All Episodes

September 30, 2024 104 mins
Hurricane Helene takes over 100 lives as parts of the South remain devastated. Biden says they have given all they can to help the victims. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announces Operation Blue Ridge to help Floridians stuck in the Blue Ridge Mountains. The DNC will send $2.5 million to more than 30 of its state and territorial parties. The Longshoreman’s Union plan to go on strike on the East Coast on strike on October 1st which could force an imminent shutdown of all cargo imports. The Biden Administration calls for “de-escalation” in the Middle East. Heritage Foundation’s Stephen Yates joins us to react to Biden laying on the beach while millions suffer from the devastation of Hurricane Helene while approving billions more for Ukraine.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Definitely worked for the nig Yes that in fact, I'm
trying to get me jacking up seven five bob.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Ground for.

Speaker 3 (00:17):
So many such a wide.

Speaker 1 (00:26):
Area, I mean, giving them all of the all everything
that we have rom the ground ahead of time.

Speaker 4 (00:35):
So we're working hard.

Speaker 5 (00:36):
Are there any more resources as the general government could be.

Speaker 4 (00:38):
Given them, No, we didn't.

Speaker 1 (00:40):
We have planned a significant amount of it, even though
they didn't ask for again, hadn't asked for again.

Speaker 6 (00:46):
Well, there's no more aid for you North Carolina. You're
Biden says, you're all good that uh yeah, yeah, that's.

Speaker 3 (00:57):
What you got. It's all good, right, you don't need
anything else. Wow.

Speaker 6 (01:03):
That was a he did speak a little bit earlier,
and we have some of those I'm not going to
take them just yet, but we have some of those
remarks that he gave. But that is the most shocking SoundBite.
And it's that's the SoundBite that's like going around the
world right now because he was asked about, you know,
additional additional aid and he's saying, well, no more aid

(01:29):
for North Carolina. After Hurricane Helene rips through go Lee.
I I mean, obviously we were praying and thinking about
everybody there We've got, you know, a lot of folks
that listen, you know, all across the country terrestrially, and
we have a lot of really good folks that you know,
they they they watch the show, they stream the show.

Speaker 3 (01:51):
We have our affiliates out there.

Speaker 6 (01:53):
And it's heartbreaking to watch some of this video footage
of this hurricane that came through. I mean, it's just devastating.
I've seen some pic I mean, I've seen flooding in
my life, but this is crazy, the stuff that we're
seeing coming out of North Carolina and even in Georgia
and Florida and everywhere else.

Speaker 3 (02:14):
Welcome to the program, Dana lash with you. We're at the.

Speaker 6 (02:17):
Top of this first hour and gonna walk you through
everything from over the weekend, and then we're gonna get
you set up because we've got a really big week.
We got the VP debate tomorrow and we're gonna well,
we'll get you all up to date with Poland and
everything else. So welcome, and again, you can watch Channel

(02:39):
three forty seven if you're listening, maybe you want to
watch the simulcast. Maybe you're in a place where you
can watch it, and you can also find us on
x AS well and rumble where the discussion is.

Speaker 3 (02:49):
So this.

Speaker 6 (02:53):
The latest of the hurricane. I mean, what one hundred
they're looking at one hundred fatalities. The number keeps increasing
because just even when I doing, you know, looking over
all of the latest with prep and everything for the show,
it was ninety when I was looking.

Speaker 3 (03:07):
Now risen to one hundred.

Speaker 6 (03:09):
They said one thousand people plus unaccounted for in North Carolina.
Some of the video that's been out there, like Asheville,
particularly the flooding, the destruction. It was a cat for
when it hit later finally downgraded to a tropical storm,
went through I mean all through the southern southeastern part

(03:29):
of the United States, seven states. There were at least
ninety five fatalities in six states, hundreds missing, more than
two million are without power. North Carolina apparently has taken
the brunt of this and in an online form and
this is in Buncombe County, thirty fatalities were reported and

(03:51):
six hundred reported missing via this online form. Built Moore
Village devastated, saying that they don't even recognize the area anymore.
Biden's declared it obviously major disaster area, making it eligible
to receive federal funding and they're in a I mean,
it's just horrible. And in Florida, Governor DeSantis said the

(04:16):
devastation was worse than that of Vidalia. And there's a
lot of destruction in Florida flooding that I read in
some places the flooding was something like what did they say?

Speaker 3 (04:27):
They were saying like fifteen.

Speaker 6 (04:28):
Feet, just crazy fifteen feet storm surge of excess of
fifteen feet, and said it was worse than Debbie, worse
than Adalia, super destructive. And it's always that storm surge
that's sometimes you know, people who are maybe unfamiliar with hurricanes,
and we have friends that are living in Florida for
the first time and friends that have moved to Georgia

(04:48):
recently and they are learning from the locals. That's the
surge is afterwards, that's like the worst, but just awful
historic flooding. I mean, just tons of people without power.
We've got friends who are in North Carolina that are
without power. Uh, and it's just you know, now it's
now it's time for the recovery efforts. Now it's the

(05:10):
recovery efforts. And of course you can't have any kind
of disaster without the politicization of it. I because that's
been happening. That's why this video is going gangbusters with
Biden that we opened with because he says this. He
comes out and says, well, there's not going to be
any more funding. You have to realize how difficult that
is for people to hear when they pay taxes and

(05:34):
then they're without power and they're not getting a lot
of help from their you know, the the FEDS, where
they pay their taxes, where there where's that return on
that investment coming back into a devastating period like this. Furthermore,
you also have more money being announced for places like Ukraine.

(05:54):
That's devastating when you're looking at all of these destroyed
areas and you're a resident in one of these destroyed areas,
and you're looking at our tax dollars going everywhere else
but the United States. And we're going to talk more
about government spending coming up. DeSantis gave and I think
you have this, Kane. He gave some remarks saying that
Florida's got it under control. North Carolina has been hurt

(06:17):
the worst. This is the remarks that he gave actually
just a little bit ago.

Speaker 3 (06:21):
Listen to these.

Speaker 7 (06:23):
What I would say, is the Florida we have it handled.
We got to prove for the individual syss things we've wanted.
We have what we need now. Obviously, you know there
may be additional things that will last for in the future.
It depends on how things shake out. But I think

(06:44):
most of the efforts should be in western North Carolina
right now because you still have active rescues that need
to take place. I mean, just think about It's almost
like if this area were totally cut off and every
road was destroyed and all this, but you can still
get places by boat there.

Speaker 4 (07:00):
You can't do that.

Speaker 7 (07:01):
You're in and I just think they should really said,
the federal government should focus on that. We're running rescue flights.
We're happy to do it, but I know the federal
government has more assets than the state of Florida has,
so there should not be anybody left behind in those communities.

Speaker 6 (07:18):
Good well, and what hurricane was it that knocked out
that bridge near Santa bell And within what a couple
of weeks that bridge was rebuilt.

Speaker 3 (07:27):
It was crazy Florida.

Speaker 6 (07:29):
I mean, Florida's you know, they're used to dealing with
with hurricanes, obviously, but I don't know how you can
watch states that are that are afflicted, you know, you
have seasons like hurricane season or a tornado season, and
think that anybody but someone who is fiscally conservative could
run those states. I just I don't know, or someone

(07:52):
who at least is able to you know, a Republican.

Speaker 3 (07:56):
I don't know how you can.

Speaker 6 (07:57):
Look at states that deal with these seasons and think
that anybody but someone who is fiscally conservative i e.
Responsible and also able to delegate and multitask and you know,
find the need fill the need. I don't know how
you could think anybody but those people with that limited
government ideology and state empowerment ideology can handle this.

Speaker 3 (08:18):
I just don't now.

Speaker 6 (08:19):
I wanted to point out something too, because I saw
this online and this was the two things on this.
I'm sure you guys have seen this. Also, this was
a an It was an order that was put out
by Donald Hagen, who was chief of police in the
city of Okechobee, Florida, which I'm told is was a

(08:42):
little bit further out from the hurricane's path. So a
lot of people were very confused as to why Don
Hagen felt the need to do this. So Don Hagen
city's designated emergency Management official. He put out this notice right,
and he put it out on September twenty sixth, says
it was in in effectual September twenty seventh, and he

(09:02):
was saying that they were for prohibiting the following acts
for the duration of this declared state of emergency, saying
the sale or offer to sell with or without consideration
any AMMO gun or firearm anything like that, not going
to allow it. Intentional display by a store in any
store shop of any AMMO or gun or firearm any

(09:23):
size description, not going to allow it. The intentional possession
in a public place of a firearm by any person
except a duly authorized law enforcement official, military person, et cetera,
not allowed.

Speaker 3 (09:33):
He signed it.

Speaker 6 (09:34):
A lot of people were confused about this because they
you know, and there you have to remember, there are
a lot of people who remember what it was like
after Hurricane Katrina when a similar order like this came through.
So my understanding is it was pretty much the second
that this went out and was brought to the governor's

(09:54):
Governor DeSantis his administration's attention that his administration reached out
to Hagen and we're like, nah, this is not flying
because apparently it's not even there's not even a legal
statute that they can cite in order to give this order,
So it's not even a legal order and it has

(10:16):
no legal standing. And the governor's administration was saying, yeah,
you're not doing this. Of all the times, you're not
doing this now particularly, and so it is not in effect,
according to my understanding, So they voluntarily Hagen voluntarily lifted
lifted that order after they got a call from the

(10:37):
DeSantis administration and they were saying that there's no legal
authority that you had, there's no statute that supports this,
and you're you're not curtailing the Second Amendment rights of
people following a hurricane for the love not going to
do it. A lot of people were very confused, and
I you know, I was. It was very interesting. So
that's not in effect, and that I mean, it's a

(11:00):
lot of people were shocked that anyone even tried. Why
would anybody even because when you think about this, think
about like the looting, and I have some stories on
that as well, because apparently people who crossed in illegally
across the southern border apparently were detained after looting in
some of these hurricane affected areas, and we're going to
have that story coming.

Speaker 3 (11:20):
Up as well.

Speaker 6 (11:21):
So that's the latest out of Florida, and we're following
all of the hurricane, all of this, the aftermath of this.
We also got to jump into some, obviously the election stuff,
because we have a vice presidential debate tomorrow. The VP
is being criticized current VP now Democrat presidential nominee. She
said she posted this photo of herself and she's sitting

(11:44):
on an airplane. It looks like AI, doesn't it. This
doesn't even look like a real photo. She said that
she was briefed by FEMA and that she is in
content act with, you know, all of these ongoing rescuing
recovery efforts in North Carolina. She's sitting there looking at

(12:05):
a blank piece of paper and she's got an ear button,
but it's not plugged into her phone. It's a really
weird photo, blank paper, The phone is not plugged in,
and you can see it that it's not plugged in.
I don't know how who is advising her, who thought

(12:26):
that this was a good look. So she made that's
pretty much her only statement that she's made so far.
She was in a fundraiser in Vegas and Joe Biden
wasn't he at his beach house? I think he said
his beach house over the weekend. And none of that
is going over well with voters. We're going to jump
into all of that. We're also going to get into

(12:46):
some of the latest polling. We have some more election.
We've got some of the remarks with the candidates over
the weekend. Spending, government spending, we got culture, the latest
with Israel, the longshoreman's strike. How is that going to
affect you? How is it going to affect your packages?
And how long will it take to resolve? Because it's October.

(13:07):
I mean it's going to be October tomorrow. We're going
to be in like the holiday period right soon. How
long is this going to go?

Speaker 8 (13:19):
Hi?

Speaker 9 (13:19):
I'm Lillian, an English major at Hillsdale College. Here's Hillsdale President,
doctor Larry Arne with a Constitution minute.

Speaker 5 (13:28):
America's founders believed in a separation of church and state,
in that the country was not to have an official
religion or an official sect, but that did not mean
that government was to be hostile to religion or even
indifferent to religion, as many today argue. In fact, America's
founding document, the Decrice of Independence, includes both a reference
to God as the author of the laws of nature

(13:50):
and a confident assertion that human beings are endowed by
their creator with certain inalienable rights. Far from being hostile
or indifferent to religion, Erica's founders understood the theology of
the Declaration to be an essential part of the education
of citizens.

Speaker 9 (14:06):
To learn more and get a free pocket constitution, visit
constitutionminute dot com.

Speaker 4 (14:11):
This Constitution Minute was furnished by Hillsdale College. And now
all of the news you would probably miss, it's time
for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 6 (14:25):
So first, uh, the guy who plays Shazam. The actor
who plays Shazam came out and endorsed Trump, Zachary Levi.
He was giving a speech in Michigan on this Reclaim
America tour, and he came out and said that his
parents were Kennedy Democrats and that he's endorsing Trump. Very interesting.
You're going to totally like blacklist this dude like asap. Yeah,

(14:48):
he's never going to work again, his career's over. I
got this just for this headline, just for this word. Actually,
a really discussing video shows a pooh cano blowing thirty
three feet in the air, covering pedestrians and cars. Said
one individual quote, I'm drenched in pooh. It's disgusting. Hey,
if you guessed this was in China.

Speaker 3 (15:09):
You're right.

Speaker 6 (15:10):
It's totally exactly where that happened. So this is basically
like their entire you know, economy and style of government
all can be described as the poo cano. Literally, it
exploded in the middle of the street eleven am Wednesday
of last week, newly installed sewage pipes in Nanning, a
southern region of China. It just blew up and it

(15:31):
shot thirty three feet in the air, splattered everyone every body.

Speaker 3 (15:35):
There's dash cam.

Speaker 6 (15:36):
Footage, there's it's disgusting people riding bicycles. Oh and and
it wasn't just liquids. Yep, yeah, it was not just liquids.
There were some solids in there. It's disgusting. You needed
to know that. It's very important news. That's what China
has to deal with. Oh great, there's more urine bottles

(15:58):
in Hawkins Hall raised health concerns after they sat for
over a month.

Speaker 3 (16:02):
What in the world is this so that?

Speaker 6 (16:07):
What in the world this is so gross. So this
was the hawk Is Hall. This is what I'm purdue.
They said that the twelfth floor a common room. There
were water bottles of urine. Nobody knew how they got
there and they ended up having to get I mean,
this is like has Matt stuff. This is college kids. Yes,
I don't know if it's a prank. They're apparently investigating this.

Speaker 3 (16:27):
This is so gross.

Speaker 6 (16:28):
Chris Christofferson eighty eight years old. I can't believe he's
eighty eight has passed away. One of the Highwaymen country
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Speaker 2 (17:47):
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Speaker 6 (17:57):
This is Apparently I Gotcha by a Green Flow, the
theme song of Floridians who are Stuck in the Blue
Ridge Mountains right now. Apparently that's the thing Floridians do
this time of years. They go to the Blue Ridge Mountains,
and the Florida government, Florida State government, was like, are
you a Floridian and are you stuck in the Blue
Ridge Mountains?

Speaker 10 (18:16):
Gotcha?

Speaker 6 (18:17):
So they're getting them. I'm not even kidding you. This
is literally what's happening. I was reading this it said
Governor Ron Decantis launches Operation Blue Ridge. I'm not I
just think it's like they, like some of these Southeastern
states that are not democrat ran, It's like they already
got a plane for everything. Like I'm just now learning
that this is how Floridians do. Fall They go to

(18:38):
the Blue Ridge Mountains and they're stuck there, and Florida
has already got a plane for it. So they have
it's literally called Operation Blue Ridge, and it's a multi
state agency response to get Floridians that are stuck in
the Blue Ridge Mountains. I didn't know that they said that.
I mean, it's literally a major relief expedition to other states.

Speaker 3 (19:00):
They just got hit by a cat.

Speaker 6 (19:01):
For dude, if I stub my toe and like fall
down and drop something, I'm done for the day, like
they get hit by a cat for and they're like,
all right, we got all this situated. You stuck in
Blue Ridge Mountains, I gotcha. We're coming up to come
get you. And it's like settled.

Speaker 3 (19:17):
This is wild. They got it all set. Man.

Speaker 6 (19:20):
They're sending ten truckloads of water, over one hundred star links,
a communication unit, Strike Team, one All Hazards Incident Management Team,
and a Telecommunications Emergency Response Task Force. And it's they're using.
This is a long list of the things that they're

(19:41):
using here. The Florida Division of Emergency Management, Florida State Guard,
Florida National Guard, Florida Department of Transportation, Florida Fishing wildfe Commission,
Florida Enforcement Coordination Task Course, Lawenforcement Strike Team, all of
these they're all coming together launching Operation Blue Ridge to
assist Floridian seeking rescue in western North Carolina Blue Ridge
Mountains and Tennessee Valley. And you can find it at
Florida Disaster dot org slash Operation Blue Ridge. I'll be dang,

(20:05):
I will be dang. I mean, this is like, this
is wild. So they were already where was Biden.

Speaker 4 (20:11):
By the way on the beach?

Speaker 3 (20:13):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (20:15):
Correct, that's right, I mean all weekend, literally, like I
don't look, I get that people in elected office they
can multitask, you know, they can go out and eat
with their families and do whatever. Biden though, this wasn't
a one off legit and it was what wasn't it
Since Thursday? Actually he has legit been had like an

(20:36):
extended weekend, and he's been pictured. I have like five
or six different images of him on the beach doing
what Trump said he would never do, sleeping in a
chair on the beach, literally asleep, mouth catch and flies
on the beach. That was what Biden. And then where
was Harris. She was at a ritzy Las Vegas fundraiser
and she was just doing fundraisers. So it's not like

(20:58):
they went out and had a meet with their family
and they got back to response or they were in
touch the whole time. I mean, he was four hours.
Because the press sits out there and watches him, he
sits there for hours hours. Nobody know aids coming up, nothing,
He's just sitting there for hours on the beach. You
wouldn't even know that he's the President of the United States.
And a major Category four hurricane came and hit in

(21:19):
multiple states and you have one hundred fatalities, you wouldn't
even know it. With hundreds of people missing, you wouldn't
even know that's what he was doing. So there's a
big difference there. You know, no one would grudge him
a meal out with his family or friends, but all
weekend on the beach and not in communication. Today was

(21:40):
the first time that we heard him say anything. Really,
you're the president of the United States. Come on, it's
just weird. I mean, I I don't know. I mean,
it's uh, just a massively, massively, massively different, massively different response. Now,

(22:03):
I wanted to get into some of this. This I'm
just saying could have an effect on polling, and this
is the time of the show that I always like
to touch on this stuff for you. Got some new
stuff coming out about Pennsylvania. Now, this one is a
Trialfiger group pull and it has Trump forty seven Harris

(22:25):
forty five. Now this goes back and forth. I think
they're dead tied in Pennsylvania. Both of these are with
all of the surveys that I have seen, And it
doesn't matter if it's Harris that's up a few or
Trump that's up a few they're all within the margin
of error, so they're all tied basically. And the pull

(22:45):
this up a couple of other polling issues in Hispanic
and Latino voters. A new survey this is NBC, CNBC, Telemundo,
where there is a plus nineteen. It's a gain amongst
Latino voters with Trump, which is I mean, obviously that's

(23:09):
a significant increase since twenty twenty. Interesting. So just put
that on the table election betting nods. It still has
Harris at fifty one, Trump forty seven. But again you
always got to think three points for errors. And I

(23:29):
just think that betting is not an actual survey of voters,
but it's an indication of what prognosticators think rather so
some of the latest with this, and then I wanted
to touch on a very important story here.

Speaker 3 (23:43):
This is Ohio Capital Journal.

Speaker 6 (23:46):
I said in the very beginning of this election cycle
that Democrats are really good to raise the money, really
good to raise the money. They're really good at delegating
cashed and they they see where their holes are, they
see where their deficits are, they just cover it in money.

Speaker 3 (24:03):
They're really good at that.

Speaker 6 (24:04):
Republican's not as much and Republicans tend to wait to
like the last minute to do something with a cash infusion.
So this is Ohio Capital Journal. This kind of goes
along with what I've been following all election cycle. So
the National Democrat Entity, they're about to send millions of
dollars to state parties because they are so flushed with cash.

Speaker 3 (24:22):
They have no idea what to do with it. They
have no clue what to do with it.

Speaker 6 (24:25):
They have so many millions raised, they have no idea
what to do with it at this point. So they're
shoring up their infrastructure, particularly battleground states, So they're looking
at sending anywhere from two and a half to three
million dollars to where they need to get the most
bang for their buck. They for the first time in

(24:48):
I think the party's history, they've contributed. So they have
different chapters. Some states have multiple chapters of the DNC,
and they have all fifty seven state and territorial not states,
but the chapters in the states, so there's fifty seven total.
They don't they've contributed to all of them for the
first time because they're so flush with cash. I have

(25:10):
no idea why anybody who want to give these people money.
By the way, you saw what's happening with the economy,
so they are really looking to shore up. They're also
looking to look they're targeting state races as well, so
it's not just going to be congressional and senatorial races.
So like, for instance, in my home state of Missouri,
they're sending in a ton of cash to try to

(25:31):
break up the GOP super majorities in the legislature because
Missouri has a GEOB has a Republican super majority. So
they're looking at doing that. They're looking at the and
Maryland the state party's mail program they're targeting that they're doing.
They're spending like seventy five thousand dollars just for get
out the votes in South Carolina. They are targeting in Virginia,

(25:56):
they're doing another huge get out the vote campaign that
they're doing that they're spending you know, one hundred thousand
dollars on. They're doing it in battleground states are obviously
getting the most, but this is what they're getting ready
to inject. All of these different little groups. They're get
out the vote groups their battlegrounds. They're getting ready to

(26:16):
do all their final media buys. They're hitting all of this,
and they're flushed with cash and they got the money to.

Speaker 3 (26:22):
Do it now.

Speaker 6 (26:24):
In the weeks prior, we've talked about the Republicans get
out the vote efforts and how some of the stuff
I've seen this cycle is very, very similar to what
I saw in twenty twelve, and it backfired on Republicans
majorly in twenty twelve. I don't think that people would
ever forget. And I had a number of friends, by
the way, who took the day off work on election

(26:45):
Day and they were going out making sure that people voted.

Speaker 3 (26:48):
It was all part of the outreach program.

Speaker 6 (26:50):
And there was the software that the Republican Party was launching,
and it was looking at those people who had not
gone out to vote yet and matching up these you know,
campaigners making sure that these these you know, ballot work
are not ballot workers, but people getting people to go
to the polls cast the ballot, plugging them in with

(27:10):
these individuals that had been identified as voters but they
hadn't voted yet, and the software failed, like it didn't work.
They didn't test that, they didn't do anything before election day,
and I had more friends that I could count that
were with us through all the Tea party stuff that
were livid because they could not They took the day
of work to go and get make sure people were voting,

(27:30):
and this failed. And I really do think that are
hurt Republicans. And the reason I make that comparison is
because they have It doesn't seem uniform to me. There
are different groups that the RNC is partnering with to
get out the vote in certain states. So one group
may have these three states, another group may have another
couple of states, and from what I'm understanding, there's not

(27:53):
a lot of discussion with each other. There's not a
lot of cohesion. And some are some longtime Republican activists
have always been on the ground that have been out there, canvassing,
been out there, door knocking, all of that. They are
not seeing that outreach and it's worrying them, especially in
some of these battleground states. I'm a little nervous about
that because it always comes down to get out the vote,

(28:13):
and I don't know why Republicans always fall behind Democrats
on that Republicans have a superior product. I are they
just apathetic because they feel like people will recognize that
and and realize it themselves and then just of their
own volition go out and vote. Because people get distracted,

(28:35):
people get busy. You got you, you have to connect
with them. I've never understood why it's Republicans that have
always struggled with get out the vote. I've never understood.
That doesn't make any sense to me. But that's where
we're at. So they're they're looking at spending that kind
of money and some in those in those states, some

(28:56):
of the state races also are an indication of party health.
In Virginia, the governor's race is in a dead heat.
You have the lieutenant governor there win some seers. Who
is a great candidate. Lieutenant governor wins some sears who
is running. She is in a dead heat with Democrat
Representative Abigail Spamberger. Now win some seers. You know she's

(29:19):
the Second Amendment LG and because this is important to
Democrats until it's not. She is a black lieutenant governor.
She would be making some serious history. They're tied at
thirty nine percent. This is according to the University of
Mary Washington Center for Leadership and Media Studies. Twenty two
percent say they're undecided or did not plan to vote.
Or decline to how are you undecided? At this point, again,

(29:39):
voters have an obligation. And then in Ohio, the Republican
challenger opens up a lead over Democrat Charad Brown, an
Ohio senate race. I've met Sharad Brown. He is one
of the meanest, nastiest dudes I have ever had the
misfortune of meeting in public. I one time asked him, Senator,
may I ask you.

Speaker 3 (29:59):
A ques uh?

Speaker 6 (30:00):
He was sitting there taking questions from everybody. Someone whispered
to him who I was, and he looked me in
the face, pointed at me and screamed in my face.

Speaker 3 (30:08):
This is in Rhode Island.

Speaker 6 (30:10):
He was one of the rudest people, meanest people I've
ever met in my life. And I got major abusive
vibes from this dude. He was really rude. I've met
rude lawmakers before, and I've been yelled at by lawmakers.
This guy was over the top. And so he's trailing
Bernie Moreno. Forty eight to forty six. It's actually in

(30:32):
the latest surveys, it's just outside of their margin of error.
Very interesting going on in Ohio. Very interesting stuff. Now,
a few other things I want to make sure that
we're touching on because we got some of the other stuff.
We're going to touch on as well, the Harrison Second
Amendment thing, because her staff is trying to clean this
up so bad. Her comments on the second event, particularly

(30:55):
when she had said this came from a two thousand
and seven video we played it last week, or she
went out there and was saying that, uh oh yeah,
you know, just because you're on a fire arm doesn't
mean we can't come into your house and look and
see what you got. Now, that's getting her into a
lot of trouble, and so her staff is having to
clean up those remarks. So we're gonna touch on that,

(31:15):
and then we're also going to talk coming up about
Trump's desire for a purge his remarks, so we'll discuss
all of that coming up. We got the latest on
the hurricane, and in our second hour we're going to
get into the longshoreman strike East Coast ports. Everyone's preparing
to strike? What does that mean? How long is it
gonna last? Where's poot booty juice? Is he not the

(31:37):
Transportation secretary? Is this not part of his whole thing?
Kine in this part of his whole thing? Well, where's
he at? I don't even seen him, mate, Like normally
he loves the spotlight.

Speaker 3 (31:47):
Right, where is he?

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Speaker 2 (32:59):
Get the load down on the latest news with a
side of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to the Dana
Show podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 4 (33:10):
Like Sands through the Hole Glance. So are the days
of the United States?

Speaker 12 (33:15):
Important part and an interesting part of how people have
talked about your role here is how your role has
reshaped the perception of masculinity. And I'm not sure you've
planned on that, but you are an incredibly supportive spouse.
Has that been an evolution for you? And do you
think that's part of the role you might play as
first gentleman.

Speaker 13 (33:34):
It's funny. I've started to think a lot about this.
I've always been like this. My dad was like this, and.

Speaker 6 (33:41):
Like, how do you redefine masculinity? Well, let me tell
you what you do.

Speaker 3 (33:46):
Jhen.

Speaker 6 (33:46):
You screw around on your wife and you impregnate your
friend's daughter.

Speaker 3 (33:51):
That's how that works. That's is that really how? I
just think that that's some that's a goofy what a
like a that's so dumb.

Speaker 6 (34:05):
It is actually their nanny, sorry, as a kid's nanny,
screw around on your wife and you impregnate your younger nanny.
That's jen Zaki. That's how you redefine masculinity. It's like,
why is that not brought up as an example of toxicity?
But you know, chivalrous behavior is always the example of
toxicity that dumb chicks bring up as a way to
shame men. I don't get it, Doug Amhoff really redefining masculinity.

(34:29):
You broke your covenant with your first wife, with the
woman that you brought in to help raise the children
that you had with your first wife. I just I
just don't think that that that's so lame. I know
we're not doing that. And then following up to that,
what does this mean? Audio somebody twenty nine? What is
a proud wife guy?

Speaker 4 (34:51):
Sir?

Speaker 12 (34:51):
There's a pop culture phrase wife guy, which you've kind
of been known.

Speaker 11 (34:55):
That's are you familiar with this?

Speaker 13 (34:56):
I've heard about it.

Speaker 12 (34:57):
Has held a wife guy a proud wife. Guy, how
do you feel about that?

Speaker 13 (35:01):
Well, if I do something annoying Nakamala and she gets upset,
I'll just show her that article.

Speaker 6 (35:06):
I'm right, shirt, I think that's just called a husband.
I hate society. Yeah, like that's like a big thing.

Speaker 3 (35:16):
What's a wife?

Speaker 8 (35:17):
Guy?

Speaker 6 (35:17):
I am so done with this, Like it's even in
the New York Times and it's just called a husband.

Speaker 3 (35:23):
Stop that.

Speaker 6 (35:24):
So many people have unhealthy ideas of what relationships are
because they have no they're not in relationships, much less marriages,
much less long term commitments.

Speaker 3 (35:32):
So coming up in our second hour.

Speaker 6 (35:35):
Should we have a purge? I mean, was he speaking seriously?

Speaker 3 (35:39):
Was Trump? Did he actually make that? Was it a
serious proposal?

Speaker 6 (35:43):
Because you can't turn that off right once you tell
me I can do whatever I want. There's no put
in that monster back there. That's not gonna happen. So
how do you deal with that?

Speaker 3 (35:51):
At large? Also the longshoreman strike? What does this mean?

Speaker 6 (35:54):
I mean we're gonna have major disruption. How prevalent will
it be?

Speaker 3 (35:59):
How long will it last? And where's poop pooty juice?

Speaker 6 (36:02):
This is literally for a guy who seeks the spotlight
isn't this the time when he should come out and
seek it?

Speaker 3 (36:09):
I don't know, I'm just curious. We got all that
more coming up. Second hour. Stick with us.

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twenty for twenty percent off. Welcome to the second hour
of the radio program Dana Lash with you Channel three
forty seven Direct TVs, where you can also watch the simulcast.

Speaker 3 (37:35):
You might already be watching it, so you know this.

Speaker 6 (37:37):
We're also at Rumble that's where the chat happens, and
you can find this stream at X two. All right,
so the longshoreman's strike, I said last hour, we were
going to touch on this because we've all been through
supply chain crisis, a supply chain crisis before, and we
all we've all had issues with shipping and everything due
to everything that happened with.

Speaker 3 (37:59):
The ronavirus.

Speaker 6 (38:01):
Now, if you liked how Biden and Harris handled immigration
at the southern border, you're gonna love this one.

Speaker 3 (38:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (38:09):
Well, it's the supply chain, it's a port strike. And
it's gonna get bad. That's all I gotta say. It's
gonna be massively disruptive. The it's gonna be East coast
ports longshoremen are preparing to strike from New England to Texas.
The strike is set to happen early Tuesday, the first

(38:32):
walkout of its kind in almost half a century, freezing
commercial shipping on a massive scale, and it would be
the biggest disruption. This is how heavy. This is the
biggest disruption to the flow of goods in and out
of the country since the height of the pandemic. So
even a short lived work stoppage would snarl shipping and

(38:54):
create havoc in supply chains for weeks. So everything from
cars to electronics, food to furniture would be stuck on
ships off shore. And according to analysts, each day that
a strike less, it could cost the US economy up

(39:15):
to a billion dollars.

Speaker 3 (39:17):
A billion dollars. That's a lot.

Speaker 6 (39:21):
And you have Gina Romando as the Commerce Secretary. She
was asked about this audio sound by thirty six, Well,
what is she hearing? If doc workers striking it goes
on longer than a week, what are you what are
you prepared to do.

Speaker 10 (39:36):
Listen, where have you been kind of focused on hearing
on what would happen if the strike goes let's say
longer than a week.

Speaker 14 (39:46):
Again, I have not been very focused on that.

Speaker 6 (39:51):
So Gina Romando, who is literally the Commerce secretary, hasn't
been focused on it at all.

Speaker 3 (40:00):
Booty juice is nowhere to be found.

Speaker 6 (40:02):
Okay, Well, I mean who the hell is in charge?
Oh well, let's see Biden? What is Biden said? Biden
was asked about the strikes. Now, he was asked about
the strikes in Yemen. This is what he said to
the strikes in Yemen audio somebody seven.

Speaker 4 (40:27):
Mister president, will you deploy more US troops to the
Middle East?

Speaker 2 (40:33):
Mister presidents to know who buns to bomb?

Speaker 1 (40:37):
Any comment on the strikes in Yemen?

Speaker 10 (40:39):
Mister president, he was asked about the strikes in Yemen,
and he says, well, I'm supporting a collective bargaining effort.

Speaker 6 (40:58):
Oh my gosh. Well, so that's the guy who's running
the country. Okay, So there's that running the conry in
air quotes.

Speaker 3 (41:11):
So there's that, all.

Speaker 6 (41:13):
Right, So we have no idea really what our commerce secretaries. Now,
I've not been following that that was embarrassing. This is
like the every actually, every single time she's asked a
question she does not know about that. What was the
last like several things we've played. That's all the soundbites
we have for her, like I don't know about that.
I don't know she Mariah carries it.

Speaker 3 (41:33):
I don't know her. I don't know her. So this
is just weeks before the presidential campaign. Huh. You'd think
Democrats would want to solve this. You would think they would.

Speaker 6 (41:45):
And Harris, who's the vice president, hasn't said anything realized
that as as uh what's his face, walls, balls, whatever,
Tim Walls as he hit come on, it is an
honest mistake. As he hits the stage during the VP
debate tomorrow with JD. Vans, that's when apparently the port
shutdown begin. They yeah, that's when the port shutdowns begin.

(42:11):
I wonder if that's gonna.

Speaker 3 (42:12):
Come up tomorrow.

Speaker 6 (42:13):
My gosh, Tim Wallas is going to try so hard
to be the everyman. We're going to talk about this.
That'll be our next topic here. But it's the International
Longshoremen's Association forty seven thousand members in the US Maritime Alliance.
They represent container carriers and port operators. All their discussions
have installed since summer. Summer. The labor contract expires tonight,

(42:35):
so beginning at twelve oh one, they could go on strike.
And the longshoremen they load and unload cargo at ports,
they work the cranes that haul those contain Those are
actually super fun to watch. They big cranes that haul
the containers on and off the cargo ships. They maintain
the equipment. This is important stuff. And they said that
the ports that they're expecting to close are major mariortime

(43:00):
hubs in New York, Baltimore, Norfolk, Savannah, and Houston. Now
they're on the West coast. Because some people have asked, well,
is it affecting the West coast too, it's not, because
they are represented by a separate union that they had
a contract agreement already last year. So the ports like

(43:22):
in the North in the Pacific Northwest and in California,
they cannot They're not going to be affected by those.

Speaker 3 (43:29):
But but.

Speaker 6 (43:32):
They could say, in solidarity, we're going to refuse to
handle cargo.

Speaker 3 (43:39):
Right now. I don't know if that would put them
at odds with.

Speaker 12 (43:43):
There.

Speaker 6 (43:44):
I mean, they just negotiated and got a contract a
year ago. So wouldn't that kind of be spit in
the face of that? I don't know, don't you think so, Caine,
is that spinning in the face of it?

Speaker 3 (43:55):
Are you spinning?

Speaker 6 (43:56):
I mean, for like on solidarity, even though they got
a nice contract a year ago. Would that be spitting
in the face of it?

Speaker 3 (44:00):
I don't know. How's that interpreted?

Speaker 4 (44:02):
Yeah, I mean, I guess it could be interpreted both ways.

Speaker 6 (44:05):
But I would just be like if I was a
crane operator, to me, it would be a sad day
when I couldn't operate a crane. I mean, I don't
I've never done that, But to me, it's just like
a giant version of that, you know, the toy thing.

Speaker 4 (44:17):
And the fact that this strike, this strike is even
being considered right now, shows that there's actually been a
long history of grievances that they've had and it has
not been addressed by anyone, let alone the administration.

Speaker 6 (44:30):
Yeah, so will they have no excuse me, they have
no way right now, nothing from the administration at handling this.
So they look at it's the International Longshoreman's Association, So
it's East Coast thirty six Ports East and Gulf coast
and it looks like everybody may have to divert to

(44:51):
west coast.

Speaker 3 (44:53):
That's good. You know, how much more expensive that would be?
So think of it.

Speaker 6 (44:56):
They would have to depending on how long it goes
on with East coast ports, shippers then may have to
divert to West coast. Think about how much more expensive
that makes something that if it has to be diverted
all the way around the other side of the country
and then to get it to wherever you are, that's
going to be that's prices are going to skyrocket. And

(45:17):
how does that affect an economy that is already dealing
with Biden inflation? I mean, what about factories that need
parts and things like that? I mean this there was
a pull this up. This is a CNN piece that
said there are shortages, higher prices even you know, factory
parts everything. It could actually disrupt not just you know,

(45:43):
more than just obviously consumption, but it could disrupt plant
operations if it halts the delivery of supplies and parts
for other factories. It's in New York and New Jersey,
they're both affected by this. That's the third largest by
volume of cargo handled. And it also and now listen

(46:04):
to this. It also affects places like Port Wilmington and Delaware.
Support we Wilmington and Delaware. That's the banana port that
brings in the biggest share of bananas to the United States.
One point two million metric tons of bananas come through
that port. Ninety percent of cherries, imported cherries, eighty two
percent of hot peppers, eighty percent of imported chocolate come

(46:26):
through all the containers offloaded at those ports, according to
the American Farm Bureau. Now it's getting scarier. Now here's
where we're getting scary. This is where we're getting scary, guys.
Eighty percent gain of imported beer, wine and whiskey and
scotch in sixty percent of rum arriving at East and

(46:47):
Gulf Coast ports eighty and sixty.

Speaker 8 (46:54):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (46:56):
Yeah, that's the top import at the Port of New
York in New Jersey.

Speaker 6 (47:00):
We're gonna have to work with wand to like come
up with some kind of rum running operation, a rum
running operation from San Juan to Dallas.

Speaker 4 (47:10):
I think you've already said too much.

Speaker 6 (47:12):
I didn't say that, I was just speculating. Don't make
me talk about the purge. Oh, speaking of the purge.
Hold up, was he serious or was he joking Trump
with the purge stuff? I'm curious. Here's why I bring
it up. So he was giving remarks on Sunday. It

(47:33):
was in Erie, Pennsylvania. I was there with Mike Kelly
and he was talking about crime and illegal immigration.

Speaker 3 (47:39):
This is audio sound by five. This is what he said. Listen,
he's a great congressman.

Speaker 15 (47:44):
Would you say, Mike that, if you were in charge,
you would say, oh, please, don't touch them, don't touch them,
let them rob your store. Let all these shows go
out of business. Right, they don't pay rent. That did
the city to the whole. It's a chain of events.
It's so bad.

Speaker 3 (47:58):
One rough out, and I mean real.

Speaker 15 (48:01):
Rough the word will get out and it will end immediately.

Speaker 3 (48:07):
So everyone's like, he's talking about the purge.

Speaker 6 (48:10):
And all these leftist media outlets, the same ones who
had nothing to say when people were talking about eliminating
Trump et cetera.

Speaker 3 (48:16):
They were like, these are dangerous.

Speaker 6 (48:18):
I actually don't. I don't trust them to determine what
is or isn't dangerous. They said, oh, he's dead, this
is dangerous. And he's talking about a purge, And well,
I think he has to be joking because it wouldn't work.
I mean, A, it's not constitutional. B, it's just not
something that would work. And see, remember what I told you, Like,
if you give me the green light to act and

(48:39):
pull some shenan against, to act up and pull shenan against,
I'm never going to stop.

Speaker 3 (48:44):
How do you turn that off? Right? How do you
turn that off?

Speaker 6 (48:47):
And also doesn't all of this operate kind of under
the assumption that there are more good guys than bad guys?
But do you know why the bad guys persist because
they're like really good at being bad guys, professional bad guys.

Speaker 3 (49:01):
You know what I mean?

Speaker 6 (49:02):
Like, you're not gonna out criminal a criminal because they
thought of it, you know what I'm saying, Like, that's
just not It's like when your parents go, don't think
of it because I've already done all of it before, right,
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (49:12):
But Cam brings up a really good point too.

Speaker 6 (49:15):
Then what happens if they're like, Okay, we did this,
now let's introduce martial law and keep it forever, just
saying so, no, I don't I don't like giving I
don't like suspending rule of law like that in a
republic no matter what.

Speaker 4 (49:29):
Government loves to do it under the guise of emergencies.

Speaker 6 (49:32):
I know, but that doesn't make it okay, okay, so
that we're just gonna just just just disregard. Do you
realize that the reason we have a republic still is
because we have good people who observe rule of law
and we at least operate with the understanding that there's
a republic and we live in it. I mean, I
get the Democrats don't, but we still do and that's

(49:53):
what's saving it. But you can't you once you allow
everyone to just you know, go through a purge, you're
never gonna stop that. There are gonna be people who
are like, no, I like this too much. I mean,
you give me an opportunity to be a war lord,
I'm gonna be a war lord. I'm just saying, it's
just I'm really I'm really good at the game of risk.

(50:13):
I may in my mind be like six ' ten
and weigh five hundred pounds in my mind and not
in reality, but I am really good with strategy and
I can at least, you know, figure out some stuff.
I'm just saying, like, don't don't let those people have
that You're never gonna stop that once you start it.
He said he'd put Mike Kelly in front of it.
I don't think Mike Kelly was aware of that. He

(50:35):
would have Mike Kelly be like the purge minister. Oh boy, yeah,
you can't turn it off. And then you invite the
government to come in and go, oh martial law. Okay, Oh,
now we're gonna have to have all these strict laws
and oversight. You guys, you want to suspend the rule
of law. We're gonna have to have new laws now.
The ones we like, I don't want to give them
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especially if you live in areas where they try to
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Speaker 3 (50:59):
Always advocate for people to carry.

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Speaker 4 (52:03):
Now all of the news you would probably miss. It's
time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 3 (52:08):
All right.

Speaker 6 (52:09):
So apparently Earth is going to have a temporary mini
moon for a few months.

Speaker 3 (52:14):
Oh, I like it? Is that going to be like
moo dang a mini hippo. I'm obsessed with that hippo.

Speaker 6 (52:19):
Earth is going to have a temporary mini moon only
for two months though. It's actually an asteroid. It's about
the size of a school bus. It's thirty three feet
and it whizzes by Earth. Actually it's alread whizzing by
right now. It's out there whizzing. It's going to be
temporarily trapped by our planet's gravity.

Speaker 3 (52:36):
And orbit the globe only for two months though. Yeah.

Speaker 6 (52:39):
So it's out there wizzing away right now, the mini moon,
and that's it.

Speaker 3 (52:44):
It's just basically a bus size asteroid. I'm alright with that.

Speaker 6 (52:49):
Israeli airstrikes realm no more Houthy's me. Israeli jets strike
hoothy Terra assets in Yemen. They hit their power planes
in a seaport used to transfer ringing weapons to the region.
So good, and they also killed thirty seven militants. The
US hit Syria with airstrikes, killing thirty seven militants over there,

(53:12):
also pulled this one up. This is oh we already
talked about this, This order from the Florida that anti
tioaight order that was immediately put to the wood chipper
by the DESAINTUS administration. In British Columbia, there's a man
in his garage. It's on video and a bear charged

(53:35):
him and Alkono camera. The guy Alex Gold, he had
security camera footage. He was unloading groceries from his vehicle
right there in his garage and a bear wandered through
and he came back to his car and he just
legit bumped into the bear. He said that the bear
was hissing and it charged at him. He's clapping his
hands at it and he said, you know, he didn't

(53:58):
run because you're not supposed to. Many people that'll remember that, like,
don't run.

Speaker 3 (54:02):
Stick with us.

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Speaker 2 (55:03):
Keep your finger on the pulse with a Dana Show
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your podcasts.

Speaker 6 (55:15):
So it's reported that Israel looks ready to mount a
limited ground invasion of southern Lebanon centered on clearing out
Hesbola and their infrastructure near the Israeli northern border. Welcome
back to the program, Dana Lash with you. This was
I mean, it's kind of it's to be expected, considering uh,

(55:37):
the on I mean, we're coming up on a year
since October seventh, there's still hostages that Hamas hasn't turned over.
Hesbel is now attacking from the north, and John Kirby
still thinks that the diplomatic course audio somebody eighteen's the
best way listen to this.

Speaker 11 (55:54):
I think what we would agree on is that there
needs to be an effort to de escalate. Here again,
Israel has a right to defend itself in a responsibility
to do so. I mean, Hesbla under mister Israela was
a lethal threat to the Israeli people. They want to get
theirs families back to those homes and kubitzes in the north.
We want to see that too. We believe and continue

(56:14):
to believe that an all out war with Hesbla, certainly
whether or on, is not the way to do that
if you want to get those folks back home safely
and sustainably. We believe that a diplomatic path is the
right course.

Speaker 6 (56:25):
I don't understand his his both ways like he wants
it both ways. He says, well, you know, we need
to pursue a diplomatic course and we have a you know,
there's a responsibility to de escalape. Yes, they absolutely have
a right to defend themselves. When he says that there
ought to be or needs to be de escalation, who
is he specifically referencing because Israel Is thrown in into

(56:50):
the context of that, simply because they weren't differentiated, they
weren't removed from it. He didn't say, well, Hesbela needs
to de escalate or Hamas needs to de escalate. In fact,
none of these people who talk about de escalation, they
never talk about the antagonists de escalating. They just say,
generally there needs to be de escalation. Well, what about

(57:11):
the person or the entity that's responding and defending themselves
and trying to get their people back. Why would you
include them in any kind of de escalation remark. It's
like if someone broke into your home, Say there was
a Venezuelan gang that broke into your home and kidnapped
your kids and busted up your house and injured you,

(57:36):
and then you responded. It would be like someone telling
you a year later, well you can't, you got to
de escalate.

Speaker 3 (57:41):
De escalate.

Speaker 6 (57:42):
What there wasn't an escalation. It was just a terror attack,
a murderous attack. I mean they had been leading up
to that, they had been non stop shelling Israeli people,
shelling Israels, sending over rockets, et cetera. Et cetera, not
just some hospital so has so that's where the escalation

(58:03):
has always been. But you don't tell people defending you
wouldn't You wouldn't tell your your spouse, Well, we have
to deescalate. What do you mean deescalate because that sounds
like disengaged to me, and ultimately I think that's what
some people mean when they're using that words or reference
Israel's reaction. Oh, they need to disengage or not defend themselves.

(58:24):
But yet it's never hamas or husbal. If it's told
to de escalate specifically, why don't they ever get into
that level of specificity.

Speaker 3 (58:34):
Well, it's.

Speaker 6 (58:36):
They need to it's hamas and hesbela. Them must deescalate
instead of just saying generally, well, you know, we have
to deescalate. There's a responsibility to de escalate. There's only
one party responsible in deescalating, and that's the antagonist that
escalated it and started all of it in the first
place and has not returned any hostages yet, and it's
a year later. Diplomatic course to get hostages back clearly

(58:58):
hasn't worked.

Speaker 3 (59:01):
It hasn't worked. I don't know if some of them
will ever be rescued.

Speaker 6 (59:06):
Uh, it's very clear that it's been a year later
and they're not going to give anybody back. We know
there are babies that were taken, they're even still alive anymore.
They probably don't even remember their families.

Speaker 3 (59:19):
It's horrible.

Speaker 6 (59:21):
So there's no de escalation. There's just elimination at this point.
And Hesbela and Amma, they've got to be entirely eliminated
if they if they don't choose to de escalate, and
the world is too terrified to specifically tell them to
de escalate, then they have to be eliminated. I mean,
if you're so scared of telling a group of people

(59:43):
to knock it off because you're afraid that they might react,
maybe they should be eliminated.

Speaker 3 (59:49):
Terrorist should be eliminated.

Speaker 6 (59:52):
It's insane we're still having this question, these discussions. Well,
I mean that you know, diplomatic horses. If someone had
kidnapped my kids, I would destroy every single person and
their entire family trees. I would leave your legacy and ash.
There would be nowhere where you could hide. I would

(01:00:14):
be it would be a demon on earth after you.
There is nothing, nothing that would stop And I think
if you if they especially these children, they take these
hostages they keep I mean good, there's no deterrent bad
guys and barbarians.

Speaker 3 (01:00:35):
It's an insults of barbarians.

Speaker 6 (01:00:37):
Brutal people have to live in fear of what happens
if they wrong innocent people, if they target innocent people,
there isn't a deterrent. Kane says, I would kill them
so hard they would die to death. I'd kill them
and bring them back just I could repeatedly kill them
and it would be a never ending cycle and every

(01:00:57):
single time would be worse. Oh my goodness. See this
is why you know Trump is talking about a purge.
Was he talking about a purge or was he saying,
like law just let law enforcement do their job.

Speaker 3 (01:01:07):
What was he saying?

Speaker 4 (01:01:09):
Yeah, it was about law enforcement doing their job, allowing
them to do their job.

Speaker 6 (01:01:13):
Part of me was like, yes, let there be a
purge because I know I would be fine.

Speaker 3 (01:01:17):
And that's kind of.

Speaker 6 (01:01:18):
Scary that It's like, wait, what what kind of person
would I be to be fine?

Speaker 3 (01:01:22):
You know what I mean?

Speaker 6 (01:01:23):
Like in that kind of then I think that scares
me more than the idea of their being total lawlessness, right,
Like what kind of person would you have to be
to thrive in that kind of because they're always batties, right,
just saying, just saying.

Speaker 3 (01:01:38):
So a few other there's there's We've been talking about
the UH election. The debate is tomorrow.

Speaker 6 (01:01:45):
Do you guys want to hear Kamala Harris accidentally like
going off script and trying to talk economy because I
do audio some by twelve.

Speaker 16 (01:01:51):
Please, First of all, Latina small businesses are the fastest
growing in the country.

Speaker 3 (01:01:57):
They are, right right, they are.

Speaker 8 (01:01:59):
But include put it in that is that.

Speaker 16 (01:02:01):
We don't lack for people who have ambition and have
aspirations and dreams and an idea that is a great
idea and work ethic, but not everybody has access to
the capitol. It's so true, and I believe strongly that
our small businesses are the backbone of America's economy. So

(01:02:22):
when we grow in strength in small businesses, we all benefit.

Speaker 3 (01:02:25):
Oh my gosh, I'm so boring. What does she what?
Just like her?

Speaker 6 (01:02:29):
What is she trying to get into here? Like you're
just wanting to give people money randomly? What is she
talking about?

Speaker 3 (01:02:35):
Caine? Are you all right? It's only Monday, dude.

Speaker 4 (01:02:38):
I literally felt like an aneurysm created like immediately in
my brain hearing that same if she cared about small business,
they wouldn't have tried shutting them down during COVID. That's
number one. Number two, they wouldn't be overspending tax money
that they currently can't and don't have. They're spending what

(01:02:58):
they don't have, and that's cause inflation, the cost of
money to go up. In order to do any business,
you got to inject cash into your business, so that
cost is going up for businesses as well. Everything she's
done has been a detriment to small business. For her
to say that is just laughable, and it gives me
a headache.

Speaker 6 (01:03:14):
Well, she knows more than you because because that's it. Yeah,
I know, just I know.

Speaker 3 (01:03:23):
I know.

Speaker 6 (01:03:24):
It's especially her unrealized gains thing. By the way, I
was reading this interesting piece, this is true. It's over
at Texas scorecard. We are already living that right now.
We're already living on in Texas.

Speaker 3 (01:03:40):
You we are.

Speaker 6 (01:03:41):
We already pay unrealized gains, the theoretical increase in a
an item's value that you just if you haven't sold it,
you just haven't realized the income. This is like the
gen like me and my friends are just like realzing stuff.
Can you give me that audio SoundBite? Because that's unrealized

(01:04:03):
gains right there. Me and my friends were just like
realizing stuff, like realizing things. We talk about that all
the time. But this is what I hear. This is
what I think of whenever she talks about unrealized gains. Listen, yeah, okay,
sor right, well you get it. But homeowners, even though
we in Texas, you don't have an income tax or

(01:04:25):
and you're not taxed like on your actual gains.

Speaker 17 (01:04:27):
Like, I feel like every year has a new energy,
and I feel like this year is really about like
the year of just realizing stuff. And everyone around me
were all just like realizing things.

Speaker 6 (01:04:40):
That's see, that's what your assets are doing. Like we're
realizing stuff. But what if I haven't realized anything. You're
still getting text I've realized things. Okay, you can get
taxed because you've realized that I haven't realized anything. Okay,
then you don't get But seeing what I.

Speaker 4 (01:04:58):
Was gonna say, she's trying to un us from what
hasn't been yet.

Speaker 6 (01:05:02):
Yeah, exactly, Like, don don't know, she's trying to burden
you by what hasn't been.

Speaker 3 (01:05:10):
So in Texas property values.

Speaker 6 (01:05:14):
Think about it as that as your property value increases,
so do the taxes. Correct right, there are people who
get property text out of their property because you never
really own your own property. Property taxes are Marxism. It's
Marxism that we think is acceptable in the United States.
Not I don't think it is, but generally nobody raises.

Speaker 3 (01:05:34):
A fit about it, but it is.

Speaker 6 (01:05:36):
So you have rising property values in Texas means that
property I fight my property tax every single time. I'm like,
oh uh ah. And nobody wants that drama coming into
the office and dealing with that, so they just are like, oh.

Speaker 3 (01:05:50):
My gosh, what makes their go away.

Speaker 6 (01:05:52):
I am the person that will literally fight with you
on everything. I am that person like red light cameras,
these are unconstitutional, and I will come in and be
my own attorney and they'll just be like.

Speaker 3 (01:06:01):
Get her out, get out, get out.

Speaker 6 (01:06:05):
So squeaky wheels do get the grease, by the way,
they get all the grease, no non non grease.

Speaker 3 (01:06:11):
Right.

Speaker 6 (01:06:11):
So think about it though in Texas, and this is
a great piece of a Texas scorecard. You know, when
your property is increasing, you're and you're not selling it.
You're literally being taxed on what you haven't a value
you have not realized, right, it's it's her policy and action.

(01:06:36):
And so you have people who purchased SA. You know,
we're tirees that have purchased their house thirty years ago
and their property taxes increased to the point where now
they can't pay their property tax because of value on
their property, which is and in Texas, they're rising like crazy.
They haven't sold it, they haven't realized it, so their

(01:06:58):
tax obligations exceed their ability to keep up with to
pay it. So you're taxing them on wealth that they
haven't realized that they have, they've made no use of.
That's just the value, the assessed value.

Speaker 3 (01:07:12):
Of their home. That is an unrealized gain. And that's Texas.

Speaker 6 (01:07:18):
It's real bad, and it's something that they're having to
fight at the legislative level. It'd be great, by the way,
if they more could be done Republicans in Austin. So
I'm just and Republicans always talk about ending the property tax.
But they are they're too, they're pansies. They're absolute pansies
about it. Oh, it's stuff that they'll talk about privately,
but they won't put in a public speech.

Speaker 3 (01:07:40):
It's stuff that they'll lower.

Speaker 6 (01:07:41):
Their voice and talk to about how much they agree
with you, but then when it comes to proposing actual action,
they don't do anything.

Speaker 3 (01:07:47):
I mean, don't sit here and talk about capping the appraisal.

Speaker 6 (01:07:49):
It's Marxist property taxes need to be eliminated entirely. There
are smarter and less Marxist ways to go about funding
things like emergency and you know, et cetera, roads that,
but this isn't the way to do it. Telling you
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Speaker 4 (01:08:50):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions. It's time
for Florida.

Speaker 6 (01:08:57):
Man or Florida woman, because that's what happened here in Tampa.
A drunk Florida woman ran into a barrier wall and
the iphoura in Tampa, and then on Sunday after when
the troopers showed up, she grabbed his man bits and
bit his leg. YEP twenty five year old Tayshiro Williams
of Largo. She crashed into a barrier wall when they

(01:09:21):
When troopers arrived, she was impaired. They were taken under
a into custody. She resisted how to be physically restrained
as officers. As they tried to restrain her, she grab
the junk of one trooper and then bit another trooper's leg,
so she got charged with resisting with violence and a DUI.

(01:09:45):
According to Florida Highway patrol I don't know why I
thought that they would wear cups, but maybe I mean
it makes sense that they don't.

Speaker 3 (01:09:53):
But now I'm like, well, got lee.

Speaker 6 (01:09:55):
You know, there's because no way to put one on
before you go over, and you know, got to do
your stuff up.

Speaker 3 (01:10:00):
Work good. Heavens.

Speaker 6 (01:10:03):
I don't even know this guy, this Florida man was
He got in trouble because he was hiding drugs in
his nose from the police and it didn't work.

Speaker 3 (01:10:19):
As you can imagine. This was in Saint Petersburg.

Speaker 6 (01:10:21):
Joel Wallace was pulled over for speeding and this was
on Miles Stretch Road in Holiday, Florida. He refused to
stop originally, so they it was a high speed chase,
and he just high speed chased.

Speaker 3 (01:10:33):
Him right on home.

Speaker 6 (01:10:34):
He had literally went home, and then apparently while en
route during the high speed chase to his house, he
tried to snort the rest of the cocaine that he
had in his car. I don't know why people you
think like cheating, like like flirting with death is going
to be better than just get I mean, stop it.
And when they finally got him, he had white residue

(01:10:56):
all over his nose and he was telling them that
he didn't have white residue all over his nose, and
then he didn't have any cocaine, and he had no
idea why they thought he had illegal drugs or why
he was contempting to conceal them because he didn't have
any cocaine except for the fact that he literally had
white powder olliver his nose because he tried to snort
the remainder of the cocaine.

Speaker 3 (01:11:15):
That's horrible.

Speaker 6 (01:11:15):
So he's totally in jail. A naked Florida man claims
to be the Devil and terrorizes women. I mean, it's
twenty twenty four, so he could be, or maybe he's
Anthony Wiener.

Speaker 3 (01:11:24):
I don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:11:25):
Naked Florida man says he was the Devil, terrorizes women.
His name is a Roverlandispina. He decided to break and
do a Florida woman's home totally butt naked and said
he was the devil, according to w TVJ, and he
walked into her apartment and said that he and loo.

Speaker 3 (01:11:45):
Went into her bedroom.

Speaker 6 (01:11:47):
Apparently broke into her apartment, went to her bedroom, told
her she had to die, and then she tried to
run away. He grabbed her, dragged her by her hair inside.
Then he's then she has a husband who wasn't there.

Speaker 3 (01:11:59):
He was at work.

Speaker 6 (01:12:00):
He began stealing her husband's underwear. This story never ends,
by the way, and the neighbors ended up calling the
cops because they heard all of this stuff. And then
when the police showed up, the devil was still yelling
and swearing. He said he was the husband, because look,
would he have all this underwear if he wasn't. I'm
not even kidding you, so and then it was crazy.

(01:12:24):
It's crazy. So the guy gets he's he was arrested,
charge with burglary, assault, battery.

Speaker 3 (01:12:31):
I don't know, man, What in the world you know?
Was it a full moon, hurricane weather? I don't know.
Stick with us.

Speaker 6 (01:12:39):
Welcome to the third hour of the program, and you
can follow along on Rumble where the chat happens X
Channel three forty seven Direct TV. The couple of things
we've been talking about, the longshoreman, the por the dock workers.
That's that's gonna kick off what twelve o one a m. Tonight,

(01:13:01):
well tonight technically tomorrow, Tuesday, And I mean, who got
the VP debate tomorrow? And then you have what could
potentially be a massive, just a huge disaster for supply
chain and that's the longshoreman's union strike, which we've been
talking about last hour. I think that's like one of
the biggest stories right now. And Gina Romondo, I still

(01:13:24):
can't get over the SoundBite. I cannot get over the
sound bite. She's literally the commerce Secretary Kane. For people
who don't know what's the commerce secretary.

Speaker 4 (01:13:31):
Do well, she's in charge of all that commerce, especially
the ones that involve our ports, because that's there's a
lot of product imported into the United States.

Speaker 6 (01:13:40):
Yeah, a huge, a huge amount of product. I mean
think about your your fruit, your whiskey, your wine, your
supplies for factories, parts of factories, literally everything. And this
affects the eastern seaboard going all the way into the Gulf.
The western side of the country isn't affected because it's
a different union and a year ago they had a
different contract. However, that still you know, there's still a

(01:14:02):
possibility they could walk off in solidarity. But for this,
for this situation, there's I mean, they've been trying to
been negotiating. Nothing's in sight. So Tomornow could be the
big strike day and people are warning about you could
either event well a combination of both empty shelves and

(01:14:23):
for the products that would come in that would come
in on the East coast, the prices are gonna skyrocket
on that forty five thousand DOC workers, so that's thirty
six ports shortages, price increases, especially if things have to
be redirected to the western side of the country.

Speaker 3 (01:14:39):
Imagine that.

Speaker 6 (01:14:40):
Think about it, Walmart, Home depot, Ikea, Amazon, all all
of this stuff, especially Amazon.

Speaker 3 (01:14:48):
Whow Amazon could get hit by this.

Speaker 6 (01:14:52):
They said that they're looking at a supply chain disruption
similar to what we saw at the height of the pandemic,
at the height of the RONA. That's what we're looking at.
So they wanted their demanding to pay raise. It's about
seventy seven percent over six years, so that means a
typical wage will go from eighty one thousand to one
hundred and forty three thousand. That's a pretty big wage increase.

(01:15:16):
So they said that the strike, you're going to see
higher prices and empty shelves. That's what you're going to see.
So retailers are trying to reroute stuff to West coast
ports and use air freight, but they can't do that
for everything. And that's I mean, it's only kind of
a somewhat of a solution. And it's also you're going
to see things get a lot more expensive, and there's

(01:15:37):
going to be delays, a lot of delays. So they
they've been negotiating with the United States Maritime Alliance, So
that's the entity that the Longshoreman's Unit Association has been
negotiating with. They haven't had any other negotiations since June.
This would be the first strike since seventy seven and
since before I was alive. So they there's and there's

(01:16:01):
a lot that would be affected. So the two busiest
for auto ports Baltimore and Brunswick, Georgia, Philly, which gives
priority to fruits and vegetables, New Orleans, which handles coffee.
And then you have other ports affected Boston, New York,
New Jersey, Norfolk, Virginia, Wilmington, South Carolina, North Carolina, Charleston,

(01:16:21):
South Carolina, Savannah, Georgia, Tampa, Florida, Mobile, Alabama, and Houston.

Speaker 3 (01:16:26):
So lots of delays, lots of delays.

Speaker 6 (01:16:29):
And they said that they're trying to see maybe one
of the someone was saying that under the taff Hartley
he could Biden could maybe seek a cooling off period
to suspend the strike. But the administration has already said
that well, not through Biden, through one of his underlings,
that that there's so far there's no intention or desire
for the administration to do it. Does this benefit Democrats?

(01:16:52):
For this to happen this close to election? I wouldn't
imagine this helps, hurts or helps anybody this close to election.
But you know, here were five weeks away and you're
going to have a significant strike. I don't know how
long it would go on for, but I you know,
at maybe you know, the administration is saying they have
no plans to take the Tart Hartley, the Taft Hearty

(01:17:12):
Act now, but you know, if if they're impacted by this,
you know, maybe maybe they could.

Speaker 3 (01:17:20):
I don't know. Do you think this hurts? Does this
hurt Democrats? King?

Speaker 6 (01:17:23):
Do you think it hurts Democrats? I mean, I think
anything that you would think it would, But I don't know.
So far, I haven't really seen anything from Harris on this,
which was one of the things I was looking at
my notes for. I haven't really seen anything from her
on this, But I don't know.

Speaker 3 (01:17:42):
We'll see.

Speaker 6 (01:17:43):
But they this would the Taft Hearty Act. It would
it restricts the activity of labor unions and things like that.
And this is a Triman thing. So this is back
in the forties, so I don't even know.

Speaker 3 (01:17:54):
I has it ever been implemented, I don't know. Yeah, so.

Speaker 6 (01:18:00):
This is you have the supply chain disruption of twenty
twenty one. Now you're going to probably see more. It's
probably it could be, it could be. That's definitely what
everybody's anticipating. So, yeah, you might want to stuck up
on some stuff now. The Longshoreman's they were saying that

(01:18:21):
they're not going to accept any other you know, the
offers that have come in from the Maritime Alliance and
et cetera, et cetera.

Speaker 3 (01:18:27):
So I don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:18:29):
People he the Biden administration, and this was CNN and
a piece that they ran a few days ago. They
had said that we've never invoked taft hartly to break
a strike. We're not going to do it now and

(01:18:49):
doesn't sound like they will. So the whole purpose, by
the way of that act, and it was like in
nineteen forty seven under Harry Truman, was to regulate what
unions during a period of emergency, what a national emergency,
what unions can and can't do. So it's saying that
they can't engage in unfair practices. Is what really what

(01:19:11):
it's about? And I mean is it I mean is
it considered a national emergency period though?

Speaker 3 (01:19:19):
Or them striking?

Speaker 6 (01:19:20):
Does that constitute a national emergency when they strike? See,
I mean there's questions. So we'll see how far it goes.
We'll see how long it goes. But in the meantime,
what you can I would say certain things that you
can get at the story you should probably get. I
don't think you need to get totally full on crazy,
but maybe it would be smart to stock up on
some stuff. You know, that might be a smart thing

(01:19:43):
to do because the strike is economically it's depending on
how long it goes on, it could be pretty damaging.

Speaker 3 (01:19:52):
And this I don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:19:55):
It's just very interesting that this is happening right before
right before an election, right before an election.

Speaker 3 (01:20:00):
I'm telling you.

Speaker 6 (01:20:02):
Now a few other things to touch on segueing using
this to segue into some immigration.

Speaker 3 (01:20:10):
I wanted to pull up bear with me, because I
got a lot of stuff up.

Speaker 6 (01:20:14):
I wanted to pull up this story that I had found,
and this is a pretty crazy story.

Speaker 3 (01:20:19):
There's a story of these eight illegal.

Speaker 6 (01:20:24):
Immigrants that were arrested in Tennessee on looting burglaring flood
ravaged victims in eastern Tennessee. So people who are here
illegally and they were arrested because they were looting. They
were arrested for looting hurricane victims. And I think that's

(01:20:48):
interesting in that this this is just how unbelievably widespread
and how every single week, now, every single week, I
have a story of that involved someone who came to
the country illegally committing a crime against someone else, Like
we had the trooper Officer Lee in Saint Louis who

(01:21:10):
was killed when someone from Venezuela who entered illegally, who
had been deported repeatedly too, by the way, who entered
illegally and was drunk driving and didn't have a license
and plowed into him at eight thirty in the morning
as he was working a crash scene.

Speaker 3 (01:21:21):
It's like every week we have some kind of story like.

Speaker 6 (01:21:26):
This, and now we have these eight dudes, and they're
all young dudes, and they were arrested for looting. People
are dealing with floods and losing everything that they have
over a flood, and they are now having to also
deal with this on top of it. I mean, it's
it's just.

Speaker 3 (01:21:46):
It's a shame. This is horrible. By the way, where's Biden?
Anybody know?

Speaker 6 (01:21:51):
I just saw another picture of him on the beach.
It's a new one. It's a newer one. He's sitting
there with Jill. They're chilling on the beach. People are flooding.
People are being flooded. You got a hurricane coming in.
He's been on the beach and Harris has been campaigning
and fundraising. I'm not saying that you can't, you know, multitask,

(01:22:12):
but it just seems to be a bad optic, right.
Didn't people get mad at Bush when he would go
back to his ranch at Texas in Texas and do
ranch work if there was a disaster somewhere and he
would be really and people would be really upset by it.
Do you remember when there was after Hurricane Katrina, people
got mad at him because he was They had a
photo of him like at the desk on the phone,

(01:22:33):
and he was getting ridiculed for I guess they wanted
him down there physically in Louisiana. But Harris can release
a photo that looks like bad Ai and she's at
the desk looking at a white piece of paper, and
she's got earbuds that aren't even plugged in. And that's
I mean, she gets a total pass one showing you
it's weird. I mean it's totally not even plugged in.

(01:22:56):
But why does her head look like it's such a
weird angle? White piece of paper for? She got her
coffee cup? She's is that Air Force one?

Speaker 3 (01:23:02):
I guess that she's on.

Speaker 4 (01:23:04):
Actually that's a good question. I think she's just deep
in thought here. She's just she's like got the thinking
man pose. Yeah, you're convinced.

Speaker 6 (01:23:15):
No, I'm not convinced at all. I mean, not that
she thinks I'm not. I mean I've got audio here
to the contrary of that. If you would like to hear,
I think we should play. I mean, you know, she's
talking about what she wants to do to help protect
our borders.

Speaker 3 (01:23:28):
Audio sound bite nine. Do you believe her on this?
Go ahead?

Speaker 8 (01:23:31):
We should not permit scapegoating instead of solutions and let's
see what's happening. Let's not permit scapegoating instead of solutions,
or rhetoric instead of results. As your president, I will

(01:23:54):
protect our nation's sovereignty, secure our border, and work to
fix our broken, broken system of immigration, and I will
partner with Democrats, Republicans and independents to do it.

Speaker 3 (01:24:12):
Why didn't you?

Speaker 6 (01:24:13):
Why can't you do it now? You're the vice president
of the United States? Why can't you do it now?
When she's like we're going to change like from what
from you? Like you're there, you're in office. Why can't
you do it now? Like a million dollar question? Why
not now? Doesn't make any sense? We have more on

(01:24:33):
the way. I'm also curious as too. Gosh, I'm fascinated
by this.

Speaker 3 (01:24:37):
This Hopefully I hope it's not a strike, but Golee.

Speaker 6 (01:24:43):
Nothing from Biden on it, although he said that he
was actually he thought he was addressing it when he
was asked about the strikes from Yemen, and he said
that he supports the the bargaining efforts.

Speaker 3 (01:24:55):
Okay, well, and.

Speaker 4 (01:24:57):
Now all of the news you would probably miss. It's
time for Dana's quick five.

Speaker 6 (01:25:03):
So apparently there are actually get out of jail free cards?

Speaker 3 (01:25:09):
Did you know this? You didn't know this? How is that?
So it's like actually a thing?

Speaker 6 (01:25:13):
Apparently, so per the Hill, every police officer in New York,
including retired officers, are allowed to buy a certain number
of special cards issued by the union. They pay a
nominal sum for the cards if they distribute them as
they wish. Sometimes they can give them to family and friends.
You can use them for perks like meal discounts. Sometimes
they sell them. It's the Police Benevolence Association courtesy cards.
Some people call them to get out of jail free cards.

(01:25:35):
So the idea is, when someone who has a card
is pulled over for a traffic violation or approached by
police for a minor offense, if you show the card
to the officer, it basically let you go on with
nothing more than just a warning. I've heard of stories
like this, but I don't know. I don't know if
I believe it right, because you've got to enforce the

(01:25:55):
law without fear of favor, you know what I mean.
And I think that there's a lot of good guys
out there, so I don't I just I don't know
anyone that this has ever happened to, do you. I
hear about these things, but there's never been anyone who's like, yeah,
I did it and it works.

Speaker 3 (01:26:08):
You know. I don't know. Just anyway, So, oh, look
at this.

Speaker 6 (01:26:15):
They're trying to tell you that it's not the injection
but just alcohol that's linked to all these cancers. Drinking
alcohols is linked to six types of cancers, but not
the government injection that we still remote the hell's in.
It's just taken shut out, not that at all. I
don't believe any of the stuff that they push. I
don't believe a single bit of it. You know why,
because all those octagenarians are what are the centronarians, sorry,

(01:26:38):
the ones that are like over one hundred every single
time you ask them, what do you do to live on?
I'd be happy and I have a drink every now
and then, not alcoholics, like seriously, learn the difference. But
so I don't believe. I don't believe this stuff. I
don't believe it. So a family, this is Newsweek focused
on a baby's first steps.

Speaker 3 (01:26:56):
They don't.

Speaker 6 (01:26:57):
They've missed the three year old wielding a knife. It's
all on video. Everybody's watching this baby takeer first steps.
But yet in the background it's a three year old
with a knife.

Speaker 3 (01:27:08):
And they it.

Speaker 6 (01:27:09):
Was their first it was their daughter's birthday. They were
one year old, and unfortunately Newsweek buries the lead all
the way down at the bottom of the article because
this person used to go back to j school and
learn how to write a proper story. But they said
that the kid was the toddler was trying to get
the cake because they used the knife to cut the cake.
They were trying to get the cake knife to lick
the cake off the knife, which is scaring me even more.

(01:27:31):
And so it just literally in the background is this
kid wielding a giant knife. It's kind of it's funny
and also scary if you're a parent, because you're like,
you know how quickly that could happen. Oh, by the way,
twenty three MEA is selling your DNA, so if you
ever use that, which is why I've never used anything
like this. Yeah, they're selling all your genetic information. They're
on the verge of being there, they're actually getting They

(01:27:53):
shut down their in house drug development until last month.
They've been laying people off and they're selling everything, including
their fifteen million customers DNA material.

Speaker 3 (01:28:02):
Yeah, look at that. Stick with us. Stephen Yates next.

Speaker 2 (01:28:06):
Makes some common sense of the crazy headlines with a
Dana Show podcast. You're on the Go guide for getting
up to speed on today's most important stories. Subscribe on
YouTube Apple or your favorite podcast platform.

Speaker 3 (01:28:19):
Welcome back to the program.

Speaker 6 (01:28:20):
Dana Lash here with you channel thirty to forty seven
Direct TV if you're not listening across the country, and
you can also catch us on Rumble and X and
all that good stuff. We're watching still all of these
stories about recovery efforts following Hurricane Helene. Very nice name
for a bad hurricane.

Speaker 3 (01:28:38):
Just horrible.

Speaker 6 (01:28:39):
I mean, just the destruction. I was reading about the
destruction in Augusta, Georgia. Holy cow, insane. I mean, it's
just as like these areas were just pummeled. Biden though,
says that we've given everything that we have audio sound
bite eight.

Speaker 3 (01:28:51):
Listen to this got me more.

Speaker 4 (01:28:56):
Yes, it's tragic.

Speaker 1 (01:28:57):
As a matter of fact, we're trying to get to
exact number my FEMA advisor dom and ground in Florida
right now because the distinction between the numbers that famous
used and the ones that used by by the locals.
So it's it really is amazing when you saw the
photographs and comes back to this sunny so I'm.

Speaker 3 (01:29:18):
Really there's so many, so such a wide area.

Speaker 1 (01:29:21):
I think they're giving them all of the all everything
that we have rom the ground ahead of time, so.

Speaker 10 (01:29:28):
We're working hard.

Speaker 6 (01:29:29):
Hey, you got Ukraine and gets more money though they
get more money, and just saying just I see some
memes out there with Ukraine and where North Carolina should
be on the map. I just I right before an election.
I have a million other things that I wanted to
ask him about. I'm trying not to be too tinfoil
with us, but our very good friend Steven Yates. You

(01:29:49):
can find him at Yates comes on X and he
is senior research Fellow at the Heritage Foundation, and he
joins us now as he typically does on Mondays, and
we're all grateful for his time because he's one of
the smartest people that we know. He's in demand. Steven,
always good to see you. I know that you're down
there in a hurricane territory too. I hope that you've
weathered literally weathered the storm. Okay, it seems like you

(01:30:11):
got some decent power. But our prayers and thoughts are
with everybody down there. You gone, you went through it, Okay.

Speaker 18 (01:30:18):
Yeah, we are in an area that is lightly affected
by things. We're in a high rise, not on a beach.
Anyone who knows me and knows the state of my
pigment knows that I'm not out on a beach in
daytime very often, and so I like nighttime beach rides.

Speaker 14 (01:30:34):
But those areas tragically were hit very very hard.

Speaker 18 (01:30:38):
So there's a lot of devastation in any low lying areas,
and so it's going to take some time. And I
think we're among a lot of other areas are hit
with a cellular outage that I assume is related to
the landslides and storms and stuff like that. But all
these considered, I can't complain. We're connecting by Wi Fi
and doing okay.

Speaker 6 (01:30:59):
We've got an election. Early voting has already started, an
election of five weeks. We've got a number of Southern
states now so southeastern states dealing with this hurricane recovery.
And we now have this stock worker strike that's supposed
to kick off tomorrow and that and NETS affects mostly
the Eastern seaboard. Just a lot of stuff that's just

(01:31:20):
just all piling up right ahead of an election. I
just kind of wanted to get your thoughts on how
these two very different issues I think one may impact
people's thoughts about whom they're going to vote forth. They're
still undecided more than another. But how does this all
play in because this is a it's kind of weird
to have this much stuff kick off right before an
election like this.

Speaker 14 (01:31:39):
Yeah, funny.

Speaker 18 (01:31:40):
It's almost like Hillary Clinton just went on TV and
gave an interview saying a lot of things.

Speaker 14 (01:31:44):
Were going to happen between now and the election.

Speaker 18 (01:31:46):
I don't know now, but in fairness, I think hopefully
this is a reminder to everybody if you live in
a jurisdiction where they have early voting, go ahead and
get that thing in now. Go ahead, because you don't
want to wait till election day and there's a cellular outage,
a power outage, a storm, or some other thing happens

(01:32:09):
and all of a sudden, a whole bucket of votes
just can't really make it in on time. So sorry
when it comes around time to tally up. And so
I think, really, if you're just looking at the contrast
of one set of candidates who are running for national
office that are hitting the areas that are hardest hit,

(01:32:30):
standing with people, and the other team basically going to
fundraisers and walking up a ramp to the airplane while
ignoring the press. And you know, we've got the sitting
President going from beach to camera saying he's done everything
and says he was.

Speaker 14 (01:32:46):
There early or on time or whatever. I mean, no,
they weren't. Weren't.

Speaker 3 (01:32:51):
Yeah, it's as if.

Speaker 14 (01:32:52):
I think people don't know.

Speaker 18 (01:32:54):
I mean, I don't even know when the last time
it was that Joe Biden got out of Delaware.

Speaker 6 (01:33:00):
Yeah, I just remember, and you were in And I
want to let everybody know too, Stephen not only did
he work into the Trump administration, but he's also in
the Bush administration as well. I just remember I think
it was like a photo of Bush on his ranch
in Texas and he was literally doing ranch work. And
from what I understood, he would also like kind of
make that sort of like how ranch Odice Yellow was

(01:33:22):
Reagan's Western White House. Bush kind of made his Texas ranch,
you know, the Texas White House, and he did a
lot of work there. But I remember there was a
photo that came out and he was doing ranch work,
and this was about the time of Katrina, and he
was blasted for this. There are photos of Biden, I
mean a million different photos. He had an extended weekend
on the beach. He's on the beach, his mouth open,
he's catching Z's he's you know, he's sitting there with Jill.

(01:33:44):
They're under an umbrella, nothing, nothing, and he's literally sitting
and relaxing on the beach while these southern states are
getting hammered.

Speaker 18 (01:33:52):
Yeah, you're absolutely right about the way those things were done.
And it is in terms of presidential campaign history, definitely
a trend that when natural disasters occur in the closing
times of the election season, it usually redounds very poorly
for the politician that is in office. These days, though,
we have this new trick. Who's actually in office? Yeah,

(01:34:15):
who is our president right now?

Speaker 14 (01:34:17):
Who's in charge?

Speaker 18 (01:34:18):
Because a lot of the country has sort of non
plussed by this. They know that President Biden has been
dialed out since nearly forever, and they know that Kamala
Harris is running for president and not running the government
while she's doing it. And so I think it's sort
of as vivik Ramaswami's been saying, it's a system, not
an individual.

Speaker 14 (01:34:39):
The system is.

Speaker 18 (01:34:39):
Going and no one knows who the system is, so
they know it's not in North Carolina and Georgia right now.

Speaker 3 (01:34:45):
Not there at all.

Speaker 6 (01:34:46):
I wanted to switch gears and ask you who was
able to do one thing, although we had to lend
a signature to something. This actually surprised me. And I've
seen some people because they're critical of the money that's
been sent to Ukraine and Israel, and I think it's
now because of the way he said, well, we have
no more aid for North Carolina or something like that.
You have people who are really hurting and the know

(01:35:06):
their entire communities are destroyed. But he approved a defense
package for Taiwan on Sunday, five hundred and sixty seven
million dollars in defense assistance for Taiwan. Now, China of
course says that quote arming Taiwan will backfire after this
aid was approved.

Speaker 3 (01:35:25):
What do you make of this?

Speaker 6 (01:35:26):
And is it the same as comparing you know, what
the United States sends to Ukraine, which is way more
than this, because I know a lot of people on
the right are kind of are saying that it's the
same thing and we should be sending more money to
like North Carolina and Georgia. What is your take on this,
because you know, you understand the relationship that the US
has with Taiwan, I think better than anybody else that's

(01:35:48):
on TV.

Speaker 18 (01:35:50):
Well, first off, the I think it's a major strategic
mistake for the US and Taiwan to be in the
aid business. And there's experts in process that say, oh no, no,
this is special programs. This is unleashing things that are
immediately needed, and they have to go.

Speaker 14 (01:36:07):
Through special channels.

Speaker 18 (01:36:09):
And all I call on that is hogwash because they've
unleashed billions and billions and billions of dollars of a
to Ukraine over the last few years, and Taiwan has
billions of dollars and is ready willing and able to buy.
It's time for dope Americans to get out of the
way and let Taiwan buy what it wants and its needs.

(01:36:31):
And if they're going to have people get around with
furrowed brow about proliferation.

Speaker 14 (01:36:35):
Risks or what have you.

Speaker 18 (01:36:36):
They've been unleashing all this stuff to Ukraine, who's fighting
with Russia. You think things aren't going to be a
proliferation risk out there? What about stuff all over the
Middle East? What about the eighty billion dollars worth of
stuff left in Afghanistan?

Speaker 14 (01:36:50):
So crimea river? About the proliferation?

Speaker 18 (01:36:53):
At this point, I say, sell things to someone that's
willing to defend themselves, so that Americans aren't the nine
to one one and maybe that deterrence can hold.

Speaker 14 (01:37:02):
So that's very, very different.

Speaker 18 (01:37:04):
And in terms of those who say we're impoverished, we
are deeply in debt, but terribly terribly in debt, but
there are resources to need emergency needs. This is just
like the border when it comes to emergency response. It's
willful neglect if the administration isn't surging resources in and
if they cared about it, they might even look at

(01:37:25):
military resources and assets who can have immediate urgent lift
capabilities to go to different areas. They would call up
someone like Elon Musk, who seems able to restore telecommunications
at the drop of a hat in danger zones. You'd
have an all hands on deck approach if you really
put Americans first.

Speaker 6 (01:37:45):
And that's a great point we're talking to our good
friend Steve and Yates at Yates comes on on X
because every single thing that I've ever read about Taiwan,
in any kind of like acquisition of any kind of
defensive material, for the lack of a better way to
put it, they have to go through this whole process
of purchasing it and then it has to be approved
and it hasn't been approved every single time. And the

(01:38:06):
Taipei Times, I know that they wrote just what back
in July that Taiwan's been one of the largest buyers
of US defense equipment. But I know that it has
to go through that whole process, and that this administration
isn't always keen to approve it.

Speaker 3 (01:38:18):
Every time.

Speaker 6 (01:38:18):
I've had headlines where they've either dragged it out or
they haven't.

Speaker 3 (01:38:22):
But yet they'll throw all.

Speaker 6 (01:38:23):
Kinds of stuff for free over to Ukraine and Taiwan's like,
we are willing to give you money for these things.

Speaker 14 (01:38:28):
We often downgrade what we'll sell to Taiwan too, And
it's just.

Speaker 18 (01:38:32):
An old way of doing things that I don't think
makes good sense for American national interests. And a bunch
of cardigan wearing pencil net geeks from the past will say, Oh,
this is the way it's always been done, and you're
gonna provoke the Chinese, we'll consider them provoked. They've been
provoking us pretty badly in a number of ways, and

(01:38:52):
I want our allies to be able to pick up
the fight before we need to, And so I think
I'll go ahead and roll those risk dice and and
move the.

Speaker 14 (01:39:00):
Material sell it.

Speaker 18 (01:39:01):
It's good for jobs in America, good for extended deterrens
for the United States, and it's time to get the
bureaucrats out of the way. I think what they're doing
is trying to set up our allies to fail in
a tie in a China contingency, so they can sort
of say, well, they were blameless for slow rolling things
because our allies fell short. And I think that's just

(01:39:23):
sort of the DC Defense Industrial Complex way.

Speaker 3 (01:39:26):
Oh, I want to bookmark that. That's one.

Speaker 6 (01:39:28):
That's one thing to continue watching as always with expert insight.
Our good friends Steven Yates at Yates Comms on X,
I keep wanting to say Twitter, I think I'm finally
over it now to say X, It's good to see you,
my friend. I'm glad that you came through that hurricane
on Scathe.

Speaker 14 (01:39:43):
Thanks so mich Dana, take care you too.

Speaker 6 (01:39:44):
We have more to come, folks, as we wrap up
this third hour, including my Grandma's rule of three. You
got Chris Christofferson. I'm not going to say his name, right,
mckimm ae d'tumbo.

Speaker 3 (01:39:54):
I did. Actually, so is who's the third? Who's the third?

Speaker 4 (01:39:59):
Ta Jackson?

Speaker 3 (01:40:00):
Yeh me is it Tito. We're going to talk about
that here when we come back.

Speaker 2 (01:40:03):
Brighten up your timely news consumption with a Dana Show
podcast where every update comes with a little dash of
not so serious. On YouTube, Apple or wherever you get
your podcasts.

Speaker 6 (01:40:15):
Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash here with you.
So if you are new to the program, you know
that whenever there's like a celebrity death, I have to
go over my grandma's rule of three.

Speaker 3 (01:40:24):
My grandma had. My grandmother had a.

Speaker 6 (01:40:26):
Rule of three where if a famous person kicked the bucket,
it had to be Sometimes I think I swear she
just made it all up because the rules seemed like
they always changed. It had to be like a famous
person or someone that you actually knew. It couldn't be
someone that somebody else knew.

Speaker 3 (01:40:41):
It had to be like.

Speaker 6 (01:40:42):
Someone that you knew or just in or a famous
person to count in the three slots, because there were
always deaths in three.

Speaker 3 (01:40:49):
She said, death always happened in threes. She's kind of superstitious.

Speaker 6 (01:40:53):
So you had, uh, who was it Tito Jackson?

Speaker 3 (01:40:58):
Last week? It has to be in the span off
like a month.

Speaker 4 (01:41:01):
It is a month, so like two to three weeks.

Speaker 3 (01:41:04):
Yeah, two to three weeks is good.

Speaker 4 (01:41:05):
Okay.

Speaker 6 (01:41:05):
So you had Tito Jackson, then Chris Christofferson eighty eight
years old, and then I Actually, this is because I
to Kimme Mutumbo, he's fifty eight.

Speaker 4 (01:41:19):
I didn't know that he didn't look fifty eight.

Speaker 3 (01:41:21):
He actually didn't look didn't he look older. I thought
he looked a little older.

Speaker 4 (01:41:25):
I didn't think he was that old, to be honest.

Speaker 6 (01:41:26):
With you, but I think he did. He looked older
like he I was like, oh, yeah, he could be.

Speaker 3 (01:41:31):
Like fifty eight, sixty, he could be, but he's passed away.
I like, I don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:41:36):
And because we had someone on social media, so you
asked Steve, you might have to bring up Dana up
to speed on to Kimba's sports ball, I will say
I know who Di Kimme Mutumbo is because one time
my husband was where he was like somewhere for business
I can't even remember, and he met Mutumbo and he

(01:41:56):
could not get over how huge he was, Like they
just happened to like be in the same hotel, they
happen to be saying, and he could not believe how
big it is. So that's how I knew who he was.
I've never seen him play, but I knew who he
was because.

Speaker 3 (01:42:06):
Of that sports Ball Go team.

Speaker 6 (01:42:09):
So that's the three, right, Yeah, that would have to be. Yeah,
that's the three. So I and he apparently had brain cancer.
I didn't even know he had brain cancer. That's so sad,
but he was. My husband said he was a very
nice He's super nice, very very nice guy. So that
would be the rule of three. Now there's a famous

(01:42:31):
person like Tomorrow, Oh my gosh, you gotta have two more,
and then it's a cycle, you know what I mean.

Speaker 3 (01:42:36):
Then it has to keep going. You have to have
like it has to be the three.

Speaker 4 (01:42:41):
Right.

Speaker 6 (01:42:42):
So I don't know that's that's the that's the issue.
Because you were asking me about that, You're like, well,
doesn't Tito Jackson, isn't he? But that's still within the
proper time frame, the completely arbitrary time frame that my
grandmother had set up.

Speaker 4 (01:42:54):
Right, it looks like James Earl Jones.

Speaker 3 (01:42:56):
And Phill Dups, Oh my gosh, I forgot James Earl Jones.

Speaker 4 (01:42:59):
Well, and I'll wait a minute, and Bob, but that
was back early September. That was like first week of September.
James Earl Jones, Earl Jones. So it was like the
eighth of September.

Speaker 3 (01:43:09):
I think who else was with James Earl Jones just
passed with him.

Speaker 4 (01:43:12):
Phil Donahue passed at late August, mid to late August,
which was to within two to three weeks.

Speaker 3 (01:43:19):
Of I didn't even know it was. I don't didn't
even know. And then Bob Newhart and Bob Newhart. Bob
Newhart I knew. So maybe that's the.

Speaker 4 (01:43:26):
Because lou Dobbs I remember, died on the same day
Bob Newhart.

Speaker 3 (01:43:29):
Well, see, then that messes it up.

Speaker 4 (01:43:31):
I know.

Speaker 6 (01:43:31):
So we got people that got it, they still got
to die because otherwise what I'm just saying.

Speaker 4 (01:43:36):
That's the rule of three Sadistically.

Speaker 3 (01:43:39):
I'm not.

Speaker 6 (01:43:39):
I'm just telling you what the that's the weird rule
that she Okay, I'm taking up all your time.

Speaker 3 (01:43:43):
Today's stupidity. I'm sorry, I have to die.

Speaker 4 (01:43:45):
Uh cut nineteen Nancy Pelosi, Well, her words speak for themselves.
Listen to this.

Speaker 19 (01:43:52):
Speaking of the twenty twenty four election, there are a
lot of independent and conservative voters who don't necessary they
love Trump. They're not Trump loyalists, but they are voting
for him because they feel like Democrats haven't done a
good enough job tackling inflation, tackling immigration.

Speaker 2 (01:44:10):
But I will say this, we have done the best
job of tackling inflation that any developed country.

Speaker 4 (01:44:17):
And what is what is she talking about? She thinks
you're stupid. Yeah, I think that's where it is.

Speaker 6 (01:44:23):
Yeah, exactly, folks. That does it for us for our
program today. Tomorrow, we've got the debate, so you're not
gonna We're gonna pregame it and then we'll follow up
find us on Facebook, YouTube back tomorrow
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