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May 15, 2024 44 mins

Is Merrick Garland going to go to prison like Peter Navarro did? Congressman Jim Jordan answers that question before Jesse Kelly. Another person going to prison is Dexter Taylor, who came on the show to share his story. Dana Loesch gives us an update on it all. Plus, appearances from Gabrielle Cuccia and Corey DeAngelis. 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Is Merrick Garland going to prison.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
We have Congressman Jim Jordan, and we're going to talk
to him about that. Jana lash joins us about this
ugly case out of New York.

Speaker 1 (00:11):
We will talk about that.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
What's going on on college campuses, education, a Hammick story,
all that and more coming up.

Speaker 3 (00:16):
But I'm right, Okay.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
We have a lot of guests on the show tonight
and we have a lot to tackle. We were going
to tackle the Attorney General of the United States of America.
We have a congressman here, we have a legal case.
Someone's going to prison for a long time. I mean,
there's so much heavy stuff on tonight's show that.

Speaker 1 (00:42):
We weren't sure where to begin, right. We weren't sure
where do you begin on a day like this, But
we figured it.

Speaker 2 (00:50):
Was only appropriate to bring you some pretty heavy news
that's out there. Maybe you've seen it in the news,
maybe you haven't. I'm going to try not to get
choked up here, but Red Lobster's closing over fifty locations.
Red Lobster is as America American as George Washington and

(01:13):
Bald Eagles, and we're apparently losing our greatest seafood restaurant.
For me personally, this is a it's a loss that
I mean, it's like losing a family member or a kidney.

Speaker 1 (01:27):
That's what it feels like today.

Speaker 2 (01:29):
When I woke up and saw this news, almost didn't
even come into work. You're lucky I'm here tonight, So
say a prayer for Red Lobster.

Speaker 1 (01:35):
We'll do what we can.

Speaker 2 (01:37):
I'm gonna go eat there tonight, try to support them
in any way I can.

Speaker 1 (01:40):
Just Yeah, this is hard anyway.

Speaker 2 (01:43):
It's also really hard living in a country that's totally corrupt.
The country is so it's such a gangster country now,
it's completely corrupt. Wrap your mind around this, because we're
gonna get to Jim Jordan in a moment, Joe Biden.
Special Counsel gets appointed to investigate Joe Biden for hisious crimes.
Special council sits down with Joe Biden, records the meetings,

(02:06):
and walks away from it, saying, I mean, yeah, he's
a freaking criminal.

Speaker 1 (02:09):
But he's so old. He's just so old and his.

Speaker 2 (02:13):
Memory is so bad that yeah, he committed all the crimes.
We know he committed the crimes, but we can't charge
this guy. He's so old. Look at him, he's old.
That's essentially what Robert Hurr said after the whole thing.
So the House of Representatives, the Judiciary committees obviously quite curious.
What's on those recordings? You know, we have transcripts, which

(02:35):
they lie about all the time, but what's actually on
the recordings? What did Joe Biden sound like? How old
do you have to sound to avoid getting charged with felonies?
And so Jim Jordan, he's been trying to get him.
Merritt Garland, the Attorney General of the United States of America,
just said no, you.

Speaker 1 (02:54):
Can't have him.

Speaker 2 (02:56):
That's kind of gangst their country we live in now,
So talk to Jim Jordan about that. Joining me now,
great Congressman from the state of Ohio, Well, this whole
Robert her special counsel thing for Joe Biden does not
appear to be going away courtesy of the House Judiciary Committee.
You see, Merrick Garland is supposed to give them the recordings.

(03:17):
It's pretty simple request, isn't it. Hey, you have the recordings.
We are demanding the recordings, and Merrick Garland is not
handing over said recordings as ordered, which is odd. Joining
me now great congressman from the state of Ohio, big
cheese on the Judiciary Committee, Congressman Jim Jordan, Congressman. Okay,
so it just florens me. So the AG just told

(03:38):
you what screw off? Is that basically what he said.

Speaker 4 (03:41):
Yeah, they're not giving it to us.

Speaker 5 (03:43):
And understand, the elements of the crime are there. Joe
Biden knowingly capped classified information, he knowingly released classified information.
They've established the motive on page I think two thirty
one of the report, Special Counselor her says Joe Biden
had strong motivations for ignoring classified procedures because.

Speaker 4 (04:04):
He was writing a book.

Speaker 5 (04:06):
A book for which he got paid eight million dollars,
an eight million dollar event. So we have motive, eight
million dollar motive. We have the elements of the crime
knowingly kept, knowingly disclosed. But then Robert Hurt reaches the conclusion.
He says, we're not going to recommend charges because Joe
Biden is a forgetful, elderly gentleman. Okay, maybe that all
that's fine, But if you got the elements of the crime,

(04:28):
you got an eight million dollar motive for doing the crime,
and you're not going to charge we'd sort of like
to base have all the facts that you based your
decision upon. So we're asking for the audio tape, not
just the audio tape when they interviewed President Biden, but
also the audio tape when they interviewed the ghostwriter, the
guy who wrote the book Miristers Monitor. We'd like all

(04:49):
that information.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
Okay, the Attorney General of the United States of America
is not the president's personal lawyer, unless civics has changed
since I was in school, correct, I do have that right,
he doesn't.

Speaker 1 (05:02):
He's not the president's personal attorney. He's not that.

Speaker 4 (05:06):
You have White House counsel for that.

Speaker 5 (05:07):
And I'm sure the White House Council maybe they're hoping
that he won't release it, and who knows if they've
talked to him or not. I don't know, but we
want to inform it. Here's the other thing I think
is important. We're in the midst of an impeachment inquiry still,
so that is even a heightened reason for us to
have all the facts, all the evidence. Look, we know
people forget things. We all forget things. I forget things.

(05:27):
You forget that. That's just that's just human nature. But
this was so profound that it became the basis for
not charging a crime, not recommending a crime be charged
when the elements are there, and as I said, when
there's a strong motivation, a strong motive elopment there as well.

Speaker 4 (05:42):
So we'd like to know.

Speaker 5 (05:44):
And then there's the final piece, which is we know
the White House has changed the transcripts because the argument
from the White House is from the just Department, is oh,
you got the transcript, you don't need.

Speaker 4 (05:53):
The audio tape.

Speaker 5 (05:54):
Well, just a few weeks ago, Joe Biden give them
the speech is reading and he uses the word pause,
which was not in the script that he was supposed
to read. We all remember that that situation a few
weeks back, when the transcript come out, it didn't have
Joe Biden saying the word pause. So we already know
the transcripts aren't always consistent with the audio version of
what actually happened. So we'd like the audio tape so

(06:16):
we the legislative branch who does oversight can get all
the facts and make a decision and see everything. And frankly,
the American people should be able to understand this as well.
As we're heading into the most important election we have,
which is for commander in.

Speaker 1 (06:29):
G Yeah, they certainly should.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
Okay, so where do we go from here, Congressman Merrick Garland?

Speaker 1 (06:36):
Is he going to prison? What's going on?

Speaker 5 (06:38):
Well, we have to mark up the contempt resolution. Its
actually just like a bill. We have to mark that
up on a schedule for Thursday that I'll go through
a markup in the committee.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
Then the Speaker of the.

Speaker 5 (06:47):
House will decide if and when it comes to the floor,
they'd have to have a vote on the floor, and
then it goes and of course you may wind up
in court.

Speaker 4 (06:54):
You never know how these things play out.

Speaker 5 (06:55):
I don't think Merrick Garlands suddenly going to you know,
charge himself. I don't think that's going to happen. But
I don't think he once contempt either. So let's hope
they decide. You know what, let's just give the tape
to the legislative body who has a constitutional duty to
do oversight, particularly when they're in the midst of an
impeachment inquiry.

Speaker 4 (07:11):
Just give us the information. That's what we're trying to get.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
Okay, let's move on to a three letter agency. I
hate I actually hate all of them, but the irs
might be chief among them. In your going after them
for doing what.

Speaker 5 (07:24):
Now, an IRS agent showed up. This actually happened in
our district, the fourth district of Ohio, showed up at
a lady's home, knocked on oer door, told him used
an alias, and this lady actually thought he was a
scam artist, and so did the local police for goodness sake,
So we want to know, Hey, hey, Danny warfol commissioned
the IRS. What's happened to this guy who was impersonating

(07:46):
someone else actually threatened the law enforcement. We'd like to
know what happened and understand this happened, Jesse. This happened
a little over a year ago on the heels of
if you remember the big story, we had Matt ty Be,
one of the authors of the Twitter files, testifying in
front of our our committee, and in the midst of
his testimony, while the Democrats are asking him by the

(08:09):
way to divulge his sources, a direct attack on the
First Amendment. While that's going on, the IRS was knocking
on his door. And there's not anyone who's heard that
story who thinks that it was just chance, just a coincidence.
At the IRS is notocking on Matt Tavie's door at
the very moment he's testifying in front of Congress about
the censorship efforts of the government. But so those two things,

(08:29):
and then on the heels of that, we have this
situation in our own district with this constituent of ours.
So the good news is the IRS has announced that
they will no longer be making unannounced visits to American citizens' home.

Speaker 4 (08:42):
That's a good thing.

Speaker 5 (08:43):
But we want to know what happened to this agent
who was so arrogant with one of our constituents.

Speaker 4 (08:48):
We know what the story is.

Speaker 3 (08:51):
Yeah, I'd like to.

Speaker 2 (08:52):
Know what the story is too, Okay, Congressman, I'll be honest.
I feel a real disconnect between the leadership of the GOP,
lots of the leadership to the GOP, and the American people.
I mean, we have an anti senmatism on college campus
bill being passed, which is fine, right, No one wants
anti semitism on college campus. Grocery prices are up forty percent,
and you hear precious little about that from the Republicans

(09:14):
were supposed to be getting these prices down.

Speaker 1 (09:17):
Do they not know that people are suffering?

Speaker 5 (09:20):
I think we do, and I think certainly the American
people can feel in a real way. I say, why
this election is so important because what is it three
years and one hundred and fourteen days. I think of
the Biden administration, we have literally went from secure border
to no border, Dave Streets, record crime, two dollars gas,
four dollar gas. And to your point, Jesse, stable prices

(09:41):
to record inflation. Thank your family out to dinner. To
that your middle class family got to dinner. It costs
you an arm and a leg for goodness, say so.
I think the country gets it, and it underscores why
this election is so important. And if we don't went
back to White House, we're never going to get the border.
Secure prices aren't going to come down. Bad energy policy
is going to continue to drive up the price of everything.
It's why this election is so important. And I think

(10:03):
those four things, the border crime, energy prices, and the
price of everything else that's going to drive this election.
I think it's why President Trump is up in all
six of the six of the seven swing states and
the other one he's dead, even Wisconsin's even he's winning
the other six.

Speaker 1 (10:18):
I think it's because of America.

Speaker 5 (10:19):
It's why you saw one hundred thousand people for goodness, sake,
and while Wood New Jersey people are fed up with
what's going on.

Speaker 4 (10:25):
We need to talk about it.

Speaker 5 (10:26):
We need to do all we can, but with the
Democrats controlling the Senate in the White House, it's tough
to change the policies right now. It's why we need
President Trump back in the White House.

Speaker 2 (10:35):
Congressman, before I let you go, I'm not obviously in
favor of government intervention and bailouts of any industry.

Speaker 1 (10:41):
I hate that it always ends up bad.

Speaker 2 (10:43):
At the same time, I can't help but feel like
maybe you guys should step in. When I break up
and I read the news about Red Lobster possibly facing bankruptcy.
We can't just allow an American institution, our highest quality
seafood place, to go under.

Speaker 1 (10:57):
Can we can't you do something?

Speaker 5 (11:01):
I don't know if you want the government, I mean
Red Lobster's Great America. I don't think you want the government.
I kind of with Jesse.

Speaker 4 (11:08):
I'm with you on this. When Jesse, we probably do.
I remember what was it now.

Speaker 5 (11:14):
Fifteen years ago when it was TARP and the bailouts
for the banks and all, how that's was it. I
muttered against that, and I think we were right about
that decision too. So yeah, I'm not a big fan
of that kind of stuff either.

Speaker 2 (11:29):
Well you were right again about that, but I wish
you could help red Lobster out either way.

Speaker 1 (11:33):
Congressman, thank you as always. I appreciate you, sir.

Speaker 2 (11:37):
All right, Look, everyone wants big government for the things
they love. I want to red Lobster bailout. I'm going
to keep pressing this issue with every Congressman. I know
it's what it is. We have a lot more for
you before we get to that. Let's do this. Let's
get you a good night's sleep. Look, it's everything. It

(11:57):
changes your entire life, changes your mood, your energy levels,
your health everything. You ever heard of. Dream powder, it's
the created stuff in the world. It's from Beam. Beam
makes it. It's called dream powder. They have a couple
different flavors, chocolate, peanut, butter. I have the chocolate cinnamon.

Speaker 1 (12:14):
What is it? What's all natural? No more garbage, all
natural and you support in a little glass of water
or a little cup of milk.

Speaker 2 (12:20):
That's what I do, Warm up a little cup of
milk and mix it up before bed. It's the most
delicious cinnamon hot chocolate.

Speaker 1 (12:25):
In the world. And then you just go to sleep.

Speaker 2 (12:28):
But when you wake up in the morning, you're not
groggy like you always are when you take things to sleep,
not groggy at all.

Speaker 1 (12:34):
You just wake up and you're ready to go.

Speaker 2 (12:36):
It's the benefit of all natural that's the benefit of
dream powder. Go get some forty percent off chopbeam dot com.
Slash Jesse Kelly, go get some dream powder. We'll be back.

Speaker 1 (12:58):
I hate the ATF.

Speaker 2 (12:59):
I haven't told you about that in a while, but
I really really did spot well. I mean, all government
agencies for the most part, but the ATF may be
the worst. And this Dexter Taylor's story, we talked about
it several times on the show, just has me so
freaking steemed. ATF bunch of dirt balls joining with the
New York Cops, rated some poor SAPs home who was
making weapons in his base, but he wasn't even selling them,

(13:19):
wasn't even advertising them. And now Dexter Taylor is going
to the clink for a decade. It looks like Dana
knows more about the Second Amendment than any person I
know on the planet.

Speaker 1 (13:30):
Joining me now, Dana Lash.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
Host of course, of The Dana Show, which you can
watch right here on the first, twelve to three pm
Eastern time. Okay, Dana, you're the Second Amendment expert, certainly
much more so than me. Shoot me straight, did Dexter
do anything wrong?

Speaker 6 (13:44):
Well, I'm not going to shoot you because I'm not
a member of the ATF and not like you. I
share you, just like of them. ATF stands for asshats,
toolbags and freaks.

Speaker 7 (13:52):
As we all know.

Speaker 6 (13:53):
We can say that because we're not on network TV,
so we can get away with that. But no, this case,
this case is so inating.

Speaker 7 (14:00):
So let me lay lay out like the crux of
the matter.

Speaker 6 (14:04):
So, in the tradition of our Great Republic, with the
Second Amendment, the Second Amendment began as a privatized thing.
I mean, it began as hobbyism. I mean, everybody knows
the puckle gun, the belt and gun rifling, which originated
in France and then was adopted by the colonists, and
then emerged in throughout the United States, first with the
Kentucky gun, and then so on and so forth. It's

(14:25):
always been you know, a hobbyists and people who are
curious about how things work that have always advanced the
progression and capability of firearms.

Speaker 4 (14:35):
And this was.

Speaker 6 (14:36):
Something that the founders were incredibly aware of at the time,
at the writing, the drafting of the Second Amendment, the
debates around the Second Amendment, et cetera.

Speaker 7 (14:43):
So this is how it started.

Speaker 6 (14:45):
And of course, you know enshrined as a natural right
and affirm by the Constitution of the United States. And
so with that federally federal statute, it's like eighteen USC.
Nineteen twenty two subsections. I think it's op and R.
So there's like several different statutes within federal law that
protects the personal manufacturer what the left likes to call

(15:07):
ghost guns because they got to give it a boogeyman term,
the personal manufacturer of a firearm. So you are allowed,
as a free American to make a firearm at home. Now,
there are two caveats to this. If you're going to
sell it, which you can sell it. If you're going
to sell it either through an FFL or a private
transfer to someone else who is a legal possessor in

(15:30):
your state of residence, you have to put a serial
number on it, so it has to be serialized.

Speaker 7 (15:35):
And if you're going to sell, you got to do that.

Speaker 6 (15:37):
And of course if you're going to start making you know,
more than just one and sell them. Then you have
to go and you have to get your federal firearms
license through our favorite agency, Dresse.

Speaker 7 (15:46):
The ATF. And so that's how all this works. Now.

Speaker 6 (15:50):
I bring these two things up because as you know,
with Dexter Taylor's case, he is not accused of doing
either of these things. And I don't mean to use
this term as a pejorative, but the guy's a nerd, right,
He's a nerd. God love him. He's an engineer, like
how things work. That's like the most boring show ever
on earth. That's probably his favorite show. He loves like engines.

(16:11):
He was a programmer. He has an engineer's mind, and
he loved figuring out how firearms work, different firearms.

Speaker 7 (16:18):
He liked building them.

Speaker 6 (16:19):
He's never even fired all the stuff that he's made.
He's never sold anything. He has zero criminal record, completely,
no record at all whatsoever. He's never sold anything. The
state wasn't even accusing him of selling anything. Now, remember
the bruined decision which handled all the licensing just a
couple of years ago, with the quote unquote ghost guns
that is in conflict with existing federal law, which has

(16:42):
been long established, longer than this New York licensing scheme,
and New York is saying that you have to get
a license, but New York doesn't want to give you
a license, so it won't give you a license, so
it can force you into the fellon category, which is
exactly what happened.

Speaker 7 (16:57):
With Dexter Taylor here. So in short, what's going to happen?

Speaker 6 (17:01):
And I just talked to Vinu Varghese's attorney in my
second hour programming today. I mean, obviously it's going to
go through the appeals cycle. Maybe it'll get up before Scotus.
We have several years to go before we get to
the point of knowing how that's going to work out,
which means several years. Jesse of Dexter Taylor sitting in
jail for a completely free, innocent activity, and I ask,

(17:22):
where are the protesters for him? Where are all the
people in the streets for Dexter Taylor, a black man
who's being persecuted by the State of New York or
his Second Amendment right that he was free to exercise.

Speaker 1 (17:35):
Joy. Yeah, it's funny.

Speaker 2 (17:37):
If only he'd been high on fetanhyl they'd be storm
in the freaking Capitol building, Dana. Okay, his lawyers said,
the judge said this, and I'm not even surprised, And
they had all these scumbag comedies think like this, do
not bring the Second Amendment into this courtroom. It doesn't
exist here, so you can't argue the Second Amendment.

Speaker 1 (17:55):
This is New York, Dana. Obviously I get a.

Speaker 2 (17:57):
Bunch of pushback when I tell people in blue states
to move, But look, move or don't move.

Speaker 1 (18:02):
You very clearly don't have.

Speaker 2 (18:03):
Rights in a lot of these states anymore, none whatsoever.

Speaker 7 (18:07):
No, you're you're absolutely right.

Speaker 6 (18:08):
And it's insane that they were told that, that they
were instructed that by this judge. And here's something fascinating
that I did not know until just today. They had
switched out the judge that was also going to hear
the case and the prosecutor because they didn't want the
optic of having a white prosecutor and a white judge
send a black conservative to jail because he was exercising

(18:29):
his Second Amendment right. So literally in the eleventh hour,
they changed everything up, and then they went before this
very very far left judge who not only told them
in the courtroom that they can't refer to the Second Amendment,
which is what this case is entirely based upon, you know, honestly,
that they couldn't refer to the Second Amendment.

Speaker 7 (18:47):
And then she complained.

Speaker 6 (18:48):
Jesse because she said that people were criticizing her positions
and what she was saying in court online, and she
was trying to fabricate or intimate that she was under
threat because people were criticizing her. No joke, that's exactly like,
that's what she did.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
Honestly.

Speaker 2 (19:06):
We have these people, like these lofty people in our society,
and they are a bunch of teenage girls, Dana. I
don't even how we walked, how do we survive this?
These judges, like you picture the judge in the robe
and you think at least some kind of respectability, they're
just a bunch of children, sociology majors or whatever they are.

Speaker 6 (19:23):
I feel like they lowered the standards they had to
because I don't know, maybe it was just you know,
the the the inexperience of youth. But I just thought,
you know, these people, if they're your elders and they're
in these lofty, you know, very well respected positions, surely
they have to know, like something about what they're talking about.

Speaker 7 (19:40):
Right, No, No, no, they don't. That's what I learned
as an adult. They don't, Dana.

Speaker 2 (19:45):
We're switching gears just because I don't get Dana lash
that often.

Speaker 1 (19:48):
And I want to ask you some political questions.

Speaker 2 (19:50):
Joe Biden, they're not gonna They're not actually gonna run him.

Speaker 1 (19:54):
Right, Dana.

Speaker 2 (19:55):
I mean they have to bounce them at the convention.
I know they can't restart the primary. I know that,
but they're never going to roll this turd out there
in November.

Speaker 7 (20:03):
Right, Yeah, they are.

Speaker 6 (20:05):
In fact, they're going to roll this desiccated old turd
out into the floor at the convention.

Speaker 7 (20:10):
That's exactly what's going to happen.

Speaker 4 (20:11):
Jesse.

Speaker 6 (20:11):
I think it's too late for anybody else. I think
it's too late even for Newsom. They made their bed
and they have to lie in it. And I just
think about this. We on the right fight because we
have too many people to pick from on the left.

Speaker 7 (20:24):
Who do they have.

Speaker 6 (20:25):
They have Biden that they're running, Kamala Harris, who's a
DEI hire. They have Gavin Newsom maybe, who took a
state that took in fifty five billion dollars in tax
revenue last year and then spent something like twenty four
billion dollars amongst thirty different programs throughout the state on
the homeless and only succeeded in increasing it by six

(20:47):
percent over the last two years. Now they have like
a forty forty seven billion dollar deficit, and that's considered
Democrats blueprint for the nation. So they have Gavin Newsom,
they had Andrew Cuomo until he killed all those old
people up in New York. Just so, I don't know
who they have anymore. They don't have anybody. We have
like an over abundance of people on the right that
we can run against them for generations.

Speaker 7 (21:09):
Are they Who are they going to run? Who do
they have next?

Speaker 6 (21:11):
They don't have who the Bob the builder, the Secretary
of Transportation, the Vice Admiral of the canoe fleet at
Camp Wimpy Tanka, that guy Pete Booty, juice him.

Speaker 1 (21:20):
They don't have anybody, Oh, they don't.

Speaker 2 (21:23):
They're never going to be able to run Rear Admiral
Pete again. There's no way anyway, Dana, I'm out of time.
You are the best, all right. College campuses are bad places.
Somebody has been spending some time with the whole Antifa
Homas protesters. And we're going to get to her in
just a moment. Before we get to her, let's get

(21:44):
to you and me in coffee. Is there anything better
than coffee? Blackout Coffee is the best. Now, it's not
just that they have the best quality. They do that too,
but they actually share my values and that's what I love.
The big coffee companies hate us.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
Honestly.

Speaker 2 (22:03):
I went to a coffee museum one time to ever
tell you this, and it was the most commie bunch
of garbage you've ever seen in your life. That industry
itself hates us.

Speaker 1 (22:14):
Not Blackout Coffee.

Speaker 2 (22:15):
Blackout Coffee talks about things like guns, god, life, America.
And they'll deliver you the best coffee you've ever tasted
to your front door.

Speaker 1 (22:24):
They delivered me mine. That's the only thing I'll drink. Now.

Speaker 2 (22:28):
You want some, You want a nice discount on a
big old fat, twenty percent discount on your first order.
Blackoutcoffee dot com slash Jessie is how you get your
hands on it.

Speaker 1 (22:40):
No, we'll be back.

Speaker 8 (22:54):
That can be a weapon, yo. You don't gotta put
that in my face.

Speaker 2 (22:58):
You Well, that doesn't look very pleasant.

Speaker 1 (23:09):
Joining me.

Speaker 2 (23:10):
Now the lady who had to experience all that, Gabby Kucia.
She is a media correspondent with Draino Media.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
I love me some Rogan. He's awesome. All right, Gabby?

Speaker 2 (23:19):
What First of all, what were you even doing there
that looked dangerous and scary?

Speaker 8 (23:24):
What was I doing?

Speaker 9 (23:25):
I was doing what the media fails to do. And
when I see a story, I show on up. And
that's exactly what my intent was on taking that flight.
I actually I'm in Florida now, DC, Draino. We are
in Florida, and I was enjoying the nice sunshine. I
saw that there was an anticipated Antifa super Bowl is
what those at Washington in Seattle called the event that

(23:45):
they were anticipating to happen on Sunday evening, in which
there was a Israel demonstration that was doing a march
up into their church called the Pursuit, and they were
anticipating this original route was to go through the Hamas Encampment,
and I I wanted to be there. I wanted to
actually see what this looks like. You always see short
clips of chaos. I mean, you could consider the short

(24:07):
clip of mine to be a little bit of chaos,
and I wanted to get the full story, see what
the encampment was like.

Speaker 8 (24:11):
I spent about four hours in there.

Speaker 9 (24:13):
That was four hours prior to that to the moment
where the Israel demonstrators came on up to the encampment,
and I learned a lot. I saw a lot the
reason behind all that. What was I doing there? I
was being a journalist and showing up. You know, everyone
loves to tweet from Afar. I just like to take
flights and get there.

Speaker 1 (24:31):
I dig it. Can you explain to look?

Speaker 2 (24:34):
Just dump it on us, walk us through these encampments.
All I've seen of the dagone videos online? Where are they?
Who are these people? Does it smell? Is their beer?
What is it like there?

Speaker 8 (24:45):
Well, it's absolutely wild, So just to walk you through it.

Speaker 9 (24:48):
So at the University of Washington specifically, they had state troopers,
they had Seattle PD, they had King's County PD, they
had campus police there.

Speaker 8 (24:56):
The campus police there.

Speaker 9 (24:57):
When I first arrived was around one third threat two o'clock.
I talked to campus police. I saw that they started
putting out barriers. I said, oh, those are mighty fine barriers.
Are those from Antifa? And again I say Antifa because
there's the signage of Antifa. You have all the outfits,
you got the goggles, you got the knee pads, you
got the gloves, top to bottom decked out. There's no
questioning that Antifa is at these encampments. Now, when I

(25:20):
spoke to campus police and I asked about those barriers,
they told me that those barriers were supplied by the university.
They were instructed to put the barriers to protect this encampment,
to protect the encampment, to make sure that no one
enters it. Now, as far as I'm concerned, the University
of Washington is public property. And when they had told
me this, I had followed up with them with a hey,

(25:41):
kind of like today, where we're going to have a
counter protest or you're just a student trying to get
on by, are you.

Speaker 8 (25:47):
Going to protect them? They explicitly say.

Speaker 9 (25:49):
I've audio that I dropped on my Twitter and two
posts and more audio to come. But they say that
they have their hands tied. They are obligated to protect
this Hamas encampment and the Hamas pro Palestinian protesters first
and foremost, not the students, not any other counter protests.

Speaker 8 (26:05):
To add to that barrier.

Speaker 9 (26:07):
So the barriers that they had initially about three weeks
ago were their own ANTIFA provided ones, and the university
did them a solid and gave them those nice new
metal barriers. On top of the fact that they As
I walked to and from for the Sunday and Monday
through the encampment, there were porter patties being installed in.
The university also wanted to make sure that they're able
to go to the bathroom freely.

Speaker 8 (26:26):
So you really genuinely can't make it up. Yes, did
it stink a little?

Speaker 9 (26:29):
Did I see a lot of armpit hair? Absolutely, everyone's
dressed the same. You have your pro Palestinians, then you
have your Antifa. Then the tents are incredible. You know,
just stop me any time you want. I can go
on for days.

Speaker 8 (26:41):
But the campus police also told.

Speaker 9 (26:42):
Me, Yeah, I showed up the next morning. It was
dead quiet. You could hear a pin drop. I'm walking
through the encampment. I actually peaked under the tents to
see if I could see feet poking out anyone kind
of just a little restless while they're sleeping.

Speaker 8 (26:55):
There's no one there.

Speaker 9 (26:56):
Campus police told me that about fifty percent at least
fifty percent of those tents are vacant. The people that
come in and out at least fifty percent, and their words,
are not students. They do whatever they do and show
on up when it's advantageous for them, when there's a
counter protest, whatever it may be. And it's such a
darn shame. When I was there, I tried speaking with
any student that was willing to All of them so

(27:17):
scared to talk to me. I would say, hey, you know,
do you follow DC Dreno. They'd get all excited, you know, Jesse,
just as you did and our fans, and they still
were like they didn't want to talk. That could have
been like their moment for fun to be like, hey,
I was on you know, Dreina, I was on Rogan's page,
all scared, scared to death to even comment on the
reality of the situation. But you can't be surprised by

(27:38):
the University of Washington because this is the same school
that said black students did not have to take their
exams after George Floyd, which.

Speaker 8 (27:46):
Is absolutely heinous. I can't you can't make it up.
You can't make it up.

Speaker 9 (27:50):
There's emails that I have on hand that say state
just that so incredible, truly there you haven't at least
now keep going, But.

Speaker 2 (28:00):
I almost forgot after Saint George Floyd died.

Speaker 1 (28:02):
How insane this country?

Speaker 4 (28:04):
All?

Speaker 3 (28:04):
Right?

Speaker 1 (28:05):
The mood?

Speaker 2 (28:06):
I know that's a really weird question to ask, but
I am curious about it. Does it feel like just
kind of a fun thing that a bunch of idiot
college kids are doing. Hey, let's go out a beer
and protest for a.

Speaker 1 (28:18):
Little while in the encampment? Or did it feel dark?

Speaker 2 (28:21):
Lots of times things feel really really dark and ugly,
And I know there's not a bright and sunny way
to say, kill all the Jews, But did it feel
dark or is it just a bunch of kids screwing off?

Speaker 9 (28:31):
Yeah, I'll say, you know, they were kind of set
up for success in the sense of, like the weather
genuinely was like the first like sunny day that they've
had for a long time. You know, all jokes aside,
so much of a reason for everyone to kind of
be out and seek what was truly going on at
this encampment? But you are correct, yes, So when I
was there about thirty minutes prior to the israel demonstrators

(28:52):
making their way up, so as about four thirty PM
when they were approaching the liberated zone, if you want
to call it that shore, it went from pretty happy,
people like listening to music.

Speaker 8 (29:05):
I mean, it's nuts.

Speaker 9 (29:05):
They're selling fruit, they're selling flowers, but capitalism is bad.

Speaker 7 (29:10):
I don't know.

Speaker 9 (29:10):
Sure, it's a bunch of hippies, truly, and I like
the hippie life, but not to that extent. And then
as soon as thirty minutes up to them showing on
up the Israel the demonstrators, everyone started flooding all of
the perimeter, everyone popping out of their tents, making sure
that they have numbers written on their forearm. I'll tell you,
since I spent so much time there, these numbers that

(29:31):
were written on the forearm, I'd spent the time with them.

Speaker 8 (29:33):
They didn't know I was part of Draino media. They
befriended me. They asked me, oh, do you have the
Northwest Community Bail Fund number? And I was, excuse me,
do you have the number?

Speaker 9 (29:42):
If you get any escalated law enforcement that you have
interaction with, bail will be set at one thousand dollars,
of which you will only have to pay ten percent
of that, which means I only have to pay one
hundred dollars of a get out of free GIL card
from the Northwest Community Bail Funds to go a step further.
I know I'm getting ahead of myself, but I really
just want to make sure that we're emphasizing this and
I'm going to drop a video this evening kind of

(30:03):
piecing this all together. But when I was given that number,
I looked at it and I said, that's not the
number for the Northwest Community Bailfund. I went on the website.
I looked at the contact us page. I looked at
that number, completely different from the number on my arm
that those Hamas protesters have. I followed that number. It
goes to an individual in Washington State. It makes no
sense to me. I called that phone number. That phone

(30:25):
number is a personal line, and the voicemail when you call,
because they don't pick up.

Speaker 8 (30:29):
I called at eleven thirty my time. It's eight thirty
their time.

Speaker 9 (30:31):
So if you want to break laws, do it after
the fact, because they're not going to answer the phone
at eight thirty am. But when I got that voicemail,
it was just a casual individual that said bail fund.

Speaker 8 (30:42):
That's it. So there's something very odd going on.

Speaker 9 (30:45):
People are paying, They're paying the price for recklessness, and
it's fine and no one cares.

Speaker 8 (30:52):
You know, but this is the same place.

Speaker 9 (30:53):
I mean, Washington State in and of itself is absolutely
buck wild. I'm very sad to report that you talk
about Jay Insley. He's the worst, truly. I mean, I'm
sure people on the left would say that as well.
He's absolutely nuts. The gubernatorial race. Bob Ferguson, the attorney general,
who you know, thank him for all the chaos in
Washington State. Two other Bob Ferguson's actually joined the race
to try and spread out the vote, also registering as

(31:15):
Democrats because no one wanted the real Bob Ferguson to
stand up and get the votes. But twenty four hours
after the fact, I guess it's a state statute in
which those that have a similar name to someone that
runs for office is act They're actually not allowed to
run for office if they have intent to confuse people
of someone with a prominent stature or notoriety or whatever
you want to call it, fame, infamous, all that. Very

(31:38):
odden just learned about that. But it makes sense checks
out with Washington State.

Speaker 1 (31:42):
Yeah, sure does. It was awesome. You come back soon.
That was that was awesome. Come back soon, all right?

Speaker 2 (31:50):
College campuses in doctrination doesn't start in college, it starts earlier.
Now it's too bad, and we're going to talk to
somebody about that in a moment. Before we do that,
I mean, talk to you about the timeshare. You think
you're stuck.

Speaker 1 (32:02):
In, but you're not.

Speaker 2 (32:04):
There's a family business that gets people out of time shares.
It's called Lone Star Transfer. They've been doing this for
so long. They've helped over twenty thousand timeshare owners legally
and permanently get out of their timeshare. You are not
stuck in your timeshare. Stop calling the timeshare companies. Stop
being emailing them. You're just going to frustrate yourself. Call

(32:26):
Lone Star Transfer instead a plus rating with a better
business bureau. They guarantee it, they put it in writing,
they give you a time frame.

Speaker 1 (32:34):
They will set you.

Speaker 2 (32:34):
Free eight four four three one zero two six four
six Call them all right, we'll be back.

Speaker 10 (32:51):
Quoting the most dangerous person in the world is Randy Weingarten.

Speaker 1 (32:56):
It's not a close call.

Speaker 10 (32:56):
And if you ask who's the most likely to take
this rip public down, it would be the teachers' unions
and the filth that they are teaching our kids, and
the fact that they don't know math and reading or writing.

Speaker 1 (33:09):
End quote. Take down the Republic, Randy Wineguard. I know
you're effective, but that's something.

Speaker 2 (33:15):
And I don't do not understand why they are afraid
of knowledge or why they are afraid of kids, critically thinking, oh, yes,
that's communist John Denver mad once again that Corey DeAngelis
has busting her up, as he has so many times,
joining me, Now, my friend Corey DeAngelis, he has a

(33:35):
book out that I want you to go buy. It's
called The Parent Revolution, and that is a revolution going
on in this country and he is on the vanguard
of it. Corey, I love that communist John Denver hates you.
It just blesses me to no end.

Speaker 11 (33:49):
Well, they really stepped in it by fighting to keep
the schools closed as long as possible. Randy was calling
Trump's plan to reopen schools reckless, callous, and cruel. They
were lobbying the CDs to make it more difficult to
reopen schools in persons. She was even threatening safety strikes.
So she overplayed her hand and awakened a sleeping giant
parents who want more of a say in their kids education.

(34:11):
We should really give her the School Choice MVP Trophy.
In fact, I actually dedicated the book to her for
overplaying her hand, showing her true colors, and sparking.

Speaker 4 (34:22):
A parent revolution.

Speaker 11 (34:24):
And if you want to take Ted Cruz's advice, Senator
Ted Cruz on the back. He endorsed the book and
he says, ruin Randy Weingarten's day by reading this book.
I mean, because she must really feel bad about unleashing
education freedom inadvertently and promoting homeschooling inadvertently, for showing sees

(34:45):
she's a horrible human being that hurt kids by locking
them out of their schools for so long, and then
when they got back into the school she's been fighting
NonStop for radical indoctrination in those institutions. Parents want the
schools to focus on the basics, not not on doctrination.

Speaker 2 (35:03):
Corey, I'm glad you brought up the CDC thing because
this is not something I have let go as so.

Speaker 1 (35:08):
Many people know. Would you just do me a favor.

Speaker 2 (35:11):
You are the man who wrote the book on all this,
walk us down memory lane and how that woman, how
they acted during COVID When it comes to education, how
they stuck their nose in pandemic stuff?

Speaker 1 (35:23):
What did she do?

Speaker 11 (35:24):
You must have thought that they were all drama teachers.
I mean the Chicago Teachers Union, one of her local affiliates,
actually panned for an interpretive dance video. Is freaking embarrassing.
If you thought the math and reading test scores were
atrocious in Chicago, you really should feel bad for the
kids who want to do extracurriculars like dance because they
did this pathetic, embarrassing video to and it was horribly

(35:48):
put together to Their videographers were horrible. But the point
is they did everything they could just to not go
back to work, whereas everybody else was going back to work.
The private schools were open, the daycare were open, private
businesses were open, and you had them deleting tweets saying
that the push to reopen schools is rooted in sexism, racism.

Speaker 4 (36:09):
And misogyny.

Speaker 11 (36:10):
They threw every leftist buzzword at the wall to see
what would stick, just so they could hold children's education
hostage to secure ransom payments from the taxpayer. And guess
what they got, one hundred and ninety billion dollars in
so called COVID relief since March of twenty twenty. But
their plan quickly backfired because they showed families what was

(36:30):
happening in the classroom through remote learning, which Jesse, we
should really just call it remotely learning.

Speaker 4 (36:35):
There wasn't a lot of learning going on, but.

Speaker 11 (36:38):
Families did get to see the radical leftist critical race theory,
gender ideology, garbage that was being shoved down children's throats
and government schools for far too long, and that awakened
the parents like we've never seen before.

Speaker 4 (36:51):
And they're never going to forget that.

Speaker 11 (36:52):
They're not going to unsee what they saw starting in
twenty twenty, and as Vodi Bacham famously said, we cannot
continue to send our children to Caesar for their education
and be surprised when they come home as Romans. The
good news here is parents aren't surprised anymore. They've woken up.
They've seen what's going on. We see it every day
on social media. Thank goodness for Lips of TikTok for

(37:15):
exposing the rot in the government school system. And the
best solution is to say, hey, if you're gonna label
me as a domestic terrorist for showing up at school
board meetings, and they did that with the National school
Boards Association. They had the FBI actually create a threat
tag for parents, specifically for ones protesting at school board meetings.
They mobilize the federal government to clamp down on parents

(37:37):
because they saw parents as a nuisance, that they saw
parents as getting in the way between them and doctrinating
their kids with leftist ideology. So this is an important fight.
This revolution is one that we're winning. It's one that
we have to win because the left almost doesn't even
have to have kids anymore, and they can still influence
our culture through controlling the k through twelve government schools system.

(38:00):
They get millions of kids that they can indoctrinate every
year for thirteen years of their lives, for seven hours
a day. And you can't beat that without fighting back
to take our schools, without being able to take your
money elsewhere, without supporting school choice. And look, eleven states
have already done this. They've passed universal school choice Iowa, Arkansas, Utah.

(38:23):
I can go over the rest of them, but there's
a bunch Oklahoma. It's red states that are doing this.
They're engaging in friendly competition to empower parents, and that's
how we fight back and strike at the route to
empower parents, they can become their own interest group. That's
even more powerful than the teachers unions, because they care
about their kids more than anybody else, certainly more than

(38:43):
bureaucrats sitting in offices hundreds of miles away.

Speaker 1 (38:47):
Cory.

Speaker 2 (38:48):
There are so many parents watching right now who want
that kind of thing that you just said for their kids.
They want school choice, they want education freedom, they want
to be able to send their kids where they want
to send them. What can a parent do who's watching
right now? Because if you don't have, you know, one
of these great laws that's been passed, you feel helpless,
you're frustrated, You've got your kids stuck in some garbage

(39:08):
school system.

Speaker 1 (39:09):
What should the parent watching do? If they want change, make.

Speaker 11 (39:14):
Your voices heard, show up at the school board meeting.
If they don't listen to you, run for school board
and kick their butts out of office. And if they
still don't listen to you, and you're in a deep
blue area, perhaps you should start calling your legislators and
pressuring them as well, so that you can take your
kids somewhere else, to a school that's aligned with your values.
You want universal school choice so that you have leverage

(39:37):
so that the school districts and the school boards don't
try to just bully and silence you, so that they
actually listen to you and look at you as a partner,
as a customer. And the last chapter I also go
over some other things that you can do to tweak
the system to improve the public schools as well, including
aligning the school board elections with the general election. The

(39:58):
teachers unions don't want you you to have a high
voter turnout because they want their special interest to control
the outcomes, so they do these elections on random times
so that they can win. But these same people who
are saying Republicans are a threat to democracy and our
voter and are suppressing votes, they suppress votes when it
comes to education issues because their special interest, the teachers' unions,

(40:20):
can control the outcomes that way. You also just want
more of sunlight. It's the best disinfectant. Let's have transparency
in the public schools. Imagine the left fighting against that,
and they do in some cases. They've actually vetoed bills.
Governor Evers in Wisconsin, for example, vetoing transparency bills, and
so that should cause the Democrats to lose votes if
they do block simple legislation like that in the future.

Speaker 4 (40:44):
So let's see where the money's going.

Speaker 11 (40:46):
Look, it's going towards administrative bloats, going towards Randy Weingarten,
who makes over five hundred thousand dollars a year. It's
not going to the classroom. New York City leftist crap
schools there they spend four hundred forty thousand dollars per
student per year, Chicago thirty thousand dollars per student per year.

Speaker 4 (41:04):
And in Baltimore they have.

Speaker 11 (41:06):
Dozens of schools with zero percent proficiency rates, zero kids
in forty percent of their high schools in Baltimore can't
do math proficiently. Zero kids. It's insane and it needs
to stop. And the best way to do it is
to engage in this parent revolution. Win some elections, become
a political juggernaut, a political force to be reckoned with.

(41:28):
And I document a lot of these wins, and it's
a blueprint for success for how you can win in
your state too. Even if you don't care about education,
if your kids aren't in the public school system, if
they're not if you don't have any kids. You should
still care about this because the left can use the
school system to their advantage to change the rest of
society and the rest of the policies that you care

(41:50):
about too.

Speaker 2 (41:52):
Math is so overrated anyway, Corey, Where can people get
this book?

Speaker 1 (41:55):
Real quick before I let you go?

Speaker 11 (41:57):
You can get it anywhere. It's The Parent Revolution. Just
google it. Amazon's an easy place to find it, but
you can find it basically anywhere. It's in stores at
physical locations as well, Barnes and Nobles, Books a Million
and otherwise. But it's the Parent Revolution. Just google it.
Please order it today.

Speaker 4 (42:12):
It's out.

Speaker 11 (42:13):
I'm glad to join you on your show on release day.
It's going really well. And as Ted crew says on
the back, ruined Randy Winingarten's day by reading this book.

Speaker 1 (42:23):
Well I support it.

Speaker 2 (42:24):
Go buy Coord's book. Core I appreciate you, my brother.
Well done the Parent Revolution.

Speaker 1 (42:28):
I'm out that.

Speaker 2 (42:30):
All right, we have light in the mood. It involves
a hammock next, all right, it is time to lighten
the mood. And you know what are underrated hammocks?

Speaker 1 (42:48):
I love hammicks.

Speaker 2 (42:49):
Now full disclosure, I've had some bad experiences with hammocks.
Being as how I'm six eight and we were using
them in the jungle and Thailand and it didn't work
out well anyway. But I love hammocks and I'm a
big supporter of taking a nap in one, and this guy,
I support him. I would like to see the signs
that says, no hammocks, we've got we've got a where's

(43:11):
the hammocks?

Speaker 3 (43:12):
Osten?

Speaker 4 (43:13):
No, I can't see you, you can't see me.

Speaker 1 (43:16):
You don't come on that.

Speaker 3 (43:17):
I'm not cared.

Speaker 8 (43:24):
Oh my god, I.

Speaker 9 (43:27):
Said, oh my god.

Speaker 3 (43:30):
Yeah, I'm not gonna.

Speaker 2 (43:43):
Just just ride the bus.

Speaker 1 (43:45):
I don't think we can't.

Speaker 8 (43:46):
Can you get down so we can get where we're going?

Speaker 3 (43:49):
What I'm saying in the hammock, I'm not I'm not
moving this.

Speaker 2 (43:53):
You know what.

Speaker 8 (43:54):
There's a c and you do get down.

Speaker 1 (43:57):
I'm not getting down.

Speaker 3 (43:58):
Get down. You never have a die down here, you
know

Speaker 1 (44:09):
I Selma
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