:27):
to push a narrative that's opposite of it. Listen to
what South African President says.
Speaker 8 (01:47:30):
Here land the land of.
Speaker 10 (01:47:35):
Our pull fathers and our.
Speaker 9 (01:47:38):
Return to our people without any failure and without any
payment of compensation.
Speaker 7 (01:47:49):
So take land without any payment, without.
Speaker 3 (01:47:50):
Any compencaration that he signed.
Speaker 4 (01:47:52):
That's the expropriation, the land Expropriation Act that he signed
at the early at the first part.
Speaker 3 (01:47:57):
Of this year.
Speaker 7 (01:47:58):
We have thousands of white farmers dead after yeah exactly.
Speaker 3 (01:48:02):
Yeah, it was real, and they just trying to act
like that didn't happen, folks. That does it for us?
Speaker 4 (01:48:06):
Until Tuesday, it's a Memorial Day. Weekends, some gave all,
all gave some, some gave all, And God love you.
For those who gave the grandest gift in service, we
love you, We love your families.
Speaker 3 (01:48:20):
God bless back with you Tuesday,