Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
My question is as follows, are you're going to do
health the middle class so that the cost of living
does not destroy us?
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Thank you for the question and your point. Listen, I
know prices are too high still. You know prices are
too high still, and we have to deal with it.
Here's how I feel about it. Again, you've heard my story.
I come from the working class. I'm never going to forget.
Speaker 3 (00:25):
Where I come from.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
And part of what we have to do is build
what I call an opportunity economy where people have the opportunity,
like you have described, for you to be able to
work hard, and your five daughters have an opportunity to
then do what they and what you aspire for them
to be able to do without having to worry about
(00:47):
just getting by. I want you to be able to
get ahead. So here's my plan. It includes what we
need to do to bring down the cost of for example, groceries.
One of the issues I'm going to be taking on
is price gouging. My question follows, it's.
Speaker 1 (01:02):
Price gouging is not gosh, I'm so tired of this stuff.
I'm so tired of it. It's that's it's price gouging
isn't an issue. Do you see that she's trying to
frame inflation as well. It's it's really not a real thing.
It's not anything that we did. It's it's all just
because of price gouging. That's what she's trying to argue
(01:22):
as a way to absolve herself of any responsibility that
she may have with this. I mean it's and she
also said, well, my planning to know and the way
that she had put it in the way that she
wrote about it, uh or the on Twitter and on
her website when she was repurposing Joe Biden's stuff. She
(01:42):
tries to act like Biden wasn't a part of it.
She wants to claim it, but then she also doesn't
want to claim like any of the responsibility for it.
It's the weirdest thing in the world. It really is.
Welcome to the show, Dana lash with you. At the
top of this first hour. Her town hall last night,
she was ridiculed for it. They they were saying that
she had a teleprompter, but the guy over at Univision
(02:04):
was saying that she didn't have a teleprompter. But do
we have like any video shots of the stage, because
I swear it looks like there was a teleprompter. I mean,
I mean, I know what teleprompters look like, and it
looks like there was one up there. I don't The
only thing I could think of is that maybe they
used it for like the host. Is that a possibility,
(02:29):
you know, where like the like the the person who
was hosting it had to use it as a way
to be like okay and then we'll be right back
and all that stuff. I don't know, but this is again,
they're part of their media blitz, which they are continuing with,
and it is just I don't know if it's working. Really,
(02:49):
I don't think I mean, it doesn't seem to be
helping her in the polls. There's a lot of discussion
as to whether or not she's even able. I mean,
there's a lot of discussion about her. I mean really
just kind of falling apart momentum wise. And I've got
some evidence to that, which we're going to get into. So, man,
but I didn't watch this town hall last night because
(03:11):
I got to I have to take a break from
it or I'm going to break my legs off and
stab myself through the throat with my femur. Yeah, it's
pretty hardcore. When you simmer in it and you live
in it twenty four to seven, you've got to take
a break. You have to because when it's this stupid,
when it's this stupid and it is so welcome again
top of this first hour, the who boy, this town hall.
(03:37):
I just like I said, I don't know how beneficial
this is for her. She's making a play obviously for
Hispanic voters, and they're doing really poorly with Hispanic voters,
I might add, the Harris Walls Harris campaign and not
doing well with Hispanic voters, not doing well with it.
The only people that are doing well with are suburban
(03:58):
white women and younger voters. You know, so take from
that what you know. What it is, those are the
only people that they seem to be doing well with,
uh sort of. And the they're counting on younger voters.
This is why you see like this this effort to
get TikTok and all this stuff. They're they're depending on
these younger voters to help them out some of these
(04:20):
these battleground states. So I don't know, Uh, it's just
but they but it continues. Then you had Tim Walls,
who was speaking with Michael Strahan and I actually thought that,
uh he strayan out walls did a decent job asking
questions and pushing back on some of this stuff, and
or asking him a lot, you know about uh his record,
(04:44):
and asking him about some of the things that he
had said previously. It was it was actually you know,
kind of interesting uh audio. Somebody thirty one though it.
I don't think this helps them.
Speaker 4 (04:55):
Listen, they were saying that, hey, the other policy that
come US could have done three years ago, wish he
was in the White House with President Biden and she
never did. What do you say to people who bring that.
Speaker 5 (05:08):
Up, Well, well, Donald Trump had four years to do it.
If you're going to talk about that. And the point
is you need a partner in Congress.
Speaker 6 (05:14):
You've seen these We've seen.
Speaker 5 (05:15):
Different bills that are ready to pass, and Donald Trump
make sure he steps in. We saw it around immigration
of a bipartisan bill widely respected, wanting to make a
difference in this holding true to our value securing the border.
Donald Trump steps in and says, look, that's going to
hurt my political future.
Speaker 3 (05:32):
Let's not make it happen.
Speaker 1 (05:34):
But Donald Trump isn't president. I mean, that's such a
weird answer. It's such a really weird answer. He's not
president though, I mean, he's not Gosh. I don't think
that this helps them. I don't think that it helps
them at all. I don't think that the answers that
(05:56):
they gave are any in any way illuminating. I don't
think that it's helping people make up their mind, because
all it does is they seem to just be passing
the buck. But he was audio sound by twenty seven.
He was asked about lying about his record. Wollts was
and again, this is Michael Stray and this ABC interview. Listen.
Speaker 5 (06:14):
Well, I think it's about building teams, about bringing diverse
folks in, finding where their skills work. I feel like
I'm on a championship team with Vice President Harris. But
it's that idea of molding, shaping, providing guidance, but understanding
that you're just a piece of it.
Speaker 6 (06:30):
Folks.
Speaker 5 (06:30):
The players got to play. I always said, you've got
to put them in a position to be successful.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
Yeah, well she hasn't won anything. You have to win
elections in order to be on championship teams. Can we
just have November already? I just want to go and
eat turkey and go into a Turkey coma because I mean,
to try to talk seriously about the Democrat campaign. Is
my numbing not to complain, because I know you guys
(06:56):
all have your issues. I could not imagine. I think
the only worst job you could have is maybe as
her advisor, having to advise her because she's such a
train wreck. It's amazing to me that she's gotten this
far in the campaign. It's amazing to me that they
picked her to begin with. And I don't I actually
(07:18):
kind of believe one of the answers that she gave
and talking about Tim Woles, that she selected him as
her running mate because only she, someone with zero political acumen,
would choose somebody like him in order as her VP.
So this is that's I don't think it's going to
move anything. So they're continuing their media blitz. At least
she stopped picking fights with Ron de Santa Son, Florida, right,
(07:41):
I mean, oh wait, no audio sound bite nine. She didn't.
What am I talking about? Jeez?
Speaker 6 (07:46):
Kill me.
Speaker 7 (07:46):
Now.
Speaker 2 (07:47):
I do think that the crisis that we have just experienced,
in the ongoing effects of it because of these hurricanes,
are yet another example of the importance of having leadership
at a moment of crisis. Who understands their role and responsibility?
Speaker 1 (08:03):
Is she describing DeSantis and not herself. I'm just trying
to understand this one, because you didn't. She wasn't describing
herself in any of this, just saying, just saying, but
she ended up. She keeps going with it. Oh, she
had a Spanish accent to c say, puadway audio sound
body eight.
Speaker 2 (08:22):
Well, first of all, thank you for the question. And
I hope your family is okay and your home is okay.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
What are you serious? Why is she doing this?
Speaker 8 (08:30):
Cain?
Speaker 1 (08:31):
You're you're you're half a Spanic? Is it hard when
I say okay? But if I say okay, you understand
it better?
Speaker 9 (08:39):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (08:39):
No, No, that's how that works, that right. No, Why
are you being racist? Why are you being racist against
the woman of.
Speaker 6 (08:45):
Color It makes me laugh out loud to hear her
do that.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
Okay. I noticed her doing that, and I thought, is
she doing that because it's a Hispanic audience. It sounds
like she's I don't know. In the meantime, Trump's or
of Colorado today and he's got an event there, and
Barack Obama had an event last night where he took
(09:10):
credit for the economy under Trump audio somebody four not
making it up.
Speaker 9 (09:18):
And the reason some people think, I don't know, I
remember that economy when he first came in being pretty good. Yeah,
it was pretty.
Speaker 6 (09:25):
Good, cousin, was my economy.
Speaker 9 (09:33):
We had had seventy five straight months of job growth
that I had it over to him. It wasn't something
he did. I'd spent eight years cleaning up the mess
that the Republicans had left me the last time. So
(09:55):
just in case everybody has a hazy memory.
Speaker 1 (09:58):
Gosh, he greed.
Speaker 6 (10:00):
What he didn't He didn't do nothing.
Speaker 10 (10:05):
So wait, we made it better.
Speaker 1 (10:09):
I see actually trying to say that he's got that
Barack Obama created the economy that we enjoyed, that the
tax cuts that right.
Speaker 6 (10:18):
People forget that gas prices were extremely high during the
Obama administration.
Speaker 1 (10:22):
Well, and they forget that our energy output, to our
ability to be able to subsist on what we were
able to extract here domestically or to send out to
the world market was greatly diminished. And in fact the
only reason that it picked up was because of privately
leis Land that they then tried to you know, retcon
and take credit for No, it didn't work. Now they
brought you know it's bad when they bring up Barack Obama.
(10:45):
You know it's bad when they bring out Barack Obama.
And he played every identity card he could. He went
after Well, he's getting at a lot of criticism for
audio somebody too, because he was basically telling black men
that they have a problem if they're not voting for
the black woman. Oh boy, may be made.
Speaker 11 (11:07):
I'm speaking to men A renty part of it maybe made. Well,
you deserve a feeling and you have a man a
woman's throt and you're coming up with other hall hardness
and all.
Speaker 6 (11:19):
The breasons for him.
Speaker 11 (11:21):
The women that allaize have been getting our backs this
entire time, pay and raising us and working and having
our backs, and when we getting home, decision's not working
for us. They're the ones that are on there wow,
(11:43):
marching and protesting.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
So that's kind of what Joe Biden said, you're not
hey man, you made black if you're not voting for me, wow,
to play that card, or hey, you're sexist if you're
not voting for a woman, it's because you're a sexist man.
To play that card. Coming up, I'm going to show
you the cringiest ad that's ever been cringed, and it
makes me want to burn everything down. It is the
(12:09):
worst ad I've ever seen in my life, and I've
seen some really bad ads. We can't make fun of
it enough. I've spent all morning doing it, in fact,
and I'm just wondering where who was in charge of
casting and who tried to put the gay guy on
the back of the truck as a mainly man like
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(12:31):
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Speaker 6 (13:47):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 1 (13:55):
Let's see here first and foremost apologies. I got this
little frozen a little bit. So this we're gonna get.
We're gonna actually come back when we come back up
our headlines. I got a whole bunch of polling to
go over with you. This is some latest stuff. A
bank TD Bank was finding three billion dollars for failing
to monitor money laundering from fentanyl, terrorism, and human trafficking.
(14:17):
I would just think that all of those are crimes anyway,
So you're just not what you're you're you're not monitoring
the money laundered for crime. It's all crimeing. They said
that from FINNANHL to narcotics trafficking, terrorist financing, and human trafficking,
their chronic fails provided blah blah blah. Don't care because
none of us are affected by this. Are we are?
(14:39):
We affected by those? I don't give a rats ask.
Let's see hackers. Now, this is interesting because I saw
this yesterday. You guys know the wayback machine. Yeah, everybody
knows that, because that's how we always get our receipts, right,
Because whenever democrats try to squab stuff, whenever they try
to hide things hackers claim to catastrophic Internet archive attack,
and of course it was about to pro Hamas goat lovers.
(15:02):
The activist movement as launched a they had it was
a pro Hamas hactivist movement that decided to launch a
catastrophic cyber attack revealing the details of thirty one million
people compromising their email addresses, screen names. It was in
counter on x that claims responsibility, and of course it
had to do with Hamas blah blah blah. And the
(15:23):
wayback Machine was inaccessible on and off. So that's I've
never heard that happening now with the wayback Machine. That's
that's the Internet's archive. If you don't know what that means.
Like they take screenshots. They have like screenshots of like
every web page ever provided that there was like something
that trilled it, you know when when on a particular
date for something that you're looking for specifically. So that
(15:45):
was interesting. These market watches trying to say groceries are
more affordable, and I'm pretty sure that this was written
by some Platinum extension Karen who sits into New York
Fifth Avenue office and only has like people bring her
groceries from Instacart. Pretty sure she has no idea what's happening,
because I mean I've literally noticed this. I've noticed, in fact,
(16:09):
I've noticed several of the recipes that I make, and
it's not that they're bougie. It's like two and a
half almost three times more than what it was like
I I to And look, when you grow up poor
in a rural part of the country, as I have done,
unlike Kamala Harris, who is literally a privileged princess who
doesn't know what struggle or middle classes, when you've grown
(16:32):
up in that area and you've come from nothing and
you've learned how to make the most with food and
recipes and everything else, you really pay attention to this stuff,
and you don't go out and get like the bougiest things, right,
you still have that mentality. I mean, this is so this.
I've noticed this for meat, for basic brand, off brand stuff,
it's like two and a half to three times more.
So this idea that they're trying to sell us that
(16:54):
it has an increase step off meet the business end
of a broom in an unflattering way, because that's a
complete lie. It's an absolute lie, and everybody knows it.
We all know it. You guys know you know how
much your pain? Why do you think this aggravates me?
They try to lie about like this. Let's see and
Marshawn Lynch is hinting at a run for Oakland mayor. Hmm,
(17:15):
interesting Marshaun Lynch mayor Lynch former Super Bowl champ. He
thinks he's looking at mayor look at that stick with us.
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Speaker 7 (18:22):
If you haven't learned your lesson yet, never rely on
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Speaker 1 (18:54):
Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash here with you
at the bottom of this. First, I'm gonna apologize in
advance what I'm about to do to y'all. I had
to watch this. No, don't you dare get sit down,
Sit down, I see you getting ready to get up
off from your desk, like, Oh, I'm just gonna go
ahead and Doug, sit down you coffee can wait.
Speaker 10 (19:14):
You're gonna listen. You're gonna watch this because this is horrible.
Speaker 1 (19:18):
So we know that Harris has the Harris Harry Walls campaign.
They've been trying to buy influencers. They've been putting these
ads out on TikTok all this other stuff. I think
I've seen it. I think, guys, I've found the worst
ad of the political cycle. I think I found it.
(19:39):
It's well, we're gonna play it for you and then
we're going to dissect because it's a bunch of dudes.
They you know, they're very it's very important. They're trying
to get the men's vote, the dude's vote, the dude
bros vote.
Speaker 13 (19:52):
And.
Speaker 10 (19:54):
Well, this is the ad they think is gonna do
that trick.
Speaker 1 (19:57):
I need you to watch this something.
Speaker 14 (20:00):
I'm a man.
Speaker 6 (20:01):
I'm a man.
Speaker 14 (20:02):
I'm a man man, and I'm man enough.
Speaker 6 (20:04):
I'm man enough to enjoy a barrel proof bourbon meat,
man enough to cook my steak rare.
Speaker 4 (20:09):
Man enough to deadlift five hundred and braid out of
my daughter's hair.
Speaker 1 (20:13):
Do you think I'm afraid to rebuild a carburetor.
Speaker 14 (20:15):
How you CARBURETD for breakfast? I'm afraid of bears.
Speaker 6 (20:18):
That's what beer hugs are for.
Speaker 14 (20:19):
I'll tell you another thing. I sure I'm not afraid
of women.
Speaker 6 (20:24):
I'm not afraid of women.
Speaker 1 (20:25):
I'm not afraid of women. They want to control their bodies,
I say.
Speaker 14 (20:28):
Go for it. They want to use IVY, have to
start a family. I'm not afraid of families.
Speaker 1 (20:32):
They want to be child ash cat ladies have all
the cats you want.
Speaker 14 (20:35):
Woman wants to be president, Well, I hope she has
the guts to look me right in the eye except
my bull throated endorsement. Because I'm mad enough to support
man enough.
Speaker 6 (20:43):
To know what kind of doing that time?
Speaker 7 (20:45):
Like, man enough to admit I'm lost even when I
refuse to ask for directions.
Speaker 1 (20:49):
Man enough to not fan young women from reading Little.
Speaker 14 (20:52):
One or one of those pants books that the sisters like.
I'm man enough to raw Dog of Flight it sucked,
not worth it.
Speaker 6 (20:58):
I'm man enough to be actually.
Speaker 14 (21:02):
In front of my horse. How I'm man enough to
tell you that I cry? I love actually good will
hunting wish side story. I'm brilliant and I'm sick of
so called men domineering, belittling, and controlling women just so
they can feel more powerful.
Speaker 1 (21:16):
That's not how my mama raised me. I love women.
Speaker 14 (21:19):
I love women who support their families.
Speaker 1 (21:21):
Women who decide not to have families.
Speaker 14 (21:23):
Women who take charge, and I'm man enough to help
them win. Wow.
Speaker 1 (21:29):
Wow, So where to start with those one? Kids? So
if we can do one, I'm sorry to put this
upon you, poor one. If we can do a side
by side, We're just gonna pause and go through these gents,
because these all were This is a real ad. This
is I when I first saw it. If I had
(21:50):
not been told, and I had not known that it
was a real ad, I would think that it was fake, right,
I would think that it was a fake ad. Let's
look at this guy right here, tweaky mctwig stick. So
my grandfather was a rancher and my grandfather was muscley.
He was one hundred percent muscle. He was shredded wheat
this guy, well, his shirt's blocking his arm, but he
(22:12):
looks like you know, have you ever heard like, Oh, well,
I guess they skip leg day.
Speaker 10 (22:15):
He skipped all of it day forever.
Speaker 1 (22:18):
And he's sitting there and he goes in my horse,
and he noticed and he looks at the horse and
the horse is out of frame, and that you can
hear the horse like, you know, kind of breathe. That's
not his horse. This guy looks totally uncomfortable standing there.
And why is he so meat? Why is he so bitchy?
Why is he so This guy's mad. This guy's a
puppy kicker, you know he is. Then we have the
(22:41):
can we get the guy who eats carburetors for breakfast?
Real quick? I think, uh, I mean, oh no, stop
at this guy. Oh no, no, wait, well I go back,
go back, go back. Let's go to this queen on
the truck. Oh no, this guy?
Speaker 10 (22:54):
Whoa men?
Speaker 1 (22:56):
Men out there? Who among you sits like this?
Speaker 10 (23:00):
Who among you sits like this?
Speaker 6 (23:02):
I do want to have a pain in that upper
thigh area on the right.
Speaker 1 (23:06):
No, you don't shut up. See you don't sit like you.
You can't even see it. My little cramp bond doesn't
sit like this. This is like a pageant pose.
Speaker 6 (23:15):
I'll be like, oh, my cramp.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
He looks like an Arrested Development character. He's Buster. This
is Buster from Arrested Development. I like women I'm sure
you do, Francis, I'm sure you do. Yes, I have
a deep throated supportive women. He actually said that phrase.
Are they trolling us at this point, linguage? Are they
trolling us at this point? And then at one point,
(23:39):
I kid you not, I'm not afraid of bears. He
said that. He says it, I bet you aren't either, Slick.
Oh my gosh, who I mean the fact that he's
this pose, this pageant pose on the edge of the
truck like this man alive. I nobody believes you can't
(24:00):
They can't even define women. But nobody believes this dude,
but came for real this.
Speaker 6 (24:05):
Like I said, I mean, if I had a cramp
on my right upper thigh, that's how or.
Speaker 10 (24:08):
If you were gay you'd sit like this.
Speaker 6 (24:11):
I'd be like, wow, my cramp is really.
Speaker 1 (24:14):
In fact, they're gay men I know who don't even
sit like this. That's that's nobody says like this. If
you have a penis, you don't sit like this.
Speaker 10 (24:28):
Okay, can we let's go to the carburetor?
Speaker 1 (24:31):
Dude, Well, we got we got this guy who I
guess he's channeling DMX. Then we got this guy all
eat carburetors for breakfast. It made me think a Happy
Gilmore when you had that one. Dude, He's like, I
eat pieces of blink like gave for breakfast, and Happy
Gilmore's like, you eat pieces of blank for breakfast? What's
wrong with you? This guy?
Speaker 10 (24:46):
I eat carburetors for breakfast.
Speaker 1 (24:48):
Wrong type of carb, lunchbox, that's not what we're talking about, okay,
pong type of carb. Oh my gosh. And then we
got who's the guy who looks like they pulled him
out from under a bridge? He looks like he would
sell bridged in him to Frank and always stunny in Philadelphia,
(25:08):
got the Queen. We got this guy who's I don't know. Oh,
here we are. If we can get a wider shot
at him, want and I don't care if you roll
it on the side there. So this guy, I want
you to notice his shirt. The first thing I noticed,
aside from the fact that this guy was working on
a BM he was working on a BMW is h
He has a super clean, brand new work bench, looks
(25:30):
like any never been used, and his sleeves look professionally distressed.
And if we can't get a wider shot of him
You'll notice something really interesting about his arms, because his
arms in his You know that he has in this
professionally distressed shirt his arms. Well, there's a raging farmers
(25:56):
tan that he has. Want's pulling it up. I don't
care if it's side by side one. We can let
the people see how the sausage is made. It's all right,
they like looking at these fools. It's okay. This this
guy has the craziest farmer's tan ever. When you wear
button down shirts and you rip the sleeves off of them,
(26:16):
look at his farmer's tan. This man does not wear
a shirt like that often. Kane does he No, he
does not. I want to and we can put this
side by side. Yes, keep it out there. This dude,
the raging farmers tan. This dude is not used to
wearing these shirts and it's professionally. Just look how clean
and pressed it is. Look how press that shirt is.
(26:38):
You all know this man does not dress like this.
This man is like a mall Santa, and he goes
home to his house in the valley. You know, after
a long day. This man is not and where he's
not working on a harley. He's not working on an Indian.
Speaker 10 (26:54):
Is that a BMW or a little yeah yeah, isn't it?
Speaker 1 (27:01):
Okay? Well, who among you with your sleeves ripped off
has one of them? I mean, we have bikers in
my family, none of them. They all it's all Harley
are Indian, That's all it is. And can we note
one of the things that I've noticed a lot of
you out there, all of the men. Immediately we're talking
about his quote clean pine work bench, an inorn and
(27:24):
amount of you. We're very upset with us. Look at that.
Look how clean that pine. I mean, it is like
the freshly fault. It's like freshly shorn pine whatever you
want to call it, felled freshly felled pinell And this
guy his farmer's tand he's not used to that shirt.
He's working on a bougie bike. I got all the
(27:46):
tools in that in the back. I don't know who
keeps their garage. That cleaned psychos And then the clean
pine work bench. This dude, this cat right here. None
of these people are real. And by the way, I
also thought that they couldn't to find what a woman is.
Oh but man, this ad is unbelievable. It is unbelievable.
I'm not afraid of women. You can't even define them. Yeah,
(28:09):
that's no, I'm not afraid of bears, I bet slick,
but they can't define what women are. They actually thought
this was gonna work. They put this ad out because
they're trying to go for dudes. I don't know any
dude who would look at this and I'd see themselves.
The guy at defend this lunchbox, what did he say?
I like, go good, whatever, shut up, nobody cares. The
(28:30):
only guy who's so unbelievable is the guy on the
work bench because he's got or the bench because he's
got muscles. This dude, this is the only dude that's
so unbelievable because he actually looks like his body type
matches the activity in which he is pictured. But I
also don't believe that that's his garage, because nobody has
a garage a clean unless they're psychos. Nobody. I don't
believe you. So I am just shocked, just shocked at
(28:56):
this because it's so bad.
Speaker 6 (29:00):
Is based on assuming men are scared of women, like
nobody's get.
Speaker 1 (29:05):
All these virgins, nobody, all of them, even that old man,
all of them.
Speaker 6 (29:11):
No, it's going to relate to this, unfortunately, may an
excuse for the Kamala campaign.
Speaker 1 (29:17):
Yeah, I mean the guy in the truck though, who's
posing like I mean this pageant.
Speaker 2 (29:21):
He might.
Speaker 1 (29:24):
He doesn't have a cramp. He sat like that the
whole ad. Pain the whole ad. He sits like this.
He looks nervous. He looks like he's like a customer
of Matthew Shepherd. He's all tweaked out on meth. That's
what he looks like.
Speaker 6 (29:35):
If you have a bullet wound right there. He's just
holding pressure on it.
Speaker 1 (29:40):
I've got theories it's probably because he's gay. Actually, again,
I will say, I don't know gay dudes who sit
like this and who are sloppy like they'll get his shirt,
I'll sloppy it is. And he's got moobs. I mean,
don't wear a fitted shirt like that, dude, or like,
at least wear a little hat shield. You know, if
you're gonna only the ladies are going to understand that reference.
(30:01):
And that's all right. But this is the ad they
came out with because they're they're trying to get the gents.
They're trying to get the men, and it's all as
Kane said, based upon this premise that men are scared
of women and that's why they're not voting for Kamala Harris.
It can't be that she's completely inadequate as a candidate.
It can't believe that she's completely unaccomplished. No, it has
(30:22):
to be because men are afraid of her. Now, when
you consider that logic all over, the inherent sexism of it,
Oh no, it's not because of any shortcomings on her side.
The deficiency is on you their side because they're men.
So they're being judged as being afraid because they're men,
which is by itself sexist. So who's the real sexist here?
(30:44):
Where is the real sexism? I mean, just because I
think that you're raging Karen and that you shouldn't be
in charge of a household, much less the United States government,
it doesn't mean that I dislike you. I'm a woman.
I dislike Kamala Harris for the exact same reason that
most dudes do, because she is completely unaccomplished and annoying.
(31:05):
It's not because I don't like my own sex. It's
because I don't like it when someone who is unaccomplished
and is a ladder climber and wants the job title
without the work. Nobody likes that. We're scared of her incompetence.
We're scared of how she might murk us all in
a third World war. We're scared of her tanking the economy.
(31:28):
But we're not scared of her because she's got a vagina. Golly.
By the way, every time I blows up Hamascos with
the versions they meet in heaven. The government Theft Agency
has their deadline for extortion coming up on October fifteenth,
and they've hired eighty eight thousand new little brown shirts
to make sure that they get what they think is
(31:50):
owed to them, even though it's your hard earned dollars.
Because they've got money to waste it on, they need
to have taxpayer money to waste guys. So these are
what the rules are right now until that changes. And
in the meantime, tax Network USA wants to help you.
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Speaker 12 (32:54):
Get the loadown on the latest news with a side
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Speaker 6 (33:05):
Like saands through the Alan Glass, so are the days
of the United States.
Speaker 9 (33:13):
I remember buying dipor. I remember the first time I
went in the store, right after Maliam was born. I
was like, what, that's how much diapers, cos I remember
changing diapers. You think Donald Trump ever changed the diaper? Eh?
(33:47):
I almost said that, but I decided I shouldn't say it.
Speaker 1 (33:52):
I mean, I don't get it. Is that supposed to
be funny or made a joke about diapers? Or we
live in the stupidest time ever. Everything is so stupid.
Speaker 6 (34:00):
Sid the adults are back in the room, Dana.
Speaker 1 (34:02):
I mean, it's you know, Dignity's back in the White
House or whatever. Dignity Hunter Biden, dignity. It's okay. Yeah,
do you think that Donald Trump or changed the diaper?
What does that matter? Who lowers my taxes? I don't
care if he's it. Look, you lower my taxes, you
stay off my guns, and you stop like trying to
(34:22):
delegitimize guns as like a serious Republican issue on the platform.
Speaker 2 (34:26):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (34:27):
I don't care if you ever look at a diaper.
I really don't care. I don't even care if you
can pronounce diaper, do it like Alec Baldwin's wife.
Speaker 10 (34:34):
How you say cucumber, how you say diaper?
Speaker 1 (34:37):
Do it like that? I don't care, don't care, what
does that matter? I love when Democrats try to have
a pour off or in Everyman Off.
Speaker 10 (34:48):
No, we're just like you. Look we're middle class.
Speaker 1 (34:51):
We one time had fries at McDonald's. He think Trump
ever had fries a McDonald's.
Speaker 10 (34:57):
No, or Kamala Harris, How are you fried fries?
Speaker 1 (35:01):
No?
Speaker 10 (35:01):
You didn't, girl, You never fried fries ever in your life.
Speaker 1 (35:04):
You literally lived in one of the boogiest neighborhoods in
northern California. Stop. Your parents were PhDs. They worked at
Ivy League University's girl, you were a princess. You went
to a super expensive primary school. Like a lot of us,
were eating government cheese. Shut up. No, By the way,
government cheese isn't bad. I'm just gonna go on record
(35:26):
and say it. Maybe it's just your romanticize things when
you're older and you look back on your youth and
you're like.
Speaker 10 (35:32):
Oh, wasn't that bad.
Speaker 1 (35:33):
No, I don't know. Maybe it was, but I don't
think it was government cheese. Pretty good, right, No one
says anything. Guess I was the poorest. It's okay, it's
all right. But you notice how they do this. They
they always they they try to act like they look,
we're poor, just like you. I'm surprised, honestly, I don't
know why am I saying this because it's gonna happen.
(35:54):
I wanted to actually happen, how much you want. But
they're gonna do like a photo op at Walmart. Dude,
They're gonna do a photo op at wally World at Walmart.
Speaker 6 (36:07):
They'll do it in front of the store on a
hay bale with pumpkins.
Speaker 1 (36:11):
Walls goes to Walmart. Haha, get it, It's gonna happen.
That's the level of thought that is in this political
cycle with them right now. They're gonna do it. I
honestly don't believe Kamala has that ever step foot in
a Walmart? Did they even have them in some of
these Do they even have Walmarts in some of those
fancy neighborhoods in California? Like she grew up by didn't
(36:34):
she grow up by Berkeley? Do they even have a
Walmart up there? Can they even say it? Or does
their West Coast blue bloodedness prevent their mouths from making
the vowels together like that? I'm curious. I don't know.
Speaker 9 (36:49):
I just.
Speaker 1 (36:51):
It's funny. It's really funny to me, So we'll see.
I wouldn't doubt I mean, you saw what they did
trying to just get dudes. You know, I wouldn't doubt
that they're gonna they'd try to try to do something
like this too, so that they can they can stunt
for the working class. We got a lot more on
the way stick with a second hour coming up. Always
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Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash here with you.
At the top of the second hour, you can watch
the radio show and channel three forty seven Direct TV.
If you're watching it, then you probably are watching it
on ex ert channel three forty seven Direct TV. I mean,
(38:14):
my gosh, it's obvious, right Friday, Yay. If you see
this Vogue cover, can we talk about this for a second?
Can we talk about this? Yeah? That Nald throw it
up there. The Vogue cover is wow. And the story
(38:36):
behind it Kamala Harris decided, well, Vogue decided to help
her out with a campaign contribution, and she was airbrushed
within an inch of well, she looks like Marzapan, she
looks like fun. They even air brushed her hands. And uh,
she's on the cover of Vogue in a very unnatural
pose and she's pursing her lips together, which isn't entirely flattering.
(39:01):
And I don't know why they thought that that would
be the flattering thing. I don't know, but this is uh,
they have they have her up there and they get
of course, you know they were going to do this
all planned. This is part of their media blitz, right,
And it looks like they photoshopped her head on that body.
It looks very photoshopped, uh, to the point where like
(39:26):
her the proportion of her hand and her forearm is
just really odd compared to on her left. So it's
your right, her left, it looks odd. Right, Yeah, So
her head looks like it's photoshopped on the it looks
(39:47):
super important. It looks weird. This is what what Vogue says.
Only rarely are individuals summoned for acts of national rescue.
But in July, Vice President Kamala Harris received one of
those calls, like summoned like a demon, like and they
(40:12):
I mean, it's just like they did. It's an in
kind campaign contribution. They photoshopped her so crazy. It's so crazy.
And this was they put her on the cover back
in twenty twenty one during the inauguration. Remember when she
was wearing her converse That was a bad cover her.
This cover is awkward because of the photoshopping. The color
(40:33):
choice is better, but the one that she was on
back in twenty twenty one was one of the worst
Vogue covers I've ever seen. It just looks she looked
like washed out. The contrast was gone. It was horrible
this photo. It's like they spent too much time photo
shopping her.
Speaker 10 (40:48):
I like, who did they let loose with the blur tool.
I'm just curious.
Speaker 1 (40:52):
They've spent way too much time photo shopping her and
it just looks awkward. But she's on the cover of Vogue. Now, Kan,
what were you telling me about when this photo was taken?
When was this photo taken?
Speaker 6 (41:04):
This photo was She had the shoot on October seventh, right,
So the anniversary.
Speaker 1 (41:09):
Is so the Vice President of the United States is
doing a Vogue photo shoot on the one year anniversary
of the Hamas terror attack. Okay.
Speaker 6 (41:20):
In addition to that's the start of her attack on
Dysantas As though he was ignoring her calls.
Speaker 1 (41:26):
So while she's attacking DeSantis over the hurricane, and while
everyone is acknowledging, you know, going through and remembering Hamas's
tarr attack on October seventh, she was doing this.
Speaker 15 (41:40):
Priorities.
Speaker 1 (41:43):
It seems too little, too late, doesn't it. Why didn't
they Why weren't they doing this with the media back
in July. I mean, I know that they wanted to
limit her exposure because every time she answers questions, it's
a disaster without exception. But you know, if if you
had any kind of talent or ability, then you wouldn't
you have gotten better? Wouldn't you wouldn't you be wouldn't
(42:05):
you like train your candidate to be? But apparently they
didn't do that, or she's just incapable of getting of
getting better at doing this. Really wild though, this is
like one of the worst covers they've ever seen. It's
really bad. It's bad. It's just too photoshopped, and it
looks fake, and her head looks weird. It's like they
it's like they took a picture of her body from
one photo and took a picture of her head from
(42:26):
another photo and then superimposed it. Right. I don't know,
It's just odd, but this is they People are saying
her the lighting's weird. Someone asked if it was Ai,
But yeah, she's got a nice little Vogue cover there
getting ready. They've never they've Vogue never gave like Milania
Trump a Vogue cover. I don't think they've ever given
any Republican woman a Vogue cover. But it was a
(42:50):
very last minute thing, and you can tell it looks
last minute. And to me, I think that this because
apparently this process for Vogue was fast tracked. Is what's
being said, it's what's being reported, So that to me
signals that she her campaign's in a desperate position. Any
(43:11):
Leabovitz took this at her VP residence in DC, and
they even said that it was on October seventh, and she's,
you know, they tell what she's I mean, that's wow.
And they're they're dolling her up and having her post
like she's a fashion icon on October seventh, I mean,
out of all the I mean, that's just wild. So
(43:34):
I uh, they also have a picture of Cheney with
her in their pants suits. I don't know, and I
don't think anybody they're trying to pretend that she's, oh,
she's so fashionable, fashionable. No one, no, let's let's be real.
No one thinks that commonly Harris is a fashion icon.
No one thinks that. No one thinks that any person
in politics is a fashion icon. I think Kirsten Cinema
(43:54):
with her quirky style, like came close to being fashion interesting.
But to have icon is such I mean, are we
going to just completely ignore the meaning of words? It's
nothing none, None of this is iconic. I mean there,
it's pantsuit city. Come on. But this was a this
was a fast tracked piece because she's in trouble. She's
(44:16):
in trouble with polling. She's uh, it's not going so
well for her. And I don't know if you've seen
there was the couple here, there was.
Speaker 14 (44:28):
Well.
Speaker 1 (44:28):
I sent some stuff out on pulling this up on
your newsletter if you get it a sub stack over
at chapter and verse the newsletter that goes out regularly.
Speaker 13 (44:38):
And.
Speaker 1 (44:40):
Quinnipiac had a pull The came out yesterday where it's
showing that even though she is leading with suburban voters,
they're lose Democrats are losing men. There's cracks in the
blue wall. She's struggling with the rust belt, she's struggling
with the working cl as voters. Uh, Pennsylvania Democrats are
(45:04):
starting to struggle. There's they're tied in five of the
seven battlegrounds and looking at some of the latest with
the Electoral College, et cetera, they're they're they're tied in
a number of these battleground states. And every single time
she does any kind of media, uh, she takes a
(45:26):
hit in the polls, like every every time, and it's
just not going it's not going well for her. This
is I mean, it's not it's Trump is not so
far in the lead that people need to exhale because
he is not behind. He is not above or beyond
the margin of error in any of these were they're
that close. So this is not a moment of relaxation
(45:49):
for the Trump campaign. It's not exhale. Look, the stress
is gone. It's not that at all.
Speaker 10 (45:55):
And a lot of these surveys too, You have.
Speaker 1 (45:57):
To remember, nobody really is going to know what's going
on until the night of the election. And a lot
of the polling that is coming out right now is
just about is designed to craft a narrative to be
used as a tool for turnout. Like there was one
poll that came it's not very it's not a very
(46:18):
good survey. It was one thousand voters and it is
an act of vote survey, and it showed Trump have
having a one point two percent lead over Harris and
a seven point change. But it's like a margin of
era of almost four and it's a small sample, and
(46:40):
it's over sampled Republicans. It's not a good survey, but
this is one that comes out. One of the reasons
I tell you that I'm not trying to, you know,
burst people's bubbles, but I cannot tell you having done
this in a number of states, in a number of
elections for over ten years, going on twenty years now,
every single time that Republicans think they're ahead or that
they think they're doing well, it doesn't matter if it's
(47:01):
in Texas or Missouri or South Carolina or Florida or wherever,
they kind of like ease back a little bit every
single time. Oh well, we can relax a little bit,
we have some breathing room. That's how it's viewed every
single time. That's why I always say Democrats really are
not the biggest threat to Republicans. It's Republicans that are
the biggest threat to Republicans. And that's why I think
(47:25):
that with some of this stuff, you can't you gotta
be careful with these surveys because they're going to try
every single election cycle to figure out a new way
to use this information to manipulate you. And if they
can get you to think that you got it in
the bag and maybe you don't need to work as
hard to get out the vote, well then all the
better for them, right, So you gotta pay attention to
this stuff like this. I get really aggravated at some
Republicans who are like, you just stop telling me about
(47:45):
these bad polls for Trump or how close it is. Oh, okay,
so you want Kamala Harris to win? Because when I
hear people who say that, I immediately write you off as
a leftist stooge and I want nothing else to do
with you. You're dead to me forever. I cannot deal
with it. I had a friend who was a little
aggravated with me, who had said, you know, I don't
know why you keep looking at these poles as opposed
(48:08):
to what. So wait, you want me to lie to
you and tell you that everything is great so that
you can sit back on your ass and not work
so hard to get out the vote. Is that where
you're talking to get out? Go to the Democrats side.
I told my friend, I was like, don't message me again.
I was done. I'm like, it's too aggravating. I'm done
with it.
Speaker 10 (48:20):
It's so stupid. Don't be purposely stupid.
Speaker 1 (48:23):
It's I want to win and I want I need
people to understand that. For whatever reason, it's a phenomenon
with Republicans, and I don't with Democrats. It's like the opposite.
When they feel like it's really close, then they just
want to grind harder. But Republicans look at it like, oh,
we've got some breathing room. You don't You don't telling you.
(48:45):
Pennsylvania is interesting. There's a lot of people. I think
Scott Pressler's done really good work there and some of
the other individual activists have done work there, really good work.
But they said that it's a lot of gen X
voters in Pennsylvania that have mobilized and Trump's favor Huh,
jen X, Look at that. Isn't that not interesting? Jen
(49:10):
X is gonna save the world, jen X the forgotten Generation.
In the meantime, Kamala Harris has agreed to a CNN
town hall. She needs a town hall, says Politico. She
wants a town hall on October twenty third. She's participating
in it. They've tried to get I think she wanted
a debate with Trump, she needs it. And they said
(49:31):
that CNN offered Trump a town hall. His campaign hasn't
immediately responded. I don't really think he needs it if
he's not taking the offers for town halls and debates.
To me, that says that their internal numbers show him
doing better and they don't want to risk it. Because
I'll be real with you, his debate with Kamala was
not good. It was like one of his poorly poorest
(49:54):
performing debates. It was because he took all the bait
he didn't have. He didn't have the strength of discipline
to not take the b and not get ticked off,
and he was. I mean he neither of them won,
but he didn't win it, or neither of them, I mean,
neither of them really won it. Neither of them really
lost it. And she stayed on point to her whole
goal was to tweak him. He can't do that again.
(50:15):
And if he can't have the strength of discipline, he
needs to not do a debate. All he needs to
do is just the interviews that he's doing and the
events that he's doing. He doesn't need to do anything else.
She needs it, she needs it desperately, but she's not
up to the task. So CNN also offered trumpet town hall.
He's like, Nah, Kamala Harris doing a town hall by
herself isn't enough because I mean, didn't she just do
(50:39):
one with Univision? So are you gonna do the same thing?
I mean, how many times you're gonna have the same
damn town hall over and over again, with the same
questions over and over again. You're not learning anything from it.
She needed the contrast with Trump. That's the only way
she's gonna get any kind of boost. And I don't
think he's gonna give it to her.
Speaker 14 (50:56):
Now.
Speaker 10 (50:56):
That's fine, that's a smart move, So he shouldn't.
Speaker 1 (50:59):
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Speaker 6 (51:53):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's quick five.
Speaker 1 (51:58):
Colorado gold mine collapse live, one dead and more than
twelve people trapped one thousand feet underground. It happened at
the Molly Kathleen gold mine near Cripple Creek on Thursday afternoon.
The sheriff at the press conference confirmed the fatality of
one person inside of the mine. They said that the
malfunction with the elevator system created a severe danger for
those aboard while they were five hundred feet into the mine.
(52:20):
Rescue teams arrived. They pulled eleven people to safety who
were stuck at the halfway point in the shaft, and
a further twelve stranded. They said that those who were
stuck at the bottom have blankets, chairs, and water. They're
in good health and are communicating with rescue teams. And
they said apparently children were amongst those that have already
been rescued from the mind so they don't know yet
how the elevator inside the shaft failed. One of the
(52:43):
people trapped, one of the twelve is an employee with
mind safety experience. The other eleven or tourists. So goodness
praying with those people. This let's see here jobless claim
numbers published. Job Seeking AI is going to apply thousands
of pizzas for you. This is wow.
Speaker 14 (53:03):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (53:04):
They said that it's called there's like all these AI
like I guess engines for the lack of a better
way to put it.
Speaker 14 (53:10):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (53:10):
They said that these this thing will send out thousands
of job applications and they match human applicants with perspective
employment and it's, uh, that's what AI will do. That's
I don't know if I I mean, I guess that works.
But now you're not even gonna have what do they
call them, I mean, the people that are hiring. You're
not even gonna have that position in HR anymore. Everything
is gonna be done by AI. Like I'm just that's
(53:33):
another job I hadn't even thought of that is gonna
go for AI. Golly, another storm Nadine tracking another one.
National Hurricane Center is monitoring a disturbance stop being disturbed
off Florida's east coast as a hurricane Milton barrels onward.
(53:53):
Uh the this hurt well, that's they're calling. They're looking
at it, calling it the storm Nadine. The newsweek piece
buries the lead. They only have the first important information
of the first paragraph. So Anna Skinner needs to be fired.
But they said they're looking at this. I mean they
start it started out in the North Atlantic. There's two disturbances.
(54:14):
You have Hurricane Leslie that's going to go on a
path away from the US, and then you have this
storm Nadine. So they're watching that. It is hurricane season.
I mean it's not you know, it's not unusual. And
let's see here we have like some name. I'm not
going to sit here and talk about lesbian sex scenes
in quick five at the opera. I mean we get
enough of that in our every day. I'm just not
(54:34):
doing it now. We're also going to get into coming up,
we have Doug Emhoff. He gave an interview and he
was asked about the lady he slapped. Why is indn't
he being asked by more people about this? Stick with
us on the.
Speaker 12 (54:48):
Go and need a quick news fix with a fun twist.
Follow Dana's Absurd Truth podcast for bite size and formative
episodes perfect for your busy schedule on Apple or wherever
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Speaker 1 (55:00):
I made Kane mad on break He's like, oh, he's
so mad right now. This is what he does.
Speaker 6 (55:08):
It's like when I say old people are innocent. You
always say I say, that's.
Speaker 1 (55:13):
Not my problem. You don't like old people. That's a
whole different topic.
Speaker 6 (55:15):
You always exaggerate my point.
Speaker 1 (55:17):
He's so mad right now. He's like a human. We
had this huge We just had this huge debate off
off air. First off, welcome back Dane to lash with
you or at the bottom of the second hour, because
I have not wanted to talk about it because I
think it's dumb. I'm gonna be honest. Let me set
it up like this. First off, you know when when
(55:41):
people say that they don't trust their government. I get it.
A lot of people have no reason to trust. I mean,
in fact, it's like a part of our American DNA.
It's the whole reason why we're not a direct democracy
and why we have a republic, a constitutional republic, because
it empowers the people against the government, and you're supposed
(56:01):
to have a healthy suspicion of it, right, I get it.
I also probably get it more than the average bear,
because I've been targeted by my government, and I've been
harassed by my government, and I've been put upon and
besieged by my government. I've been called a domestic terrorist
by literal city members of government simply because I support
(56:25):
natural enumerated rights like you know, your right of self defense,
it's Second Amendment. So I get it, Like I said,
a little bit more than the average bear about distrust
for government. I always have joked over the years, I'm
like two steps above anarchy. I believe in a constitutional republic,
Article one, Section eight, and nothing more. Everything else is noise.
(56:50):
And I've said this even before the Tea Party, when
I helped to found the Second Tea Party, going around
the country and getting at the et cetera. I mean,
I've seen it, I've experienced it, I've been through it.
All that said, no, I do not believe the federal
government is driving hurricanes into Florida to kill people before
(57:10):
an election. I don't believe that. Now do I think
that there exist things, you know, patents for different weather applications,
for the lack of a better way to put it, Absolutely,
But the existence of a patent doesn't mean that the
technology or the thing exists. I mean, that's you know,
IP one A one. But I say that because I
(57:34):
know that some people, and I am friends with individuals
that are on a scale of yeah, maybe they're you
concede clouds two, they're driving hurricanes into Florida like that.
That's a pretty big scale. I have friends all over
it on that scale, and I listened to them and
I'm like, okay, wait a minute, hold up. I mean,
(57:56):
we struggle to make even clouds full of rain right now,
So what makes you think we're gonna be able to
like control like an entire I have had a friend
that told that honestly believes and has told me that
the federal government is literally controlling the hurricanes. And that's
why there's so many more hurricanes and they're whipping them
up in the water out there, and they're like driving
them towards Florida. I am not kidding you. I don't
(58:18):
want to name any names. And I love this individual.
I don't dislike them, and I'm not making fun of them.
I just think they're so wrong. And I told my friend,
I said, I go, what strikes me is that this
is like the right's version of climate change in a way,
like to this extent. And Kane totally disagrees with me,
(58:39):
and so he's like, you don't believe in ionic whatever
drones with copper wires in the sky, do you know?
And he got so mad at me during break because
Cane is one of them. He's one of them.
Speaker 6 (58:48):
I am only stating, No, you're not.
Speaker 1 (58:50):
You're pretending to triangulate.
Speaker 6 (58:52):
You're what we're doing is you're trying to assign something
that I'm doing, which is not what's happening. That's what
you're doing, you needed to be clear about. But what
I'm doing is just telling you the scientific data that
actually shows the electric field in the ion A sphere.
If you looked up the actual usage of like say harp,
(59:15):
for example, do you understand what harp does and how
it affects atmospheric energies.
Speaker 10 (59:21):
Yes, that I'm talking about hurricanes.
Speaker 3 (59:24):
This is.
Speaker 6 (59:26):
Right. I know you want to take the absurd.
Speaker 10 (59:28):
I'm not taking absurd.
Speaker 1 (59:29):
This is literally what people I've had, people, very good people,
very smart people, try to argue this with me.
Speaker 6 (59:35):
So somehow I'm curious with you when I can't get
a word in edgeways. Isn't that weird?
Speaker 1 (59:39):
I just want to make sure that you were accurately
representing my position, Kane.
Speaker 6 (59:43):
I was. Isn't that what you the absurd and you're
like purple purple whales at this guy.
Speaker 10 (59:49):
That's stupid.
Speaker 6 (59:51):
Yeah, no, but no, I'm giving an example. You went
to the absurd and you then decided.
Speaker 1 (59:56):
To be against You do what you do.
Speaker 6 (59:58):
Think that's hurricanes.
Speaker 10 (01:00:00):
That's okay, Okay, that's all I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (01:00:02):
That's all I'm saying that.
Speaker 10 (01:00:04):
That is literally all I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (01:00:05):
So why are you so mad.
Speaker 6 (01:00:06):
At exactly what I was saying? Because you kept acting
like it wasn't what I was saying. That's why. Well,
now you're trying to assign what I was saying, like
I said something differently than what I said that's what
I was in that I'm not mad.
Speaker 1 (01:00:23):
I'm not mad, oh man, oh man, I because I
see people who and there's been like a lot of
you know, discussion. I was telling my friend this. My
friends like, you don't think that we have you know,
it's twenty twenty four in our government's like one hundred
years ahead of us in technology, and I'm like, I
actually don't believe that, I mean, the same government. Look,
I can't also entertain the idea that our government is
(01:00:44):
supremely incompetent and then also is like late years ahead
of with all this tech. Does that make sense? Like
I can't reconcile that. That's why I don't necessarily believe it.
Look how many things they absolutely fubar up.
Speaker 6 (01:00:57):
And like five years ago, if you were to tell me,
know what, dude, vaccines are horrible actually for you, I
would have been like, that's crazy. We vaccines are credited
with saving thousands upon hundreds of thousand.
Speaker 1 (01:01:11):
Five years ago. Can I would have said a couple
of them?
Speaker 6 (01:01:13):
Yeah, I would have yeah, maybe, But you wouldn't have
then questioned the entire big pharma that we see today
and the behemoth that we now know that it is.
I know, I'm just saying it five years ago wouldn't
have been as severe as post COVID. You never said
a damn thing about the big pharma before COVID. Give
me a break. You can't prove it.
Speaker 1 (01:01:37):
Either, actually written, that's okay, But it was like, it's
like about putting all the kids like on ADHD meds
and all this stuff and like and it's like that
talking about that. I've totally written about it.
Speaker 6 (01:01:48):
Yeah, so that went deeper. It wasn't just oh, we
got to treat ADHD. It was oh, damn these.
Speaker 1 (01:01:53):
But I will say vaccines a little distinction there though,
because the vaccines that that that you're talking about question,
like we all questioned the guard to sell and all
this other stuff. But even okay, let's establish that whether
or not you agree or support all of the shots,
that the ones that were there have been out there
(01:02:13):
for a long time, right, Yeah, when.
Speaker 6 (01:02:15):
I was a kid, there were nine, like maybe nine
you had to take when I was a kid in
the seventies.
Speaker 1 (01:02:20):
So they've been out there for a while. The coronavirus
one is legit, like brand new for sure, but no studies,
no adverse, nothing established on it. So a lot of
the people were pointing out, like, that's we don't want
to do that because there's nothing, we have no information
about it. And then you would have people in the media,
(01:02:40):
why do you hate all the vaccines? Because people were
saying that one's new, there's no studies on any adverse reaction,
there's no long term nothing, it's not been around as
long as these others.
Speaker 10 (01:02:53):
Yeah, and they were unfairly characterized, and that.
Speaker 6 (01:02:55):
Prompted us to look into what's in these other vaccines,
possibly because we've seen an uptick since the seventies and
eighties on these things you just mentioned, like ADHD, autism
and stuff like that. So we wanted to look and
see and the common denominator in these vaccines, even though
old and trusted ones like you said, use as a
that far use as a preservative thym arisol, which is mercury.
(01:03:18):
And if you can explain to me why they allow
you to inject three times the amount of mercury in
your veins but won't allow it in a CANNI.
Speaker 10 (01:03:25):
Cigarettes are safe, kine FDA says, So, really, is.
Speaker 6 (01:03:28):
There cigarettes in the vaccine? Because that's what I'm talking about.
Speaker 10 (01:03:31):
Government things certain things are safe when I get.
Speaker 6 (01:03:34):
Saying they've been using for decades mercury as a preservative
in these vaccines, and that heavy metal is what's been
causing a lot of these other issues the vaccines themselves.
If it were just like the old school like you
talked about, which is just the dead virus to help
your body kind of live, that's not what's happening, and
that's not what's been happening since the seventies.
Speaker 1 (01:03:54):
Yes, yes, look look at all you're sitting over there.
Like I can tell he sits up straight a certain way,
and he has his arms a certain way. I can
totally tell you.
Speaker 6 (01:04:03):
I have to move to the mic, saying, but.
Speaker 1 (01:04:07):
I do think that with some of this stuff, we
gotta be a little careful. Some of the folks out
there need to be a little careful. Look, I said,
you know, I get it. You don't need to convince me.
I've been called a domestic terrorist by my government, and
I've been completely harassed by my government before just simply
for supporting enumerated rights. I understand totally, but I also
(01:04:27):
don't think that our government is both completely incompetent and
they can't fund a hurricane disaster relief, but also have
all the technology to literally drive hurricanes towards Florida and
other Republican areas. I just don't believe that the two
things can coexist. I don't believe it. So we got
to like get to pick one. But the other thing, too,
(01:04:52):
is the media has been seizing on this, I think
is a way. They've written more about this than they
have about the disaster that is FEMA. And my other
reason for cautioning people about it is any time that
anything is given as a tool of distraction, the left
(01:05:12):
and the media will seize upon it and they will
focus entirely on that and they will ignore the other
issue because, look at it, the bigger issue is what
all of these tax dollars people have paid into the government,
federal government, federal taxes, and then they turn around when
(01:05:34):
people need that return on the investment of their tax dollars,
where is it, Well, it's gone to illegal immigrants. And
then they try to argue, well, no it hasn't, but
yes it has, because you guys have said yourselves. I mean,
this spending is literally on the government website. It's over
at DHS, which is where FEMA is under by the
(01:05:56):
way the head of DHS. If you guys saw this
Leandro majorcis he's been. He was out shopping recently, and
he also went to go eat some enjoy some sushi.
He spent. He went to North Carolina, he spent under
(01:06:19):
six hours there and then he left to go to
Nobu to get sushi, which is like a fancy sushi
place No Boo. And he spent less than six hours
visiting the hurricane hit areas of North Carolina, then ran
back to d C and had some very expensive sushi,
and he probably spent more time at No Boo. And
(01:06:42):
then he's probably spent more time shopping and eating sushi
than he did actually in the hurricane hit areas. And
he was he left the establishment. He had a little
take home bag too when he left.
Speaker 10 (01:06:55):
You have a little doggy bag, Cane, You have no
boo doggie bag.
Speaker 1 (01:06:59):
This guy does not under seeing optics. DHS is a joke.
He does not understand optics at all, a man, not
nobody in this administration. Does you have Joe Biden on
the beach when the hurricane's hitting the first one, and
then you have Kamala Harris sitting for Vogue on October seventh,
while she's also simultaneously trying to attack Florida. I mean,
(01:07:21):
you see the mess that this is. This is such
a mess. None of these people have any self awareness.
Say it what you said, say it.
Speaker 6 (01:07:29):
I bet Majorcis only eats California. I bet that's all
it is.
Speaker 10 (01:07:33):
That's the same sushi.
Speaker 1 (01:07:35):
I'll just have the California roll. I bet he does.
I bet that's all he does. I bet you're right,
though he does look like a cold fish doney extra.
Speaker 7 (01:07:43):
Everybody's singing, I wish they are could eat California.
Speaker 6 (01:07:51):
It's his laugh mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida man.
Speaker 1 (01:08:02):
All right, So Firhurst up here. Because of the Hurricane Milton,
people could catch fish in the street. It's actually not
a bad gig be able to just like walk out
your front porch and go catch fish in the street.
At this was in College Park area. Two men caught
a large bass on a flooded Orlando road. Yeah, and
a dude in a writing mower came cruising down the
(01:08:23):
middle of the street. I mean this all happened at
the same time. Dude was bass fishing in the street
and another dude was driving a writing lawnmower like a
weather report, no joke, right, yeah, it's like a ccenn
weather report. And he came like he came cruising through
right through the middle of this of the of the scene,
and they had a news crew there and he didn't
(01:08:43):
have a care in the world. And the guy released
the bass back on the water and he's like, we
came out here to fish after the storm. He's like,
you know, it's not fun for people whose stuff get ruined.
He's like, you know, what are you gonna do right now?
Just you know, everything's flooded, You're out there trying to
you know, this is that's all you can do. It's
too funny. This a bearded Florida man asually joined a
women's only poker tournament and he won five thousand dollars
(01:09:04):
and got away with it. He was the anti discrimination legislation,
so they can't ban men from entering into a women's tournament.
So he ended up defeating the female lead and took
home over five thousand dollars. According to the Las Vegas Review,
there's video of it. Some of the some players were
putting a bounty on him. They said good luck, but
(01:09:26):
not really but yeah, he entered into the tournament and
he couldn't they couldn't keep him out of it. Yeah,
he did beat all the women, that is correct. He
beat all of the women. This can you this story?
Have you ever had a dream and then like you're
mad or a spouse or something in your dream and
(01:09:49):
you wake up and it takes a second to realize
you're not dreaming, and you're like, and you're mad at
them for absolutely nothing. So this woman was charged with
domestic violence because her okay, so, so she got mad
at her husband and attacked him because there was a
woman on television. They were watching television and the woman
on TV reminded her of her husband's former fling. Wow,
(01:10:14):
it's Coral Springs Police. They responded to the call at
a residence at a residence and the caller said a
verbal argument between the spouses. The couple got they had
over Apparently the guy had cheated on her with this
chick and the some woman on television it resembled the
chick that he had cheated on his wife with, and
the wife got mad attacked the husband and that's what happened. Yeah,
(01:10:37):
and yeah, it was bad. She threw all kinds of
items at him. She scratched and bit him. I mean
he did cheat, so but they said that he actually
finally she look. He took her to the ground because
she wouldn't she wouldn't stop aggravating him and biting him
and scratching him. So he forcibly took her to the
(01:10:58):
ground and held her there, and then she tried to
complain to the police that she was the victim because
he had used force on her. Girl, you were scratching
and hitting him, Like, what did you think was gonna happen?
Come on, So she was arrested and taken After they investigated,
they're like, yeah, you're the battie. So they took her
to jail, Broward County Jail. Of course, Like what, I
(01:11:19):
guess they hadn't gotten past that. I guess they hadn't
worked through it. Two dudes try to rob a construction
site during Milton and they deservedly got stuck Winter Garden.
They tried to take advantage of the state of emergency
in Polk County. They were at a construction site. They
were trying to load up on what they thought was
going to be an easy steal, and they got stuck
they actually got stuck and pol kunty sheriffs arrived and
(01:11:40):
they took them to Pole County Jail. Stick with this
third hour on the way, Welcome back to the program,
Danel last year with you. At the top of this
third hour. You can follow along channel through forty seven
Direct TV. The chats at Rumbull were also on x
Kamala Harris's husband, The Second Dude, Doug Emhoff headline, he
(01:12:00):
doesn't deny bombshell stories that he slapped his axe and
got his children's nanny pregnant.
Speaker 13 (01:12:08):
Spreading it about you, saying that tabloid's stories about your
personal life, saying you should be front and center. He's
saying it about your wife and making incredibly crude and
lose suggestions about her past life. I'm just curious.
Speaker 16 (01:12:32):
I know it seemed like a very zen, mindful person,
but I think I'd be pissed off, and I'm just wondering,
how how do you how do you all stay centered?
How do you stay disciplined and not really bl I'm
not really pushed back hard at these things.
Speaker 3 (01:12:52):
We don't have time to be pissed off, we don't
have time to focus on It's all a distraction. It's
designed to.
Speaker 6 (01:12:58):
Try to go off our game.
Speaker 13 (01:12:59):
Does it get your Now all we are doing, all
we talk about is.
Speaker 10 (01:13:04):
Joe Scarborough b jade up that question.
Speaker 1 (01:13:07):
That's that's what it was. I have no other way
to put it right now. He hawked to it. Doug
him Hoff just then with that question.
Speaker 14 (01:13:17):
He did.
Speaker 1 (01:13:17):
And you know I'm right, Joe Scarborough just hawked to it.
Doug m Hoff with that question, the way he set
it up, he acted like he's afraid to get slapped.
He didn't want to ask that question. So you know
when people are saying that you knocked up your nanny
and you slapped a hell out of that chick it
can film Festival. I mean, how do you like stay
centered when people are asking you about this?
Speaker 10 (01:13:40):
Like, how do you not like react?
Speaker 1 (01:13:43):
That's what he just did.
Speaker 6 (01:13:47):
Come on, Notice he didn't deny it. He did no.
Speaker 10 (01:13:50):
Doug Mhof's like, we just don't have time to get mad.
Speaker 1 (01:13:54):
So you did hit her. I mean a normal person
would have been like, say smacked, sure, but Joe scar
is like his eyes get tinier and tinier. If you notice,
like the more nervous Scarborough gets, his eyes just disappear
into the meat of his face. They just they just disappear.
It's like some messed up anime. But he the I mean,
(01:14:16):
he took five thousand years to ask that question. So, like,
you know, when you were slapping people, knocking people up
with it, like, you know, how do you stay centered
when people are like you did that?
Speaker 10 (01:14:26):
How do you see cindered? Who asks a question like that?
Speaker 1 (01:14:31):
So when you were murdering people, how did you stay
centered when people criticize you for murder? Like, we just
don't have time to get mad. It's a distraction. It's
a distraction to ask why you beat the hell out
of a chick and the valet line at can Film Festival?
Speaker 10 (01:14:47):
How is that a distraction?
Speaker 14 (01:14:48):
Me too?
Speaker 1 (01:14:49):
How is that a distraction? When you knocked up your nanny?
How is that a distraction? It's like it's that's we're
trying to people are trying to figure out if they
want you the White House and you're that's a distraction.
It's just golle, did you did? Joe Scarborough was uncomfortable
in asking that question. And when you're the reporter, when
(01:15:11):
you're the person, when you're the interviewer, you cannot be
afraid to ask those questions. I mean, grow a pair
for the love. He looks like one of those dudes.
It was in the walls, Harris ad I'm a man,
all right, Carburetors for breakfast, gollye. That question though, was
(01:15:31):
something else, but he Doug im Hoff didn't deny it.
He didn't deny it so but that that would have
been the follow up he had. Scarborough had to ask
him like that, He had to ask him, He had
to ask them the question, and so he asked him
to check the box. But he didn't really want to
ask him, which is why he basically asked and answered
(01:15:53):
the question himself in the question. So all Doug Mhoff
had to do is, yeah, it's so bad. We're just
we don't have time to get mad. Who does this
joff Scarborough does. I can't make fun of it enough,
however much you loathe these people, It's not enough, it
really isn't. I mean, so the ex girl for remember
(01:16:16):
she got that back of the hand as a can
film for something like Doug Emhoff got mad because he
accused her of flirting with somebody I don't know, or
that a dude flirted with her. I don't know what
it was anyway he whacked a whapped the chick, slapped her,
and he goes, this is designed. He answered Scarborough, it's
it's designed to try to get us off our game.
And Scarborough goes, does he get you off your game?
(01:16:36):
That's the follow up He has not did you did
you slap her? It is does it get you off
your game? That's the follow up? Did Twitter just drop
our stream because I said that? Joe Scarborough hawk to
a Doug Emhoff, is it? Do you think that?
Speaker 6 (01:16:55):
That's?
Speaker 1 (01:16:56):
That's that's probably what happened one.
Speaker 6 (01:16:58):
Because weird timing that they did when you.
Speaker 1 (01:17:00):
Did that, because just to say X may have dropped
our stream because I said that. Maybe, Oh no, I
said it. Joe Scarborough just talked to it. Doug m
hoffs with the question there and then he follows up
does it get you off your game? The follow up
should be, so you slapped her? Do you regret slapping her?
(01:17:22):
That would have even Look, that's that is actually a
technically it's a strawmian because you're presupposing something and you're
trying to fabricate something. Well, actually, no, that's not a strumming.
You're begging the question begging the question is assuming, even
though it's technically hearsay. I believe all women. I was
told to do that by Kamala Harris, Doug am Hoffs.
He's the wife guy his wife. He's the wife guy
of the wife. I was told to believe all women.
(01:17:43):
So it begs the question when you assume that what
the question is based off is true and you ask
the question like, Okay, so do you regret slapping her?
Not so you slapped her. So the most unbiased way
possible would just would be to ask so you slapped her?
When I would have been like, say, do you regret
hitting her? Me too? Do you regret hitting her? Also?
Speaker 14 (01:18:06):
Me too?
Speaker 1 (01:18:06):
Believe all women? Should we believe all women? That's what
I would have asked. But Joe Scarborough goes, does it
get you off your game? I'm Joe Scarborough. I don't
know why, but they pay me gobs of money to
blow smoke out my backside on MSNBC. He used to
get so mad at me. Him and his wife spent
like fifteen minutes one time going off on me on
(01:18:28):
their show because I criticized them because they're so thin
skinned and so I totally uh norm McDonald it and
I just hit them every time, like every hour for
weeks after you remember game.
Speaker 10 (01:18:40):
That's the follow up they have what would you wouldn't
you have asked that too?
Speaker 1 (01:18:44):
So do you regret hitting her?
Speaker 6 (01:18:45):
Oh yeah, without a doubt.
Speaker 1 (01:18:47):
So you deny hitting her, But do you regret it?
If you did?
Speaker 10 (01:18:51):
Well, if I had hit her, I would have regretted.
So you hit her, there's a way you can keep
it going.
Speaker 6 (01:18:55):
It's like, no, I'm not off my game. I'm still
beating women.
Speaker 1 (01:18:58):
Yeah. Scarb's like, does he get you off your game?
And him Hoff goes no, We're all we're doing. All
we talk about is this selection that.
Speaker 10 (01:19:05):
Is so lame, You pansy. You pansy doesn't even.
Speaker 1 (01:19:11):
Have the balls to ask him a tough question, You
absolute beta pansy.
Speaker 10 (01:19:18):
Just to cut you off your game.
Speaker 1 (01:19:20):
Good grief. And he acts like such a hard ass
on his show, doesn't he. But then you get in
front of Doug M. Hoff. I guess he's worried about
in slappity slap too. He wasn't gonna ask him that
question he'd get He's gonna get the back of Doug's hand.
Oh boy, got lee.
Speaker 10 (01:19:36):
He was asking him a question like he's a beat dog.
Speaker 1 (01:19:38):
So does it? Does it?
Speaker 10 (01:19:41):
Does it get you off your game?
Speaker 1 (01:19:44):
Good night? Wan says that the first stream was having issues.
It's just a stream wide issue. It's not because I
said that Joe Scarborough's a pansy and hawked to a
Doug m Hoff in the question laid up there. I
just want to make sure people understand what we're talking about.
Speaker 6 (01:19:58):
It was good that you repeated at the yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:20:00):
Because the question I mean, I was like, did Joe
Scarborough talk to a Doug em hooff in the setup
of that question because he's a pansy? Because he was
afraid to ask did you beat that chick in France?
You know? Did you ever? Did you ever hit your
nanny that you impregnated? You hit her too? Like I'm
just can I just say to the laziness like you
(01:20:21):
don't even leave the house for your side piece. You
can't even you don't even have the energy to leave
the house for the side piece. You're like the nanny
and she wasn't even that good looking. It's can't even.
Can't you just shut up? Kane or I'm gonna make
you say on here you put it's like, oh man,
(01:20:44):
oh man, what Steve's in here? Doug won't talk to
a Joe. If Joe won't talk to h.
Speaker 10 (01:20:50):
My gosh, can't even deal.
Speaker 1 (01:20:54):
Oh man, You know you have to make fun of
these people. This is how bad this stuff is. This
is how unbelievably bad it is. And then you got Barack
Obama out there trying to act like, hey, poors, we're
like you audio sound bite six. Listen to this.
Speaker 9 (01:21:09):
Tim is a veteran, he is a teacher, he's a
coach hunter.
Speaker 6 (01:21:15):
He's been a great.
Speaker 9 (01:21:16):
Governor, working with Democrats and Republicans to get stuff done.
He can also take advantage truck apart and put it
back together.
Speaker 1 (01:21:24):
We can't.
Speaker 9 (01:21:26):
You think Donald Trump can do that? For that matter,
do you think Donald Trump has ever changed a tire
in his life?
Speaker 14 (01:21:36):
Wow?
Speaker 1 (01:21:37):
So is that gonna mean that our taxes are gonna
go down and then we're not gonna go into World
War three and get all our kids marked?
Speaker 6 (01:21:44):
Are these the new measurements for president? Whether you can
change a diaper or a tire.
Speaker 1 (01:21:47):
Remember when Barack Obama's like, oh, go to just change
your pressure and retires, shave you all the grass in
the world.
Speaker 6 (01:21:53):
He was even the one that said tick up your
thermostead a couple degrees too.
Speaker 14 (01:21:57):
Mm hmm.
Speaker 1 (01:21:59):
The thing that I that I will say that I
think people like about Trump is Trump's like, yeah, I'm rich.
What And then and then he's like, yeah, I try
to take advantage of all the tax breaks I can get.
Who wouldn't. I mean, he just admits it, where all
these people are like, no, we'll pretend poor. They pretend
to be while they're up in Martha's vineyard and doing
all this stuff. Like Barack Obama's like, oh, climate change
(01:22:20):
is back, guys, all the shorelines going away. Meanwhile buys
house on Hawaiian coastline and then changes the shoreline in
contravention of a Hawaiian law, or he buys coastal property
up at the Hamptons. He has, but he's like, oh no,
all you guys better get away from the shoreline.
Speaker 10 (01:22:36):
You'll drop it to the ocean and die the climate change.
Speaker 1 (01:22:38):
I think they tell you that, so you'd leave the
shoreline for them. See, it's like that they pretend the stuff.
It's all pretend with them. It's all pretend it is.
Oh yeah, yeah yeah, hold on audio sun bite one.
Uh Yeah. This is when is this a cot one? Yeah?
The audio some bite one listen to this. This is when,
by the way, the iron ditch the sheer, Barack Obama,
(01:23:01):
super rich guy, multiple houses, multiple mansions, you know, uh,
telling all these people who are who are broken struggling
in this by an economy that they better vote for
Kamala Harris or they're not they're not doing enough. Unreal audio.
Somebody one listen to this.
Speaker 14 (01:23:15):
Is that.
Speaker 15 (01:23:19):
We had not yet seen the same kinds of energy
and turned in all quarters of our neighborhoods at communities
as we saw when I was wrong.
Speaker 1 (01:23:34):
He's gotta bu himself on the back theory.
Speaker 11 (01:23:37):
I also want to say that that seems to be
more pronounced with the brothers.
Speaker 1 (01:23:43):
Oh boy, oh boy, with the brothers.
Speaker 6 (01:23:49):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 1 (01:23:54):
We had this yesterday. A guy poor gas on himself
and ran into a patrol car. This is in what
I was at Washington in North Carolina. A father embraced
his new life after becoming the second person to receive
a titanium heart. That's interesting. He get at Duke Hospital.
It is a titanium artificial heart powered by magnets. It's
(01:24:15):
like a whole meme now with the Internet. It's made
by this company that they replace this guy, Donovan Harbison's
heart and it's like an experimental thing. And they said
that he you know, they told him some time ago
he had to have a transplant. I can obviously take
a long time, so they have. It's an experimental device.
It's powered by magnets made by this company called five five,
(01:24:36):
a core that actually replaces like his whole heart. This
guy named Daniel Tims invented it. They attached the device
through these connections to the remnant parts and then the
grafts are stitched under the remaining vessels, both the order
and the pulmonary artery, and in an instant the device
was able to recreate normal circulation, normal amounts of blood float,
(01:24:57):
and normal pressures. And they said it's definitely heavier because
you don't normally feel your heart. They said it would be.
It's he's gonna stand up with it. It's gonna he's
gonna live with it temporarily. I'm he's like, he's good
attitude about it. He says, he's like Tony stark, I
guess you would feel it. How how weird would that be?
I think that made me nauseous to feel it. Wouldn't it,
(01:25:19):
wouldn't it? That is so weird, Like, oh, I don't know,
I got I got questions about that. So Chippendale's dancers
are gonna, oh they're gonna, there are things, So they're
gonna unionize. Carr, I ask who actually, of women thinks
that that whole shick is attractive? Right, I've just never
understood it. It's I know, like from when I was
(01:25:42):
a kid. That's like the stereotypical thing. But I just
don't get it. But they said that the Chippendale's at
the Rio they're going to unionize. Okay, well all right.
They said it takes a lot of work to make
the prestigious ranks of the chips. Are they called the
chips the chip and Dale's people the Chips. Yeah, they
(01:26:03):
said there's little job security. Well, you think you're ripping
your pants off and shaking your ass for women and
probably some dudes. I mean, what kind of job security
did you think you.
Speaker 6 (01:26:12):
Were gonna get with you got paid above union scale.
I didn't know.
Speaker 1 (01:26:15):
Yeah, I actually thought they Yeah, I thought they made
like some cash, right, I don't know, it's interesting, but
there anyway, they're unionizing. Somebody shot and killed a two
year old sea lion. There's a twenty thousand reward offered
for information. I'll i'll happy happily take a bat to
anybody if the loss calls calls for it. They said
that it's a this associated They found he was injured
(01:26:35):
but alive. He had a fresh gunshot wound in his back.
Who shoots a seal a sea lion? Who shoots a
sea lion? He ended up he didn't make it because
of his injury, sadly, so they're looking out. They're asking
for information that they said that some of them California
sea lions are they're at a higher risk of human
(01:26:55):
related injuries and death because they're less wary of people.
Their natural behavior, your has been changed, and so they
think that someone might be nice to them and give
them food, and instead someone is a thug and shoots
them in the back like this, let's just like who
does that? Like how I hope you get eaten by
sea lion? I hope a sea lion comes and just
takes a chomp right out you. So I hope a
couple of them. I hope there's revenge. Revenge. That's sad.
(01:27:19):
And let's see, I had thought I had one more here.
Maybe I do not. Oh, I had this, but I
don't know if we're gonna have time to get to
it later. In Beverly Hills, did you guys see the
video of a dude who knocked out? There was a
guy who was harassing diners at the Beverly at his
Beverly Hills restaurant who was a pro Hamas guy, and
the restaurant order came out and knocked the dude to
the ground, to the ground. It was in Beverly Hills,
(01:27:43):
Swinky Restaurant, Babylon Bees fighting Gavin Newsom. We're gonna talk
to them next.
Speaker 12 (01:27:49):
The Danish Show podcast You're fast, funny and informative news
companion for those always on the move. Subscribe on YouTube,
Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 1 (01:28:00):
Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash here with you.
You can listen coast to coast terrestrially. You can also
check out the live stream of the radio program channel
through forty seven direct TV. You can find us on
x Rumble everywhere where there's a you can find us everywhere.
We're everywhere, so welcome back. With the bottom of this
third hour. We were talking a little bit earlier about
(01:28:21):
that insane video that Harry Walls released and we thought
it was satire, but it wasn't. It was a real,
actual video. I actually, I literally thought Babylon Bee made
it until I watched at the end and I was like, well,
they wouldn't put up a link to Harris Walls up there.
That's interesting. It was the where they have all the
guys and they were pretending that they were guys and
(01:28:42):
they liked Kamala Harris. Babylon Beat, I think is one
of I think that they're one of the maybe only
entity that really gets satire very well. There are very
few people who do, and there's they're the only ones
on the right who do, and that's what makes them
so incredibly dangerous, and especially during a time when sometimes
the news and what people do it's just so crazy
(01:29:06):
that you don't know if it's real or not. That's
why I think it lands so well, because they just
capture that perfectly. And that made Gavin Newsom mad out
in California, and so he wanted to ban them. He
wanted to ban memes, what video like anything, anything funny,
He just wanted it's a war on humor. And I
(01:29:26):
was actually shocked that it went as far as it did,
and they litigated it. Joining us right now, both via Skype,
well I think one visiting one via Skype. Seth Dylan
and Kristen Wagner. You guys know Seth Dylan with a
Babylon B and Kristen Wagner's president and CEO General Council
of ADF, which you guys know, lines for Defending freedom,
and we've got them. We've got a three parter right here.
It's good to see you both, Seth and Kristin. Thank
(01:29:48):
you both so much for joining us. Seth, I'm gonna
I'm gonna start with you first, because I mean I
thought that actually was satire originally when you guys first
said that Newsom was looking to ban you were doing
and I thought, now they're just picking a fight with
Gavin Newsom.
Speaker 10 (01:30:02):
No, it was actually real. When did the Left stop
being funny?
Speaker 8 (01:30:07):
Well, they're still funny, that's the thing, is I joke, Well,
they're funny.
Speaker 3 (01:30:11):
Unintentionally.
Speaker 8 (01:30:12):
I joke all the time that it's Uh, the way
to illustrate how difficult our job is right now in
this insane world where real headlines seem like satires, You
got to think at jokes that are funnier than what
democrats are doing in real life. You know, that's the
that's the challenge when you watch you know, you talk
about things that look like parody or they look like satires.
That's every Kamala Harris speech or interview. It feels like
it's satire. It feels like it was generated, like it's
(01:30:34):
an ai deep fake. That's got we're stuffing funny words
in her mouth. No, that's actually her talking. So it's
it's the challenge of doing satire and now makes our
job harder, not easier.
Speaker 1 (01:30:43):
It does make it harder. And I was looking at
this what they were, what they were, what he originally
targeted was this parody video of Kamala Harris, which he
had said should be illegal. And this was back in July.
And essentially what they were wanting to do was to
take down anything that they could argue you would harm
or somehow endanger a candidate's electoral prospects. And they were
(01:31:04):
saying that it was like miss intentionally misleading. Kristin. I
want to go to you on this because, I mean,
the purpose of satire isn't to explain that what you're
doing is comedy. And it just seems like the whole
crux of their argument just presupposes that everybody is too
stupid to realize when something is a joke and when
something isn't. I mean, maybe that goes true for some
(01:31:25):
of the folks on the left, but I don't know
anybody on the right who believes that.
Speaker 17 (01:31:29):
Well, this is by all accounts of power grat by
politicians to protect politicians during election season, which they've expanded
to be over six months. So this is a roadmap
for censorship. It is state sponsored censorship, and not only
kills the joke that the Babylon Bie and others are
trying to make, but it is taking a hammer rather
than a scalpel to take away the rights of Americans
(01:31:51):
to debate in a political season. It's extremely dangerous.
Speaker 1 (01:31:56):
Yeah, and how, I mean, how do you even prove
if you're new so so, how would you even prove
like that she was damaged by a funny Because I'm
assuming you're the lawyer here, not me, But I'm assuming
you would have to prove some kind of damages on that.
How does that even That's why this seems so ludicrous.
Speaker 17 (01:32:11):
But you don't have to, Dana. I mean that this
law is crazy in a million ways. So in terms
of what the law does, it says that if there's
digitally modified content and the government decides that there are
parts of it that might be untrue and it might
actually hurt a candidate's chances of getting elected, than anyone
can sue that sees it. It also imposes potential liability
(01:32:32):
for anyone that reposts it. So the whole goal of
this is to censor debate. And it's not about whether
something's true or fault. It's about the government being able
to tell Americans what ideas can be expressed in the
middle of our elections.
Speaker 1 (01:32:46):
And that makes it harder seth to what you do
as I hate the phrase content creator, but you know,
I don't know how else to put it. When you're
when you're coming up with us, it makes it a
little bit harder when you have all of these restrictions
that are coming down on how you can move within
comedy and within humor and what's fair game and what
(01:33:07):
isn't I mean it is designed to be a chilling effect.
I mean, how would that how would if this was
allowed to have stood, how would that have effect what
you do?
Speaker 8 (01:33:15):
Well, it's a problem that we faced for a long
time because you know, we've been battling the fact checking
and the claims that we're misinforming people on purpose for
a while and then it, you know, it started shifting
to this argument that we were engaged in hateful conduct.
Speaker 3 (01:33:27):
It was hate speech that we're publishing.
Speaker 8 (01:33:28):
That's why we got kicked off Twitter was because we
made a joke that was considered hateful conduct. And we
actually had a conversation before we posted that joke. You know,
should we post this, there might be some penalty for
posting this. And I make this point all the time.
This is exactly how they want you thinking before you speak.
It said, if I if I say this, if I say,
if I say this message at this particular time, will
I have some kind of penalty? And that and that
(01:33:49):
leads to people end up Uh, that leads to people
censoring themselves, engaging what I call, you know, soft censorship,
as opposed to them taking your content down. They're getting
you to censor yourself before you even post it, And
so I think a law like this, yeah, it will
have an effect.
Speaker 3 (01:34:02):
On people like us.
Speaker 8 (01:34:03):
You know, we would have every intention of continuing to
post what we post, come what may, and then we
would fight it out in the courts. But a lot
of people are going to censor themselves and refuse to
tell jokes that they think might lead to penalties or
lawsuits or enforcement of some kind. And so it's absolutely intended.
And whether it's intended or not, I think it is
intended too. But whether it's intended to or not, at
will chill speech for that reason.
Speaker 14 (01:34:24):
I think.
Speaker 1 (01:34:25):
I feel like that's already happening, don't you think so?
Seth like the rewiring of the American mind, and people
are they're actually stopping to second guess themselves, even over
the most innocuous things.
Speaker 8 (01:34:37):
Yeah, I mean, the soft censorship is happening a million
to one against the hard censorship. Most of the censorship
that's happening right now in our culture is people who
are refraining from speaking because they don't want to be canceled,
they don't want to lose their platform.
Speaker 3 (01:34:49):
They'd rather go along to get along.
Speaker 8 (01:34:51):
And so we already have it with the policy enforcement
that's there on these private platforms. When you layer on
legal restrictions and enforcement of laws that could result in lawsuits,
it's that much worse, that much more intimidating. And so
I think we'll only see increased levels of censorship if
we don't continue to.
Speaker 3 (01:35:05):
Fight these things and assert our right to speak freely.
Speaker 1 (01:35:08):
Now we're talking with Seth Dylan with the Babylon b
and also Kristen Wagener's president CEO of ADF Christen there
are are already legal pathways to go after you unprotected speech,
speech that you know is considered defamatory or slanderous, reliable
or I mean there's there's specific categories time tested in
the courtroom. What they act as though that that is
(01:35:31):
is it because it's harder because the and this proposal
and what Newsom and Democrats wanted to do. They didn't
want to meet that higher bar because I know it's
really difficult to litigate those types of cases and bring
them into the court. Did they just were they trying
to make it I mean easier for censorship. But what
what did not exist that this law was providing for them?
Speaker 17 (01:35:53):
There's nothing that didn't exist. There are laws in place
that you know, intrusion of privacy, defamation if you engage
in false speech, there's laws involving election fraud. All these
things are already in place, which I think just exposes
the motive behind this, which is that it's not about
real harm to someone's reputation. And again, remember these laws
only protect the politicians, but it's actually that they don't
(01:36:14):
want unflattering ideas or unflattering concepts to be out there
about them. And you raise a great point, Dana, in
terms of what is the harm. In these other areas
of the law, you actually have to prove harm, but
this California lassays you don't even have to prove harm,
you just have to prove that it might be likely.
Speaker 15 (01:36:31):
What kind of speech?
Speaker 17 (01:36:32):
How do you know if something impaired at political candidate's
chances of getting elected. It's why it's so troubling and
why the trial court has said this took a bulldozer
to the First Amendment rights of citizens, did it.
Speaker 8 (01:36:45):
It's also telling that they went right after that Newsom
was so worked up over a parody of Kamala Harris.
You wonder would he have been that worked up and
be talking about how it needs to be illegal if
it had been a parody of Trump that made Trump
look bad, you know, so it was you you can
tell just from the content that triggered this thing, you know,
his response to it and then accelerating pushing this law
(01:37:05):
through that there's political bias that play here too well.
Speaker 1 (01:37:08):
And these are also the individuals that were silent when
you have Kathy Griffin with you know, a disembodied you know,
blooded head of Donald Trump, or when they've you know,
some of the language that they have used in talking
about conservatives, Apparently that's okay, but if it's in any way,
you know, ridicule, ridicule is very I mean, it's a
very effective rhetoric, It really is. I mean, ridicule is
a very effective form of rhetoric, and it's really hard
(01:37:31):
for them to fight back against it and set to
use used.
Speaker 8 (01:37:35):
The word dangerous earlier, Yeah, used word dangerous earlier. We
are considered dangerous by the people whose ideas we challenge
with mockery, which is, like you said, one of the
most effective ways of challenging them.
Speaker 3 (01:37:47):
It is considered dangerous.
Speaker 8 (01:37:48):
And so they will often suggest that they are trying
to protect people from harm when they're censoring comedy, you know,
that could be hurtful or damaging or or something like that.
But with their really trying to protect is their ideas
and their preferred politicians and their their narratives.
Speaker 3 (01:38:05):
You know, that's what they're trying to protect.
Speaker 1 (01:38:06):
Yeah, Chris, let me ask you this, this this suit.
It seems like they knew that this was going to
be unsuccessful in some part. But then I also wonder,
you know, I always try to look at what their
other hands doing when they're distracting with the right hand,
what's the left hand doing? Is this also designed to
maybe put a roadblock or a hurdle in people's minds
that that maybe you know, they they'll think twice about
(01:38:28):
doing something like what Seth and Babylon Bee does. Well,
we don't want to. We don't want to, you know,
poke the bear. We don't. We don't want to engauge
in expensive litigation or have our all of our time
taken up by litigation like this, So maybe we won't.
It seems like, you know, that is also kind of
an unintended effect that they wanted to inflict here.
Speaker 17 (01:38:46):
Well, I mean, anytime you have to resort to litigation,
that that the process is part of the punishment, right,
So I think you're spot on to suggest there's more
going on. First of all, this law went into effect
immediately upon newsome signature. Immediately, there was no waiting period,
so there's no question they wanted it to affect this
election cycle right away. And then the second thing is
(01:39:07):
there's no assurance that going into a trial court in
California you're going to get the kind of relief that
we did. After all, it is California, and then you're
taking it up through the Ninth Circuit. I think the
fact that we got the relief that we did let
you know how egregious this violation is, how over the
line it is. But keep in mind we have to
continue to litigate this. California hasn't dropped it yet and
(01:39:30):
it will continue to go through the system. That's why
we're so thankful for babylon Bee and other clients who
are willing to stand up in this moment to say
I'm I'm going to take the arrows. I'm going to
take the distraction that it causes my business or what
I'm doing, because this is that important.
Speaker 1 (01:39:45):
Would it have gone this far if they were in
Texas and not California.
Speaker 17 (01:39:50):
If they were in Texas, the law would have never
have been passed.
Speaker 10 (01:39:53):
Oh now, sut, there, here's where we go.
Speaker 1 (01:39:55):
Now we got to start talking about getting you guys
to relocate and come to text us.
Speaker 17 (01:40:00):
Well, I think it's important to realize that this law
actually applies to all federal elections. So literally in Texas,
if you're in Texas and you repost something, you can
be sued under this California law in California. So this
doesn't just inhibit the rights of California citizens. Now they
might have a defense, you know, someone in Texas to
say the California court can't haul me in. But again,
(01:40:23):
they got to defend themselves, which is the point.
Speaker 1 (01:40:26):
Wow, seth, wait a minute, I take that back. You
caused problems from the Texas they go to California. That's that.
That is insane. This well, so let me ask you this,
how is this going to affect your movie? Because you
have a movie that drops today. It's you're taking a
very serious completely not satirical at all. Look at January
sixth and those you know, those warlords that were involved
(01:40:48):
in all of this, and the countless lives that were
lost that day. Uh, and it drops today. Congratulations on that.
And by the way, that movie you can go to
Babylon Bee dot com and you can you can access
the movie. It's uh, it's January sixth. The most the
most doubly stay most deadly is h are you so?
Were your thoughts? I mean, congrats on the movie.
Speaker 3 (01:41:06):
But hopefully it will and I think we do have
some relief.
Speaker 8 (01:41:10):
You know, a judge has looked at the law in
response to the initial lawsuit that was filed and had
did say that it was unconstitutional and that it hinders
free expression, particularly you know, humorous expression, and so I
you know, we will continue to try to push push
back and fight this through the system as it like,
(01:41:30):
like Kristin was saying, you know, it's not over yet.
There will be appeals and it will continue to go
through the system, and so we'll continue to fight that.
I think we will have ultimately prevail in that. And
we're certainly not going to engage in the censorship of
you know, holding back the jokes that we think need
to be told at the time they need to be told,
we have the right to tell them.
Speaker 3 (01:41:47):
So we're going to keep doing that.
Speaker 1 (01:41:48):
And I love that you fight back against explaining that
it's a joke. I'm so grateful that you do that,
because I hate it when people have to go, well,
it's guys, it's a joke. And this is why it's funny.
Speaker 8 (01:41:56):
You ruin the joke when you have to explain the joke.
I couldn't imagineblishing all our jokes with massive disclaimers saying
they're satire. You know, you just and the entire mechanism
of satirical humor relies on you not doing that.
Speaker 3 (01:42:09):
You're mimicking something that seems and feels.
Speaker 8 (01:42:11):
It's got to feel real, and that's what kind of
makes you do a double take at it, and it
pulls you in and then you get the punchline.
Speaker 3 (01:42:17):
But it doesn't work unless you do that.
Speaker 8 (01:42:19):
And so if we were to have to layer disclaimers
over our articles or put them throughout our videos, playing
the entire time the video is going, there's got to
be this massive disclaimer across the screen that will Also
it doesn't just mess up the joke also, it also
messes up the virality of it too, because people aren't
going to want to share content like that.
Speaker 3 (01:42:38):
People aren't going to want to engage with it.
Speaker 8 (01:42:39):
If anything, they would laugh at that and think that
was stupid, but it would definitely hurt your ability to
get reach with your jokes.
Speaker 1 (01:42:45):
Yeah. Absolutely, Well, the documentary which is very official, very
official documentary, not at all satirical, very serious. January sixth
the most deadliest day, and I love how it's never
forget to remember. Let me one quick question about this
for I let you go because I know we're ready
to wrap here. But what was the most important thing
that you learned, Seth when doing this documentary? What did
you learn that maybe no one else knows?
Speaker 8 (01:43:08):
You know, I wouldn't say that we learned anything secret
or confidential, but we I think maybe one of the things,
the things that we took away from this was that
we didn't really fully understand the extent to which this
whole thing has been blown out of proportion and deserves mockery.
Speaker 3 (01:43:22):
You know.
Speaker 8 (01:43:23):
We went into this realizing this is an issue that
needs parody. You know, there needs to be a satirical
documentary that's done on this. But just the more we
looked into it, the more we talked to people and
had conversations about this, it became that much more clear
to us how insane and the victims by the way,
the people who are engaged in you know, the law
fair against them, and the effort of the DOJ and
(01:43:43):
the FBI to go after people. It's just so much
more outrageous than we even realized. So that was probably
the key thing.
Speaker 1 (01:43:51):
Well, I can't wait to watch it, and it's out
now and you can access it over at babylonb dot com.
Slash January sixth, Seth Dylan is a pleasure. Thank you
so much for everything you do and making us all laugh.
And of course, Kristen Wagner, we really appreciate you as
well at the Lines for defending freedom. Thank you for
what you all do to preserve liberty and our rights.
We're grateful for you both. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
Speaker 12 (01:44:13):
Subscribe to the Dana Show podcast because who says you
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get your podcast.
Speaker 1 (01:44:24):
Welcome back to the program. I will be in Richmond,
Virginia next week Wednesday of next week at the WRVA
event Politics and Pines. My friend Brian Kilmead, a whole
bunch of good folks, are going to be there. It's
going to be at the Beacon Theater. I have no
idea what to expect. Trying to figure out what shoes
to wear. I don't know what shoes to wear, you
know what I mean. It's like, what kind of footwear
do you wear for something like that. I only have
like a beer once a year at Octoberfest because I
(01:44:46):
eat super healthy and fast and it's Octoberfest. So it's like,
I'm gona have to break that rule with the politics
and Pines thing. So I have information about it in
the newsletter that comes out, So make sure if you're
in the area sign up. I'll be back with you Monday.
God bless