Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
One of the things I'm concerned about is potentially these
ports getting hung up. I think it's totally unacceptable to
try to intentionally deprive people of the supplies they need
to be able to rebuild their homes when they've been
displaced at a natural disaster. We should be doing all
(00:20):
we can. The federal government should be doing all they
can to make sure all the supplies continue to come
in here unabated. And there is the prospect of things
that are critical for the rehabbing and recovery of here
in other parts of Florida that may get hung up
in some of this work stoppage. So now is not
the time.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
You already have.
Speaker 1 (00:41):
People that are reeling, you have people that are on
their backs. Let's do everything we can to accelerate the relief.
Make sure that they have the equipment, make sure they
have the supplies that they need to be able to
rehab their prods.
Speaker 3 (00:57):
That's Florida Governor RHN Decantis who's talking about the strike
that's been taking place. So we're going into what day
three of this now, and we still haven't measured everything
with the you know, what the cost of this is
going to be, what how it's going to affect you know,
really everything. We have no idea yet because it's only
(01:19):
damn day three. It's only day three. We don't know.
I mean, it's just I read that there was a
solar flare this morning, a big one, and I hope
it just just I'm good. I'm I'm good with a
blackout only except in the hurricane affected areas, because that's
the I mean, that's the whole point too. I Mean,
you've got you've got to strike happening, and you have
all of these people who are going to need supplies,
and I mean we're not even getting into the issue
(01:39):
with the federal government not being able to stand up
and do what they need to do. Welcome to the program,
Dana Lash with you. This is one of the things
we're talking about today because we've got the day three
of the strike, and then more of this devastation from
these from the hurricane affected area is coming to light,
and it's I mean, it's just absolutely devastating. I read
(02:01):
a story, uh the other I think it was last
night or this morning. I read a story wherein there
there was a family that was stuck up in the
mountain somewhere and they had to go on this ridiculously
long hike. All the roads were just I mean they
were like they were crumbled like cookies. The roads were
were either's. They were absolutely impassable. You couldn't even get
(02:23):
a three wheel or four wheeler on some of these roads.
I mean it's just the mountainous terrain, the mud, uh,
the uneven topography. I mean it was just crazy. And
they had two little kids and a puppy. And they
said they did really good trying to They had their
stuff as much to you know, their clothes and medicines
in that and they trek down and were able to
(02:44):
get help. But they had a trek down for a
few miles before they could even meet fire and rescue
because they're just overwhelmed. And I mean, you you had
the uh what is it? The the vice president? I
almost said president, See what I did there?
Speaker 4 (02:58):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (02:58):
The president vice presid And it did it again. Who
was she was? This was like some kind of supposed
to be like some kind of quick stop and she
was asked about funding. Audio SoundBite, Well, she was at
a presser. Audio sound bite too. This is Kamala Harris
offering Americans a very nice seven hundred and fifty dollars.
(03:19):
Here you go.
Speaker 5 (03:22):
And the federal relief and assistance that we have been
providing has included FEMA providing seven hundred and fifty dollars
for folks who need immediate needs being met.
Speaker 3 (03:34):
Seven hundred and fifty dollars if you have immediate needs
being met. Now, the interesting thing here is I was
looking at uh there's a very interesting bot that tracks
FEMA spending and I'll put it in your email prep
for those of you who are signed up over at substack,
chapter and verse. There were there was this piece there
(03:59):
was a peace talking about how the Biden Administration's Health
and Human Services awarded over five hundred million dollars for
refugee resettlement in North Carolina. This is This was two
hundred and thirty million in contracts to New York based
deployed resources for security maintenance, janitorial services, another five million
for security guards. It's an eight hundred bed facility. It
(04:20):
was awarded fifty point four million for a five year
lease and they had two hundred and eighty six million.
It's an illegal alien intake facility in Greensboro, and they
had one hundred and forty five million dollars outlaid as
of July fifth, twenty twenty four. That's and then and
then that's not even getting into some of the other
grant money two hundred and twenty one million in primary.
(04:42):
These are our tax dollars, is what I'm pointing out.
I mean, this isn't like, you know, free government spending.
And you know, I bristle at the accusation that people
are like asking for, you know, a handouts or something.
This is their tax dollars, you know, These are these
people's tax are tax dollars. And I just think, you know,
if you're going to have a FEMA and you're gonna
(05:02):
have these you know, these these departments in these organizations,
than by God, the tax dollars that that we spend,
that we pay into the government, you know, every single year,
maybe just maybe they can go to help Americans who
are here and citizens, you know, especially during the time
of a hurricane recovery. I just feel like that that's
like the most simple thing that could be done. I
(05:24):
don't know why that would be in any way controversial
to say or anything like that, but it's I I
for some reason, we're you know, all of these hundreds
of millions of dollars. And remember you had MAJORCIS who
was saying that well, Health and Human Services, and you
know it's uh, it's it's broke, it's uh. You know,
(05:46):
all of these government agencies we need more money. Uh,
FEMA needs more money. I think you guys remember that
when they were arguing for an increase in FEMA funding.
I'm not even getting into This is just the beginning
of this. So you got that, you get that right there,
how about five hundred million? And then I'm not done.
This is let's see, FEMA got another grant. This was
(06:09):
three point nine actually is technically like four million dollars
Headnupen County Shelter and Services Program for Illegal Immigrant Assistance.
You got another again, FEMA grant twenty twenty four. I
mount four point five million El Paso Countye of El
Paso again, Shelter and Services Program for Illegal Immigration Assistance.
Federal Emergency Management grant. Again, this is four point eight
(06:31):
almost four point nine million. This was Denver City and County, Denver.
The purpose of this awards and by the way, this
is a USA spending knock cup shelter and service program
Illegal Immigrant Assistant. When we go on because I can't
go on for some time. There's a lot here. I mean,
it's just this bought tracks just specifically FEMA spending. This
(06:52):
is twenty twenty three grand. It was about five million
dollars went to the city of Atlanta. Again, if you
had guests for the Shelter and Services Program of Illegal
Immigrant Assistant ding DING being you would be correct because
it's exactly where it went. And so this is I
guess where the money is going? Is this where money's going?
Because is this why you know you have Biden saying well,
people have gotten everything that they're gonna get. Is this
(07:14):
why you got Kamala Harrison's like well, like like pond stars.
You know, best they can do is seven hundred and
fifty dollars best they can do? I mean, is that?
Is that why? I mean? I got more millions here?
Want me to keep going? We got Brownsville, they got
five point five point two million dollars, and again what
was the purpose. The purpose was shelter and Services program
(07:36):
for legal Immigrant Assistance. I got more and more and more.
How much do you want? I mean, there's a lot here,
and I just it's just amazing to be that, you know,
with all of this. Why are we having such a
struggle coming first hand account from from people who are
in these affected areas who are trying to get assistants,
and they're being told that, you know, well, we don't
(07:59):
we don't have this, we don't have that. We don't
have the ability to get up here where you are.
And it's not because you know, it's impassable. You've got
families with little kids able to walk down the damn mountain.
Why can't FEMA get up it? I mean, there's you.
You've got the stories that have been going around of
these individuals who have been trying to help with their
private choppers and they aren't able to do it because
(08:19):
they're being blocked. In fact, this is poot booty juice,
Ladies and gentlemen, poot booty juice. He put this video
on x where's this said? It's like fifty sixteen million,
cut sixteen million. This is what he was telling people
who were flying in and around drones or whatever recovery efforts.
Speaker 6 (08:38):
Listen, our goal is to make sure that funding is
no obstacle to very quickly getting people the relief that
they need and deserve. There's also some safety issues that
come up, for example, temporary flight restrictions to make sure
that the airspace is clear for any flights or drone
activity that might be involved in helping to allow the
(09:00):
emergency responders.
Speaker 3 (09:01):
I'm trying to figure out and maybe somebody you know,
who knows about you know, drone who's done you know,
stuff like this in these areas, maybe somebody can explain
it to me. I just I don't understand why you
could even like fly a drone to just get especially
because these are people who live up in these mountains.
You know what if you live up in one of
these mountains and you are trying to figure out, Okay, well,
(09:25):
how far down do I got to walk down the
holler here in order to see if I'm even going
to be able to get you know, my vehicle or
whatever down the mountain?
Speaker 1 (09:37):
Right?
Speaker 3 (09:38):
I mean, how far is it? I mean how far
do you? I mean, do you know? These people don't
even know? So they would take a drone out and
try to see if they could, I don't know, get
a drone to use see if they can walk down
the road get down the mountain. Maybe it's a possibility,
(09:58):
maybe it's not. They don't know, they can't even can
they not even fly that? I mean, what about news
news entities, what about you know, other private recovery efforts.
I mean, that's the thing that makes people think that
you're trying to hinder the recovery efforts when you do
stuff like this and they have it. This is of course,
you know, this is pooh booty juice. Who is the
(10:20):
pity higher over at the Department of Transportation, who's saying
this stuff? So, I don't know, I've got I got
a lot of questions, I think, as a lot of
other people do, about the government response, the way that
the government has been reading all of this and messaging this.
And you know, we spend all of this money, We
(10:42):
send how many hundreds of billions of dollars to Ukraine?
We spend how many billions of dollars on people who
are coming here illegally. I mean, maybe the original story
that went out talking about how well we're not loading
up these people who are here illegally, they're gift cards
with six thousand dollars, But no, you are giving them
hundreds of dollars, in some cases a couple thousand dollars.
(11:02):
I mean, this is you can't lie when this stuff
is publicly available through government spending tracking on the Internet,
and people can look and see. I mean, this is
it's this is a real issue. This is just further
compounding the distrust and all out loathing that people have
towards the federal government. Right now. I mean these grants,
(11:24):
this is crazy. County of Riverside, you know, they got
six they got thousands of dollars most of these, most
of these grants, like Laredo, Laredo got about six million dollars. No,
this is yeah, six million dollars, six million dollars for
the purposes of shelter and services, illegal immigration assistance. These
are processing. This isn't like we're going to go in
here and then we're going to deport you. This is
(11:46):
like these are holding, processing, releasing, not detention and deportation,
all of it. I mean, you can go it's all
at USA Spending dotcup. It lists everything out at list
where it's going, what it's tracking all of that. Now,
on top of all of this, you know, we're in
an inflationary period. Everybody's broke. I told you earlier this
(12:09):
week just how much construction materials, which actually shocked me,
were imported into this country. I thought at least we
would be self sustaining with regards to you know, timber
and a lot of our concrete and steel, and I
actually was proven wrong. I went and I was looking
to see how much came and how much comes through
(12:29):
these East Coast ports. So look back at these images
of devastation that we've been seeing coming out of the
Southeast States and think about how much it's going to
cost in materials to get that to rebuild. Some of
these areas are saying it's gonna be six months before
these roads are even passable again, and then how long
are the port's going to be shut down? What is
(12:50):
that going to do to the cost of goods? What
is that going to do to the availability of goods?
I mean, that's just to start with. So there are
a lot of problems. I'm glad starting off this out
in this segment. I'm glad that Florida Governor Ron DeSantis
is speaking out about it and say no, no, no, we're
not doing this good on him because he's one of
the only Republicans out there actually speaking out about this stuff.
(13:11):
We got a lot more to hit. We're just getting
started this first hour and coming up like I said,
the latest with the hurricane recovery, we've got the strike,
We've got some of the elections stuff. It's getting dumber.
It's getting dumber and dumber honestly out there. So we've
got a lot of stuff to hit. As we roll
towards the headlines to the bottom of this program, you
don't know what it is, whether it's a natural disaster
(13:31):
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Speaker 7 (14:57):
Right now is Kamala trying to earn the dumb vote.
Kamala Harris is pitching twenty five thousand dollars for first
time home buyers, while trying to build millions of new
homes with government funds, all while using small businesses as
straw men. Check out the Watchdog on Wall Street podcast
on Apple, Spotify, wherever you get your podcast.
Speaker 8 (15:17):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 3 (15:24):
All right, then let's see, of course everything just frozen.
All right, So first off, like I said, we're following
everything with the uh oh, we got o Ran and
Iran and Israel, we got all. We're gonna be touching
on all of that as well. First up, the death
tolls now reached one hundred and eighty nine. It's being
measured as Hurricane Helene the deadliest storm since Katrina. That's
(15:45):
and it's one I said yesterday it was going to
be one of the top five they said costliest, like
largest storms in terms of costs an area covered. Apparently
it's the technically since Hurricane Katrina is now considered the
deadliest storm to hit the United States. That was in
two thousand and five. Hurricane Katrina killed one than three
hundred and ninety two. Hurricane Helene's death tool, which is
still rising, is now one eighty nine, and the devastation
(16:08):
covers six states across the South. It's horrible. Colorado. Mane
used to shovel to kill a mountain lion and save
his dog. Not gonna lie. I would have done the same thing,
but mine would have been a gun. He killed a
mountain lion with a shovel tried to eat his dog
last week, and one very experienced Wyoming mountain mountain lion
hunter said, it's actually very impressive. He is like, that's
(16:30):
that's wild. He goes and mountains will kill any dogs.
They love dogs. Dogs is tasty and they will totally
devour them. So this is pretty that's pretty amazing. But
the dog was enraged with the mountain lion and then
enraged the mountain lion. The guy grabbed the shovel and
killed it, So man, I mean that takes some effort
to do that. That's pretty amazing. An Israel reservist in
flip flop stopped the Ghati terror attack in Israel. Remember
(16:54):
the Taro attack that we were talking about where they
opened open fire in a train station. I mean the
little it's like the good guy with a gun. It
was a reservist in flip flops. Dude ran in flip
flops and I'm sorry, but the surface on which he
ran kind of looked like a smooth surface because they
had like stills from CCTV seven people killed in the shooting,
stabbing terror attack and Jaffa. I was on Tel Aviv
(17:16):
of light rail in the sky just the timing. He
just happened to be there and he stopped it. Lev Kretman,
the guy who neutralized the terrorists. He's an IDF soldier.
He was in Gaza. He has his own personal weapon
and he was apparently getting a beverage and he heard
shots and rand awardem and flip flops and ended it.
That's pretty unbelievable. Paul McCartney's issuing or is teasing an
(17:37):
emotional Beatles tribute on new tour. I don't know who
else is going to be there. Pink Floyd sells music
rights to Sony for four hundred million dollars. We got
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Speaker 9 (19:11):
Using Codina makes some common sense of the crazy headlines.
With the 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 (19:25):
Welcome back to the program, Dana Lash with you. We're
just watching some video my friend Tim Kennedy earlier today
and Caina and I were talking about it on break,
just how hard it is for people to get down
there and respond in these hurricane devastated areas, six states
now dealing with us and then looking at all the
it was seven hundred and fifty dollars, Kamala Harrison is like,
I'll off you that Maui money seven hundred and fifty
(19:48):
dollars if you've lost your homes and all that. We
can't really do anything. They're they're in uh, they're doing
their tour right, their little tour of the hurricane ravaged
areas and my understanding, and we'll get this, we'll get
this audio already they were playing on break. My understanding
is that I know that they had to put up
(20:09):
like a certain I can't remember how many you know
what the standard operating procedure is, a radius of X miles,
you know, around your principle, around you know, potus when
they're doing a tour like this, And but that also
means that all air traffic has to stop. They take
complete control over those the skies just at that point.
(20:29):
And when you're doing a tour, that means if you're
doing any any kind of helo anything, whether you're dropping supplies,
whether you're rescuing people, whatever it is, that all has
to stop, that all that has to stop so that
the tour can be conducted. And I remember, and I'm
not like the biggest Bush fan, but I remember after
(20:52):
Hurricane Katrina, there was a story that came out where
he was trying to delay one air tour so that
they could do helo evacs of people who are on
their rooftops. And he got a lot of criticism for
that because he understood that, you know, if he's over
these affected areas, ain't nobody else getting through. That's just
how it goes. Doesn't matter if it's a Republican or
(21:13):
a Democrat, that's just how it goes. And I remember
he got a lot of help for that. He caught
a lot of help for it, did he? And I
thought that was that's It's not because he didn't want
to go and tour the area. He knew that it
was more important to get these people out of there.
I remember that distinctly. That was about the time that
Kanye West went out there and said, George Bush hates
black people. It's just wild seeing this, the devastation in
(21:36):
this and then when you look and see the how
rescuers are dealing with it, and how people who are
just you know, regular average everyday citizens were pitching in
trying to help. I mean, it's it is something else.
It's infuriating. It is infuriating to see, and I feel
(21:57):
so bad for these people. We got this audio. This
is one of the guys. This is they're explaining to
you right here what I was just talking about, how
you got to freeze you know, you got a perimeter
even in the sky around Was it Mills that was
talking about this, how that they couldn't they had to
suspend all evac and all supply drops. Okay, yeah, listen
(22:17):
to this, this Core Mills discussing this.
Speaker 10 (22:19):
The other thing is is that yesterday for President Biden's
you know, Dog and Pony show to come in and
see photos, he put a thirty mile TFR, which is
basically a restriction in the Arizone, which means that he
actually stopped from twelve o'clock until sixteen hundred and four pm,
he stopped air traffic and helos from transferring supplies, dropping
sar teams picking up individuals from metavacs. So that was
(22:39):
not only irresponsible, but if you're going to come a
week later, at least make sure that you're not trying to,
you know, hinder in any way. Further, the actual operations
that are being led by civilian organizations and veterans such
as myself and others that are trying to do what
is right.
Speaker 9 (22:52):
And so.
Speaker 3 (22:54):
Wow, wow, thirty mile thirty mile radius. So for thirty
mins around where they are and nothing getting through, no rescue,
nothing happening for thirty miles around where they are, that
is something else. Holy cow. And forever how long he's
in the air, until he's secure on the ground. That's
(23:15):
how long that's an effect for that's that is something
else I gotta tell you.
Speaker 11 (23:22):
Kennedy.
Speaker 3 (23:23):
Yeah, let's play Kennedy, because so this is our friend
Tim Kennedy who's been there with his organization. They've been
trying to get supplies and rescue people who have been stuck.
Just these first hand accounts are stunning. Listen to this.
Speaker 12 (23:37):
At present, they're in the way. They are directly interrupting
our ability to conduct missions and operations. And I'm not
going to disparage anybody because we are trying to work
within partner relationships, both government and non government entities, within
state and federal and county.
Speaker 4 (23:53):
You know.
Speaker 12 (23:54):
I went to put a couple of people into a
hotel last night and they have a security guard to
the hotel, and they said, oh, we're so sorry. The
entire hotel has been booked for federal employees. And I
was like, no, No, I have people that would just pull
out of a mountain that are living out in the hills,
and there's not a place for me to put them
because we have federal employees that are stay in the hotel.
I slept in this white car last night. I smell
(24:16):
like foot and death right now, as does every single
person on our team. Not a single one of us slept.
We got done maybe at three o'clock, the moment the
sun was up and we could play helicopters again. We
were back in the air and we have not stopped.
And I was like on the fence about trying to
get on this program or not. I want people to
understand how incredible this organization is. Save our allies and
all the work that all of these volunteers are doing.
(24:37):
But people, this is biblical level devastation. This is apocalyptic
the things that we see out there.
Speaker 3 (24:44):
It is. And he's not wrong. And Tim Kennedy is
not born to hyperbole, by the way, for him to
say this, and you can just you know, you can
see how upset he is over it. I mean, it's amazing.
It's just stunning. I mean when you look at there's
one picture of the of it was actually major thoroughfare
through one town that's in the mountains, and the road
(25:05):
looked like I'm trying to you know, how many get
brownies out of the oven and uh, you know, they're
all like they're deliciously cracked on top and it's all
uneven and there's big you know, gashes and all this stuff.
Now imagine that's the topography of these roads, absolutely impassable.
Like some of the roads are so broken and uneven,
like part of the road may be up twelve feet
(25:26):
in the air, and then you know you've got a
huge ravine. Uh. It's the words don't do it justice
how devastating it is. And I I mean, I'm just amazed.
They're just amazed at this. And all the people who
are out there with the recovery efforts, I mean they're there.
They were asking for uh was it Good Samaritans, the
(25:48):
Graham the Grams organ Grams Organization was asking for volunteers,
So contrary to what Pooh Booty Juice was saying, they're.
Speaker 4 (25:56):
In the way.
Speaker 12 (25:56):
They are directly interrupting our ability to conduct this.
Speaker 3 (26:00):
And then I've got some audio plan and then I
just why is the recovery so slow? And why do
you have the optics of Kamala Harris out there. I
get it that we're in we're, you know, an election,
but I just feel like maybe helping these people get
back on their feet's a little bit more important than that.
(26:20):
Seems like it now in the meantime, we got the strike,
and so it's already been crazy. Have you all been
to a Costco or Sam's. It's nuts, they're already doing it.
The rationing starting New York City Costco shoppers, emptied shells
and a panic over the port strike.
Speaker 7 (26:36):
Ten.
Speaker 3 (26:36):
I don't like getting people all hyped up, getting them
to freak out over this stuff. And I'm still like, man,
don't freak out. But you know if you like I
I need to get some just some stuff for dinner.
And I like getting some produce at Costco more so
than some of these other stores because I just think
they're their produce selections better. I wouldn't even go into
their first stuff because I have all of it. And
(26:56):
it was crazy. It's crazy when you go in there
and you see people free looking out like, oh my gosh,
like what do you are? You are you like playing
on having just like massive diarrhea, like when this is going,
like why do you need that much toilet? I just
don't get why you need that much toilet? Paper man,
that Ozark came out just then. Did you hear that toilet?
Oh my gosh, that's it? Hold on, hold up, that's
a specific part of thosears. This says toilet. My grandmother
(27:19):
said tarlet. So it's very different. Like I do not
have the R. My ar's in the wash, all right,
hers is in the tarlet. So it's very very different.
But people were empty and they said, no toilet paper,
no paper towels. You know, all the only stuff is
left is the thin nasty stuff. It's like tissue paper, right,
(27:40):
that's all it's left. This is in Staten Island. They
were going through everything. Water, they were going through paper, towels,
they were going through all of it. People were just,
you know, they were alarmed about the put just chill out,
calm thyself.
Speaker 8 (27:53):
I was in Sands last night, in the DFW area,
and shelves empty of water, empty of paper, towels, empty
of toilet paper, and literally the line and every register.
Speaker 2 (28:07):
Was at least three or at least three or four
people deep.
Speaker 3 (28:14):
I some of this is going to be self induced.
Speaker 2 (28:17):
Yeah, it's psychology, it is.
Speaker 3 (28:21):
I don't know what it is, but people feel like
they got to go and buy all the paper products
and French toast supplies. Have you noticed like whenever there's
like a if it's a hurricane, if it's a snowstorm,
if it's a tornado, whatever it is, people gotta go
out and they got to get French toast supplies and all
the toilet paper that they can imagine, right, toilet paper.
(28:42):
I can't help it. I'm just toilete. Sounds so weird
to say. Wand's laughing. Wan, I swear to you. Wan
says certain things better than English than I have ever
been able to say. I but but for real, though,
I mean, is it's always the same supplies if you
(29:04):
noticed those doesn't matter. If it's like, oh, if there's
a strike, is there a supply chain crisis? Is there
a snowstorm? We need French toast supplies and all the
toilet paper you got? Like, what are you putting in them?
French toasts? What are you put in it? What is
what are you eating? I don't know, Like I see people,
I would be too embarrassed sidebar. For real, I would
(29:26):
be way too embarrassed to get that much. I couldn't
go and do a rush on the shelves. I would
not want to give. And I it's weird because I
don't care what people think. Unless it's something like that.
I could not because I know how I am I'm
judging you to death. If I'm seeing you stand in
the line at Costco and you've got all the packs
of toilet paper in your cart, I'm thinking, what is
(29:48):
wrong with you? That's my first thought, Like you need
a doctor. You don't need more toilet paper, you need
a doctor. Fiber, right, Like, what is your deal? Oh
my gosh? And you know, or paper towels. I'm like,
they're just get a rag? What is your what's your damage?
I just I don't know, man, I I would just
(30:08):
be too embarrassed about that, right, Like I don't want
I don't want people I don't know, Like it's just weird.
Is that weird?
Speaker 2 (30:16):
No?
Speaker 3 (30:17):
I tried to want to fall asleep on the beach
in front of cameras. I don't want to be seen
in Costco buying all the toilet paper.
Speaker 2 (30:22):
I saw it last night. I just went in there
for some cheese and some other What else did I get?
Speaker 3 (30:27):
What did you go in there for?
Speaker 8 (30:28):
I went in there for some cheese and I got
What else did I get? I got some dairy stuff.
Speaker 2 (30:33):
That's what it was.
Speaker 3 (30:34):
That's what happened. You go in these stores and you
don't remember what the hell you.
Speaker 8 (30:36):
Want, because I did. I just when I was right there,
and I just jumped in just to see. And people
I mean stacked the water, stacked in their carts the
toilet paper, and I would it.
Speaker 2 (30:48):
I don't know. I wasn't vibing with those people.
Speaker 3 (30:50):
I wouldn't vibe with them either. I mean, I don't
even need because I'm already prepared. See, I accumulate over
a period of time, so I don't have to go
in an embarrassingly buy and a small platoons of toilet paper.
Speaker 2 (31:01):
I think I'm good to the end of the year.
Speaker 3 (31:03):
Oh dude, minter real, I'm easily good to lean to
the air, oh easily, and maybe even after because I
got grades of stuff, right, I got my good stuff,
I got my mid tier, and then I got this
stuff where it's like we're step away from me cicadas.
This is what we got. So I got tiers of it,
you know, for rationing in.
Speaker 2 (31:20):
That just reminds me of the COVID stuff.
Speaker 8 (31:21):
Remember when everything when they made a run on toilet
paper back then, just doesn't it's it's psychological.
Speaker 3 (31:29):
It is, it's so psychological. So they got so the
strikes a wrong going I mean there are, Yeah, you're
going to see price increases with certain things. There's I
don't think you're not going to be able to get items.
I think it's going to be How expensive are those
items going to be? Because yes, this affects the ports
that are on the east coast going into like what
the Gulf, but you know you can ships will probably
(31:50):
they can. It'll be a hell of a lot more
expensive thanks to oil, but you know they can go
through pan the communists controlled Panama Canal CCP controls Panama Canal. Well,
great job us and go through Panama Canal and go
around the West coat Port west coast ports or you
know you're looking at then they were and then you'll
(32:10):
freight and error. I mean it's so it's gonna be
more expensive, but for sure, but I don't I mean,
I think if there's gonna be something that you absolutely
have to have, I think you're gonna be able to
get it. But do you want to pay that much
for it? I'm just wondering, you know, the longer that
this goes out, you know what does that uh what's
that mean for prices like going into Christmas and you
know all this other stuff so we've got the shoppers
(32:31):
that are empty in shelves. It's apparently it's costing the
US economy some hard cash. And they they don't want
any automation. You're gonna have to have some automation. You're
gonna have to you can't have the United States our
ports fall behind, continue falling behind everybody else. This is
the US of a like. I wanted to be so
damned swanky when people pull in here there, I want
(32:52):
people to go, my gosh, look at what freedom does.
That's what I want them to be bowled over by
how awesome they can be if you're free. And instead
we got Harold Daggett gold ring. You know, Oh, I
didn't even I don't think I have time to get
into this. But dude, I don't know how I miss
this because I don't know a lot about Cardia, but
(33:13):
he apparently was wearing like Cardia glasses festestooned with diamonds
and gold in one of his videos. I am not
even kidding. I don't even know how much of the
glasses cost. How much a pair of Cardia and fancy
Cardia glasses? First off, what the hell kind of man
wears Cardia glasses. I'm calling I'm calling you out on
how tough you think you are If you're wearing more
gold than your average b How in the heck are you?
(33:36):
Come on? I mean, this is this is some liberace
territory here, dude. Come on, what man wears Cardia sunglasses?
Who does this? He's wearing these like fancy? He dresses
like sorry, but he dresses like an old lady going
to church he does. He's got his Cardia sunglasses on it.
How much are those glasses? How are you acting like
you're a man of other people? And you look like
(33:57):
a fruit loop all golded out and nuggeted out and
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Speaker 9 (35:24):
Get the loadown on the latest news with a side
of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to the Data Show
podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast, like.
Speaker 2 (35:36):
SAMs through the Ali Glass. So are the days of
the United States.
Speaker 13 (35:41):
There are a lot of people who say that according
to the Bible, God made man and woman, and that
couldn't be more clearly defined. How do you respond to them?
Speaker 14 (35:56):
It's hard to relate it to modern day times because
it wasn't written for twenty twenty four. It was written
behind then. When we read in the scripture that God
created man and woman. Yes, and God created everyone else.
Speaker 3 (36:12):
No, God created man and woman. You confused, little turd.
God created man and woman. That's it. I mean, who
are these people that come out and like, well, I
mean it's not you know, the Bible is not anachronistic dude.
Actually chick, it's a chick who's trying to be a dude. Yeah, no,
Adam's Apple. You know they try and I can tell.
Speaker 2 (36:32):
Her that what kind of radar is that called.
Speaker 3 (36:35):
It's just there's no Adam's apple a soft looking and
he calls himself himself and he's a trans person or
she's a trans person. So if you're saying you're trans
and then you refer to yourself as he and him,
then you're a chick. If you say you're trans and
you're referring yourself to yourself as she and her, then
you're a dude. And if you have a giant penis,
you're a dude.
Speaker 2 (36:55):
I'm still not clear.
Speaker 3 (36:57):
Yeah, it's still not clear. I mean people just need it,
you know what. But just you know how they have
them shoes out there that I don't understand. These shoes
they're like the plastic shoes that you can see the
woman's feet and just the toe box that's covered. Those
are stupid, by the way, because they look dumb and
they look uncomfortable and hot. But maybe you should make
them riches for people like this. That way we don't
got to be asking all those questions. Just you know,
(37:18):
just put it all out there. But yeah, that's wrong.
Even the devil can quote scripture and stop it. These
people are not shepherds they're deceivers. We got a whole
second hour on the way. Don't go anywhere, partners that
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percent off. Welcome back to the program. Dana Lash here
with you at the top of this second hour, and
we're covering everything from the ongoing strike, we got the
(39:08):
election around israel I, got some culture stuff coming up
for you because we've got to have a palate cleanser.
And then of course we've got the Hurricane Helene recovery efforts,
which Biden says, the hurricane happened because it's climate change
and audio somebody eight if you don't agree with him,
then you're brain dead.
Speaker 13 (39:25):
Let me close to this.
Speaker 10 (39:27):
Nobody can deny the impact of climate crisis.
Speaker 13 (39:30):
Anymore, at least I hope they don't.
Speaker 3 (39:31):
They must be brained. And if they do, well, I mean,
it's completely crazy to think that there is I mean,
think about it for a moment. I mean, it's really
wild to believe that we have a hurricane in hurricane season,
and it's always been hurricane season. It's been recorded as
being hurricane season, and all the records going back to
(39:54):
the beginning when humans began taking records of the weather,
particularly in this area, and so it's just totally we
hurricane that we would have a hurricane and hurricane season
like this. It's just wow. Yeah, it's like so unprecedented.
It's really amazing. I you know, I'm just saying, you know,
just just saying for a friend, it's just totally I mean,
(40:17):
we've never seen we've never seen hurricanes like this, but
it's so it's but it's so destructive. Dann. Yes, sometimes
it happens. We got that solar flare that happened too.
It's like the historic solar flare thing that's happening, and
apparently we're going to see the fallout of all that.
I'm sure that's going to be attributed to climate change.
No Biden's saying that, Well, you know, you're brain dead
(40:38):
like me unless you believe, you know, unless you if
you don't believe that a climate crisis caused a hurricane
during hurricane season. The dates back for hundreds of years
since you begin recording the weather, I mean, you must
be brain dead of all the things to say at
that time. I tell you what, Now, we're following all
of this, and I don't know how you got two.
(41:00):
This is why our media are just garbage. You have
two huge stories right now that I don't know in
any other if these were Republican, if this was a
story about Republican culpability, this is all you would hear.
You've got Democrats in the White House, disastrous response to
six states dealing reeling from Hurricane Helene. And you've got
(41:23):
also this story with Kamala Harris's husband. He's out there
slapping women up. And this was the woman who literally
ran in twenty twenty on the Believe All Women stick,
the woman who tried to get b rolled during the
Kavanaugh hearing by accusing this innocent man of being a
rapist and pederass in front of his wife and kids.
And the media is not asking them for anything on that,
(41:46):
not a single thing, not a single thing. And so
it's amazing. It is absolutely amazing. And then on top
of it, on top of it, now you've got the
story that came out that Inspector General report where the
IG found that Customs and Border Patrol ICE and TSA
they didn't fully assess the risks you guys, of releasing
(42:08):
non citizens without ID into the US and then putting
them on domestic flights. Bill Malugians said that under current processes,
CBP and ICE cannot ensure that they're keeping high risk
non citizens with that identification from entering the country. TSA
cannot ensure it's vetting and screening processes prevent high risk
non citizens who may pose a threat to the flying
public from boarding domestic flights. Don't you guys feel so
(42:31):
much better now? Oops? Guys, they just can't do it.
They can't handle FEMA funding, They can't handle this. No,
but they can't fund to the tune of millions of
dollars in cities across the United States. Assistance for I
llegal immigrants who come in fiscally twenty three, Federal Emergency
Management Agency FEMA allocated nearly three hundred and sixty four
(42:53):
million that year six hundred and fifty and twenty twenty
four for the Shelter and Services Program to provide what
they called humanitarian services to illegal immigrants after they were
released from DHS. That's according to FEMA dot gov slash
grand slash Shelter Services Program. And they ran that in
cooperation with Customs and Border Patrol and ICE. Hmm. Wow.
(43:18):
Remember when they were saying that that FEMA needed more money, right,
all of it go I mean, this is a lot
the stated goals. By the way, they wanted equity as
a foundation of emergency management on FEMA's own website. While
they're spending one hundreds of millions of dollars on those
who come into the country illegally, this would be in
(43:39):
any sane world, like the major story right now why
people would be asking this administration why do we not
have any Why is the assistance so slow for people
in these states, even in areas where it's not actually
impassable because they're up in a mountain. Why is it
so slow? Why is there no cap Why are you
(44:00):
guys out there demanding more money for FEMA. Why are
you giving hundreds of millions of dollars to these services
in all of these cities to provide for the needs
of people who come here illegally. This is Biden Harris's
(44:20):
Katrina moment. It absolutely is. I would say Harris more
so than Biden's, because he's just a place marker. He's
not a president, He's a place marker. At this point,
it's just unbelievable. And in the meantime, I got several
stories here we got coming up. We're gonna talk to
(44:43):
my friend Anie McCarthy about the Jack Smith filing. That filing,
you know, it's October. Judge Chuck and released Jacksmith's massive
brief detailing evidence against Trump. We're gonna go over that
with Annie McCarthy. Can I just say one quick thing
though about the Milania Trump memoir. Why she's a memoir
out and I don't begrudge her having a memoir, but
why do you make a video where you're defending abortion
(45:05):
as a way to sell your memoir four weeks away
from an election where you're trying to keep evangelicals in
under the tent. Why would you do this? Can I
just talk? I'm not I think she's perfectly fine as
a person. This is one of the stupidest campaign things
I've ever seen in my life. I get that you
have to sell a book, but when you're the first,
(45:25):
when you're the former First Lady and potential next First
Lady of the United States, and we're four weeks out
of an election, and there's already a fight on the
right about abortion and IVF and all this other stuff,
and everybody's just trying to keep the team together to
go into November. And the former First Lady comes out
with a video where she is literally talking about abortion
as a right and says and says that she supports abortion,
(45:49):
and she says all that she writes about it in
her memoir, and she comes off sounding just like Kamala Harris.
Why for the love of God do you put that
out there four weeks before an election? Why anybody got
an answer for that? Because if I'm an operative and
I'm looking at this, I'm like, what did you just do?
What did you just You couldn't save that for after November.
(46:09):
You couldn't put that out after November you're trying or guys,
we're trying to keep the team together. What are you doing?
There's a bigger question to talk there's a bigger issue
to talk about after all of this, because where's the
Republican Party going. Fine, we'll have that discussion after November.
Right now, I just want to win. This doesn't help,
This does not help stop it. You know, I got
(46:34):
for all the people who are like Trump's a sexist
and a misogynist and a control freak. If he was,
she'd have never come out with that video. There's no
way he would have let his woman make that video
and come out with that video if he were all
those things on the left that they said he was.
But why are you doing this? Like, I'm all that's
the thing that you want to talk about in the book. Now,
I could theorize and say, well, maybe they ran this
(47:00):
as like, well, it's not Trump saying it, it's her
as a way to keep the independence and maybe some
of these moderates, maybe to attract them if abortion was
the big thing that they worried about. But Malacia Trump
doesn't make policy. She's not gonna have anything to do
with policy. She's not going to influence policy one iota.
But still this does not help at all whatsoever. I
(47:21):
don't know why people do this. Who is the strategist
genius that decided that was a good idea because they
ought to be fired, rehired just to get fired again.
They deserve multiple firings to have their desk packed up
and purp walked out of the building. Oh my gosh. Now, yeah,
it's dumb. It's dumb. We'll talk more about the direction
(47:43):
of the party's heading after November, but it's pointless if
you don't when, because it's heading right to Haites in
a handbasket, depending on what happens in November. You know,
just you gotta look at all it. Can we talk
about how biohackers are annoying. I got two annoying stories
for you. Let me get to the wolf faroh one first,
and then we're gonna get to the biohacker people. So
Will Ferrell he made this movie where it's just something
(48:08):
on a Netflix documentary. It's called Will and Harper or whatever.
I don't know. I'm not watching it because Will Ferrell
used to be funny and then he got high on
his own supply and he got really annoying and preachy,
and I just can't stand it. I saw these comedians
when they get older. They're just like, I've got to
be serious and talk about it. Shut up. So one
of his friends, who's a dude, wants to identify as
(48:29):
a woman, and so he does this documentary and it's
all the people promoting it, including Will Ferrell, are the
only ones saying that it's controversial. They're like, it's a
controversial documentary. It's super controversial, and they're like pushing it,
like look how controversial. No one's saying that, no one cares.
And so he takes this dude as part of I guess,
(48:51):
like a scene from this documentary to a Texas roadhouse,
right or Texas? I guess Texas roadhouse. It is a
Texas roadhouse, but the people in Daily mailnoida with the
hell they're talking about, so it's they just a random
Texas steakhouse. It's Texas roadhouset dude, I know them rolls anywhere.
So he took his friend to the steakhouse, I guess,
to try to see if they could sit there and
eat and if anybody would give him stuff for pretending
(49:13):
to be a woman, and so they're sitting there, they
got cameras all around, they're trying to make a spectacle
of them of themselves. They gave themselves a big toast
at the table, and then the dude who's pretending to
be a woman, Harper said, we gave a little toast
and I said something about passing a trans bill, and
the room did a reversal. You're you're treating people are
(49:38):
in there trying to just eat their food, and you
come in there with a bunch of cameras, You sit
down and you start making loud remarks about trans issues
when people and you're surprised that people don't want their
meals interrupted by your bs. And then you're you're gonna
use you being a moron and being a bad guest
and patron as a way to fall accused them of
(50:01):
being bigots because they just don't want their meals interrupted
by your attention seeking read the room, you fruit cake GotY.
So they they I mean, and you can see they
got photos there, and they got their camera crews all there,
and they're making a big deal about it. And then
and then Harper, that dude who pretends to be a
woman got up and made a political speech. They conveniently
(50:24):
left that out of the documentary because they wanted to
try to get the room turning on them, and they
wanted to set these people up to make them look
like bigots. Prime the room. Oh there's a trans person
in here. Here's the trans person. They're gonna sit down
and have their stake. They went to a Texas roadhouse.
They're going to try to antagonize these people so that
they can get the reaction they want and then show
(50:45):
them all as being bigots. They gave a speech in there,
and this Harper Steele gets up in this damn crowded
restaurant and says, quote, I wish you guys would do
more for trans rights in this state, and then you
would be surprised if somebody rolls their eyes or is like,
just shut up and eat your food. I mean, interestingly enough,
(51:06):
nobody was mean to them. If anybody booed them, they
deserve to get booed because you're interrupting all these people.
They just want to get away from this crap, and
you're going in this restaurant and you're interrupting their food.
Attention seeking, self glorifying because you want to try to
falsely portray these good people as being bigots. When you're
the one who's creating noise in the restaurant, You're the
(51:27):
one who what kind of fruit does this? Stands up
in the middle of the restaurant, makes a speech about
trans writes, Oh my gosh, you guys are shocked at that.
You must be the biggest no they're shocked that a
loud mouth is standing up in the middle of the
restaurant and interrupting their meal. That, by the way, is
probably three times more than what it would normally cause
because the stupid policies you support. This is so stupid.
(51:52):
Oh it's controversial, And then Will Ferrell will goes. I sobbed.
He said he regrets taking his friend to that time
a steakhouse. He said, he just it was a bad choice,
and he sobbed. So wait a minute, you annoyed everybody
for a scene for your movie, and then you're gonna
try to act like I just I can't believe what
(52:13):
I forced my friend to endure by going to the steakhouse.
Who are these people? I mean, absolutely insufferable. We got
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(53:19):
and then life is just better. So don't mask pain,
fight it naturally with Relief Factor center.
Speaker 8 (53:24):
And now all of the news, you would probably miss.
It's time for data's quick five.
Speaker 3 (53:31):
All right, so first and foremost and pull this up
here ahead to restart some stuff. It's probably the solar flare,
by the way, that's the other thing we're going to
talk about. Apparently it's like one of the biggest solar flares.
What are they say, in like seventeen years something to
that effect, One of the biggest solar flares in like
seventeen years, And it happened earlier this morning, and they
said we're expected to I guess feel the residual after
(53:56):
effects of it for what how long? Like days? I
think the first is gonna be like in a day
or two. So that might mean that you could see
more of like those auroras the further south that you go.
And everyone's like, oh, there's gonna be radio blackouts, and
I don't know if it's gonna be all that. Let's
see here the Oh would you fly this an AI
(54:17):
passenger plane with no pilot where travelers can sit in
the cockpit and quote unquote enjoy the view? No? I
would you know? What? This is what the robots want
you to think. They want you to be like, yes,
come fly on our plane. It's the AI plane, and
then you know, maybe for a few years, everything's gonna
go just peachy king right, seeing the robotaxis in South
(54:39):
I write a story the other day. We're a womb,
but it'd a woman's hair. Yeah, her head was in
the room. Bah anymore, I'm not gonna sit here and
fly on this plane. I am flying on an AI plane.
No thank you. Let's see, there's a doctors want to
use a new b r I system to measure how
round you are instead of b M I. I don't
understand that.
Speaker 10 (54:59):
Why.
Speaker 3 (55:00):
What's because BMI is pretty accurate. It's called I'm not
making this up, the Body Roundness Index. Can we all
just get a little dumber? I think we all just
got a little dumber. It's BMI is widely used, but
it's controversial. Now they want the body Roundness index. And
(55:20):
they're trying to go why cellulade on your thighs is
a good thing? Shut up? Shut up this. They're trying
to make you like they're trying to celebrate unhealthy bodies
and act like it's body positivity. No, no thanks. And
Idaho man took a homeless person to breakfast. Oh that's nice. Oh,
but then he drug and stabbed him sixteen times. That's
not nice. That guy's that guy's nuts. He killed a vagrant,
(55:42):
took him to I hop and I's been sentence to
life in prison. I hope his life is shortened in prison,
you know, not by anything bad, just you know, if
it's IHO, just don'tan him to die on the outside.
I want him to, you know, be in prison for
a long enough time that he can die on the inside.
Like I cleaned that up. That's a nice onen't uh
and uh we got we'll talk about feral hogs coming up.
But why are biohackers annoying?
Speaker 9 (56:03):
Stay with us, keep your finger on the pulse with
a Dana Show podcast delivering timely news with insightful analysis
whenever you want, straight to you on YouTube, Apple or
wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 3 (56:18):
Welcome back to the program. Dana Lash here with you,
and we're at the bottom of this second hour already.
Just kind of want to place to me. I got
all kinds of stuff for you. It's been like heavy
with the news industry. Now now they're talking about the
auto industry with the strikes. Can we just all come
together real quick and just make fun of somebody for
a moment. Can let's just cleanse the palate. It's been
(56:41):
serious newsday. You guys need a break, right, Let's all
hate somebody together, all of us without any kind of question.
Let's all get out. Let's have some unity. Okay, we
got to talk about these biohacking freaks. This is I mean,
I don't know if I want to laugh or well,
I don't know what I want to do. This is
(57:02):
so weird. Have you heard about first thought? There was
the dude how old is? He's like in his fifties,
and he's like, I want to be like as biologically
young as my son, right, And he like it sounds
like he kind of uses his kid as a guinea pig.
He's like, I take my son's blood and I run
tests and then I do. And he's like, from what
I understand, that guy who started this biohacking thing, he
(57:29):
he looks silver, he looks weird. All I can tell
is that he grew his hair out, got a ton
of botox, and maybe dipped himself in colloidal silver. I
don't know. I don't really notice much of a difference, right,
he still looks the same age, sure, I'll go ahead
if you want to tell me that you think that
you're biologically nineteen. Okay, I really don't care. I don't
(57:51):
know you. I'm not going to send you flowers when
you die. I don't care. I won't even know when
you die. I won't even be notified because we don't
know each other. So I don't care. So I just
you know, I do what you want to do in
your own life. But now it's a big thing. I've
got to, oh, got to talk about this story. So
now it's like the new CrossFit. Everybody's biohacking guys, everybody,
(58:13):
and it's starting to be stretched from here's a freak
rich dude who's like injecting all this weird stuff in him,
and now it's like just people eating healthy just like
they're biohacking. Oh my gosh, that's insufferable. So we all
all agree that people who do CrossFit talk all the
dame time about CrossFit. Right, and people who are who
(58:34):
are keto or like I'm keto, we know it because
they tell us, right, Or people who are like I
love cycling, we know it because they tell us when
they're not hogging the road anyway, this couple from New
York Post biohacking couple plans to live longer than anyone
on the planet. Oh good for you. Nobody cares. So
(58:54):
it's this couple and they're in They're in there, they're
doing this this pro file for the New York Post.
And I guess they had a photographer come to their house.
I'm gonna tell you something. If your house is all
white and it looks like it's been staged, I think
you're crazy. I don't trust you. Nobody's house looks like that.
Your house should look lived in. Okay, it shouldn't look
(59:16):
like a doctor's waiting room. So they're from They say
they're from the Midwest and they want to live longer
than anyone on the planet. I'm sure they're very nice.
They're the lens the lenses right. One of them was
a chief revenue officer at a marketing agency. Somebody else
founded a talent agency. I don't know. They sound like
well where they sound like your typical couple on House Hunters. Well,
(59:36):
I make miniature dollhouse furniture, yes, and I do underwater
basket weaving. We have a budget of fifty million dollars,
like that's what they sound like, right, So they he
I just need to share this with you. So they
were talking about how they got together. Even so he
started as the biohacker. The guy was the biohacker first. Right.
(59:59):
They woul lived to one hundred and fifty years old,
and they spend six figures a year on their quest
for longevity. I don't know who likes this world enough
to want to live that long. Right, all your friends
are dead. You're gonna be stuck with zoomers. I'm sorry, guys,
but just saying so, she's like. The wife is like,
I've been committed to wellness for years and when I
met my husband in person, he asked her for detailed
(01:00:22):
information about health and biology because he wanted to make
sure that they were going to be suitable to each
other for over a century. What So, yeah, that's what
they did. Uh. He made sure that, uh, they all
had to They had to pass all the tests. He had.
She had to pass the medical and metaphorical tests. According
(01:00:43):
to the Independent. Uh he the Paara follow is strict
daily routine. It sounds like there's no fun at all.
So they wake up. He wakes up before her, and
they both begin their day with pulsed electromagnetic field therapy
using the Clinical Great device in their home. They follow
that up with a workout and walk to soak up
a bit of sunlight as soon as it rises. Then
(01:01:04):
they sit down for an organic homemade breakfast. In the afternoon,
they try to get more sun and take a cold plunge.
If the man works from home, then they use the
hyperbaric oxygen chamber and Nanovi, a device that claims to
repair everyday sell damage. And for dinner because apparently they
don't eat lunch, she cooks an organic dinner where she
sits down to eat with her husband. At five point
(01:01:24):
thirty pm, they take a long walk through the hills
and then they begin their wind down routine. They do
a sauna session and then switch the house to red
lights at sunset. They're in bed by nine pm every night.
They hope that their strict routine will help them to
welcome their first child soon. Well that's not how that's done,
but okay, good for you. They sound like a blast, right,
(01:01:48):
you're gonna you wanna go have some organic quene wand
cicadas over at the lenses and sit in there red lights.
It wouldn't it be like sitting under them frar lights
at a fast food place. I feel like this goes
too far? Am I wrong? Cane? Does this go too far?
They actually have a cold tub day. The only time
I get into cold water is accidentally.
Speaker 2 (01:02:11):
There's health benefits to it.
Speaker 3 (01:02:13):
I don't care. I don't want to live to be
one hundred and fifty at all. I have zero interest.
Speaker 2 (01:02:18):
Yeah, those are the years or someone.
Speaker 3 (01:02:20):
Have you looked around and seen stuff? People are wearing
high waisted jeans and they want to afraid him. It's horrible.
Have you listened to the music. Have you seen what
they're trying to get you to eat? They're putting all
this bug stuff in your food? Who the hell wants
to live to one hundred and fifty? Take me back
to the days when Grandma used to put the bacon
grease in a jar under the saint can everybody drain
(01:02:41):
davy back? I'm just saying, you don't want to live
to one hundred and fifty?
Speaker 14 (01:02:46):
Do you.
Speaker 8 (01:02:48):
Where someone else has to like wipe your button stuff?
Those are the years that I'm not interested in experiencing.
Speaker 3 (01:02:53):
I mean, they literally hold their faces up against the
like this wall, of red light little bubble lights. I
it just does not sound fun. And then all their
photos it's just it's just so weird. Dude, it's so weird.
I don't know what I think about this. I mean,
you do you, but it's annoying, isn't it. They go
(01:03:16):
end up like Jimmy Carter watching planes fly by. Yeah,
they're gonna be willed out there and watching Oh my gosh,
I just guess. So I had to talk about that
because they keep seeing it over and over again. There
was another story of this woman who was like, oh,
I'm a biohacker and I have eleven grandkids. You're not
a biohacker. You just eat healthy, Cynthia. Come on, that's
not biohacking. Stop it. I can't man, it's but I'd
(01:03:40):
rather have those people live into one hundred and fifty
than like Jimmy Carter, right, du you know that's so mean.
I don't care. So, uh, let's go back to some
of the other news. We all had to have a break, right,
didn't we We have a Just you hear about the
solar flare. Can we touch on this real quick? What
does this mean? I don't know. Uh, the strongest of
(01:04:01):
its kind. Flair may cause blackouts. It's a massive sola
storm and it looks like the eye of Sauron, if
you just want a description of what it kind of
looks like. To me, it looks like the eye of Sauron.
And I don't know, like I thought I were we
supposed to sacrifice tax dollars of the Sun to stop this,
like and that would happened, like the Sun was all
(01:04:22):
like you didn't give me your tax dollars, Now I'm
gonna blast you with my solar ray and then we
get like these pretty auroras and all this stuff, and
the sounds like damn, I don't know, like what wasn't
that supposed to happen? Isn't that how it works? Like
you throw throw a virgin in the volcano. Apparently those
we don't have them anymore. Throw a virgin in a volcano,
and then the volcano didn't you know, eat up your island.
(01:04:44):
Aren't we supposed to just like put tax dollars in
like a T shirt cannon like they have at the Games,
and then fired up at the sun, or like take
one of those SpaceX rockets and just drive by the
Sun and shoot it off shoot it out.
Speaker 2 (01:04:57):
You gotta do it at night so it doesn't burn
up the money.
Speaker 3 (01:04:59):
Yeah, yeah, I mean, I'm just saying, isn't that weren't
we supposed to do that?
Speaker 8 (01:05:02):
Kane?
Speaker 3 (01:05:02):
Who didn't? Maybe that's what the Green New Deal was
all about. See, they went around and they were like,
if you don't want the sun to zap you with
the solar ray, give us all your money and so
to placate it like it's smog or something. Give us
all the money and and they'll make it happy because
white is giving you our money. Help make the sun
(01:05:23):
not do that. It just does. Shut up, you anti
science bigot. Give us your money. And then they don't
even actually send the money up there. They just like
put monopoly money in there, and then they keep the
money and get rich. That's really what it is, Kan,
Why didn't we think of this business model? What the
heck are we doing like researching issues and trying to
be read and smart and stuff. We could have just
done this the whole time, biohacking. And now I would
biohack maybe not the one hundred and fifty though, I
(01:05:45):
got a limit. So it unleashed a massive X class
solar flare the most powerful conngenerate. It has the potential
to pummel our planet with a powerful geomagnetic store this weekend,
and it triggered a coronal mass injection. That's when the
(01:06:06):
plasma and the magnetic particles burst forth from the Sun's
surface like a ZiT right like pop, and then it
could hit the Earth. I get Friday around four pm.
According to spaceweather dot com. This is a great name
for a website. Space weather, not just any kind of weather.
It's weather in space. So I don't know it coult.
It could impact navigation systems, power grids, satellite communications, you know,
(01:06:30):
green stuff. I don't know, right, Are you worried about
this one? They did have the last outburs like this,
there's temporary radio blackout over big swaths of the Pacific
Ocean that nobody lived in except for Hawaii.
Speaker 8 (01:06:45):
Yeah, everything is frequency. But I do believe that sometimes
they talk about these solar flares or exaggerate them because
there's already.
Speaker 3 (01:06:52):
Eight No one would do that, what because.
Speaker 8 (01:06:55):
There's already a plan to shut down communication in some way,
So they want to seed that first with a little
story of a solar.
Speaker 3 (01:07:03):
Sorry, guys, you can't have the election because we had
a major solar flare. Guys should have given us your
tax dollars so we could have sacrificed it to the sun.
Speaker 2 (01:07:09):
You have no idea how close you are to No.
Speaker 3 (01:07:11):
What I just said was try that's literally it. I'm saying,
guys can't have an election because you guys didn't give
the song got mad. You didn't give it your tax dollars.
Should have given it more money. You're gonna go around
with a hat now, okay, and collect money for the sun.
Make it happy, cause then inflammation. Yea sun had some inflammation.
But I mean, you know, it's really not that far
(01:07:33):
off anymore. So yeah, this is yeah, we just gotta
If you just just throw money at that sweet, angry
ball of meanness, then it gets all calmed down. It
eats it up like a cookie monster. It's cookies not
and then it's full, and then it doesn't need your
money anymore until it does, and then you gotta do
the same thing all over again. It's just a cycle,
(01:07:54):
you know, you gotta. No, it's not extortion, it's nature.
It's different, right different. That was actually the most accurate
thing I've ever said. On this program. That's what the
Green New Deal is. It's not extortion. It's nature, that's
all it is. Oh my gosh, So just saying, you know, oh,
(01:08:14):
just following all this coming up, no one's asking about
Doug Mhoff. But by the way, nobody's did they they
did try to ask what's his face? Elmer Fudd, Elmer Walls,
Tim Fudd him a question. One of them is right
about his some of his remarks at the debate, and
(01:08:36):
it just got worse. This guy is just not He's
not fit for any time, much less prime.
Speaker 8 (01:08:43):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions.
Speaker 2 (01:08:50):
It's time for Florida man.
Speaker 3 (01:08:52):
Woo whoo who all right? So first stop, hmmm, this
uh crazy? Well, this guy went to jail as a
four being a pickle thief. I almost said for pickle
thieving sounds kind of It's not pickleball. I mean, you
(01:09:13):
know what Pole County Sheriff's office the super Way Food Mark,
a Florida man was called in.
Speaker 11 (01:09:19):
He had committed a theft from the store earlier in
the day, and he was back at the store causing
a disturbance. He fled after I realized the store employee
called nine to one one, and he frequently steals from
the store and then he tries to like sometimes he
will try to pay for the merchandise, but then he
throws the incorrect amount and literally throws it on the
counter and runs away. So he stole pickles, and the
(01:09:40):
store owner had enough. Now he's going to jail.
Speaker 3 (01:09:43):
Upon arrest, Felipe jess Gutierre says, quote, Oh, I'm going
to jail as a pickle thief. That will thank you
for naming yourself. That's great because it sounds really good
in a headline. The pickle thief is facing a felony
petty theft charge. And he was I love how they
the sheriff saw office puts out or rusted by Pole
County Sheriff's office. They got a picture of their Pole
(01:10:03):
County Sheriff's car and then they got the purpse picture
in the corner. It's hysterical. Yeah, well so, but here's
the most important question. What kind if it's the sweet
pickles taken away? Immediately? Pickles? They're nasty? Do you like them?
Speaker 2 (01:10:23):
I like them? What is the matter with you?
Speaker 3 (01:10:26):
You people who bread pickles and people who think cilantro
tastes like soap. I don't get you people, right, I.
Speaker 8 (01:10:31):
Don't think cilantro tastes like soap for but I do.
I do enjoy that. Yeah good stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:10:37):
Yeah, bread and butter, pickles.
Speaker 2 (01:10:38):
Good stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:10:38):
So a teen girl, Florida girl brought a taser to
a middle school because she had a problem with another student. Now,
back in my day, we just beat the snot out
of them on the playground. Uh, but she was having
a problem thirteen year old girls. She got arrested for
bringing a weapon to Best Shields Middle School and they
they said they got a tip about it. A student
spark testing a taser at a bolt at a bus stop.
(01:11:00):
It was in her person and an administrative search and
it's lavender colored. It's a new one. She borrowed it
and brought it to school because she had a problem
with another student. Now what gets me is that, you know,
the sheriff was like, it's unacceptable that someone to bring
a weapon to school to terrorize another student. You realize
that she felt like she had to because she was
being terrorized by another student. Like, I don't know, maybe
(01:11:23):
let's look at what the bully's doing to make a
student feel like they got to do that to protect themselves,
just saying it goes both ways here, just it goes
both ways. I don't want to talk about the guy
who abused the dogs, Kane. How bad was it? I
purposely didn't read the story. It was bad, Okay, I can't.
All I know is that a guy was accused of
(01:11:43):
horrific animal abuse to his dogs in Polk County, and
I feel like I don't need to know more death penalty.
Speaker 2 (01:11:51):
The highlights are yeah, no, and I agree with the
death penalty.
Speaker 8 (01:11:54):
But the highlights were carcasses, oh no, all around, emaciated
dogs that were alive, no food or water to be seen.
Speaker 3 (01:12:04):
I'll take care of the problem for free, for Florida.
I'll go down there on my own time, my own dime.
I'll take care of that little problem for you, for
that guy. I'm just saying, you know, I'm not selling
you what I'm doing. I'm just said I'll take care
of the problem. I'm a wolf. Call me this, I'll
come help. Let's see here.
Speaker 4 (01:12:19):
This.
Speaker 3 (01:12:20):
No, not doing that one because I don't need that.
Don't need this one either, and I also don't need
that one. Can we stop going to stores and having
romantical times? Just ourselves. That'd be amazing. I mean, why
is this It's constantly a thing. This Florida woman accidentally,
she says, misplaced three hundred and thirty dollars while depositing
company checks over a two year period. I accidentally put
(01:12:44):
it on my account. This is Margate medical rehab employee
faces grand theft charges and it was a two year
scheme apparently. But what she had said was in the
woman it went all the way up to July of
last year. Her name's Luiz Pierre. She just was accidentally
putting them in our cause she didn't realize it was
going to sit into her account. She didn't mean to
(01:13:06):
do that. US stick with us Third Hour on the way,
Welcome back to the program. Dana Lash with you top
of this Third Hour, and we got a lot to hit.
We've been covering a lot of issues. It's been kind
of a crazy news week. And you can watch along
Channel three forty seven Direct TV the chats over at
Rumble and I'll also find this YouTube Facebook All the
(01:13:27):
Goods of X. We're also on X if you want
to check it out. So, Hurricane Helene, we got a
one to two punch because you got the hurricane recovery,
A broke FEMA, and now you got the strike happening.
Where did all FEMA's broken? And we don't know where
all oh, we know where all our money went. You
don't have to guess, Kane, if you had to guess
where our money went. A. It went to the Sun
(01:13:48):
to make it not spit solar flares at us b
It went to buy booger sugar for Hunter or c.
It went to assisting illegal immigrants, resettling them and giving
them humanitarian needs whatever that means.
Speaker 2 (01:14:03):
What would you say out of the three Jeopardy music here?
Speaker 8 (01:14:05):
But I would say it's mostly see, but it could
be all three, dude, definitely mostly.
Speaker 3 (01:14:09):
See though mostly see. Now you don't get them. Mostly
you got pick one.
Speaker 8 (01:14:14):
I imagine that some booger sugar was probably purchased a
tax dollars.
Speaker 3 (01:14:17):
Either the money was sent up to the Sun to
make it not spit solar flares. That's number one, right,
number two Hunter Biden's booger sugar. Right three, I went
to resettling unit.
Speaker 8 (01:14:30):
The FEMA money definitely went to resettling illegal immigration.
Speaker 2 (01:14:34):
By the way, here in the United States.
Speaker 3 (01:14:37):
That is correct, sir. You don't win anything because femous broke.
We're all bro nothing to give except maybe you need
to spend less pimp, that's right. Just the satisfaction of
knowing you're correct. Sometimes when Steve plays soundbites of me
while with me, I feel like that's little Dana on
my shoulder, Like it's a little Dana just sitting there
(01:14:57):
like telling everybody what's what, just like that. FEMA's broke.
They don't have it. They Leandro Majorcis, who's the DHS
secretaries like, and FEMA's under DHS. They don't have the
funds to make it through the season. Maybe it's because
you guys, maybe they spent almost a half a billion dollars.
Actually it's more than that. It's probably a billion on
(01:15:19):
housing and providing services to illegal aliens. I mean, where
else in the world do you go and you can
get that kind of treatment. I mean, this isn't like
the Ritz, you know what I mean. This isn't the
Four Seasons. It's not like come on over and here's
your delicious steak meal. Here's your prepaid phone, and here's
a debit card prepaid and here's some here's some you
(01:15:41):
get some tickets to go get food. I mean, it's
not like a fair right. They treat it like one
This say isn't Glastonbury, It say, is like what is
what do they do you guys treating them? This is
not how you don't get this treatment anywhere else. Hey,
guess what if you snuck into Mexico? Can you think
you'd get all them things? I mean, you got family
in Mexico, so you know this, like, would you get
all the would you get all them perks? If I
(01:16:01):
were to go down, sayah was gonna go down, and
I'd be like, I'm gonna visit Kane's family. I'm just
going to cross the rio go up in Mexico and
I got in trouble with one of them federal allies,
what would happen? I probably get Kane a prepaid phone,
and I'd probably get, you know, maybe like I don't know,
a nice stay in a nice hotel. They'd put me
up a nice hotel, like one of them fancy resorts. Right,
(01:16:23):
will go yeah, because it's like it that's what the
United States does. So surely that courtesy is returned, right,
It's pretty Oh, it's not.
Speaker 2 (01:16:31):
It's a unique situation we have here in the United States.
Speaker 3 (01:16:34):
So what would they do to you if I've snuck
down there and try to see your some of your
family on the other side of Browns?
Speaker 2 (01:16:39):
They would detain you and then.
Speaker 3 (01:16:41):
And then I'd get a nice meal.
Speaker 2 (01:16:42):
Right, you might get something nice meal may not.
Speaker 3 (01:16:47):
Be the but then I would go get to stay
in a nice hotel for free, paid before by the
Mexican nationals.
Speaker 2 (01:16:52):
Right, they would send you right back, actually would they? Yep?
Speaker 3 (01:16:56):
That's so mean. Why are they so resist? Mexicans are
are so resent. That's why can't I just like, come,
let let me come in your country and it's take
your stuff. I mean, why not otherwise you're racist? That's
how it works, right, doesn't it work in reverse?
Speaker 7 (01:17:08):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:17:09):
No, no it doesn't.
Speaker 4 (01:17:10):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (01:17:10):
Yeah, So FEMA's broke, and uh, you know I thought
FEMA when it was a disaster like hurricanes or tornadoes
or something like that, they were supposed to be there
to help provide assistance in those times. I mean, that's
why we you know, why we pay taxes, pay a
lot in taxes. But and you Crank gets a lot
(01:17:33):
of our money as one of our minds, like billions
of our dollars. So, uh, that's not what happened. Congress
did replenish a big source of FEMA's response efforts. They
gave him twenty billion dollars in disaster relief that was
supposed to be part of a short term spending bill.
It goes up to December twentieth, and then they can
(01:17:54):
FEMA had a little bit more flexibility to draw the
money out as needed. And no they're not. I mean
they're all in home their home states right now until
after the election. So they're going to be home now
for the next month. Congress is isn't a sessions, so
they're gonna be home now for the next month. Boy,
(01:18:15):
this sounds like it's just real great. We got all
this stuff happening, and you now we don't have FEMA
to be able to afford anything. Congress is an incession.
They spent all the money on illegal immigration, and everybody's broke.
Speaker 2 (01:18:29):
But we got that cr Hey, maybe.
Speaker 3 (01:18:32):
We can just like take these back seats, like, oh,
we're gonna need all this stuff back. Got to give
it back now. I mean that's I mean, that's the
whole reason why you have FEMA. I mean, you can
plan for a disaster as much as you want to,
but sometimes extraordinary things happen and create even more extraordinary circumstances.
And that's why our government was like, Okay, well we'll
create this, you know, this this department to be able
(01:18:54):
to deal with us. And now there's nothing there for
the people who need it, who paid into it, which
makes me real mad, Like what, I'd be livid. You
paid all this in tax and this is what you get.
You get you get everybody else gets nice swinky accommodations,
and what do you get. I don't know. I'm just
(01:19:15):
I don't know. This is so it's so frustrating and
I feel so bad for these people. Elon Musk has
been providing free Starlink. He's been providing free internet through
Starlink to all these people across the six states, and
they made they he said last night that they made
a system update to allow starlinks and all the affected
areas to work regardless of payment. He said that they
(01:19:38):
were updating the software and they were trying to get
it completed last night, but it was a it was
a big update. And so he's like out there doing
the what you know, the federal government. Wait a minute,
I though everybody's supposed to have high speed internet out there,
didn't they say? That's what? Whoa whoa, whoa hold up,
we just talked to Brendan Carr about this.
Speaker 8 (01:19:56):
Sorry, forty two billion dollars spend nothing and I mean
zero to show for it.
Speaker 3 (01:20:03):
Huh. Imagine that. So all that money, all these people
were supposed to have high speed never happened. Now Elon
Musk is out there doing it for free. And you're right,
the broadband, the whole thing that they had, I mean,
they spent an on just a particulous amount of money. Yeah,
(01:20:27):
forty two billion dollars and let's see. Oh but you
know what. One of the problems, probably like the ev
charging stations, they had to have all the diversity stuff,
equity and inclusion stuff in it. Remember what we told
you about the charging stations. One of the reasons that
they weren't able to get all the ones that they
said they wanted to they got seven, right, seven built
because they had to have a quota of how many
(01:20:49):
minority owned businesses, how many minorities those minority owned businesses employed,
whether or not those minority owned businesses that employed a
certain number of minorities also employed translators. I am not
making this up. I was reading this off of their website.
I'm not making it up. And then what kind of
community events that they did to try to ingratiate themselves
better at large with the community. Those were all requirements
(01:21:09):
in order to be able to get a contract with
the government to build an EV station. I am not
even making this up. So you couldn't just even if
you were a minority company, minority own not enough? How
many minorities do you employ? Not enough? How many translators
do you have? What I'm just asking, That's what they required.
So you see now why that's so stupid. So there
(01:21:30):
were probably businesses out there, minority owned businesses, maybe they
didn't have a minority, you know, majority minority owned employees,
and they got they got the shaft because of that.
Do you see how stupid and also racist this is?
It's a government contract, and so we're promoting one group
over another to receive federal dollars to perform a service
that isn't needed. And somehow that's considered constitutional and fiscally responsible.
(01:21:52):
I don't think so. I don't think so. All right,
Another fun issue, I just saw this story. So the
the first lady has doubled down on her pro abortion stance.
This is why. Why are republic Why? Oh my gosh,
why is this headline even getting the light of day
right now? Why are they pushing it?
Speaker 4 (01:22:12):
No?
Speaker 3 (01:22:12):
I know the media. Why are Republicans? Why is she
saying this four weeks ahead of an election. She's releasing
her book. This is a headline, Kane that just posted.
She released a book, and she said she calls abortion
an individual freedom and a fundamental principle. She said, quote,
without a doubt, there's no room for compromise when it
(01:22:33):
comes to this essential right that all women possess from birth.
And then she starts talking about abortion. She says, quote,
it's imperative to guarantee that women have autonomy in deciding
their preference of having children based on their own convictions,
free from intervention or pressure from the government. Oh my gosh. Why.
She says many women ought for abortions due to personal
(01:22:54):
medical concerns, and then she cites the complexity inherent in
the decision of whether a mother should risk her life
to give birth. These things are already protected. I don't
know what this I don't know what this campaign is
(01:23:15):
thinking or why they thought that would be a good
thing to do. Like I said earlier, we're just trying
to keep everybody under the same tent right now, and
having the former first Lady go out and sound identical
to Kamala Harris when talking about abortion is not helpful
and keeping all of these different factions together under the
same tent. Look, if you think that you're going to
go out there and hang out a carrot on a
stick about abortion to get Democrats to vote for you,
(01:23:36):
it's not going to work. Democrats are not going to
vote for you because abortion isn't the only issue. If
abortion is such a big issue to them that they're
willing to vote for a candidate based on that alone,
I guarantee them to you. They were never going to
vote Republican in the first place. They were always going
to vote Democrat. And going out there and hurting your
own odds with your own base by acting like you're
triangulating the issue, that's not going to do anything to
(01:23:59):
help your numbers. If anything, it'll hurt. This is just
I just don't and I just don't understand her doing this.
Like go out with your memoir, that's fine, you know whatever,
But now this is like a bit, and she's talked
about it, and it's not that they just pulled one
thing out of her memoir and they're they're pummeling over it.
The video that we're showing is literally her talking about abortion,
Like she made a video, a promotional video about her
(01:24:21):
memoir where she's defending abortion. And I just don't know
why the campaign thinks that this is the smart, smart
thing to come out with right now. Like I said,
anybody who's like, oh no, I gotta have aboard, they're
not going to be voting for Democrats. There is for Republicans.
There's nothing Republicans that are going to do that will
get a hardcore abortion supporter over to vote Republican, because
(01:24:44):
that is just the symptom of an overall ideological deficiency
that these people have. It's not just you know, government
paid for, you know, taxpayer funded abortion on demand up
until the moment of birth. It's also they want higher taxes.
It's also they want to go in nation build. It's
also they want to get in never ending wars. It's
also that they want an open border. It's also that
(01:25:07):
they want you know, the Green New Deal. They want
all of these other things. That's just one aspect of
their Marxist ideological deficiency. You're not going why hurt yourself
with your own base in an effort to try to
attract people who are never going to vote for you.
They are never going to vote for you ever. You know,
Donald Trump once said he could go out a Fifth
(01:25:28):
Avenue and shoot somebody and that nobody would on his
side would stop voting for him. He could go out
there and a board a whole mess of babies in
the middle of damn Fifth Avenue. It's still not going
to get Democrats to come and vote for him. So
why with this? Why do this before we go? Why stop?
Gotta leave? You've seen the polls. It's close. I don't know.
Speaker 7 (01:25:49):
So uh.
Speaker 3 (01:25:50):
We've got also coming up Iran in Israel, because Israel
is now considering a ground well, they're looking at their
oil fields and Iran has said that if there's any
kind of response, and they're going to strike back super hard.
I think that was all they had unless they've got
something nuke under their sleeve. I don't know.
Speaker 8 (01:26:10):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's quick five.
Speaker 3 (01:26:18):
Okay, there is a woman who transforms taxidermy. Taxidermy's rats
into sexy showgirls with colored feathers, bras and fake eyelashes,
and she has twelve hour days to keep up with demands.
It's called her taxidermy business. It's quirking bizarre rats. Is
it just rats? Okay? I would want more than the rats, right,
(01:26:44):
I was. I'll tell you it was in Traverse City
one time went to an ice cream parlor slash taxidermy shop.
I just eat my ice cream, vanilla coon, I just
eat my ice cream. And I was just like looking
at like all that there was, like they were put
up in all kinds of little whimsical like fantastic mister
Fox kind of you know scenes. It is very neat,
very interesting, very demure. Let's see here. We've Bank of
(01:27:07):
America says the widespread outage is nearly fixed. Oh they
had one. I don't use them. They're trash bank. They
said their customers reported having access to having trouble accessing
their actual money. But their glitch has been fixed. Guys,
So I hope nobody was inconvenienced.
Speaker 1 (01:27:21):
Yay?
Speaker 3 (01:27:23):
Was that solar flare? I don't know. Yeah, sure. Weird
timing with the vax rollout and the boosters rise in
the hive is the steepest amongst straight dudes and women,
with a thirty percent surge in two years. Kine, are
you telling me that the vax gives you the hive?
Speaker 8 (01:27:39):
Come on, I wouldn't be surprised that it compromises your
immune system to the point where you're susceptible.
Speaker 2 (01:27:44):
With things like this.
Speaker 3 (01:27:45):
But okay, I don't believe that you're just like susceptible
to the hive. I think you just like get it regardless.
Now other stuff, I'm on board with you on that.
Speaker 8 (01:27:54):
Back in history, there has been some accusations about vaccines
back then creating the HIV issue, and Anthony Fauci was
actually behind it back then.
Speaker 3 (01:28:03):
So yeah, there's that's too much tenfoil for me.
Speaker 2 (01:28:06):
All right, I'll quit.
Speaker 3 (01:28:07):
Not with the hive like cancer is different cancers completely,
I totally agree a thousand percent. But with literal AIDS, yeah,
I don't think. So that's not how AIDS has gotten Okay,
it's not how all right, doctor lah go ahead. I'm
just saying. You know, AIDS comes from Green Day, from
when you listen to Green Day, and it's sonic AIDS
audible hive that turns into full, full blown aids. That's
(01:28:29):
how every everybody knows that. That's how you contracted cot Lea.
Come on, also, Oh I want more? No no, no, no, no,
no no, I didn't get this one. Oh, FEDS arrest
thousands of violent fugitives and a sweeping operation. What like why? Now?
US marshals they had a month long nationwide mission to
(01:28:50):
capture violent fugitives. They have arrested three thousand, four hundred
suspects wanted a murder, rape, robbery chargers. How many were
here legally? I'm just curious. Stick with us. My friend
Nay McCarthy joins us.
Speaker 9 (01:28:58):
Next The Dane Show podcast. You're fast, funny and informative
news companion for those always on the move. Subscribe on YouTube,
Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 3 (01:29:10):
Welcome back to the program. Dana Lash here with you
at the bottom of this third hour. Catch us on
channel three forty seven direct TV X Rumble Everywhere. One
of the things that we've been following, and I said
we were going to touch on this earlier on in
the show, was this this weird thing from from Jack Smith.
I mean he's able now, I mean it's it's it's
(01:29:32):
an immunity filing, and it gets into what he's suggesting
is Trump's alleged desperate bid to overturn the election, even
though you know, Mike Pence was even saying that these
conversations were not taking place. And I just think it's
really weird that the timing comes right after the vice
presidential debate and Tim Walls kind of stepped on himself
(01:29:53):
all over himself, not kind of, and then he tried
to clean it up after and like his responses were
even worse. And then now you have the situation with
missing kids from the border and the FEMA response, and
it's just like a really not the best news cycle
for Democrats and then boom, this filing comes out, and I,
you know, I was kind of scratching my head over this,
So of course we had to go to our very
smart and very good friend, Andy McCarthy, best selling author,
(01:30:17):
and his book Ball of Collusion, the plot to rig
an election and destroy a presidency. I think is you
have to read it to understand really how everything makes
sense with what we're seeing now and what we've seen
these past what eight years now. A former Chief assistant
US attorney. He joins us now via phone on Skype. Andy,
always so good to see you. I mean, did this this?
(01:30:37):
I don't know if I would classify this as an
October surprise because some of it seems kind of like
a rehash, but it also seems like a desperate attempt
to try to like rehabilitate Democrats or try to hit Trump.
It just it doesn't seem like it's justice minded at all.
Speaker 15 (01:30:55):
Well, it's not justice minded, Dana, and thank you for
the kind words. It's it's the whole project of Jack
Smith's term as Special Counsel, including both prosecutions, was strategically
timed to have trials and bad information, and they hoped
convictions of Trump come out in the run up to
(01:31:18):
the election. Remember, they wanted to have two trials, but
which were estimated to be like two and a half
to three months each. He wanted to start in March,
which would have taken him right through election day. So
the whole objective here was to influence the election. He
kind of got caught up on his wheels because he
(01:31:39):
underestimated how complicated it would be to try to prosecute
a former president, and the Supreme Court put the Brakes
on it, so they can't have their trial, the next
best thing, as far as they're concerned, I think, especially
on the J six stuff, which is what Harris wants
to run on, what Democrats want to run on.
Speaker 4 (01:31:58):
Otherwise they have to run on their own record, so
obviously they'd rather run on that.
Speaker 15 (01:32:03):
But since they can't have their trial, the next best
thing is to at least get all the evidence out
there so that the media Democrat complex has it, the
Harris campaign has it, they can blast it in their
election messaging.
Speaker 4 (01:32:17):
And the like.
Speaker 15 (01:32:18):
And that's the only reason for doing this, because there's
no way that this case could go to trial in
less than a year given all the legal complexities that
still remain.
Speaker 4 (01:32:31):
And ordinarily a.
Speaker 15 (01:32:32):
Good judge and a good prosecutor would not want the
evidence to be publicized prior to trial. A prosecutor who's
been running around telling everyone that his defendant is a
threat to democracy as we know it, wants to keep
the evidence close to the vest. You don't want to
identify witnesses or because.
Speaker 4 (01:32:53):
They could be threatened. Right the integrity of the process
could be threatened. And a judge is supposed.
Speaker 15 (01:32:58):
To be worried about the jury pool, the defendant's fair
trial rights and the like. The last thing you want
to do is fuel the publicity with the most explosive
parts of the government's case. Right, So ordinarily you wouldn't
do any of this stuff. But the purpose here is
not legal. It's political.
Speaker 4 (01:33:16):
They need to.
Speaker 15 (01:33:16):
Get this out into the public domain. There's no legal
reason for doing it. So it's pretty obvious what they're
trying to do here. They didn't get their trial. This
is the next best thing.
Speaker 3 (01:33:26):
And I'm glad that you mentioned that. We're talking to
our friend Andy McCarthy on the phone. I'm glad that
you mentioned how odd it is to lay out all
of your cards like this. I mean, again, I'm not
a lawyer. I know some law, but I'm not a lawyer.
I'm definitely not anywhere near your league, you know, And
I've watched some law and order. I know that, you know,
prosecutors don't like to lay this stuff out like that.
But it's like, this is like the first like ninety
(01:33:48):
pages of this thing. Is all the evidence that he
has was that sort of I guess, like his second
place prize for failing to get the first place prize,
which was a trial before.
Speaker 15 (01:34:01):
I guess you know it's funny you mentioned law in order.
I was trying to think as you were saying that,
how many of the ninety pages you could read in
the forty five minutes they managed.
Speaker 4 (01:34:10):
To wrap up all their cases. I never had one
like that you could wrap up that way.
Speaker 15 (01:34:15):
But you know, look, just to show how farcical and
unabashedly political, this is when we have very careful procedures
in the criminal justice system for how evidence gets unfolded,
where before any of the evidence starts to get presented,
the judge can tell the jury which the allegations mean nothing.
(01:34:36):
An indictment is not proof of anything. The defendant is
presumed innocent. You can't assume anything until the end of
the case, when you've heard the whole thing. They get
to cross examined, they get to put their defense in,
they get to test all of the.
Speaker 4 (01:34:50):
Documents and the witnesses that the government presents.
Speaker 15 (01:34:53):
The judge tells the jury all this because you don't
want them, you know, rampantly on a runaway thing where
they on an incomplete understanding or a one sided understanding
of what the case is.
Speaker 4 (01:35:06):
You don't want them, you.
Speaker 15 (01:35:07):
Know, rushing to justice and doing a verdict that that
turns out to be against the evidence when you hear
all of the evidence.
Speaker 4 (01:35:15):
So all of this.
Speaker 15 (01:35:16):
Is supposed to be done under you know, due process
rules that we've taken I don't know, millennium or two
to develop, you know, But here, because this is political,
they couldn't care less that there's no due process protections here.
They couldn't care less that this is obviously going to
taint the jury.
Speaker 3 (01:35:36):
That's exactly what I was thinking of.
Speaker 15 (01:35:37):
I mean, it is the DC jury pool, where you know,
hostility to Trump is kind of baked in the cake.
But still you're at least supposed to pretend that you
care about.
Speaker 4 (01:35:46):
Influencing the jury pool.
Speaker 15 (01:35:48):
They don't care about any of this because the objective
is to get the information out in time for the campaign.
Speaker 3 (01:35:52):
Yeah, and that's a great point too, because you're now
jurors are going to see all of this, and as
you said, this is outside of that controlled environment of
exploring this evidence in a courtroom with due process protections.
Now it's just out there in public domain for the
court of public opinion and any potential duror. I don't
even know how you get an impartial duror with everything
(01:36:15):
that they put out there. At this point, I really don't.
Speaker 15 (01:36:18):
Yeah, well, you know what they figure is if Trump
wins the election, there's no case, right because he's going
to if he gets sworn in at twelve oh five,
at twelve oh six, Jack Smith gets fired and whoever
is running the Trump Justice Department gets told to dismiss
the case.
Speaker 7 (01:36:36):
Now.
Speaker 4 (01:36:36):
I think they may have.
Speaker 15 (01:36:37):
Some trouble with Judge Chuckkin on that, but they will
be constitutionally allowed to do that, and then it will
die the death it deserves. If Harris wins the case,
it will probably proceed. Even though I think it's against
her interest. This case is good for the presidency as
far as Democrats are concern, as long as it has
(01:37:00):
the political value of dumping dirt on Trump in the
run up to the election. Once Harris is elected. If
she's elected, what this case is about is cutting back
on the immunity of the executive branch and the president,
which should be the last thing that Harris, the Justice Department,
or anybody actually wants. So if she were smart, pause,
(01:37:25):
I think you know, she would have a lot of
incentive to just say I think it's time for the
country to turn the page. I ran as like the
new somehow, I ran as the person who is going
to be a step away from my own administration. But
you know, don't you know, twist yourself and are not
trying to understand that I'm going to be the new
(01:37:47):
fresh face that turns the page. It would be good
for her in terms of not degrading the immunity of
the presidency. It would be good for her politically because
it would look like an olive branch that doesn't cost
her any thing.
Speaker 4 (01:38:00):
But the left would go crazy. So I don't see.
They never do anything that makes the love go crazy.
Speaker 3 (01:38:05):
Yeah, they're talking with our friend Andy McCarthy, whose book
is a must read Ball of Collusion, the plot to
rigan election and destroyer presidency. And that's you touched on too.
This was I mean, it's about the presum the presumptive
immunity for official acts, and that's what they were looking
to try to define. I guess piecemeal what was or
was not an official act because they I mean, they
weren't able to claim or at least uh prove their
(01:38:29):
original claim that what he was engaged in was somehow
outside of his you know, regular performance as the chief executive,
and furthermore, like and a lot of the stuff in
this filing U and I was reading your piece, and
I was reading the filing as well as a lot
of conversations with Mike Pence. But Pence even he like
said in his book that there they he didn't even
(01:38:51):
see at the time any there wasn't any proof that
that of attempted fraud on behalf of Trump. And so
it's weird to me that prosecutors that he would include
that in here but lead that detail out.
Speaker 15 (01:39:04):
Well, I think, understood as a political document, it makes
perfect sense that he would write it the way that
he wrote it. I have to say, having looked at
it now, that he and the Supreme Court are like
two ships passing in the night on this because and
having been a prosecutor for a long time, I can
(01:39:25):
assure you that prosecutors don't win the battle with the
Supreme Court. But you know, the Supreme Court's opinion basically says, look,
we think presidential acts should be immune from prosecution for
today's purposes. We're not prepared to go any further than
to say the core executive acts, like the president's control
(01:39:47):
over the Justice Department.
Speaker 4 (01:39:48):
They're absolutely immune for that.
Speaker 15 (01:39:50):
But the court's message was, if pressed further on this,
we might be inclined to say all official acts of
the presidency are immune because the anger of degrading the
executive's role in our constitutional system is too great.
Speaker 3 (01:40:04):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (01:40:05):
And that's what you get when you read the opinion.
When you read.
Speaker 15 (01:40:08):
Jack Smith's submission, he's like, the Trump immunity opinion is
just a bump in the road. And sure, I got
a lot of the presidential acts here, but look, I
can overcome the immunity. And when you read with the
Supreme Court said, look, I think he's going to get
indulged by Judge Chutkin if it comes to that, and
(01:40:29):
we continue to have this case. But when he gets
back up to the appellate courts, I don't think they're
going to smile.
Speaker 4 (01:40:35):
On this theory that he has.
Speaker 15 (01:40:38):
And the other thing he says, Dana is that Trump
should be understood as a candidate, not a president in
this context. In other words, even though he's the incumbent president,
he's also an office seeker, and in that role, he's
not exercising executive power. That's private conduct, private behavior that
(01:41:00):
he doesn't have community for And when you read the
Supreme Court's opinion, what they say again and again is
that the president's powers are so vast that it's impossible.
Speaker 4 (01:41:13):
To draw clear lines between.
Speaker 15 (01:41:15):
You know, when you're a candidate and when you're the president.
And you know, there's an appellate opinion that says, Look,
the president could be giving a campaign stump speech and
in the middle of it he could say, and that's
why I'm firing the Secretary of State, which is not
a political thing. That's an official act. Right So it's
not always easy to tell what's official and what's not official.
Speaker 4 (01:41:36):
And what the.
Speaker 15 (01:41:37):
Court's message in that opinion I think is let's stay
out of this. Regulating presidential abuse of power is for Congress.
That's what the framers intended. They certainly didn't intend for
subordinate executive officials, which is what federal prosecutors are to
be policing the chief executive.
Speaker 4 (01:41:57):
That's not the way the system was designed.
Speaker 3 (01:41:59):
Is going to be fascinating to watch. What a great
time to be a student of law right now, especially,
I mean, you're getting real time, you know, practical lessons.
This is amazing. Andy McCarthy, our good friend on x
at Andrew C. McCarthy and his book Ball of Collusion.
Always such a pleasure whenever we have you on. Thank
you so much for your time, my friend.
Speaker 4 (01:42:19):
Thank you, Dane, appreciate it.
Speaker 9 (01:42:20):
Take care Subscribe to the Dana Show podcast because who
says you can't make fun of people while staying informed
on your own personal time. Subscribe on YouTube, Apple or
wherever you get your podcast.
Speaker 3 (01:42:33):
Welcome back to the program. Make sure you sign up
for the newsletter over at substack, chapter and verse. Lots
of good stuff that comes out on that on the
regular and it's stuff that you're gonna want because I
put a lot of this, like my prep deep dives
on different issues. I've got a couple of pieces one
and one in the process. It's a bigger piece that
probably won't be until maybe Monday or Tuesday next week.
(01:42:54):
Then I got another another one comes out. We got
our culture deep dives, all kinds of good stuff that
come out pretty regularly on that. You should check it out.
Uh this, I have all these weird soundbites of Harris
speaking about the hurricane and hurricane response, and none of
(01:43:19):
it is good. I okay audio sun bite four. What
does this even mean, I know, I don't want to
take up Kane's time, but can I just hear this
real quick?
Speaker 16 (01:43:28):
I have been in close attention from the beginning to
what we need to do to make sure that at
the ground that's quickly as possible, and that includes what
was necessary to make sure that we provided corrected consistance
and that work.
Speaker 3 (01:43:48):
So she's saying in this we've been paying close attention
from the beginning to what we need to do. Okay,
what then, why aren't you doing it?
Speaker 11 (01:43:56):
You know?
Speaker 3 (01:43:57):
Just I know it's kind of a basic question to ask. Ask,
but if you've been watching closely as to what you
need to do, why are you not doing it? Just
want to ask that question. Yay, that's all I got,
all right, Kine, Today's stupidity, all right, it's gonna have to.
Speaker 8 (01:44:14):
Be and one I think it's gonna have to be
the seven hundred and fifty dollars cut number two, because
think about this. People are upset, people are displaced, no water,
no food. They see billions being sent to Ukraine, they
see billions being sent all around the world.
Speaker 2 (01:44:32):
They saw what happened to.
Speaker 8 (01:44:34):
Maui and the government only handing over seven hundred and
fifty to those guys one time. And here's what Kamala
has to say for those in North Carolina and other
places ravaged by the.
Speaker 5 (01:44:42):
Hurricane, and the federal relief and assistance that we have
been providing has included on PEMA providing seven hundred and
fifty dollars for folks who need immediate needs.
Speaker 8 (01:44:55):
Being just go back to the first hour of the show,
Dana laid out all of the area that FEMA money
went to and guess what, none of it went to Americans.
Speaker 3 (01:45:05):
Yeah, none of it.
Speaker 2 (01:45:06):
And it's still is.
Speaker 3 (01:45:07):
We're looking at that.
Speaker 2 (01:45:09):
That's stupid, all.
Speaker 3 (01:45:10):
Right, folks. That does it for us. This Thursday, we
made it through the week. Tomorrow we're gonna get you
set up for with all the end of week stuff,
anythings that drops, and then also we'll get you set
up for the weekend too. So have a great night.
Find us Facebook YouTube, I can subscribe subscribe over at
substack back with you tomorrow.