Episode Transcript
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join the Coffee Club today. Basically, you know that there's a public perception
that you're clarifying this now, butthere's a public perception that that was part
of a apology tour, if youwill, that this had been said online.
There was all of the criticism,there was advertisers leaving. We talked
to Bob Iden. You hope don'tadvertise. You don't want them to advertise.
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What do you mean to try toblackmail me with advertising, blackmailing with
money yourself. Yeah, but goyourself? Is that clear? I hope
it is. I mean who doesn'tfeel that way? Honestly? I mean
(02:20):
who doesn't? Who among us?Welcome to the show, Dana Lash here
with you. Thank god it's Thursday. We're almost through this insane week because
it keeps getting crazier. You canlisten by the way Coast to Coast,
and I hope that you signed upfor the newsletter over at Substack because there's
always good stuff that goes out upthere over there, up there over at
Substack on the rag, so makesure you go and check that out as
(02:44):
well. Lots of good stuff thathappens that happens there. So in the
meantime, this is one of manythings that we're going to be discussing today,
including getting into some of this becausewe've got to talk about I'm fascinated
with the Kissinger stuff because while andI'm I'm not going to dive into this,
let's not throw elements up and makea big thing about it right now.
That'll that'll come later. But I'mfascinated with the dichotomy that's in the
(03:10):
press right now of Jimmy Carter beingsick and he's at his wife's visitation and
he's like on the doorstep of deathand the way that he's perceived and received
and feted by the left and thenHenry Kissinger, and I'm fascinated by this,
(03:30):
and I want to dive into ita little bit later because I feel
like that's also yesterday we talked aboutWarshock tests and the context of you know,
having this discussion, whether it's aboutyou know, the either masks or
a whole bunch of other host ofissues. I think this is like another
Warshock test. I really do feelthat way. I think it's another Warshock
(03:51):
test to kind of see where peoplesort of really are with foreign policy and
what they you know, where whatthey really believe anyway, So we're gonna
get into all that. The audiothat we started with, though, what
was this? This was like aNew York Times, some New York Times
event. I actually don't care enoughto know what it is. But what
is it you were gonna tell me, Kane? Was the deal? Book?
(04:14):
Was that the deal? But whatis even that? Yeah, it
was some stupid New York Times thing. I don't know. That's all I
know. They and they had himthere. Our friends over at pat Chops
immediately made a SoundBite out of this. But this is the SoundBite that's getting
all of the attention. I actuallydon't even think that that's like, I
mean, I love that SoundBite.I completely agree with him because he's he's
referencing all of these advertisers that arebeing pressured by the left to pull advertising
(04:42):
on X because they accused him falselyof saying something, of tweeting something anti
semitic, which he absolutely did not. And I find it fascinating that all
of these actual anti Semites that havebeen out there excusing pro Hamas and doing
all of this stuff. I've beenfascinated in watching this because they project onto
(05:04):
him, and so, I mean, I completely agree with what he said
there. He also said which Ithought this was a brilliant SoundBite as well.
Audio sound bite eight. I thinkthis is perhaps my favorite, because
he was having a conversation with themoderator about these virtue signaling pharisees. For
(05:25):
the lack of a better way toput it, listen to this and what
I see all of the place ispeople who care about looking good while doing
evil. Yeah, it's amazing.I love it. I but he made
a good point though, I meanhe's like, yes, I mean,
you know, they're talking about they'retalking about doing good, but they care
(05:47):
more about looking good while well.They care more about looking good than actually
doing good. And they want tolook good while they do good. But
they'd rather look good than do good. Is essentially what it is. I
love that sound bite, and he'sright. He's right in this people who
care about looking good but they're doingevil. And I really feel like in
(06:10):
a lot of instances, especially withpolitics today, it's more about looking good
than actually doing anything good. Igo back to the Kissinger thing. I
mean, he's there's some there's somecomplications. Obviously, there's some nuance.
He killed a lot of comedies.As my friend Kurt reminded everybody he did.
He also, yes, I getsyou. He also and I think
it's completely fair to say that thedude also enabled China to be what it
(06:33):
is today. I mean, Ithink that's a I think that's completely fair
to say. Uh, but inthe world of geopolitics, what in the
geopolitical sphere, the you know,normally it's not just it's it's not so
incredibly easy to make the easy call. I mean, he was, you
(06:54):
know, a guy who was aforeign he got into foreign policy theory,
and then he was also a diplomat, and he wore a couple of different
hats, and so one wasn't theother, and one would make different moves
more so than the other, andit was there's a lot of I mean,
there's a lot of nuance here.Nobody's I mean, good grief.
You could the I think concern thathe had at the time, particularly as
(07:19):
it relates to China and brokrang orbreaking rather this Russian Chinese relationship, thinking
that you could fracture communism and thatwould do it in you can. I
mean, there has to be constantvigilance, and of course that wasn't helped
by the administrations after particularly the Clintonadministration and the World Trade Organization and everything
(07:39):
else. I mean, we couldgo on and on their admittance and to
that helped really fuel their rise tothe top, almost faster than anything.
But ultimately, I mean he didlay the groundwork. I mean that's something
that I mean, I think it'scompletely fair to acknowledge that. And so
the reason that I brought up atthe very start of this Carter is when
you look at what's happening in theMiddle East, one of the reasons that
we're dealing with all of the nonsensethat we're dealing with in the Middle East
(08:00):
is because of Jimmy Carter. Hewas one of the worst presidents that we've
ever had in American history. Ilove the Jimmy Carter. I love the
FDR the most. Politically, Ilove Jimmy Carter, and I also think
that his virtue is a veneer.Uh and I really love, however,
FDR. But we have it.Democrats. They love to romanticize, like
the most ridiculous people amongst them,and and and then but they freak they're
(08:24):
freaking out of our kissinger. Didyou see Rolling Stones? Hold up,
did you guys see Rolling Stone?My gosh, this was crazy. I
mean there were people who were justabsolutely just cheering on this guy's death.
And I mean, I mean justwild. Rolling Stone went at him.
I mean, they were they theythey were not happy. They they well
(08:46):
they were happy that he was dead. But I pulled this piece up because
I'm not getting it up. Butthis says what happens when you work radio
TV guys, we don't do teleprompters. But yeah, they they they went
at him. They rolling Stone winat him. And I've been watching all
of these hot takes from people allmorning. Really it started last night.
(09:09):
And nobody they they the way thatthey talk. Oh, he left so
many people dead, you know,in Cambodia, et cetera, et cetera.
Hi, have you heard of theKima Rouge? Have you heard of
Polepot? They acted like they weren'tthere, They weren't factors. It was
all just Henry Kissinger. It wasHenry Kissinger, Kane. Did you know
that all by himself? I mean, there was no there, There were
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no monumentally murderous regimes down there thatwere I mean, have they heard of
the killing fields? Have they heardof the tree in the killing fields?
The tree where the kamis used totake babies from moms and smash them against
the tree, beat them against thetree like one would a rug on a
stick, and then discard the deadbodies. But you know, Kissinger displaced
(09:54):
people. Kissinger killed people. I'mnot kidding you. That's what's been the
majority of the hot tak And butyet they're lionizing somebody like Jimmy Carter.
Jimmy Carter, who's moves in theseventies created the destabilization in Iran that you
see now. Jimmy Carter. Wehave to deal with the who thies,
We have to deal with all ofthat. We've deal with Hesbola, we
(10:16):
have to deal with Hamas, allwhich are funded by Iran because of who
helped them to who helped the Ayatola, Who helped all of that. That
was Carter. I love reading biographieson presidents. It's one of my that's
I love historical books. If I'mgoing to read a book, I'm going
to read a historical book because somuch written today is just absolute trash.
(10:37):
And I was reading one. Iread it a couple of years ago.
I actually pulled it out as soonas I heard he was sick. And
that's what reading it and uh,I mean, it's so eye opening.
It's amazing the stuff that isn't taught, either in high school or college about
why there's so much that contributed tothe destabilization in the Middle East. But
interestingly enough, it's like there's ablackout on Carter's participation in it. Now,
(11:01):
the reason I bring this up,and yes, Carter. Yeah,
I mean, Kissinger wasn't president.Carter was. Carter was a president.
Kissinger wasn't a president. Yes,Kissinger was, you know, incredibly influential
and helped guided the foreign policy ofseveral different presidential administrations. But yet he
wasn't the top guy. He wasn'tthe top guy. He made a lot
of he made a lot of moves, and he was he was kind of
(11:24):
celebrated. I mean, he waskind of he was pretty popular with Hollywood.
Delete. I saw a picture ofhim with Elizabeth Taylor. I guess
it was back in the seventies orsomething that it was taken hm. And
interestingly, I read another quip aboutall of this where because he got the
Nobel Peace Prize, right, Imean if you think that that's you know,
a Nobel Peace Prize. But hegot the Nobel Peace Prize, and
(11:48):
he also shared it with U well, he shared it with a basically the
what is it? Doc Lou Doc, who was one of the guys that
he sat with and they were brokeringthe peace agreement. They were brokering the
peace agreement and trying to end youknow, fighting in Vietnam. Al though,
(12:09):
did it the Communist did it in. But the whole thing was that
he was making a lot of thesedecisions that he was writing the checks that
Nixon's butt had to cash. Notthat Nixon was I mean non intelligent.
It was incredibly intelligent. But alot of the foreign policy decisions that were
guided by Kissinger, I mean hewrote them, and Nixon cashed in with
(12:30):
his backside. And I was readingthis this story where I don't know who.
I'm trying to remember who it wasthat wrote this. It was what
there's a million things written about Kissingertoday, but I was reading this piece
and they were saying that, youknow, when he got the Nobel Peace
Prize, Nixon actually had wanted theNobel Peace Prize, and he you know,
(12:52):
thought, you know, president ofthe United States, he'd probably get
it. He didn't get it,and Kissinger got it sharing it. The
other guy declined because he said thatit hadn't been implemented, but Nixon gave
him. It was described as avery gallant congratulations, but people who knew
Nixon well could perceive the hurt becauseit had cost him dearly the foreign policy
(13:18):
that had been guided by Kissinger.And I just thought that was a very
interesting insight, a little interesting insightinto this, but I cannot get over
the contrast between Carter and Middle Eastand the reception and the fetting that the
left does, and then what wesee with Kissinger. It's just it's fascinates
(13:39):
me. Now another contrast is happeningtonight. I'm not doing a live debate
of it because I'm actually writing abig old I'm drafting a big olong piece,
and it's been so crazy it's takenme a couple of days to do
because I feel it's basically, youhave these two ideologies that are contrasted so
perfectly on stage tonight. I dothink it's smart for disantists to go right
at Gavenus. I think it's smart. I think that it shows that he's
(14:03):
not gonna hide, and he's gonnafight, and he's gonna go after the
guy who really Joe Biden might bePresident of the United States, but the
up and coming most influential member ofthe Democrat Party is Gavin Newsom. And
I don't think the right is takingthis seriously, and they're about to get
obamaed. Not kidding you. I'mnot the only one who thinks this.
(14:24):
Coming up later in the program,a lifelong Californian who's followed California politics and
is not about Gavin Newsom since youknow, people talking about it now on
blogs and podcasts could spell his name. She's going to join me to give
insight into exactly this, because shesays the right's being done with us.
They think that he's inconsequential because weview him as being silly, which is
(14:48):
true, we do. I mean, good grief, French laundry. It
looks ridiculous when he went there withthe lockdowns and everything else. But he's
dangerous and also, you want totalk about baggage, This dude has so
much baggage. I'm not even talkingabout the political baggage of the high speed
rail. I'm not talking about theboondoggle of crime and drugs and everything else
(15:09):
that's happening in California. I thinkshe says he's still having an affair very
publicly right now, and there's politicalimplications to that. So she's going to
join us. Jennifer van Laer comingup. She's with Red State. She's
going to join us to talk aboutthat. We're also and we've got this
contrasted, We've got this debate tonight, we're gonna give We're gonna pregame it
(15:31):
a little bit. We also havea bunch of other things to get into
big tech. And Musk is sayingagain what everybody else is thinking and maybe
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The Dana Show. I've said this, and I said this to dun Chowping
(20:26):
and MLAs, and I've said thisto every world leader. It's never,
never, never been a good betto bet against American people. Never,
never, never can I break thisvideo down one and I'm gonna you're gonna
hate me. I'm so sorry.One, It's like, yeah, I
love when you do video break onDana. I think these they are great.
(20:48):
Welcome back to the show Dana lastyear with you and listen Coast to
coast watch the simulcast. Here's okay. First off, let me just address
what was said. And then uhuh dun chowping? Dude? What that?
Who is he talking about? ZimiJijiiping like the Kami Chinese leader.
Not a peep from anyone in themedia on this. Really, I just
(21:11):
need a pulse check on these zombiesthat are running these publications. Not a
single peep from you people. Idon't care if it was your beloved grandfather
that said something like this. Youmake fun of it because it's it should
be. If you can't make funof this, you're a soulless meat sack.
You're a solace meat sack, andyou're getting nothing for Christmas. That's
(21:36):
it. How do you not,dude? It's like sixteen candles. It's
like a movie scene. Okay,So I want to break this down because
I got to give props to thefemale and the male that are steened on
either side of him, and youcould see it. The other the guy
had a real good poker face.You could see there was a hint of
(21:56):
question that passed over his face whenthe president said, don chow peing,
which in the Himalayas. What Butthe girl, the lady, you could
tell she caught that and was likewhat and it registered. She caught herself
like they knew they were on thenational stage and they were trying to keep
it legit right. So let's justlet's just walk through what is now my
(22:18):
favorite video sound by so far ofthis month. Go ahead, I've said
this, and I've said this todunk chow ping And then she looks right
back at him like I'm sorry,what, don chow what did you just
say? And you could see herlike her purse lips together. She just
looked at him and went what.The other guy like, his eyebrows were
(22:40):
up real hot. I love watchingpeople's expressions on stuff. I can't tell
you how many videos of this,like these walk throughs and stuff I've seen
that. So the guy's like,wait what and you could tell his like
eyebrows dropped just a little bit andhe's like, oh, here we go.
But she it's like he could heexpected this out of Biden. She
didn't, and she just looks athim the way her head and looked at
(23:00):
him right after he said that thatwas really that was something. But then
it gets weird er. So afterhe says Dong chaoping and they're just standing
there, then it's like, Idon't is he wearing like a shot collar
where if someone is standing behind thescenes and they're on the campaign and they
(23:22):
are like, oh, it needsmore energy. My mom has candles and
I'm not gonna lie. I gotsome too for Christmas where you can do
the remote with them. You're thosethings are amazing, right mineor made in
Taiwan. Thank You's Gina, andthere's a remote and you can think think
like with the remote ever you knowwhat I'm talking about. So it's like
(23:44):
someone did that to him, likethey got a shot collar on him,
and they're then back with the remotelike trying to get him to not be
boring and sleepy. So go ahead, because he gets riled up and it's
just out of nowhere and awkward.In malays I've said this to every mad
world. It's never never into themic. Now he leans over and the
(24:08):
guy. The guy is like,what the hell's happening here? They're both
amused. One thing that you cantell from both of their faces is that
they are amused. She is suppressinga chortal which is kind of like a
chokey laugh. She's suppressing it andyou can tell, and the guy is
(24:30):
just looking like, yep, Imean, they're The guy's like has the
expression of this is my drunk friend, you know what I mean, Like
when you're when you're dudes, whenyou're at the barn, one of your
friends who's maybe had a couple,you know, maybe a pint too many,
starts making a joke and it's justawkward, not funny, but you're
you find it funny. That's likehim. She's just trying not to laugh.
(24:51):
But okay, so again, weirder er go ahead. Never been
a good bet to bet against Americanpeople, never, never, never,
And okay. So she starts noddingher head and the guy that's on the
other side of him is like,I don't know what this he means,
but I guess it's tilly time.It's tilly time. We're gonna throw down
that he just and then he startsclapping like yeah, fight fight, yes,
(25:17):
love that that's only who knows whatthe hell this guy's saying, but
sounds like he's talking about fights rightnow, and I'm down with that.
And she just starts nod in herhead. She turns, she turns into
a bouncer like mm hmm, Tillytime. I just it's the funniest.
This is so funny that I can'ttell you how many times I watch this
video. I watched it the firsttime that I literally lol. Normally I'm
(25:40):
lying when I write that, I'mnot. I'm not lolling at all.
I'm just like I'm somewhat amused inmy facial express and expression hasn't changed.
I laughed like a loon out loud. I llled loudly when I saw this
video. I love the guy's expression. He's like yeah, Tilly time,
Yeah, and she just starts nodin her head like mmmmm, oh my
(26:00):
gosh, it's just precious. Ijust gotta I'm sorry, go with me,
simulcast guys. Why she's She's like, I'm not gonna laugh and he's
like, yeah, what fight,yes, yes, and she nods her
head and he's like yeah, Tillytime. Anyway, you know what,
where's the bad lip reading people?Right? I want the bad lip reading
(26:22):
people. You remember the one thatwe played where it was, uh,
they were dubbing Matt and Gates andKevin McCarthy in a fight. I brought
the tiger. It's hysterical. Theyneed to do that for this. Honestly,
some days that's the only way Ican take politics. And I work
in this business. It's almost likewhen Biden just speaks normally, it sounds
like it's the lip reading thing.Yeah, I mean, you know what,
you make a really good point here, because they they would only serve
(26:44):
to make him look smarter and soundsmarter because at least they're yeah, they're
like more coherent and more you know, a little bit more consistent with their
speech and stuff. I don't know, but that was I'm still yeah,
I felt on that. I meanthat whole clip. I mean, you
start with a dong chow ping andyou in with them, and I'm gonna
(27:07):
do my angry old man pointing goodnight. So uh there. I I
don't know, I'm I'm speaking ofthe bidens. By the way, Oh
I got I got some more bidens, so uh there was an unusual payment
that was flagged to them. Areyou shocked by that? You're not shocked,
You're like Dan and I know this. I know that. Yeah,
But they keep finding more guys Atsome point, I mean, what is
(27:33):
it going to take for the mediato care about what they're finding with the
Bidens. Look at their star.We found a pile of dead hookers and
all kinds of crack rocks and allthis cash. And it says Joe Biden's
crack rock or Hunter Biden's crackrock onthe on the crack baggie. And then
it says Joe Biden's money from Chinawritten on all of the paper in casing
(27:55):
the bills here. I mean,could this be Biden's? I mean,
what does it take for them toactually pay to to this? What does
it take? So the newest storyhere is that the investigation into the money
laundry. So there's the bank hasan investigator. They expressed they had expressed
(28:15):
serious concerns about a transfer of fundsthat had been done in the form of
a forty thousand dollars check from JamesBiden. Okay, can i'm sidebar?
I haven't had enough coffee today numberone. Number two does James Biden sort
of who's the great value version ofwhom? Joe or James? They both
(28:38):
look like weird, morphed out versionsof each other and like we're missing somebody
who looks normal. I don't anyway. So they said that a forty thousand
dollars check to James Biden, andit was an email obtained by House oversight.
Biden got a forty one thousand dollarspersonal check from his account. It
was written, it was written bythe wife. But how the wife get
the money? That's what we're gettingtoo. How do the wife get the
(29:00):
money? And guess it was allwith the Chinese energy firm ce f C.
Hey Kine, who's equity firm wasdoing all that business with ce f
C? Yeah yeah, wait,remind, remind everybody who is Rosemont Seneca
owned guy that would Biden? OhHunter Biden, that's right? And and
(29:26):
whose baby infant son is he?He's the baby and goo baby? Who's
that president? President? Yeah,there's just you know, yeah, so
they uh, the Chinese entity thatsent all that cash to them, it
was the cef C. That's howthey That's how they got it. Ce
f c and it was it wasall to uh, the cysts in law,
(29:48):
and then all of a sudden theyhad all this money and they're trying
to be like, no, shewrote the check. But again, where
did the money come from? Ididn't just fall out of the sky,
didn't just operate out of the ether. Where did it come from? And
they they flagged all of these andthis was just one of many invest many
transfers that they found incredibly suspicious.That's why they were flagged. I mean,
(30:12):
that's why all of this. Thebanks were flagging them first. Hmmm.
So they said, yeah, theywere unusual. The original payment that
was set up by Hunter biden ina Chinese business associate was listed as being
for management fees and reimbursements. Andthey had this guy. It was a
payment to Hudson West the Third,well, Hudson West the third Okade he
(30:34):
received these payments and so they didn'treally have any records of him like doing
any consulting or management stuff. Theyhad no no record of him doing that
at all. But then after itwent to Hudson West the Third, they
had no they had no nothing tomerit any payment from anybody about management fees
(30:56):
or reimbursements is my point. Theyhad I mean there was what do you
mean some he was? What waswhat were the payments for? There was
nothing to clarify what the payments werefor. Once the five million landed at
Hudson West, they carved it upinto all of these different I mean,
they divvied it up and then theystarted funneling it through all their other different
accounts. Why wouldn't Okay, Soif CEFC had hired somebody for management or
(31:26):
consulting, say you own a businessand you're hiring someone for management and consulting,
wouldn't you just pay them, likeoutright to them directly? Why would
isn't it? It's kind of weird, right that they would divide up everything
that you're owed and then funnel itthrough a million different accounts. First,
(31:49):
right, isn't that weird? Wouldyou find that sketch? Huh? That
seems shady? I don't know,I how, And then it goes through
all of these this Rube goldbarg aGoldberg machine of coldbarg and my Biden moment,
(32:10):
it goes to this Rube Goldberg machineof financial shell game before it finally
ends up in the Biden's account.Oh, it always ends up in the
Biden's account, make no mistake.I mean, I get that there's a
reason why you have LLCs, butI don't understand the purpose other than to
hide money or launder it. Idon't understand the purpose of having a company
(32:34):
just literally to move money around again, other than that obvious reason. Aside
from the obvious reason, why elsedo you have all these companies to that
just transfer assets? That's all theydo. What does your business do?
It just moves money, like literally, I just take it or receive it.
No launder It's really great. Youknow, I got a lot of
(33:00):
we got a lot of questions aboutthis. So does house over safe?
All right? We have a lotmore on the way coming up. I'm
gonna tell you about the worst bar. This bar it's apparently it's based on
the concept that people are tired oftalking to other people. I get it.
Then stay home, right, we'regonna we're gonna get in all of
(33:20):
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the latest at the Middle East,the latest happening in DC. We're gonna
make fun of people. We gotall that stuff coming up. Our friend's
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(35:36):
like SAMs through the hour Glass.So are the days of the United States?
Instead of cutting number It's like CongressmanTrump and Bob want to do.
What does he think that Bobert's nameis Trump Band? He said congressman by
Congressman Trump and Bob want to do. So he's a congressman. Hmm.
(36:07):
Man. That was he had abad day yesterday. I am man call
Lee all right, fat good grief. This was after this wasn't this after
Don Choping what he called the whathe called Ji jimping Chinese later Dong Choping
(36:27):
because that makes sense. Uh.Yeah, he's super special, this guy
with his I just I don't thinkthat this in any way inspires confidence in
any Democrat voter when they hear him. I think that's why they're very slowly,
although they're up against the clock.If they're going to be pushing Gavin
(36:52):
Newsom, I will be watching thatthing with Newsoman DeSantis tonight because I think
it's gonna be very, very instructivein terms of Democrats messaging. There are
two factions right now in the DemocratParty. You have the faction that have
pushed Biden and you have the factionthat I think there are a lot that
(37:14):
like Newsome because they see him asthe only other option they have going forward.
The problem though with Democrats is theydon't have anybody else. They really
don't. Barack Obama one of theworst things that he ever did. He
screwed his own party hardcore in thathe tried to protect his legacy and tried
to fend off competitors by just destroyingthe bench. Do you remember in twenty
(37:40):
twelve the spokesperson that they are thespokesperson, The guy that they had delivered
the keynote at the DNC was oneof the Castro brothers from Texas right,
and he was an alright speaker.He wasn't anything to be excited about.
They were being groomed like they werebeing eyed as potentially could be. But
(38:00):
they were identical twins and one ofthe guys who was mayor, he switched
out for his other identical twin brotherso the other one could go to a
fundraiser one time for a parade inSan Antonio. That was a trip.
They discovered that they were too goofyessentially to go any higher than they did,
so they were discarded. But BarackObama never they didn't encourage a new
(38:20):
crop of leaders, and so asof such, they totally depleted their bench.
The only person sitting on it isNewsom, and he's sitting there twittle
in his thumbs, just I andJoe Biden. This is going to be
very interesting to see, uh,not only how both of these candidates do
Tony and then he's a candidate,but also how the media responds to it,
particularly Newsome. Stick with us wholeother hour on the way. Pedro
(38:43):
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seven to two Patriot code Friday seventysix for details. In your own popularity,
Sure you've seen the polls. Alsoyour ratings thirty eight point five percent,
Biden's forty point four percent, andTrump is higher. Ron Klein says
this, and you've seen press aboutyourself over the years. He says that
(40:15):
he believes that your popularity or unpopularity, or whatever rating you want to put
it as, is a function ofsexism and racism. He says that's part
of the problem. He says,she doesn't get the credit for all that
she's done. Do you think that'strue for what? Well? Are we
talking about the media or people asit relates to the media. I'm short
(40:35):
some of that is true. Forwhat is she what does she do?
I don't mean to sound like Suresyhere, but jim any Christmas? For
what she brought us? Then diagrams? Really that's the VP that was yesterday
at that New York Times butter mybiscuit thing whatever it was? What was
(40:58):
it? The deal book summit?Sure? Okay, Dania last here with
you on the airwaves. You canlisten coast to coast, you can stream
it, you can watch the simulcastsChannel thirty forty seven trag TV. So
the reason that no one likes heris because they're sexist and racist, not
because she totally sucks out loud.I mean at her work, her jobs,
(41:24):
the sexism into racist I mean,well, so wait the sexism and
racism. Wait a minute, letme understand this. So you get into
the vice president's office, but youcan't do I mean, you get that
far, but then all of asudden the sexisms and the racisms. So
(41:44):
you get as far as actually gettinginto the VP office. Oh but I
the reason that I'm not good atmy job is because of too sexisms and
to racisms, is why. Imean, that's the truth of it.
Unburdened by what has been ven diagram, she sounds like if you fed an
(42:05):
AI machine like just random boardroom stuffand then it and then told it to
spit it out. Yeah, giveme a thousand words in a speech like
you're a female president, like you'rea female vice president, and that would
be it. Right, So youget as far as the VP office,
(42:28):
so there's no sexism in racism stoppingyou. Then right you get into like
everyone's like yeah, cool, allright, you know she's in the VP
office. But then all of asudden it dawns on them that you're a
you're a woman of color, andthen they're like, wait a minute,
how did this happen? And thenall the racism's into sexisms happened? Is
that what you're telling me? Likeit goes that far to the VP office?
(42:53):
Totally fine, No one says nothing, but only after she's in office,
because see, I would think thatif it was really sexism and racism
at play, she would never havegotten into the VP office. She would
have never been Vice President of theUnited States. So methinks that it has
(43:15):
nothing to do with racism and sexism. She's just looking for some kind of
justification to explain why she can't doher job. Well, that's what it
seems like. I feel like I'mpretty correct on that. You know,
I'm I I'm so tired of this. I'm so tired of well, I'm
(43:35):
a woman, so woman stuff,woman, woman, woman, lady female.
That's not a substitute for a policyor wit or you know, substance,
nothing good. Heavens, Can Ijust tell you because this I just
now saw this. It happened acouple hours ago. Alexandricascio Cortes says she's
leaving twitters or sorry X. Shegoes quote after are Alon's f bomb Tye
(44:01):
ride. This will be my lastpost on acts. She says, I
can no longer support a platform runby foul malta genre. Huh, didn't
Rashida to Leib say cursing shouldn't bea distraction when she got mad she was
(44:27):
cursing about Trump. Hmmm, I'mjust saying. I mean, I I
remember not just her, but Iremember Alexander Accassio Cortez too, using all
of a sudden there are these newlittle neo Puritans after his f bomb Tyride.
I just said bye, Actually Iknow, I just I shared with
(44:50):
her. Rashida to Leib like sayingthat, you know, cursing that distraction.
I think he he said what hesaid in the way that he said
it so that it would go viral. Be it was arresting to your attention
and see it was just you know, maybe it's not something you'd stay in
church. But I also don't thinkthat, you know, we'd be talking
(45:10):
about advertising Marxist boycotts like this inchurch. Either. The point is that
he did it in order for itto have impact, and it worked,
and he's correct. By the way, all these companies that are like,
we're gonna pull on what grounds again, it's like suresy for what because they
(45:35):
want to accuse him of anti Semitismfor nothing. They're just trying to get
him on something, that's all.They're trying to get him on something.
What is she gonna do? AlexanderKashio Qortez has no influence outside of social
media? Do you know how Iknow that? Because she doesn't move the
needle. All these people that thinkall the stupid stuff they do on social
media, it doesn't move the needleright or left. By the way,
(45:58):
if it did, we would havean issue twenty twenty guys, nobody,
Oh, I said something uncomfortable.It's true. It's true, though,
where's the lie? That's the whole. She doesn't move the needle. All
she does is like throw a flailabout on social media and record herself.
(46:21):
She's a younger version of Elizabeth Warren. Give her a few years and she'll
be like, can I get youa beer? Asking her very uninterested spouse.
I'm saying, but I just Idon't know. It's amazing to me.
Can we talk also about this othervery uncomfortable twenty twenty four thing?
(46:42):
What in the ever love and hellis Trump doing? Tweet? He we
didn't tweet, it was on hisplatform. He posted it it's not made
up, it's not photoshop about sosome dude named Mark Fisher. I'm not
playing the audio. This guy,some dude left BLM and said that he
(47:02):
is well. He said, heleft BLM and he was talking about how
you know he's he's going to voteRepublican this time around. And then Trump
had had posted on his platform thathe was happy to have his He said
(47:22):
quote, spoke with Mark Fisher yesterday. A great guy, Very honored to
have his and BLM's support. Ihave done more for black people than any
other president Lincoln, question Mark,including a ten year blah blah blah criminal.
Just the first step back is somethingthat we can debate about later.
But the key sentence is very honoredto have his and BLM support. He
(47:45):
could have just said his. Hecould have just said Fisher support. Why.
I don't care how much you lovehim, I don't care how much
you hate him. Put it asideand let's all be let's all be reasonable.
People were not the left. Whyare you saying that you want to
have that? We are honored tohave BLM support. Did you see what
they just posted a couple of weeksago, they were cheering on Homas BLM,
(48:07):
which burned and looted for several yearswhile we all had to be stuck
inside our homes and nobody did nothing, even in DC BLM. I had
a number of people telling me,which I think is interesting because I've written
books about this and I've been idon't know, writing and on air for
(48:29):
quite a bit talking about liberty evangelismconverting people. They're like, oh,
Dana, you know BLM can convert, Like apparently, because I said,
I go, so, there isthis the new thing on the right.
What's the script? Are we nowin support of BLM? You know?
And yes, I'm being a smartass because hi, have you met me?
Like I love people who love it, every love smart ass ory everywhere
(48:52):
else. But then all of asudden, don't anyway. But I asked
that. I'm like, I'm whydid he tweet that? Like he could
have just said Fisher support and that'sfine, but BLIMP support. I mean,
I don't think that Trump's dumb.I don't think that he's I mean,
why would you put BLM's support upthere? Why they looted, they
burned, they destroyed neighborhoods, Theyimpugned the character of half of the country
(49:16):
for the way they voted. Everybodywas a racist. They were pushing CRT
and DEI in schools. They triedto burn a church down. I mean,
good grief, why would And Iget that people are like, well,
you know, Dana, you knowwe want to be able to convert
people. You know, okay,but without acknowledgment of wrong, how do
(49:38):
you have reconciliation? I mean biblically, it starts with acknowledging acknowledgment of wrongs.
Mean not as you want to takeissue with everything in the New Testament,
happy to have that separate debate,but in order to have reconciliation,
you have to acknowledge offenses. Youhave to acknowledge it. We can't.
(50:00):
We're not going to be like theBidens and pretend this stuff doesn't exist.
I mean they for years, howlong came? How many years? Three
years? Four years? They burnedand looted half the damn country. Every
major city saw rioting, writing everywhere, writing in Dallas, writing in Saint
Louis, writing in Houston, writingin Austin, writing in the Los Angeles,
writing in Portland, writing in NewYork, writing everywhere. There was
(50:22):
rioting Memphis, Nashville, Atlanta,rioting everywhere, Chicago rioting everywhere, Kansas
City rioting everywhere. There was riotingDC, and they, I mean turned
(50:43):
into buying large mansions. They endedup taking all this money that they were
given and they ended up using itto enrich themselves. I had some people
say, well, you know,it's very important that uh, you know,
we Republicans try to go after theblack boat. I'm excusing me.
Hold up, I don't know anyI literally do not know any of my
(51:06):
acquaintance, my friends who happen tobe black Americans, who think that BLM
was helpful, and they're not allon the right, they at worst thought,
you know, I it was eithera distraction or a grift or just
like a super far left faction.There are so many other ways to do
(51:29):
outreach without sanctioning, mainstreaming and welcominga Marxist terror group that was celebrating,
literally celebrating October seventh. I don'tknow if you remember the image that they
posted. They posted somebody on aparaglider holding up one of the BLM flags
(51:52):
and with yeah, so there's noacknowledge. There hasn't been an acknowledgment of
wrong here, and that's how reconciliationbegins. And also forgiveness too. This
is the other thing. I wrotea whole book about this, called Gray's
Canceled. Some of the people inmy timeline should get it as Christmas guests.
But forgiveness doesn't mean acceptance. Andagain acknowledgment of wrongs. You're not
(52:16):
gonna have reconciliation without it. Youdon't have big tint. I don't want
to be in a big tent witha damn Marxist. I don't want to
be in a big tent with aterrorist that tried to burn down a church.
If people are that damned desperate forvotes, then settle up because y'all
gonna lose. If we're that bad, then we're gonna have our asses handed
to us in twenty twenty four.If it's so bad that we got to
(52:36):
sit here and beg violent Marxist forvotes, we don't need to do that.
You don't have to debase yourself.That has nothing to do without reach.
It's not five d Chess. Ihad friends that had their buildings set
on fire by riots in Saint Louis, And you're telling, oh, well,
you know we gotta forget No,oh no, absolutely not. Your
(53:00):
right to self defense was under attackby BLM because they thought they had the
right to bar general private property.By God, if you try to defend
yourself, you're a racist. Allof a sudden, we're gonna sweep that
under the rug. Really no,we're not. I mean the left can,
(53:20):
but the actual right will not.Friends over a Wise foods Wise Food
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com. That's prepared with data dotcom. And now all of the news
you would probably miss it's time forData's Quick five. So the new CDC
(54:30):
Life Expectancy data shows a painfully selebrebound from COVID, or one might say
a painfully slow rebound from all ofthe stuff that we had to live through
under COVID. Maybe Americans are doomspending. This is interesting. Obviously it's
a problem. They say that nearlyall Americans are concerned about the state of
(54:50):
the economy, many continue to spendmore save less doom spending. They say,
maybe the one way to cope withstress is economic fears amount but obviously
it comes at the expense of yourown financial world. So it's it seems
like a coping mechanism. Ninety sixpercent are worried about the economy. Inflation
is still just destroying people. Butholiday spending is going to reach record levels.
(55:13):
You're looking at nine hundred and sixtysix billion dollars, that's the projection.
And they say it's like, youknow you have doom scrolling, now
you have doom spending. Credit carddebts topping your trillion dollars. And you
know who's really the most susceptible todoom spending? I get it. They're
worried about buying houses and the oldergeneration did not help. But you can't
be doom spending. And they sayGen Z and millennials are particularly susceptible to
(55:37):
this. They said over seventy threepercent of Gen Zers would rather live in
the moment. So that's about doomspending. So you can only blame the
other generation so much, right,you can only blame like our parents so
much for stuff, all right,because I think that millennials are young boomers
that had kids, right, isn'tthat kind of the general thinking of it.
(55:59):
Let's see the dollar is heading forits worst month in a year.
Oh Yang, good heavens. Thisalso a couple of others. I don't
like those other headlines and I haveI don't like these. They said that
the kill switch coming to your car. We're going to be talking about EV's
here coming up real quick because they'renot selling and now the kill switch the
(56:22):
mandate, which is a complete violationof privacy. It's true, and there
are receipts and it's coming to yourcar. This is an actual thing that's
happening. This is something we're goingto talk about later on in the program
coming up. We have more instore. We got meat, we got
don chow ping lots. Stick withus. Elevate your commute workouts or downtime
(56:44):
with the Dana Show podcast. Unleashthe power of knowledge at your fingertips by
following Dana on Apple, Spotify orwherever you get your podcasts. He'll get
a public here and after he doesthe deposition, he doesn't get to set
the rule. Just because he toldthe deal Ojay, the RS, the
National Archives, and every other gothernightency that's been investigating the Biden for years
(57:06):
to stand down. Doesn't mean he'sgonna tell the House oversc com but he
wants to do. We have senthim a lawful subpoenut. So that's James
Comer who's saying, uh that thisis talking about this whole thing with Hunter
Biden, and he's not going totell how Silversight what to do. What
it is. It's just such obviousaudio. I really don't give a rats
(57:27):
ask about coming on with it.It's just obvious. We get it.
Meat Potatoes saying something that we allknow I need more coffee. My coffee
machine broke. I hate the earthSmodge needs to come and just blight this
rock. Welcome, yeah, welcomeback, bottom of the second our.
Oh, this is what happens whenI don't have enough coffee. Guys,
that's what I have. I havemy black rifle coffee beans, but my
(57:50):
coffee machine broke. Can I justget you're gonna indulge me for a second,
because it's like a vehicle operating withouta oiel, right, I sometimes
you know, I'll have, likeI had a little bit a meany cup
of coffee because we have this brevelmachine. That's that Brevel's garbage. It's
garbage. I said it. Idon't care if anybody. We've had three
(58:10):
machines. We keep having to takethem back because literally, like clockwork,
every year and a half they totallybreak down. So we had this,
you know, got it for Chris'sbirthday, had this fancy coffee machine because
we drink a lot of coffee andit keeps breaking down. So now we're
without coffee. But Dana, couldn'tyou do like an old timey, old
timey some of you other dying atme, right, now, like you
(58:31):
know, the drip machine like youryour your parents had asks Kane every day,
and I'm like no, because Ijust don't like the way it tastes.
I want like, I want itto wake me up when I smell
it from across the room. Youknow what I mean. I wanted to
have the effect of Hunter's crack,but without the crack. Does that make
sense? Yeah? So I havemy favorite mug ever, and uh,
(58:59):
there's but one drop left in it. And I'm on my deathbed right now.
I don't know if you can tellthis is me on my deathbed not
having enough coffee. So that's whereI'm on the struggle bus right now.
Guys hate the word. You guysare the same way. I see you
guys all talking. I see youguys all talking on social media and Facebook
comments. I'll post something in themorning and you're like, oh, I've
only had X amount of coffee today. I can't process this that early.
(59:22):
I see you, I see thecomments of the newsletter prep I send down
the morning y'all like I haven't hadenough coffee. You don't judge me,
all right, So I wanted totouch on where's let me get my audio
list up for radio here. Iwanted to touch on the it came what
were you telling me? Because youwere playing me slat fighting? But I
(59:43):
couldn't just roll into it. Wehad to set it up for the folks
because they're slat fighting really badly inthe Senate right now. Yeah, well
it's been going on. It's it'slike a girl fight in the bathroom at
Junior High. So I have thisthree minute audio that kind of yeah,
this is the Judiciary the Judiciary Committeehere, this is what started the problems
that we're now seeing another and they'rehaving it. It's about big tech.
(01:00:07):
Just to cute, it's about bigtech because big tech, as you know,
like for instance, how YouTube hasbeen taking down our videos and uh
they you know, moving to demonetizecertain things well at the same time demanding
that you participate in their program wherethey throw ads in the middle of your
live broadcast. But okay, uh, but they uh, it's not just
(01:00:28):
YouTube, but it's other big techcompanies. Our government not only has been
pressuring them to censor conservatives, butyou know, really in some instance is
paying them to do it. Andso this is this this fight that they're
having and the Senator is all relatedto this. Listen. Oh oh,
I thought we had it. Wedon't have it. I didn't know if
you were setting up the Schollenberger stuffor if you're the Schellenberger's there, he's
(01:00:51):
you have the two guys who didthe Twitter files there, uh and they
Shellenberger, who sounds, by theway, just like John Malkovich. He
does, actually he sounds. Hisvocal tonality is like totally John Magovic.
Anyway, Sorry, I'll play someSchellenberger and the judiciary stuff has is completely
different about confirmation of right. Yeah, but that but this was interesting.
(01:01:14):
Just what I'm going to play analyst. Thirteen percent censorship still censorship, absolutely,
and the other eighty seven percent iswhat we call the chilling effect that
the courts have long recognized that theyengaged in. That is the problem.
There's a broad up. By theway, part of the operation, Commerson
go. Part of the operation wasto change the terms of service. So
(01:01:34):
you see them constantly trying to changethe terms of service. You see them.
It was thirty five percent of ofthe URLs that were springy ep were
labeled removed or soft blocked. That'sall forms of censorship that censorship is not
just removing, but sixty five percentwere not. So how can the government
be so coerce? Is the firstamendment? That for the cour government?
(01:01:54):
The first amendments say the government cancensor. They're not censoring, they're flagging
in the social media companies a firstamendment. It's not the first Amendment.
It's the terms of service, asyou said, and they are flagging it
for the social media companies to maketheir own decisions. That is not the
first Amendment. That is the termsof service. Just seeing the Comersman,
(01:02:16):
you're an attorney. You know thatthe four federal judges have already ruled that,
and I know that it's on appealin front of the Supreme Court.
Right now, what does that last? I got to the heart of the
issue. That was the sterical That'spretty funny. Yeah, when they have
to sit here and I've been sodeboosed, let me just explain to you
(01:02:38):
my social media how and the stuffthat you that you have to do,
and how this is affected you know, just from my perspective, you know,
just because that's all I can.I see what happens in the headlines,
but all I can offer at somepoint is what I've lived because it
(01:03:00):
hasn't just been with COVID, andI've been talking about this since before COVID
happened. I'm glad that everybody elsewoke up to it and saw what was
happening, because this has been goingon for a long time. Even when
some of these people who are uncoveringsome of the Twitter files now were on
the left and had no problem withit. Then that's the kind of thing
that I'm gonna be honest. Itdoes kind of piss me off because there
(01:03:20):
are people who think that history beganthe day that they were born. Some
of us have been out here sincewe were in our early twenties, and
we've been kicked around and we havebeen deboosted and demonetized. When I really
started going really hard into Second Amendmentadvocacy, which I've always been a Second
Amendment proponent, When I started goingreally hard into Second Amendment advocacy, I
(01:03:45):
was hit so hard on social mediait crushed me. I have screenshots on
Twitter before Musk bought it where forthree months I did not gain or lose
a single follow up. For months, I had static views. All the
views on all my stuff were zero, which you know that's not even possible.
(01:04:09):
But my account was so slammed that, I mean, sometimes it was
like screaming into the ether. Therewould be zero. It was like I
didn't exist. They just kept itso hardcore suppressed on YouTube. It's so
bad. Wan's job, so Wanworks with the first We have our radio
(01:04:30):
show and we have our simulcast.Wan has to fight every single day.
He's like, the stuff that they'vedone to this account is insane. He
wasn't even there when they started this. He just walked into it, and
he wasn't even fully informed of howmuch we were deboosted. And then he
started seeing it himself and he's like, this is crazy. We had a
(01:04:53):
friend who, after Musk bought Twitter, knew some of the new people that
they brought under Twitter, and theywere like, there are so many layers
on this account, yours and others, and that it's it's gonna take forever
to go through. They're taking foreverto go through all this code. Facebook.
It's the same thing YouTube. Wegot hit really bad. They just
(01:05:16):
start I mean, they hit usso bad on YouTube. It has affected
me professionally, it has affected mefinancially. We've had it. We found
difficulty in expanding and doing what weneed to do because of the de boosting
and the censorship from big tech andgovernment. And I've been I've been hit
(01:05:39):
with this. I mean, mygosh. We actually worked with a company
to help fight back against some ofthe stuff that YouTube was doing to us
and and doing to the account,and it got even work. It got
really bad because of my Second Amendmentadvocacy. There were times on Twitter where
they would literally just take me out. You couldn't even find any to if
it had to when I was onair. If you would on Twitter and
(01:06:00):
you tried to search for any ofmy tweets, current past or whatever,
when I was on air, youcouldn't find me. There were people who
would take video of their screens tryingto do that, and they would send
it to us or post it andyou could not even find me. Anything
where I would talk about firearms oranything like that was immediately hidden on YouTube
anytime that I mentioned And it's notreally gotten any better. On any time
(01:06:24):
that I mentioned any kind of gunsor firearms anything like that, Oh my
gosh, they made me invisible.It has affected me professionally to the point
where it stunted anything that we weredoing digitally. It put a pause on
all digital expansion. It put apause on branching out and even hiring other
people to work with It rocked us. And then when COVID hit, it
(01:06:48):
got even worse because we would talkabout government forced mandated vaccines and we would
talk about actual science, and itgot even worse. You could believe that
it got worse, which is kindof hard to imagine if you've seen and
as wand I mean, you know, it got even worse. And so
(01:07:10):
then they really started pulling videos andissuing us penalties and threatening us and doing
all of this stuff. And sothese hearings have been a long time coming.
But I really want to know wherethe hell all of these big free
speech purists were when some of usin the conservative sphere were saying, Hey,
(01:07:31):
this is weird. Don't you findthis weird? Not a single one
of them were, not any ofthem, None of them were concerned with
it until they had skin in thegame. And I just kind of find
that to be lame. You're onlysituationally interested in natural rights if it concerns
you, and this has been goingon a long time, and then you
(01:08:00):
find out, I mean, youknew it, but you really find out
that your government's been involved in it. And I see this and I'm I
it does make me. It doesmake me angry. You know, it
makes me angry because I don't thinkthat the the regular audience, you guys
don't see the weeds of what wedo. You're not in the weeds of
what we do. You don't seethe back end of what we do.
(01:08:20):
You see what what we do oncamera and behind the mic. But the
frustration sometimes that we come up againstback channel because everything's expanding digitally and you
just get your ass beat by bigtech and big government that's using big tech
as a as a censorship agent.And that's what it is. They're using
these companies as agents of censorship.That's what makes it censorship because it's driven
(01:08:45):
and directed by the government. Andwe're still fighting it today. Are we
not one still fighting it today?Can you've seen it? It's crazy?
I mean there there would be timesI've literally had like stuff on YouTube.
I've had users removed on YouTube.We've had videos that before that it's like
(01:09:10):
they're invisible. No one, noteven a single It's crazy, and there's
no and and as one tried toexplain to me one time, he was
like, well, this doesn't makesense because this this measure, this metric
says this, and this metric saysthis, which should make this metrics say
this, and it doesn't. Andthat's suspicious. But that's what you know,
a lot of us have been dealingwith from the get go, some
(01:09:30):
of us even more than others.So it's been it's been a struggle,
and I get the passion of people. I'm glad that more people have woken
up to it. Really could haveused that you know seven eight years ago,
six years ago, five years ago, really could have used that energy
then. Because it's hard to comeback. It's hard to like gain ground,
(01:09:53):
even when they like on Twitter,when they start opening this spigot and
I can tell some things have changedon Twitter, it's still hard to come
back. And when you work inthis industry and you deal in information and
all of a sudden you just disappear, it's tough. And I'm not you
know, I don't have I don'thave you know, Diane Sawyer money.
(01:10:15):
I don't got Barbara Walter's money.I don't got hand any money. I
don't got things like that. Ican't hire a whole team of people to
fight all of this every single dayfor me. So you got a lot
of these people who you know,have much more humble origin, and they're
coming up and they're trying to expanddigitally, and it's very, very difficult
because of all of these roadblocks thathave been measurably and documented put in place
(01:10:41):
by these companies, all at therequest of government, as we're finding out,
because if you think, you gotto think, if they were doing
it with COVID, you know theywere doing it with guns, If they
were doing it with ivermectin, youknow, they were doing it with firearm
law. I mean, they weredoing it to parents at school board meetings.
(01:11:04):
They where have they not abused theirauthority? So we live in the
greatest era of information. But youknow what, the government has managed finally
to figure out how to use thegreatest tools of distributing information. And now
it's well who controls the distribution.If they can bring all the big tech
(01:11:29):
companies in and they can play oneveryone's political zelotry, then they can control
what you see. And then itgoes back to how it was before,
and that was their whole goal.I don't know if it changes, I
don't know. It's like Elon Muskis fighting a one man war and there
are a lot of powers to bethat are lining up against him. I
haven't always agreed with him on everything, and I do think that I think
(01:11:54):
that he's part genuine and genuinely interestedin it. In part he's super rebellious
and that works in our because everybodyelse is like everybody that thinks similarly ist
to But it is a it's ahard ward to wage, even for the
richest man on earth. It's hislife mission to make bad decisions. It's
(01:12:15):
time for Florida man, I mean, who among us? Right? Like?
A Florida man was arrested because hegot caught with a gator in his
suv. This comes out of DixieCounty, Florida man's facing charges after he
was called by Florida deputies transporting analligator in his suv. According to Florida
Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, aDixie County deputy discovered a three foot gater
(01:12:38):
and the man's SUV during a trafficstop on November night. That's all just
coming out now, though apparently theman told the officials that he saw the
gator crossing the road was terrified itwas going to get hit by a car.
He was like, I'm going torelease the gator into a pond.
He's facing charges of unlawful possession.They said the gator was released in a
safe area. Was he though goingto release in a pond? Because I
feel like if he was, thenyou should have just let him do his
(01:13:00):
thing right. He helped the taxpayer. Come on, I don't know.
Let's see. We had the ladyabout eating counterfeit cash. The other day
the oh oh, A man wasarrested for stabbing old lady in a Walgreens
parking lot because, according to deputies, he said he wanted to. Yeah,
I mean they go why and hegoes because I wanted to. That's
(01:13:21):
literally what it says in the AffidavidNneth Bryant, thirty four, was charged
with aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, second degree felony after the incident.
It was in Walgreens in Naples inFlorida. Yeah, he looks totally dopey
in his mugshot. Stick with USthird Hour. You mentioned before that the
US deleafs are two American women held, one has been released, So does
(01:13:42):
that mean there's one American woman leftbeing held? And what do we know
about her condition? Do you thinkshe could be released soon? I wish
I had good answers for those questions. Unfortunately we don't know. We do
believe that there's that there that ofthe unaccounted for Americans that we've believe,
there's one other woman that's unaccounted forand that we had believed was taken hostage.
(01:14:08):
So we were hoping to see twowomen and of course the little lab
Gail come out over the last week. Yeah, and they're finding out that
their way isn't really working. Welcomeback to the program, Daniel, last
year with you top of this thirdhour. You can listen coast. You
can stream the radio program as welleverywhere YouTube, Facebook, YouTube, which
(01:14:29):
we hate, but they have agood chat there in channel through forty seven
Direct TV as well. Yeah,they and they've also yesterday we talked about
how they were pushing this idea ofa two state solution, which is never
going to work because you Hamas doesn'tbelieve in a two state solution. I
mean, in order to have atwo state solution, you have to believe
that Israel has the right to exist, which they don't. And that's the
problem. It's this this belief inmagic, apparently that they're going to have
(01:14:58):
this peaceful kittens and sunsh world whereeverything is resolved with a two state solution.
That's I mean, you could haveany of these other countries take in,
you know, these people that livein Gaza. And but this is
about control. It's about hamas andterror groups trying to tell people they want
to control this part of the ofthe world. And they'll make up they'll
fabricate this you know, fantastical story, a fairy tale of a country that's
(01:15:23):
never existed and has never been supportedin terms of existing throughout all of antiquity,
or they just conjure up out ofthe ether an ethnicity that's never existed
until they needed something to conveniently dovetailin with this fictional country that they've created.
They I mean, all of thesepeople, most of them, I
(01:15:44):
think, what like they have hadThey've had some Egyptians society, some Jordanians.
This is about a terror group thatjust wants to make up an excuse
to control this part of the world. That's it. I mean, that's
it. That's others to it.It's they're colonizers. They're colonizers, and
that's the truth of the colonizer.They're the occupation. If you want to
(01:16:05):
have a discussion on who is orwho isn't the occupation, they are the
occupation. And the elected government thatthey chose for themselves doesn't believe in any
their neighbor to the north's right toexist. So you're not going to have
a peaceful solution there. Their electedgovernment's got to go. That's it.
(01:16:25):
Chuck Schumer and Joe Biden, thoughthey're realizing how tough this is. Schumer
only just began what yesterday talking aboutanti semitism within the Democrat Party just yesterday,
and Biden, I think, hasstarted to stay away from it.
Have you noticed this, He's beenpushing Bidenomics and that disastrous with that disastrous
(01:16:49):
speech that he gave yesterday. Itwas so bad he started talking about Bidenomics.
Did you know I was looking atThis comes from world ameters a couple
of places. The median age ofresident and Gaza strip is nineteen nineteen.
(01:17:13):
The median age is nineteen. Thehatred of Jewish people is actually a part
of their curriculum. I don't knowif you realize this. When they took
over after Israel left unilaterally pulled outin two thousand and five, and then
(01:17:36):
they had elections in two thousand andsix and people said, we want Hamas
and they elected Hamas. That wasone of the things that they implemented was
actual that you're teaching hatred of Jewishpeople. You're not teaching criticism or teaching
(01:17:56):
government, and this is good governmentor bad government. I had nothing to
do with that. No, theyliterally went out. I mean it's like
it's like mind comp part two.And you're shocked that after what almost twenty
years of this type of education.People are shocked that Hamas's popularity would soar
(01:18:18):
to the point where they actually theauthority had to suspend elections because they got
so popular. And again Median agesnineteen, their popularity swelled up to outside
of Gaza and even threatened the authorityin the West Bank. And you're shocked.
(01:18:42):
So you can't say that they don'trepresent the people that elected them,
the people that they conditioned with inschools, and the people that wanted to
overwhelmingly vote for them in both territoriesto the point where elections had to be
suspended. I mean, that's that'scrazy. There was a point that had
(01:19:03):
been made, who is it?Duane Patterson was looking at popularity of like
for instance, in Democrat Party andRepublican Party, et cetera. And the
survey. There was a Jerusalem Postpiece that showed they surveyed people in Gaza
(01:19:24):
and West Bank since the October seventhattacks. Seventy five percent support the attacks,
seventy four point seven percent agree inthe creation of a quote unquote Palestinian
state from the river to the sea, meaning no existence for Jewish people seventy
(01:19:47):
five percent. And Patterson noted thatTrump's best poll in the current primary right
now, and that's an inflated margin, but it's still a He's still in
the lead sixty four percent. There'smore dissent in the GOP than Gosin's and
West Bank residents against Hamas. Yet, as Patterson notes, they want to
(01:20:15):
tell you, oh, the RepublicanParty has been totally taken over. That's
what the left says. But theleft won't say that Hamas is totally taken
over or that support for terror hastotally taken over. Don't you think that's
an interesting factor. So if youhave seventy five percent of those surveyed that
(01:20:40):
support Hamas after the attacks, howdo you say that Hamas, which again
was elected by the same seventy fivepercent of people that supported them, and
their popularity has only grown, howdo you say that they don't represent them,
that Hamas doesn't represent them? Imean, based on what is your
argument against that you have? Andthat's just one of many surveys that have
(01:21:03):
been taken over the past ten years. These are just surveys taken that just
right after October seventh. Now doyou understand why none of the other Arab
nations want people from these two territoriesto come into their countries. Do you
understand why nobody's taken anyone who mightbe displaced by their elected governments of warmongering
(01:21:28):
Hamas's warmongering. Do you understand whymaybe perhaps Jordan, or Egypt, or
the Saudis or anybody else, theywon't take any of these people because they
actually a lot of them are signersof the Abraham Accords. They're not gonna
they're not gonna take in people whowhen they have been accepted elsewhere, like
(01:21:53):
in Lebanon. Did you see Imean, have you seen what's happened previously
in the countries where displaced people fromthese two territories, what has happened.
They bring that ideology with them.They saw on increase in terror attacks,
increase in conflict, increase in turmoil, fighting, et cetera. It got
very, very bad. And sothey said, no, we're not going
(01:22:14):
to accept any more people coming in. We're not doing this anymore. There's
a reason why the left here aretoo stupid to see it. They're too
stupid to acknowledge it. They keepsaying, well, you can't talk about
a group of people, this isHamas. So again I go back.
You have all these surveys and thepopularity has only grown. And these aren't
(01:22:36):
magical, made up surveys either.It was so bad. You have the
quote unquote Palestinian authority that oversees underthat umbrella of Hamas and FATA. FATA
used to have power in Gaza andthey were displaced electorally well by an election
(01:22:56):
by Hamas. And they are stillthe guy who runs FATA as the chair
of the authority, and they runWest Bank. They're all the same people.
It's what it would I've been sayingday after day. But it you
might think that these some people mightsay, oh, these surveys, I
don't know how I put much stockinto them. Well, do you put
stock in the authorities suspending elections becausethey were so nervous at Halmas winning elections
(01:23:20):
in west Bank and controlling both territoriesthat they suspended those elections because Hamas's popularity
was so overwhelming. Because that's whathappened. So you can't say that these
surveys are bunk. They're actually incrediblyreflective of what's happening there. If they
had another election on Gaze, evenafter everything, Hamas would probably, according
to all this, still be elected. They're still super popular in west Bank.
(01:23:44):
Hmm. So now you see this, Now you see what the truth
of this matter is. I don'tknow why it's so difficult for people to
talk about this everything is. It'slike they got to focus group everything.
These politicians are so weak and they'reso terrified. It's just stupid to say
that they don't represent them. It'sstupid. Now tonight we're gonna talk to
(01:24:08):
Jen van laur about this. She'sthe managing editor over a red state.
So tonight you have DeSantis versus Newsome. I actually think this is incredibly smart
to do. I think this isa very smart debate to have. I
think DeSantis is wise for doing itbecause there's and here's why the left,
(01:24:30):
a huge faction of the left isgoing to be paying attention because it's Newsome
and a huge faction of the left. Once I'm like literally hit my microphone
hair was like I was about likeabout ready to sneeze, it was like
getting close. I thought, it'scrazy today. My whole point before I
distracted myself because I talk with myhands like crazy, my whole point is
that there is a sizeable enough factionon the left where they are, uh,
(01:24:56):
they're excited about Newsom. They thinkthat Newsome they want they would love
for Newsom to replace Biden. That'snot, you know, a big secret
on the left, and they're goingto be watching it. They're going to
be cheering on their guy, andthey think that that his way is the
way forward. I mean, youhave California versus Florida, the governance of
Florida versus the governance of California,and I think this is the this is
(01:25:18):
the choice that Americans are having tomake going forward in twenty twenty four.
You have two choices, which oneare you? This is it, this
is the last exit off the roadto California. You're not going to be
able to claw back to anything thatremotely resembles what the country look like twenty
years ago, thirty years ago,after twenty twenty four, it's not going
to happen. I mean it wouldtake I don't think that you have the
(01:25:40):
will to maintain that generation after generation, especially right now. I mean not
with a populace that gets upset overpeople on pancakes syrup. You know,
I just don't see it happening.It's going to be a very interesting contrast.
And I'm interested to see how DeSantisperforms against somebody like Newsom, because
Newsom DeSantis is very much I'm gonnabuckle down and we're gonna get it done,
(01:26:03):
and I'm gonna tell you all aboutit after. Uh, he's not
He's not like a He's more ofa cool He's more of a Calvin Coolidge
than he is like a showman.Newsom is Newsom. I mean, he's
you know, he's a pretty boy. If you want to say that.
He's a freu frou California dude whocomes from old money, he is generationally
(01:26:25):
Democrat. He's a NEPO baby.It's going to be very interesting to see
the contrast between these two. AndJen Van laur is saying, look,
Republicans need to realize there is anactual threat on the horizon here, and
we're going to talk to her aboutthat. She's a lifelong California and she
knows all about this business. Herewith newsoman democrats in the state and now
(01:26:49):
all of the news you would probablymiss. It's time for Dana's Quick five.
So I'm reading about here's the scaretmongering headline. So just you're probably
gonna start hearing a lot about thisif you haven't already. They're saying,
Oh, it's China's white lung It'shitting the US. It's the newest thing,
guys, the newest craze. Theysaid, mystery wave of pneumonia has
hit America. Ohio County records onehundred and forty six child cases of white
(01:27:12):
lung syndrome, which it says meetthe definition of an outbreak infection overwhelms Chinese
hospitals. This case is spike inEurope. Oh my gosh, weaveing a
ash. You know, the teeth. This is crazy and they're saying that,
Oh, it's raising fears of anotheroutbreak. It's an outbreak. Oh
they say this every day. I'mnot gonna where it could be fold again,
like the who said we're not gonnabe fold again, just saying,
just saying. I they're immediately goinginto the fear mongreen. And of course
(01:27:36):
it comes out of China. Ofcourse, of course it does. An
eighty three year old woman dies afterfalling through the floor of her home into
a well shaft. Now this isa new thing. Yeah, So the
eighty three year old woman fell fortyeight feet down a well shaft that was
under a one hundred plus year oldhome. The woman was right at the
(01:28:00):
house to assist her her daughter moveand as she was walking in the kitchen,
she stepped onto a weekend floor andfell through it right into a well
chef that the family had no clueabout. It is what it's like a
horror film. Isn't there a horrorfilm where there's like I swear I've seen
something like that. Yeah No,well no, I mean like there where
there's like all these tunnels and minesand it sounds like a mass house,
(01:28:25):
a teen who learned CPR at schoolsaved a toddler from drowning on Thanksgiving.
A California teenager did the right thing. It's just so bad. This is
a great story. It was performedCPR on her three year old relative who
almost drowned in the family's pool onThanksgiving. CPR is always a good skill
to have the ability to do that. And let's see a this is an
(01:28:46):
a gorilla who has this much timeon their hands. A grinch tries to
steal Christmas. Now, look,yes, we all know Jesus is real
and that Christ is keeping, butyou don't have to stand outside of a
kid's school with a sign that saidSanta is fake, Jesus is real.
Come on, seriously, what thatwas a look caine, just because then
(01:29:08):
I feel like Jesus was telling meto do stuff at that point. Yeah,
I and he stood outside within aGrench costume, well in dresses,
the Grench dressed as Santa. Yeah, and they they police recalled, but
they didn't arrest them. They saidhe was on the lawfully on the sidewalk.
(01:29:29):
Uh. And yeah, I mean, clearly parents would not be happy
about that. Jennifer Van Laher diddims change their bylaws. Stay with us.
Whether you're a policy walk, anews junkie, or simply someone hungry
for insightful discourse. That Dana Showpodcast has your back. Follow Dana on
Apple, Spotify, or wherever youget your podcasts. Welcome back to the
(01:29:50):
program. You can listen coast tocoast on in a market near to you.
You can also stream the radio programand you can watch the simulcast channel
three forty seven direct t the YouTubeFacebook as well. Dana lash here with
you at the bottom of this thirdhour. All right, so tonight,
one of the things we were pregaming a little bit is this like one
(01:30:10):
off debate between Ron DeSantis, Floridagovernor, and Gavin Newsom, Gruesome Newsom,
California governor. It's weird because they'reboth technically one's officially second in the
primary, the other one's not officialbut is unofficially second in the primary.
But it is a really good contrastof the choices that Americans have going into
(01:30:34):
twenty twenty four. California and Florida, I mean, two states that are
talked about so much as representing theleft and the right. But there's more
to it than this. I thinkthat it's just I think it's a smart
choice for DeSantis to do it,but I think that there is a line
that you've got to be aware ofalso, because as we were kind of
talking about, Democrats don't really havea bench, I think, say for
(01:30:57):
one guy, and that's Gavin Newsome, and he's really been rising in name
recognition nationally the past couple of yearsfor good and bad reasons. And then
there was something interesting that I sawfrom Jennifer van Laard, who is the
managing editor at Red State, andshe had a very intriguing piece and she
(01:31:17):
was tweeting about this. I didn'trealize that Democrats had really changed their bylaws
regarding the replacement on the presidential ticket. That's kind of interesting. So throw
that in the mix, and thistakes a whole new appearance, doesn't it.
Jennifer joins us now via Skype.You can find her at RedState dot
com and on X and Will saidTwitter on X Jennifer, thanks so much
(01:31:41):
for joining me. You are reallyinsightful in this because you're a California resident,
native California native, you've been therefollowing politics, you know, I
think more in the conservative sphere aboutGavin Newsom in his history I think than
anybody else in commentary, you caughtthis that Democrats change their bylaws and he's
a very ambitious person. He's makingall the right moves. What does that
tell you? What do you seegoing into this? Well, there's a
(01:32:04):
couple of possibilities, especially as wesee Joe Biden's pull numbers continue to tank
and the Democrats are going to getdesperate either. We all know that they
want to keep Kamala on the ticketbecause they don't want to upset the black
people, the black women especially,and they don't want to lose the White
House even more so there's going tobe some difficult conversations I foresee, and
(01:32:30):
whether it comes as a contested conventionor whether it comes as replacing Joe Biden
due to quote disability. After theconvention, I believe that Gavin will be
on the ticket. Wooh. Andthere's this is like especially a thought that's
like really been growing. And thenthe Democrats changing their bylaws there I didn't
really see a lot about this.This kind of seem like it's slipped under
(01:32:54):
the radar. Well, they don'twant to signal their plans too much because
they want to have that element ofsurprise. But they have in their bylaws
where I'm going to read it,in the event of death, resignation,
or disability of a nominee of theparty for president or vice president after the
adjournment of the National Convention, andhere's how they go about it. The
(01:33:15):
National Chairperson of the DNC shall conferwith the Democratic Leadership of Congress, the
Democratic Governors Association, and then reportback to the committee on who they want
to fill that. So we knowhow the Democrats operate, and we know
that they even if it didn't havewording like that, they could still twist
it to make whatever regulations say that. And that seems like a pretty easy
(01:33:40):
way to get Biden off the ticketif he has more of these episodes and
then they just stop ignoring them andactually calling them what they are. Yeah,
that's a really good point. We'retalking with Jennifer Van Laer, who
is the managing editor over at RedState. She's been following all this stuff
with Gavin Newsom, and you've beenwarning Republicans too, saying, look,
you're playing with fire. You cannotget too comfortable with this guy. I
(01:34:01):
agree with you. I don't thinkthat because we kind of see because we're
I mean, obviously we're conservative,and we look at this, especially those
of us not in California, We'relike, gosh, how could he be
an attractive candidate to anybody? Buthe's coming he's old money, he comes
from very powerful families in California.They've forgiven him a lot. I mean,
this was the guy who was diningat French laundry when everybody else had
(01:34:24):
to stay home. Uh. Andthen we're going to talk a little bit
too about some of the baggage inhis personal life, but they, I
mean, it doesn't seem to dinghim. And so talk to us a
little bit about this. I mean, are Republicans aware of what they're inviting?
No, I don't think they're aware. And part of it is because
Republicans across the country have this mindsetof California's just weird. Let it fall
(01:34:46):
into the ocean, ignore it.They're stupid. They voted for this.
And part of the reason that hekeeps getting in is because the media doesn't
challenge him here at all, andthey bury his stories for him, and
so that you have that to dealwith. And then when conservatives don't pay
attention. I had a bunch ofstories back in the spring where Gavin Newsome
let people die in the mountains.They were snowed in for two weeks and
(01:35:09):
it was a Republican area. Iwas trying to make this into Gavin his
Cancuon moment, like he used topick on ten Cruz about the Conservatives.
Said eh, whatever, and I'mgoing you've got to help me amplify this
because otherwise you're going to end upwith this guy in the White House and
now here we are, and becausehe has so much baggage. I mean
(01:35:29):
that, I mean just the mistakesthat he made with the high speed rail
stuff and the boondoggle with that,I mean that would take anybody else coming
from any other state. But there'sa whole apparatus there to aid this guy,
to help him, because really,who else did Democrats have besides him?
We know it's not Kabala. Imean, she's failed on a big
scale. Pet Buddha judge. Imean, come on, they don't really
(01:35:51):
have anyone. No, they don'thave anyone. We're talking with with Jennifer
van Laer and you can find herat jen van Laar on x. So
the bylaws he does seem like he'srunning a shadow campaign of sorts. He
was very and I get as governorof California and he welcomed U Chowdong Ping
or however Joe Biden said his nameat his speech the other day when he
(01:36:14):
welcomed Jjiping to the state of California. I get it. As governor,
you know he's there, but hewasn't just there with Biden, like he
welcomed him by himself with his wife, and it was a very big deal.
He was more front and center thanany other governor that I've ever seen
that's welcomed a foreign leader in theirstate Before that, and his you know,
visits to Florida and his trips andmedia stunts elsewhere. I mean,
(01:36:35):
it seems like he's really running ashadow campaign, and that the Biden team
is kind of aware of it.But I mean, what gives here.
It's so weird. It is weird, and not just him well, welcoming
Jping going to China and having oneon one talks with him and negotiating climate
accords between California and China. Idon't even think that that's really legal or
(01:37:00):
that he should be doing. He'snot an official representative of the United States
government. Why is he over theredoing that? And Biden just looked the
other way because the Dems know Bidenis not in any way capable of having
those kind of trips and talks withpeople. So I think that all of
it is really done on a calculatingbasis to get the public to see Gavin
Newsom as a statesman. Ooh,that is a really good That is a
(01:37:25):
really good strategy that they're doing.And it makes him I mean, because
he can form a sentence immediately,he comes off as looking better than Biden.
And if he doesn't have name recognition, doesn't that kind of work in
favor of him if people don't knowall about him elsewhere, because then they
don't know all of you know,like you were talking about him letting people
down the mountain, has you know, met the crime rate, the money
(01:37:45):
spent on a rail system that neverhappened and really should have never been proposed.
But I mean, they don't knowabout all of his offenses, right,
they don't know that fifteen years agoin San Francisco, he said that
he would have homelessness solved in tenyears. Obviously failed at that. They
don't know that he's the one thatbrought George Gascon into San Francisco, that
(01:38:05):
he and George Gascon authored Prop fortyseven together, which is widely credited with
making our crime rate skyrocket here andletting people out of prison. They don't
know any of that, and alot of it's been wiped from the internet.
But I'm working hard to find allof it, and you're doing a
really good job at it too.Speaking of which this rolls perfectly into finding
(01:38:26):
this. I was reading this partthe other day. This blew my mind.
So we talked about the whole HarveyWeinstein Rose McGown thing when it happened,
and we talked about Jennifer Newsom atthe time. So this is Gavin
Newsom's wife. I thought Hillary Clintonhad an unlikability factor. I feel like
his wife is really trying to challengethat she, like Hillary, may have
(01:38:48):
met her match in someone who ismore unlikable than her, if that is
a possible thing that can happen.So she apparently was trying to pressure.
According to your reporting, and fromwhat you got, the everything that's out
there, you even got, likethe conversations they had, the messages,
the fact that Jennifer Newsom was tellingtrying to get Rose McGowan to kind of
(01:39:08):
back off some of these claims becauseof her relationship to the law firm that
was representing Harvey Weinstein. And thenwhen she didn't, she had this whole
safety net of well, I alsowas targeted by Harvey Weinstein, and then
that became a huge story that obscuredthe fact that she was trying to basically
bully Rose McGowan out of telling thetruth about Harvey Weinstein. And there's even
(01:39:30):
more to it than that. Ohright, And it's funny because you know
Rose McGowan to go to her andsay, well, what can the law
firm do to make you happy?Apa? Shut up? Like, that's
not the person that I'm going togo to with that kind of thing.
It's not going to work. Butit has worked for Jennifer Newsom in the
past, which is why she wentthat way. Because back when Gavin was
(01:39:50):
mayor, he had an affair withhis appointment secretary, so an employee who
was also his best friend's wife,and the best friend was also Gaan's campaign
manager, and so that that comesout. The woman didn't go to the
press. She told her husband admittedthe affair, and then the husband went
to Gavin and called him on itand quit. So this all comes out,
(01:40:12):
and Jennifer Newsom goes to the SanFrancisco Chronicle and says, well,
you know, she was really theculprit. Then when people hit back on
that, she goes and writes aneight hundred and two word comment on a
blog post, I love how yousaid it was like ee coming style.
She was just full of passion.And she says, oh, it was
just times that she showed up passedout on his doorstep, like insinuating some
(01:40:35):
kind of date rape or that hewas having sex with a passed out drunk
woman, which is a whole otherkind of that's for him. Wow,
and nobody's talked about this, nobody. The thing is still up. I
found it online. It's not likeI'm just saying this is heard and I
have no proof they're screenshots. Andanybody else it sounds weird to say this.
(01:41:00):
Anybody else, their political ambitions wouldhave been immediately clipped. But not
Gavin Newsom, not even with allof this baggage. I don't even know
how this would play out. Ashe becomes more known on a national stage,
which is what we might be seeingtonight. I wanted to talk to
you about this as well, becauseI think in some respects, I feel
(01:41:20):
like DeSantis is trying to get aheadof it and he wants to pick a
fight with Newsom just to kind of, you know, maybe get some shots
in body shots in on this guy. But I don't think that he's ever
debated anybody like Newsom. Now,for all the ways that we can make
fun of Newsom and how much hairproduct he uses and his insane wife and
everything else, there is also anotherreason why he's been in politics. So
(01:41:42):
he can be amiable when he wantsto be, and that can come across
well to voters without them realizing hisbackstory. Right. We have seen in
the Times that Sean Hannity has interviewedhim, and Handy came right out and
said, there's an LA Time storywhere Hanndy says, yeah, we had
an immediate connection. We hit itoff. And so if you're not kind
of hip to that kind of hownarcissists work thing, then you're liable to
(01:42:04):
fall for it. But the thingthat DeSantis hopefully knows is and by watching
some of Newsom's interviews with reporters.He gets upset very easily, and there's
he has a glass job. Basically, if you know where to hit,
Newsom will just completely lose as cooland he could have a viral moment of
(01:42:24):
just looking like a madman, whichis I think if I'm Rondasantis, That's
what I'm going for. That's areally good point. And apparently k Newsome
I saw this today. I thinkit was Twitchy that had I think Twitchy
had it and I think you talkedabout it too. How he's apparently Newsome
is using Nicki Freed to help preparefor the debate tonight. So he's gone
to all the batties in Florida Democratpolitics to have to help him prepare for
(01:42:48):
tonight. Well, I mean,Nicky's not had such a seller track record,
so you know, good luck withthat, Gavin. Yeah, but
if he's going to go, ifhe's going to use people like that,
maybe try to use some underhanded belowthe belt tactics. I kind of hope
he does, because I don't thinkDesantas would be the first one to do
that. But if Newsom goes there, then that opens the door for for
(01:43:12):
the Santa to have and that's yeah, and that would be and honestly,
that's that's kind of what we wantto see. We want to see some
of that. Jennifer Van Laer,you do such a great job. We'd
love to have you back, especiallyas we see how this newsome thing develops.
I mean, she's she's the Jennifer'sthe go to authority on this issue.
So we appreciate you joining us todayand thank you for doing what you
do. You work hard and giveyou deserve the credit for it. Thanks
(01:43:33):
so much, good to see you. We have more to come focus as
we wrap up this third hour ofbroadcast. Now knowing all that, now,
how much more interesting has this debategotten tonight? I know it's gonna
be very interesting to watch. Sowe have a lot to We're gonna have
a lot to feel like. We'regonna have a lot to recap tomorrow.
Follow Dana on Apple, Spotify orwherever you get your podcasts, because knowledge
(01:43:58):
is your ultimate super hour is Nick? Hey, Nick, this is the
Nick. Now look my my marinecarries out it has a closed to blow
up the world. Back then,this is not nuclear weapons? Right,
Okay, he gets the cab ah. Now you'll hear from Democrats. Oh,
(01:44:24):
he's just trying to be funny.That's all it was. He's just
trying to be funny. Don't takeit on it. It's like, yeah,
was he bragging. I'm a littleconfused. What what was that?
That was Joe Biden telling one ofthe guys, and he was when he
went to Colorado to make his littlebidnomic speech yesterday, and he's like,
yeah, my ma, he's gota code to blow up the world.
(01:44:47):
I mean, the fact that youwould just say that, I don't know,
man, I don't even know anymore. I don't think anybody does.
I don't think anyone does. Nowtonight we'll be watching the debate. There's
not gonna be a live chat forit, but I am gonna have a
peace come up about It's going tobe very interesting. Uh. I really
really want to watch it and takesome notes of the broadcast because I think
there's gonna be some I want tobe able to talk. There's gonna be
(01:45:09):
some very interesting comment about this comingcontent from this coming out, I think.
So we'll have that recap for youtomorrow. Today's Stupidity King. All
right, it is Corrine Jean Pierre. Of course, the White House spokesperson.
So today, after Kirby had madehis do you have that one?
Excellent? So Kirby was making commentsabout the Israel Jimas war, it was
(01:45:32):
time to switch over to more domesticquestioning from the press pool. And this
is what happened. Thank you somuch. All Right, we can end
this briefing if it's not gonna berespectful here, Chris, and Nativa is
(01:45:56):
not happy one question from her wasanswered today. I mean, wait,
wait, she has one job though. Make sure you sign up for the
newsletter substack, chapter and verse,go and find it. We'll have a
recap bug and I have a recapof the debate tonight and also tomorrow and
air be back with you then