Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Thank you for gathering.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
My name is Damian Williams and of the United States
Attorney here in the Southern District of New York. Today
we are announcing campaign finance, bribery, and conspiracy charges against
Eric Adams, the Mayor of New York City. As the
indictment alleges Mayor Adams engage in a long running conspiracy
in which he solicited and knowingly accepted illegal campaign contributions
(00:24):
from foreign donors and corporations. As we allege, Mayor Adams
took these contributions even though he knew they were illegal,
and even though he knew these contributions were attempts by a.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
Turkish government official and Turkish businessmen to buy influence with him.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
We also alleged that the mayor sought and accepted well
over one hundred thousand dollars in luxury travel benefits from
some of the same foreign actors who arranged many of
the illegal campaign contributions.
Speaker 1 (00:53):
These benefits included.
Speaker 2 (00:54):
Free international business class flights and opulent hotel rooms in
foreign cities.
Speaker 1 (01:01):
The mayor had a duty to.
Speaker 2 (01:02):
Disclose these gifts on his annual public disclosure forms so
that the public could see who was giving him what
But as we allege, year after year after year, he.
Speaker 1 (01:13):
Kept the public in the dark.
Speaker 2 (01:15):
He told the public he received no gifts, even though
he was secretly being showered with them. We allege that
Adams accepted these benefits knowing that they were given to
him because of his position, and in exchange for some
of those improper benefits, he intervened in the New York
City Fire Department's inspection process for a building owned and
operated by the Turkish government, allowing it to open even
(01:39):
though it had not passed the fire inspection.
Speaker 3 (01:41):
So this is some of the latest with Eric Adams,
who is he's being charged with all kinds of what
I guess they're trying to say he's been under the
influence of Turkey this entire time. So he's getting all
of these different charges against him. And that's just some
of the latest with it. Welcome to the radio program Thursday,
Dana Lash with you, and we were following this story.
(02:05):
I think there's a lot of discussion that it's because
a lot of the things that Eric Adams had said
about illegal immigration, et cetera, and that it's the illegal
immigration aspect of it. That's that's why, like right after
he said it, then that's why he started. That's why
(02:27):
they started investigating him, because it's been like ten months
that they've been investigating him at this point. I think,
so the and we're going to follow up with all
of this stuff. He just had a press conference where
he was getting heckled at some of it. It was
a really wild press conference and the Feds are laying
out all the charges now. They were saying that he
was taking bribes and that he wasn't disclosing. Well, it
(02:47):
was basically it constituted bribes and that he was he's
taking bribes and he was basically in the pocket of
Turkey this whole time. So welcome to the program. We
got a ready show to do. Other people apparently in
this orbit need to be notified of that. You can
find us over at Substack as well. We got a
lot of stuff to hit, including the disastrous remarks from
(03:09):
Kamala Harris where she she made a speech and I
talked about some of it last night on Fox and
it was fairly ridiculous the speech that she gave. And
so this, uh just just I feel like democrats are
kind of falling apart when they're not attacking themselves. Really,
when they're not attacking themselves, they're entirely falling apart. So
(03:32):
it's this is just some of the latest that we have,
and we're gonna be you know, sorry, We're bringing it
to you as we get it. But those charges that
came out, I don't know if I think that it's
related to his remarks on on immigration. I don't know
if that's like a conspiracy theory or not. I mean,
he said some pretty crazy stuff before, so I don't
believe that he's like some sort of hero of the
(03:54):
right or even really an ally of the right. But
you know, I mean, he he took brad VI apparently.
I mean, he was a lot of it was like
upgrades on flights and free stays when he would travel,
and apparently he like always traveled through Turkey, et cetera,
things of that nature. I wanted to play some audio
for you of Kamala Harris's her disastrous remarks that she
(04:16):
gave because she's campaigning and she was trying. She did
this sit down interview with Stephanie Ruhl, who was in
a weird outfit. It's like, don't dress like day Wednesday,
Adams and red pumps, like when you're trying to do
a serious sit down that's fashion where that's not anchorwar.
But she did this weird sit down interview with Kamala Harris,
and they were in I don't know what the setting was.
It was like they were in a home depot, in
the back room of a home depot. But audio sound
(04:39):
Bye three is some of her room. She spoke. This
was at her fundraiser, so we have she had. She
did two different things. She had the interview with the
MSNBC and then she also gave a campaign speech. This
is part of her campaign speech. And I just like
I said last night, I don't speak drunk Hallmark. We
need to guard that spirit.
Speaker 4 (05:00):
We have to guard that spirit.
Speaker 5 (05:04):
Let it always inspire us. Let it always be the
source of our optimism, which is that spirit that is
so uniquely American. And let that then inspire us by
helping us to be inspired to solve the problems that
(05:24):
so many faces, including our small business owners.
Speaker 6 (05:29):
Yeah, we have a transgress.
Speaker 3 (05:34):
Yeah apparently whatever that is, whatever that was, whatever her
remarks were there, what that what do you this is
supposed to be about the economy. I don't understand what
she's talking about when she says guard the spirit, What
the hell does that mean? What does it mean to
guard one's spirit? What is that she talking about the
spirit of American entrepreneurship? Because I don't think that she
(05:55):
understands it. If that's what she's talking about, you know,
she doesn't understand it. Is it the spirit of American guardianship?
I don't know. I don't know. I don't know what
that meant. I really don't. I mean, she has no answer,
no answer to anything. This is wait audio sound bite two.
This is just when she keeps discussing she failed. And
(06:17):
we're gonna talk more about this, but I just got
to get these soundbites out of my system. Audio sound
by two.
Speaker 5 (06:22):
We just need to move past the failed policies that we.
Speaker 3 (06:27):
Have proven don't work. I don't even know what that means.
She's part of the poloty. Someone tell her that she's
in the White House. I mean she's in, right, she's
still vice President. I didn't fall down the steps this
morning and like hit my head hard. And you know,
now I don't understand what's happening in the world. Correct, correct, Yeah,
(06:52):
I don't know. I don't know what. I don't even
know what half of what she's I don't even know
what this means. We need to move past the failed
policies that prove so she indicting herself in this, I'm cures.
I'm very confused. I don't know she indicting herself in this.
I'm not quite sure. I just know that this is
the kind of stuff that does not resonate. When you're
(07:12):
talking to people about the economy, you better know what
the hell you're talking about, because you're talking to people
who they're they're struggling right now. I heard there was
a SoundBite that was played yesterday somewhere not here, but
I had heard it where it was one of her
surrogates saying that people are misremembering the Trump economy, and
(07:35):
that I heard that, and it made me so angry.
When her surrogates are insisting that we are that people
are misremembering the Trump economy. Can you play that real quick,
because this right here, when you combine this is the
messaging that they're putting out that you all are stupid
(07:56):
and that you can't remember anything, that you're stupid, you're
misremembering your own bank account. And also, uh, you know,
we got to guard the spirit. That's what you're getting
from this administration. Listen to this. So this is one
of her official campaign spokespeople.
Speaker 6 (08:10):
Listen.
Speaker 7 (08:11):
Part of it is that Americans, when you ask the
question are you better off today than you were four
years ago? Many Americans misremembered just how bad the economy
was four years ago.
Speaker 3 (08:22):
Hmm, what does that mean? Misremembering? Yeah, I mean that's
that's I would imagine that it's that it's called that,
it's called forgetting misremembering. We're not misremembering anything. People are
broke as hell. They're broke, they can't afford anything, and
they can't afford anything because of this god awful administration.
(08:44):
People are stressed to the max, because this administration is
driving everyone into an early grave because they're they're they're
stressing everybody out with the economy. They're stressing people out
with the possibility of taxes. And then we have this,
you know, pick me or who is the vice president
of the United States. I've never seen anyone so damn lazy,
(09:05):
who works so little in their life that got handouts
to get to where she is, because it's exactly what
it is she gave us every time she sits here
and says that she's from the middle class. That angers me.
You're not from the middle class. Do you guys know
that before she started her illustrious story about being bused,
that she went to a ridiculously expensive primary school that's
like twenty five thousand dollars a term. She had two
(09:28):
PhD parents that work in Ivy League universities. They lived
in one of the wealthiest areas in Berkeley, California. And
she's gonna sit here and try to act like she's
one of you, that she's middle class. She's worked in
the public sector ever since she was an adult. She's
never worked in the private sector ever. She's always been
in the She's always been on the government teat always.
(09:50):
These are people who have no idea what it means
to build anything. These are people who have no idea
the stresses of small business and making payroll and hiring
and being the first to arrive in the last to leave.
And they don't understand any of this. And that's why
she sounds like a damn drunk Hallmark card whenever she
talks about the economy. She doesn't understand what payroll taxes are.
I don't believe she does I don't even think she
(10:12):
could define capital gains her life depended on it. She
doesn't understand basic anything based related to business or basic
economic principles. She doesn't understand it. She has the mentality
of a barely educated college freshman who's a Marxist and
has yet to take an econ class. Because everything she
(10:32):
talks about relating to the economy reflects that everything that
she has proposed so far, when you know, I mean
mostly it's vagaries, but everything that she has proposed thus
far has been I mean, when you follow it to
its logical conclusion, it is the utter destruction of the
American economy. She was going off on tariff. She was
going off on it, and look, tariffs, that's a little
(10:55):
bit of a nuanced aea. She couldn't even define a
tariff if her life depended upon it. I it angers me.
It pisss me off as a woman, do you know why?
Because women. I don't mind if you have a Margaret
that you're type president, but you're gonna get a horrible
woman in that office, and then women are never gonna
be able to get that office again, at least in
my lifetime, because we're gonna have blown our shot because
(11:15):
we have someone who is who's a barely literate who's
gotten to where she is because she checks boxes, because
she is a political identity. That's why don't act like
it's everything I'm saying is offensive because it's true, and
the reason people are offended because it's true and they
have to admit, Wow, we only want this person because
(11:38):
of completely shallow cosmetic things that they were born with
and couldn't change. Has nothing to do with merit. Nothing.
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Speaker 8 (12:58):
Well, Taxing the rich actually solve our problems. All of
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Speaker 9 (13:16):
Get your podcasts, and now all of the news you
would probably miss.
Speaker 1 (13:21):
It's time for Dana's quickfive.
Speaker 3 (13:23):
So the Court's block Ken Paxton's appeal. They're going to
have a gun ban at the State Fair of Texas,
which is in one of the most peaceful and least
crime affected areas in all of the United States of America,
particularly Texas. There's no crime at all whatsoever that ever
happens in Arlington, Texas. There's never been any crime that's
ever happened at the State Fair of Texas. And I'm
sure that they have more than enough resources to keep
(13:46):
everyone safe from the gang bangers and the drug dealers
that don't exist and are prevalent in the area when
people go and are disarmed, So go and eat your
giant meat on a stick. Don't get shot.
Speaker 9 (13:55):
Everything you said was false.
Speaker 3 (13:57):
Maybe is it? Is it fake news or is it not?
Nobody knows they yet the State Court of Appeals, So
he's taken it all the way up.
Speaker 6 (14:05):
Go Paxton.
Speaker 3 (14:06):
Also, Colorado tops the United States in cocaine use again,
and honestly, if I had to live next to some
of the dirty hippies that are now like all throughout
Colorado with their pot shops, I'd probably have to use
cocaine too. Marks the second time in three years that
Colorado tops the country and admitted cocaine use. People are
just like, yeah, we're on cocaine, so it makes sense
(14:27):
of Venezuelan games and everything in there. Yeah, six people
are hurt and an explosion from an intentionally set ied
as opposed to an accidentally set ied at a Santa
Monica courthouse in California. You know, you don't accidentally set
your IEDs the man. And this is just the headline
over at ABC News, the story that was probably headlined
by the editor, but it took three people to write
(14:48):
five hundred words. The explosion was around eight forty eight
am Wednesday the Santa Maria Courthouse in Santa Barbara and
it was a small I mean they said it. It
was an explosion. That's why they got such crazy these
security of courthouses. Let's see China test buyers and intercontinental
ballistic missile into the Pacific Ocean. I'm sure they meant
for it to go into the atmosphere, but it probably
(15:09):
just straight the hell up, just shot into the water
because it's China. Also, Nancy Pelosi's husband, in what I'm
sure is just a total coincidence, sold more than five
hundred thousand dollars worth of visa stock just weeks before
the Department of Justices Antitrust lawsuit. You know, it's just
he's got very good instincts, and I'm sure he doesn't
(15:30):
trade on his wife's insider knowledge at all whatsoever. You know,
the guy who was assaulted in his underwear by another
guy who I'm not a conspiracy theorist. Was it his boyfriend?
I don't know, but he was a BLM Marxist Progressive
anti trust cops also alleged that VISA was forcing financial
tech firms to work with it by threatening to penalize
people who don't like Democrats. Also, AOC says that Eric
(15:53):
Adams should resign as New York City mayor for the
good of the city amid federal probes. You know how
they want to get into you. And we're going to
talk about this. Andrew Cuomo is looking at his comeback.
So who do you want as mayor of New York City?
A guy that maybe is it considered a bribe or
was it treatment? I don't know, Do I care? Maybe
maybe not? But would you rather have that guy in
(16:15):
office that took some money from Turkey or the guy
who killed all your grandparents with his policies? Don't I
mean literally killed them. He took his policies fashioned them
into a stake and stabbed your grandparents in the chest
like they were now sparatus. So I don't know, Like,
who do you want in office? Andrew Cuomo or do
you want Eric Adams, the guy who helped create all
(16:37):
of the problems that New York is dealing with now?
Or Eric Adams who seems like a less annoying of
a Marxist, not maybe all the way of Marxist, willing
to say some stuff about illegal immigration. Did he take
money from Turkey? Nah? The only thing, the only difference
with Eric Adams and all the other New York Democrats
is Eric Adams was dumb enough to get caught. That's
literally the only thing. Because all these cats have taken
(16:58):
this kind of they've taken up raids, they've taken free trips,
they've taken hotel stays, literally every single one of them.
He just got caught. That's the reality of it. We're
gonna talk about that coming up, and we're also gonna
get into Kamala Harris and the holistic housing market. Stay
with us. So, the folks over at Patriot Mobile, the
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Speaker 7 (18:15):
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Speaker 3 (18:27):
Welcome back to the program. Dana lash with you do
you guys, what's your favorite Kain? What's your favorite book
of the Bible?
Speaker 9 (18:37):
M hmm, Man, that's a tough one because I do
like Psalms. You go back to that one a lot.
Speaker 3 (18:42):
For the Psalms.
Speaker 9 (18:43):
Yeah, piece of pie Psalms. So I think it'd be Psalms.
There's a lot of books there and a lot of
things to pull from.
Speaker 6 (18:48):
Mmm.
Speaker 3 (18:50):
I'm partial to Ephesians. Well, what about those Ecclesiastics. Huh,
you know the book about the Ecclesiastic people. Oh wait
a minut. That's just I apparently that's what Kamala Harris
that she thinks that that's Old Testament scripture. I'm not kidding.
Audio sound bite one.
Speaker 5 (19:09):
You know, there's a time for patients and there's a
time for impatients. That's not an Ecclesiastics. But swapscript for
a minute.
Speaker 3 (19:21):
Mayor the Ecclesiastics. You know, remember when they got I
feel like I say this a lot. Do you remember
when do you remember when they got mad at Trump
for what did he say? Two Corinthians? Is that what
he said? It's not one but two Corinthians something like that, right,
or two Timothy and said he said to Timothy, I
think it was it was it that it was one
(19:41):
of them. I don't remember it was one of them.
Oh my gosh. And the left, the left was, can
you believe Trump doesn't know this biblical book? He doesn't
know this book of the Bible?
Speaker 6 (19:53):
Can you believe it?
Speaker 3 (19:54):
And they just lost their minds. What about the Ecclesiastic people?
I mean, that's it's it's goofy, right, And it just
goes to show you that she yes, you know, the Ecclesiastics.
That actually sounds like a great theological punk band name
(20:16):
where they take It's like they take the Book of
Psalms and they turn it into punk songs. And their
first album is called Punk Psalms. Oh, we're just writing
it ready.
Speaker 6 (20:27):
Or in air.
Speaker 3 (20:28):
That'd be great.
Speaker 9 (20:28):
The last an X that's right, it can't be.
Speaker 3 (20:33):
That's right, Yeah, yeah, yeah, Ecclesiastics, that's right. Oh my gosh,
that actually would be. How is that not a punk band?
That actually would be really great. I can see them
opening up. I can see them playing like, uh, the Vatican,
you know, you like go out there and see Peter
what are the Ecclesiastics for I can see it. Man,
(20:54):
I would totally go to that show. Wouldn't you go
to that show? It's just all psalms punk style that
actually I want to do it. I mean, I know
enough power chords and I can play rhythm guitar poorly
enough that I could be a punk. I could be
a punk guitarist. I can do it.
Speaker 9 (21:10):
And the next book in the Bible, Song of Solomon, right.
Speaker 3 (21:12):
So that's the second album.
Speaker 9 (21:15):
Yeah, that's what it is.
Speaker 3 (21:16):
Yeah, follow up and then in the style of paranoid Android,
just have a character, just have a song called Solomon.
It's ecclesiastics. Sounds great, doesn't it. It's a great that's
a great idea. I can't believe no one's done that yet.
So she actually she didn't come up with that idea.
But anyway, it's like that band Pentonics or what was
the Pentatonics. I liked them for like five seconds and
(21:39):
then I was like, Okay, I'm done with it. I
can only take so much, you know, Like there's certain
types of music that for five seconds, I'm like, this
is the greatest, and then it's too much.
Speaker 9 (21:48):
I revisit during the holidays.
Speaker 3 (21:50):
Really I don't like I don't know.
Speaker 9 (21:53):
It's usually in playlists and it pops up.
Speaker 3 (21:55):
I don't like it. I mean I don't. I don't
dislike it. I just it's not my jam. I like
the old creat it's not my jam.
Speaker 9 (22:01):
But I'll run across it during the holidays.
Speaker 3 (22:03):
When we were when I was a little kid. I
have no idea how we got on this subject. When
I was a little kid, my mom would they would
put her and my stepdad would have uh he because
he was h He had a record player. He was
one of those people. He was a vinyl is a
vinyl person, and he would play all kinds of like
(22:25):
old Christmas music on these albums, these vinyl albums and
so and we and that's how you decorate the tree
and all that stuff. And so now I have to
have that music around Christmas.
Speaker 6 (22:35):
You know what I means?
Speaker 3 (22:36):
Yeah, Ecclesiastics. Can you imagine the Ecclesiastics Christmas punk? That's amazing,
like away in a manger, but punk style that's so cool,
like like a really fast drun. Oh my gosh, Like
I'm already like imagining it in my head. And guess
and you wouldn't have to pay royalties because it's kind
of like considered American standard, right dude, for reels. I
(22:58):
can't believe that hasn't been done. Trademark copyright work on that.
Speaker 4 (23:03):
Right now, I'm.
Speaker 3 (23:04):
Saying I've got guitars. I mean, I can play you know,
I can make it. At least one part of it happened.
I could play drums poorly enough where I could put
those tracks down. Can't play bass to save my life
unless it's like, you know, three three chords. That's about it.
But there you go. Where are we going? That's okay?
The clut you guys would buy that album? I feel
like I feel like you would. Can you imagine? Oh
(23:25):
my gosh, and you could. Uh oh, I'm just I
need to stop because I'm like going on and on
and on. All right, So I wanted to bring the
tug butt back to shore here briefly because Georgia a
new survey came out. It's not looking so hot for
the Harris It's not. It's a CBS you Gov poll.
(23:48):
You know, CBS, which is the C stands for conservative
you guys, remember that, right, The C stands for conservative,
So CBS you go poll shows. Now it's within a
margin of error. But I will note something. This was
fourteen forty one registered voters and it has Trump fifty
(24:12):
one to Harris's forty nine. Now, margin of error on
this was three point five. But still why do I
cite this because the last survey, if you will give
me a moment that I saw, had had them tied
like literally, except it was like point five. So this
(24:33):
survey and indicates and the last one was likely voters
and not registered voters, and that was I want to
say that that survey was like a ras Muscin I
think maybe no, no, no, it wasn't Erasmussen. It that
last one was. I think it was a trafflic guard group.
So anyway, long story short, I feel like, you know,
(24:55):
this one shows like, you know, a two point bit
of growth, but it's not. Georgia's not certain and Trump
needs to really focus. I think he didn't he just
do an event in Georgia. He needs to focus on Georgia.
He needs to and stick to the hits, stick to
the issues that voters care about. But Harris is freaking
(25:16):
out because what's one of the things that we've talked
about ever since she picked Walls as her second Banana.
They completely just glossed over Josh Shapiro and almost made
it seem like they weren't making a play for Pennsylvania
and Pennsylvania's electoral votes, almost like they thought, well, we're
(25:39):
just going to go straight for Georgia. Maybe we'll get Pennsylvania,
maybe we won't. But it was really clear that their
play was to go for Georgia over Pennsylvania. So it's
kind of interesting and now like looking at this, how
this is not working out for them, that it doesn't
(25:59):
look like their plays worked thus far, and probably in
this probably because I mean, her messaging is really bad. Yeah,
when they were tied, the last survey was on September
fourteenth when it came out, and that showed them really
at like forty eight forty eight, but like he was
like forty eight point five and she was forty eight.
(26:20):
So you know, there's there. They were right there. And
now it looks like he's kind of pulling away from her.
Just I'm not it's not enough to be a trend yet,
but it's enough to keep an eye on, I think.
But that's not that's not a good poll for Harris,
not at all, not a good pole for her. Marist
has a survey out for Arizona. Trump is plus one again,
(26:44):
still within the margin of error. The margin of air
is three point eight points on this, so he's only
plus one, So they're tied. They're tied. It was Harris
that she the last survey that they measured well amongst independent.
The last survey that they measured amongst independence was Harris
fifty one, Trump forty seven. And those are only likely
(27:06):
voters for independence. And Joe and Biden carried independence by
plus nine in that state four years ago, so these
are kind of already you know, left leaning independence. Now
it's they're still leaning towards Harris, but less so so.
But these are likely voters, not registered voters. So fifty
(27:26):
to forty nine with this latest Maris poll from Arizona.
And I was looking at the cross tabs for this one,
and like I said, three point eight margin of error.
I mean, this is not a huge lead for him
with this survey, but it looks like they're tied. And
they looked at twelve hundred and sixty four people that
they surveyed, and they conducted that through September nineteenth and
(27:49):
twenty fourth, and they also used text and Landline for
this too. So they've got eleven electoral votes for Arizona.
And very interesting how the independents they are not as
supportive of Harris as they were Biden, which they have
the same policies. I mean, she's literally the same person.
Just a woman now is the same person. It's the same.
(28:11):
I mean, this is why you have to vote for
the set of policies that they're looking to advance and
not the person or personality if that's like an issue
for people. But man alive, it's it's close. I wanted
to hit Coca Cola. Do you guys hear about Coca Cola?
Jere about this. I don't drink Coca cola because I
am a pepsi drinker. So apparently there was a dude
(28:34):
on Facebook who was at a machine in a Coca
Cola store where you can personalize the like you can
write your name on the coke can or write something
on the coke can and it personalizes it in the machine,
which is actually kind of neat. And he was able
to write Ala and Buddha and Satan, but he couldn't
write Jesus. And when he tried to write Jesus, it
(28:57):
said exadly, we cannot automatically allow this text on the can.
If you feel some mistake, please please speak to a
state rep now. And then there were other people saying
that you can write, you know, other political names, but
you couldn't write where you're Caine's grinning, like you couldn't
write Trump or do something like that, yeah, or yeah.
Speaker 9 (29:17):
Jesus and all that. See, here's my problem with it
is that there are I have friends named Jesus.
Speaker 3 (29:23):
Yeah, Jeseus is an actual name.
Speaker 9 (29:25):
Yeah, Like why they can't even get that on the cust.
Speaker 3 (29:28):
I feel like that's anti immigrant.
Speaker 9 (29:32):
It definitely is an anti immigrant.
Speaker 3 (29:33):
It's jingoistic.
Speaker 9 (29:35):
Yeah, thank you for bringing like you're welcome.
Speaker 3 (29:38):
It's in whatever other ingoistics isms that they want to
add to it to not allow Jesus to be on it.
Apparently though, too, you can't write like Trump twenty four
on it. Yeah, I don't know. They said that they've
been any monikers that are trademarked political in nature, names
of country, celebrities, religious figures, as well as anything that
(29:58):
could be considered offensive for reasons. And now it's stupid.
See now it's they tried to be so pc that
it's dumb. Now you can't write, but I think you could.
It allows Elon Musk's name, and it allows I think
a couple of other names. I think it allowed Harris,
but it didn't allow Trump. So some people are saying
(30:21):
that is it's woke?
Speaker 1 (30:22):
Is it?
Speaker 3 (30:23):
It might be? Do can I be real? Do I care?
I don't think so.
Speaker 9 (30:28):
If woke equals fascist, then yes, that would be correct.
Speaker 3 (30:32):
I just think that some people. I don't even know
why some people continue to choose life for themselves. If
you're so miserable that you're offended by a name on
a cocine, how are you alive?
Speaker 1 (30:46):
Like?
Speaker 3 (30:46):
How are you living? And you're just not offended to
like actually into the grave? How right? How are you here?
I don't get those people. They're offended by everything everything,
How in the hell are you alive?
Speaker 6 (31:02):
I am so a fan.
Speaker 3 (31:03):
They're the people who are mad over butter and pancakes, syrup.
Speaker 6 (31:06):
And names on soda.
Speaker 3 (31:08):
What we can't have Trump on a can of soda?
Speaker 6 (31:12):
That's bad?
Speaker 3 (31:15):
What is your damage? What is wrong with these people?
Speaker 4 (31:19):
Do you know?
Speaker 3 (31:19):
I'm not political all the time. I do turn it off.
Speaker 4 (31:22):
I happen to.
Speaker 3 (31:23):
Believe certain things and I am a certain way and
it's just how I am. But I don't always talk
about politics, and I don't always you know, look for
political fights and everything. And one of the things that
makes me so mad is that when I try to
walk away from it, somebody out there on meat space,
a leftist is always trying to make it a reality
and make it a real thing, you know. Like we
got a story coming up where this kid got in
(31:45):
trouble at his school because he made a gun out
of soda cans. But no, he didn't like actually fashion
a fire like a gun that can be fired from
soda cans. He laid out, literally laid out out what
I'm assuming are full cans of doctor Pepper on a
bed in the shape of a rifle, meaning that it
(32:07):
looked like a lowercase K. That's it. And he posted
it on TikTok and he's thirteen years old. He does
with thirteen years old with thirteen year olds to do.
Post it on TikTok, and someone at his school got
offended and they suspended this kid. Not only did they
suspend him, but he's got two marks on his permanent record.
(32:27):
One is for cyberbullying, and I can't, and that he
got a sit like someone was offended by a picture
that they saw, and so that amounts to cyberbullying somehow,
and that's a that's a permanent mark on his record.
So that's one one of the marks he got. And
the other one was making a school threat even though
he never made any threats. That's the thing. He never
(32:50):
made any threats to anybody, to any school, to any person. Nothing,
No bullying took place. We're going to talk about this
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Speaker 7 (34:10):
Get the loaddown on the latest news with a side
of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to the Dana Show
podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.
Speaker 9 (34:21):
Like SAMs through the hour Glass. So are the days
of the United States.
Speaker 5 (34:27):
What's the first word that pops into your head when
you hear the name Kamala.
Speaker 1 (34:31):
Harris liar.
Speaker 3 (34:35):
That kid is on the accelerated track clearly that that kid,
that's uh, who's that sissy? And enormously Sarah asking kids
a liar He didn't even man and they couldn't even
take a beat. He knew immediately what his response was.
I love this kid. Sounds like his parents are very
(34:57):
involved in his education and he's very intelligent. I'm just
telling you now, if we were like, if we were
like the full throated right, we'd be like, this kid
needs to run for office right now, we just saying
it would be yeah, it doesn't matter, go rub right now.
Like what he said, he said, what I'm like, I
(35:20):
don't know. In my head, I sound like South Park
doing Mickey Mouse. That's hysterical. Gosh, it's so funny. Welcome back,
Dane lash with you. You know you can send up
for the newsletter over at Substack. Lots of good stuff
that goes up there or on the rag and you
can also watch US Channel three forty seven Direct TV.
The chat happens at Rumble as well. This Eric Adams indictment,
(35:43):
I just I am not particularly zealous about him either way.
I think it's whenever Democrats act like they're cleaning house,
they're not really cleaning house, because they feel like someone
breached their code of ethics because they don't have any
(36:03):
Their code of ethics consists of stepping outside of the narrative.
And when you criticize your narrative masters, they come at you.
And that's I think, honestly, what's happening now? Did he
make it easier by doing some of this stuff? But
what is it? Maybe not? But how is it any
different from what any of these other democrats do regularly?
Speaker 6 (36:25):
You see what I mean?
Speaker 3 (36:26):
We're gonna talk about that more. Stick with us. In
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(37:29):
the program, Dana Lash here with you top of this
second hour, and you can watch the simulcast of the
program over at Channel three forty seven Direct TV. You
can also find us on x on Rumble, where the
discussion happens, and on Substack. Chapter and Verse is the
name of my official newsletter. You can go and subscribe.
(37:52):
Always new stuff out on the rag. Got something I
always send? Try to send out something that's I've been
trying to make more of an effort to send something
out at least once a week. It's totally non political,
and we usually do like a culture post that's strictly
just about stuff that I'm watching, reading, playing, listening to,
and so we cover all of that. So you got
(38:13):
new notes, Are you got new Mel Gibson, You got
the South Korean Beatles?
Speaker 6 (38:17):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (38:17):
Yeah, you got all yeah, uh huh yeah, Tulsa King,
new season, uh, new Cure album, all that, all that
listed in it. So yeah, I know, lots of good
stuff happening right South Korean Beatles well, because you know,
because I'm hang on, I'm gonna get to the meat
potatoes in it because I love Japanese punk and I
(38:38):
like what like South Koreas have been doing a lot
of experimentation with like you know, fifty sixties type sounds,
and it's a really interesting band. This group that I've
got linked that'll come that's that is sending out with us.
So it's really good. And I also link to one
of my favorite Japanese rockabilly artists too, So it's weird,
but it's fun. You know, you need a break, you
(38:58):
need a you know, palate cleanser. All right, So as
we roll, got a few things I gotta tell you,
Like when the Eric Adams stuff hit. I'm not an
Eric Adams fan, but I'm not an Eric Adams hater.
I'm ambivalent, Like truly I am. I am ambivalent about it.
(39:21):
He's charged with bribery and wire fraud and I was
listening to the to the charges on this and he,
you know, frankly, kind of it just I don't know,
It's just he's a Democrat. I'm like, I expect democrats
to do this stuff. I mean, honestly, if I'm being real,
I expect politicians in general just to be I just
(39:44):
think when you're in office for a certain amount of time,
you're weird. Nobody you have to be weird to be
in office that long. Yeah, I hate it. I would
hate it think about it. And I know there's some
people who go with the best of intentions, right, but
I think when they get there, something changes them, like
they become infected, like a virus. I don't know what
(40:05):
it is, and then they just like seek out this
these accolades and they seek it out and it's like
they get they can be addicting, and so can praise.
Praise can be a horrible drug for us, not for
the Lord, but for us humans. It can be a
horrible drug. And I think some people, if they do
one thing right, they get addicted to the praise, and
(40:27):
then they constantly seek accolades, and then that turns them
into like shadows of their former selves, and then they
become grifters. I don't know, Maybe I'm just very very cynical,
deservedly so it's an earned cynicism. But I can't imagine
anyone that would want to be in office for as
long as some of these cats are in office for,
or want to be in government for as long as
(40:48):
some of these people are in government for. You know
the amount of ring kissing and buck kissing you have
to do in order to be in it that long.
I can't stand to go to more than one, like,
you know, the Christmas season when it comes around, I can't.
I can't stand to go to more than like one
or two Christmas parties a season because I just get
I am a situational extrovert. It's one thing to be
(41:10):
on a stage in front of tons of people or
behind a mic, but when it gets to those one
on one things, I can't hang. It's I'm as awkward as
get out and just drains my energy. I can't. I mean,
if you've ever met me in a small setting, You're
going to be like, she, how is she? She's so weird?
She is the most awkward person we've ever met. And no,
(41:30):
it's totally accurate. And I and I have no filter,
and so I immediately will say things like, so, I
guess we're supposed to talk about the weather since I
don't know you, I mean, I just you know, I
what else are you going to say? It's weird. I
can't stand when when things are awkward. So I'm like,
if it's going to be awkward, let it at least
be awkward for a reason, right, Like, let's let's introduce
(41:54):
something to really feel awkward about in this setting. So
I just I don't know how they do it. I've
been to the you know, I've been to the Capitol.
I've been I've seen lawmakers and everything that they have
to do, and I just I don't know. There's something's
wrong with them. I just said, no, they're different. I
don't think they're human. When you stay in I think
(42:15):
if you're in office for like fifteen years, you officially
cease to be a human. You're an alien, You're a Martian.
I don't know what's wrong, because who wants to be
there for that long, and you've got to be in
d C. You got to be in d C. And
DC's can be pretty if you're a visitor for a
short period of time, but when you have to live there,
it's a different story, right, totally different story. The first
(42:35):
time I took it was the first time. Maybe it
was the second time. I took one of my kids
to d C with me when I was doing one
of the Sunday morning shows and I went in Saturday night.
We get to our hotel and it was in the
nice part.
Speaker 6 (42:47):
Of d C.
Speaker 3 (42:47):
You know, is there one and I mean there were
just we when we drove around the corner to go
to our to go to our hotel, and it was,
you know right not I mean not far from the
Capitol at all or the White House at all. Go
around the corner and there are all these people in
the street. And my kids have seen homelessness before, but
(43:11):
it's off the chain in places like New York and
DC and LA like, it is a whole different kind,
a whole different level. Like you think you've seen homelessness,
but not until you've seen people like ten cities on
the sidewalk where you couldn't even walk on the sidewalk,
like you actually have to walk into the road because
there's so many people on the sidewalk and the cops
are just like, we can't deal with it. It's too much.
When we turn the corner, it was like that, like
(43:34):
just a block away from the hotel that we were at,
and I'm like, well, this is what democrats do. This
is welcome to Democrat policies and action. And it's true,
there's nothing about anything that I've just said right there,
that's a lie. I'm not lying to my kid. It's true.
But it was wild to see these policies and I'm like,
these are the people who've been here all this. He's like,
they know they're here, right, And I'm like, yeah, they
(43:55):
know they're here. He's like, but they're just right down
there and I'm like, yeah, they are in there for forever.
They just they become immune to everything. They just stay
in that bubble. It's weird. I think they're weird. I mean,
I'm not trying to sound mean, but I think it
is mean when you That's why I think the voter
is the term limit. I don't like term limits because
(44:17):
as much as I think it's weird that people are
in office for that long. I don't want the government
to take anything, any other decision making ability away from me. No,
you don't get to determine how long someone stays in office.
I agree with Hamilton and Adams and all of the
other founders who were writing in the Federalist papers against
government and post term limits. Those are the people on
whose side I come down. And that's our That is
(44:38):
up to our discretion. So you know, that's why we
got to be smart about it, because we ultimately decide
this anyway. My whole point in that is that I
think Eric Adams is a product of his Democrat environment.
He's a product of Democrat politics. He's a problem of
a product of the Democrat Party. He is a product
of New York. Are you telling me that all of
(45:00):
these other people who have occupied, you know, his honors office,
that they've never engaged in anything, because I don't believe it.
He was just dumb enough or lackadaisical enough about hiding
it that he just got caught. He just got caught.
So what is it? They were saying that he didn't
disclose all this stuff and that it amounted to influencing,
and we don't want any influence influences from foreign entities.
(45:23):
Oh unless you're Hillary Clinton and you're working with the
Kremlin and a British spy to launder stories through the
press and then merch them out so that then you
can take the published stories that are predicated upon debunked
OPO and nin secure through a non lawful process. A
surveillance weren't on an innocent American because he has wrong think. Okay, yeah,
(45:46):
or Hunter and Joe Biden, you know, I mean, come on,
but they're special, Urcane, They're special. They're the specialist. D different,
D different. That is correct, sir, it's D different. But
he's a product of that whole environment. And I think
the reason why they're mad at him now is because
(46:06):
of what he was saying about immigration, right, the stuff
that he had said about immigration before. It does seem
you know, this seems a little weird that he comes
out he'd said in twenty three that what did he
say that, you know, it's a never ending problem, the
issue that they're all dealing with with the deluge of
(46:28):
illegal immigration, that it's a never ending problem. Huh. And
then immediately they started investigating him after that. So, I
don't know. I just feel like he had said, quote,
this issue will destroy New York City. He said that
in September of last year. He said that it was
being destroyed by the influx of one hundred and ten
(46:48):
thousand asylums seekers. This is New York Times from the
southern border. He didn't see a way to fix the issue.
He said, let me tell you something, New Yorkers, never
in my life had there's a video of this. Never
in my life have I had a problem that I
did not see an ending to. I don't see an
ending to this. It'll destroy New York City the moment he.
Speaker 6 (47:04):
Says this literally.
Speaker 3 (47:06):
Then in November then they started they opened a major
federal corruption investigation into his fundraising and they were accusing
him of receiving illegal donations from the Turkish government, which
is tantamount to conspiring with the Turkish government. Right after
he says this audio sound bite sixteen. Now, this was
(47:27):
this was September of twenty three after, I mean a
month and a half after he says this, then a
federal investigation is opened in him.
Speaker 10 (47:37):
Listen, I have been fighting in justice my entire life.
That fight has continued as your mayor despite our police
when the federal government did nothing.
Speaker 3 (47:51):
Well, he says he's being targeted immigration.
Speaker 10 (47:53):
From what he was, he's open loaded our his shelter
system with no relief. I put the people of New
York before a party and politics.
Speaker 3 (48:01):
So he he was. This was in September. This was
just the This was actually today the video where he
made the statement that The New York Times quoted him
as saying he was speaking at an outdoor event in
September of last year, and that's when he made those claims.
And then right after that, right after that, the investigation
was opened. So I mean, I think it's a bit
of both. I think he did. He did he probably
(48:23):
like take because when I was when you read the indictment,
he was taking like one of that. For instance, when
he flew I can't remember where he's flying. He flew somewhere,
and he flew through Turkey, uh, And he got upgrade
to business class and that was like an eight thousand
dollars upgrade, and then another one was like a twelve
thousand dollars upgrade. And then he didn't disclose it. And
(48:46):
they're saying that that that should have been disclosed and
it's illegal that it wasn't, and as a result, you know,
you're it could be considered for an influence. And then
there were when he would go and stay a different
like he stayed at the Saint Regis. They think, when
did you go to a symbol or something. He stayed
in Saint Regis and that was you know, super swinky.
(49:07):
It's a super smuky hotel. And apparently that was comped
for him, and he also got like an upgrade there
and it was comped for him, and all this stuff
very you know, expensive, and he didn't disclose it. And
there's other things. I mean, it's not like, you know,
he was selling access to the mayor oral office really,
you know, in exchange for blood diamonds or I don't know,
(49:27):
stock in the Chinese company that was taking over a
giant cobalt mine in the Dominican repub or not. The
people's were a democratic Republic of Congo the way Hunter
Biden did. But hey, it's d different, right, and actually
it's Hunter Biden. If you want to have a discussion
of race, I think you could probably justifiably propose one there.
(49:49):
But you know what I just saying so he was
getting heckled when he was given to I just don't care.
I mean I I it's the Democrats problem. Let them
deal with it. I just think it's funny and I
think Republican should hammer at home that the moment that
he started talking about immigration, that's when Democrats decided he
was a liability. All of a sudden, they discovered that
they don't like foreign influence, but they love it all
(50:10):
the other times, that it doesn't prove to be disadvantageous
for them. You can't have a Democrat out there causing
waves on immigration in an election cycle. That's what this is.
So they're trying to fix it. They're trying to fix
it by taking him out, just saying we got more
on the way. Oh and also we're going to talk
about you know who's I in that position, you know
(50:30):
who wants to be the mayor. Don't call it a comeback,
he's been here for years. Andrew Cuomo, the guy killed
all y'all grandparents in New York. We're going to talk
about that coming up. Also, Biden's unveiling a new anti
gun executive order. We'll talk about all of that and
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Speaker 9 (52:00):
Now all of the news you would probably miss. It's
time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 6 (52:06):
So this.
Speaker 3 (52:09):
Pulled this up. This is crazy. This has to do
with a bear. A dad and son were mulled to
death by a massive bear as it broke into their
home and it killed Oh in this Oh gosh, this
store is so horrible. It killed thirty five dogs at
a nearby shelter. This bear, it killed thirty five dogs
(52:31):
at a shelter a day earlier. And it was this
was in Russia. It was a man eating bear and
it broke in and the eighty seven and fifty six
it broke into their house, killed and ate them.
Speaker 6 (52:43):
I hoped that.
Speaker 3 (52:44):
I mean, oh my gosh, I mean it killed the
Oh my gosh, these poor dogs and the poor people.
I hope they drag this bear and make it an
example of it for all the other bears out there.
Is what happens. Oh my gosh. They said it killed
these dogs in a matter of minutes. It is huge.
There's a picture of the carcass of it, and it's
(53:07):
like goodness, it's that's horrible. Oh my gosh, horrible. And
then the dad. It killed a dad in the sun.
It's like elderly dude. An American Airlines plane had to
turn around and land at the original airport for a
nine after nine hours into the flight because of a
problem with their toilets. Passengers initially were not given an
explanation for the change. Someone said, new fear, unluck, your
(53:29):
flight to Korea may go five hours and come back
with zero explanation. It was on its way to South
Korea and it had to turn around and go back
to Dallas and fix their toilet. Oh my gosh, you
I don't know. Maybe you could have figured out that
there was a problem with your toilet before.
Speaker 6 (53:50):
You took off.
Speaker 3 (53:51):
Just I don't know. I know that's crazy to suggest that,
but just you know. A new photo shows the UFO
hovering over Canada, but before it was shot down by
a US fighter jet. Maybe it was aliens bearing gifts.
I don't know. It was a cylindrical They said it
was a suspected balloon in the Great White North. I
don't know. I'm just gonna go ahead. And I wanted
(54:13):
to be Aliens because I'm really tired of being disappointed
by Oh no, it's not aliens, it's just communists again.
Speaker 6 (54:20):
Just uh.
Speaker 3 (54:21):
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Speaker 3 (55:51):
Can we just like do air guitar and like we're
coming in with a little metallica. We're in a very
musical mood right now. It's Thursday, we're coming in towards
the end of the week. And also we we were
playing on Kamala Harris's Ecclesiastics thunder Blunder and I had
an idea for a theological punk band that covers psalms right,
(56:11):
and so Kane ran it through a I and it's
actually it's not bad. Give it a you got it,
We've got it. Yeah, we can totally play it. This
is our Oh you're playing it?
Speaker 6 (56:26):
Okay, turn up.
Speaker 3 (56:30):
It's the Ecclesiastic covering songs.
Speaker 4 (56:34):
Wait, wait till it's not.
Speaker 6 (56:49):
Bad, say I.
Speaker 3 (57:09):
Actually, it's actually not bad. It's actually not bad.
Speaker 9 (57:13):
I didn't think AI could do so.
Speaker 3 (57:14):
I didn't either. I really wanted to hate it. I
wanted to hate it so bad. I was always prejudiced
against it. I am, I am technologically prejudiced, and so
I was already prejudiced against it. And it actually is
is not bad. It's actually pretty good. I'm not gonna lie.
That's uh.
Speaker 9 (57:34):
And apparently AI improves itself, like when you you sort
of edit the type of style, Like remember we had
first iterations of these songs and they were more like
like Irish punk sort.
Speaker 3 (57:44):
Of dro It was like it was like you had
a bunch of people in an Irish puboo decided to
set down their guinness and then knock out a banger.
That's what it, you know, and then this like that.
Speaker 9 (57:53):
Then it's sort of morphed into what we're hearing now,
and I think there's even more generation.
Speaker 3 (57:57):
It sounded almost it got into shanty terror. It did
just a wee bit.
Speaker 9 (58:02):
Did the Ecclesiastics.
Speaker 3 (58:05):
I like, I would see them. I would go to
a dive bar where there's probably not doors on the
stalls in the women's room. I would go there and
watch that band. Yeah, so I mean we could do it.
I mean we were talking about how I mean, I
play instruments. I can play rhythm guitar poorly. I can
play drums. I could you know, knock out something crude
and you know, you know, could like like an opening
(58:28):
act and a dive bar. I could do that. But you know,
we were in it through AI for the purpose of time.
And it's actually not bad, not bad at all.
Speaker 9 (58:35):
I've heard worse.
Speaker 3 (58:37):
I mean, and I love it even more because it's ours.
So I don't know, I feel like, uh yeah, that's
that's what I love it. Can you play it again?
Will you play it again?
Speaker 6 (58:48):
Please?
Speaker 3 (58:49):
I really like this song. It's the Ecclesiastics. How theological
punk band lot? Can they just say things like e
(59:11):
in a context?
Speaker 4 (59:13):
It's cooler.
Speaker 3 (59:17):
It's actually not bad.
Speaker 6 (59:18):
It's not bad.
Speaker 3 (59:19):
It's a little bit a little bit upfeat for me.
But oh that's so good. Did I would? I would
see them. It's a jam man, that's a jam, hey, Steve,
so does that slap?
Speaker 8 (59:36):
Does sound like a sea shanty a little bit.
Speaker 3 (59:38):
Though, see it is a little sea shanty ish.
Speaker 8 (59:42):
Although when we're talking about Ecclesiastachs, I thought it sounds
that sounded like something you majored in college.
Speaker 3 (59:47):
You know, well, I mean yes and no. But but
so Kamala Harrison is straight. Can we play her thing
or her thing real quick? It's real short. She was trying,
I don't know what she was trying to say, Ecclesiastes,
and she got the name of the she got the
book wrong.
Speaker 5 (01:00:01):
You know, there's a time for patients and there's a
time for impatience. That's not in Ecclesiastics, but.
Speaker 3 (01:00:09):
Gets right Ecclesiastics. She knows Kamala Harris just referenced our
punk band.
Speaker 6 (01:00:15):
That's right.
Speaker 3 (01:00:16):
So yeah, thanks, Kamala. I actually now, I mean it's
I'm gonna actually take this to the instagree because I'm
really I actually like it, all right. So in the
spirit of punk bands, this is like the most awkward
segue ever. In the spirit of punk bands. Have you
ever heard of suicide pod? It's not a punk band. Actually,
(01:00:42):
it's a way to die, like an actual way to die.
This is I think these things are terrifying. So the BBC,
the British Broadcasting Company, has a story of how police
in Switzerland made multiple arrests after a woman reportedly ended
her life. You a so called suicide pod, which almost
(01:01:03):
sounds like an XS song, but that's blonde. It's apparently
the first case of its kind. Okay, So here's where
it gets super weird for me. I am fascinated by
this story. And here's why. When you think of suicide
pod and like going to murk yourself in a pod,
I just think that I'm going into this like matrix
(01:01:25):
type of environment where they have got them all lined
up and you go lay it and you press a
button and it like squirts gas in there. So this
lady she apparently had like I guess, a degenerative disease
or something like that, and she had been sick for
a long time. And I know, I'm not in support
(01:01:46):
of euthanasia, she had been sick for a long time,
and the I guess she wanted to go into the
suicide pod. So she's sixty four years old, she used it.
She's an American woman, and it's just she goes to
this place out in the woods in northern Switzerland. So
instead of going into this like matrix type environment, she's
(01:02:08):
literally out into the woods. They had this pod out
in the forest, and the maker of the Sarco suicide pod.
They said that they wanted her to go under a
canopy of trees. It was. It's designed to allow a
person inside to push a button in Jackson nitrogen gas
into the sealed chamber and then they fall asleep and
(01:02:29):
then suffocate to death in a matter of minutes. So
and if you thought, if you wanted to know if
the guy who made it looks nuts, he does he
the guy who invented it is, you know, it looks nuts.
So she's not, you know, in the woods in Switzerland
in the space pod and they put it on in the woods.
(01:02:49):
So she gets in to the space pod or the
suicide pod, and they said she pressed the button almost
immediately and it took like five minutes. And they said that,
you know, they could see her. She they could tell
when she went unconscious and her muscles were twitching. And
then that said the police showed up and they found
a woman's body in the pot. So I got a
lot of questions also now too, like did they leave
(01:03:12):
her there? Like how did that work? I mean, don't
you get it out? And and also I know this
is this is how my mind works. Please don't judge me,
but you know what the first thing I thought of
when I saw it. There's a picture of it online
and like it's you know, it showed it open and
it showed the guy I invented it getting into it.
It does actually look like it looks like an old
(01:03:33):
taming bed. Yes, but when you get in there. I'm
just saying, not that I supported or ever. Would you
have to know that it's been used before?
Speaker 6 (01:03:44):
Is that weird? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:03:48):
But it's weird though, right, I mean, it's weird that
you're going into a pod to die.
Speaker 9 (01:03:53):
But I think the mindset of people who are wanting
to do this, they're least concerned there. The concern at
the bottom of their list of concerns would be that
someone else died there, because I would.
Speaker 3 (01:04:06):
Be like, did someone craft pants in here? Like did
they mess themselves in here? Like you know, because they're
like when the body goes, you lose control of those functions, right, true,
So it's like, ooh, was it ichy? Like who had
to clean that up? Did they clean it well? Because
can you you're in the pod and you're pressing the button.
Not that I would ever do this or suggest that
you do this, it's horrible, but what if you notice
(01:04:28):
like some gunk in it, Like, oh, they didn't get
the spot and then you're dead. That sucks. That's a
horrible way to go. Are going to be concerned that
That's totally what I would.
Speaker 9 (01:04:37):
I'm getting in there to die. The fact that it
might have a little gunk in there is.
Speaker 3 (01:04:42):
Probably getting into like a nasty like hobo pod. That's gross,
that's so I mean, yes, you're getting in the pod
to murk yourself, but shouldn't it be a clean going
you know, it's so weird. Oh, I mean, I feel
bad for the lady wh thought she had no their
choice and it and they and they said that they
(01:05:02):
put it out in the woods so she could look
at the trees in the sky, or because it's easier
to hose it off. I don't know, just oh man,
it's so weird. She she cashed out her life savings
and flew to Switzerland to do this, and I don't know,
(01:05:22):
And it's it's weird. This whole thing is weird. And
now there's like accusations towards the group. Of course it's
called the Last Resort who they said that they that
they wanted to they spent her money and wanted it
to be Uh. They told her she would need it
after she was dead, and they said that her family's
(01:05:43):
saying that they took advantage of her. That that's one
of the accusations. But the the this is just all
so weird. It's just so weird. And they said that
when you get in it, uh, it it has a
little voice that that says, quote, if you want to die,
press this button. Yeah, Ajan's France. Press gotta look at it,
(01:06:04):
and that's what it says. If you want to die,
press this button.
Speaker 9 (01:06:07):
Is there another button that you just last minute decided
you want to live that you press?
Speaker 3 (01:06:12):
Is the cleanliness not up to you? Old standard? Press
this button?
Speaker 9 (01:06:16):
Is the lid locked until you decide to die? Or
is it?
Speaker 6 (01:06:19):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:06:19):
I don't yeah, I guess it seals you up in there.
Speaker 1 (01:06:22):
Lord.
Speaker 3 (01:06:23):
Oh it's just so weird, like you you're I don't know.
But it does also sound like a punk band suicide
pod opening for the Ecclesiastics. One disapproves of the other. Hmmm,
I don't know. Steve says it looks like a bad transformer,
emphasis on trans It does look like a bad like
(01:06:44):
seventies transformer, you know, it looks like a pager, a
giant pager that's out of the woods, right giant. Be
careful because if it's from uh Taiwan and Israeli company
out there could blow up just saying just saying, I've
got I just I am fascinated by this thing. But
(01:07:04):
that's what it says to you, like when you get
in like preath this button if you want to die.
It's a three D printed capsule and you get in
it and you press the button and that's it. That's horrible.
That's just so bad. I mean, and this woman was sixty,
she's young. You're telling me she couldn't get any other
you know, I don't know. It's just the whole thing
(01:07:28):
is weird to me. But the they are trying to
call it the Tesla of ethan Asia. What a disregard
for life. This is like mass produced life ending. That's horrible.
And it's out of Switzerland. Can I also say? You know,
and I love the Swiss, but man, those are some
pretty weird and rdic ideas up there. Let's just create
(01:07:48):
a pod that'll murk you like that in minutes and
then they'll have a whole line of them up. It's weird,
all though, like some of the best horror movies come
from up there.
Speaker 9 (01:07:58):
Just saying, say, how they dispose of the body?
Speaker 3 (01:08:02):
Do they know?
Speaker 6 (01:08:04):
So does it like.
Speaker 9 (01:08:05):
Open the lid and hope for wolves?
Speaker 3 (01:08:08):
They open the lid and they do hope for wolves? Okay, No,
I mean, I I don't know if all of them
are like out in nature. But I'm just I'm I'm
a little curious because it looks like it could lean
up and just sloop dump you out. What if it
does that? What if it like trabue shaes your dead
body out.
Speaker 6 (01:08:24):
Of the pod.
Speaker 3 (01:08:27):
Well, look, if you're marking yourself in a pod, let's
just drop all pretense of you know, taste here. You're
you're mrking yourself in a pod. Nobody should be offended.
If I'm like, does it trade you share your dead
carcass out of it? I mean, it's all horrible.
Speaker 9 (01:08:42):
Would it surprise you to find out there are people
lined up to do this? That there is a line That.
Speaker 3 (01:08:47):
Makes me sad that there are people.
Speaker 9 (01:08:49):
That are there's a waiting list.
Speaker 3 (01:08:51):
Are you serious?
Speaker 9 (01:08:52):
One and twenty people? Apparently there are some one and
twenty applicants hoping to use the machine to end their
lives according to the last resus.
Speaker 3 (01:09:02):
That's so sad to me. I feel like the guy
who's doing this, who created this whole thing, is I
just think that it's exploitative and you're praying upon people
at like a horrible time in their lives. And then
I and it makes me feel sad that these people
don't have a support network. I mean, the pot is ludicrous,
but it you know, it doesn't distract from just the
(01:09:23):
sadness that I feel for people who feel like they
got to do this. It's just ugh, oh goodness. Why
does the guy who they call doctor Death, he's this
Australian ethan Asia advocate. Why do these people always look
like freaks? They always look like freaks, do they not?
In they always look like like, you know, they are
(01:09:44):
the villains. You immediately know, uh, that's the bad guy
because he looks like the bad guy. He's just they
just you know, they got a look all right. We
got more on the way, so weird segment.
Speaker 9 (01:09:59):
It's mission to make bad decisions. It's time for Florida Man.
Speaker 3 (01:10:08):
Can I do man? If I would come into any
into this with beside the Florida Man thing, with any song,
I think it'd be a jukebox hero. Maybe did you
guys hear about this this floor, So these dudes got
into a fight over the jukebox. What was playing on
a jukebox? And this dude ended up getting shot. So
(01:10:30):
a Florida man was shot dead after he got into
a dispute over a jukebox song. And it was adding
Mexican restaurant and I love how they're like it turned violent.
It was in Fort Lauderdale early Monday morning. It was
an argument over a jukebox song and the dispute gan.
The dispute began at this restaurant when one man began
(01:10:50):
commenting on another person's music selection, according to authorities, said
marrow Bonia. He said to WSVN TV quote, I heard
there was two guys and they got into an argument
because he sounds like he's from Jersey because one of
them played a song in the jukebox and the other
guy was kind of ticked off and he goes the
guy who got in silta pulled his weapon and started
shooting the other guy. They actually wrote it fanatically as
(01:11:15):
he said it. They so the guy drew his weapon
first and the other so one of them played a
song on the machine, and the other guy was mad
and said, you're not a real Mexican if you play
that burp music is what he said, which then made
me stop and go, well, how can what is not
real Mexican?
Speaker 6 (01:11:32):
Then?
Speaker 3 (01:11:32):
Like if if he played what did you play that?
He got accused of not being a real Mexican. Yeah,
like Caine, you're white adjacent, so it's true. You know,
like what would somebody play in a Mexican restaurant that
would make you go that's you're not a real Mexican?
What that? How does that work?
Speaker 9 (01:11:49):
I don't know anything but despasita anything.
Speaker 3 (01:11:53):
Don't have Joe Biden go there. Anyway. The guy was
shot and killed was a fifty four year old. The
other guy was taken into custody and man, they had
just out of all the stories. A Florida man wearing
an ankle monitor tried kidnapping. Attempts at kidnapping in a
Walmart parking lot spotted when legs were flailing out the truck.
(01:12:16):
According to the Affidavid the je Marcos Perez, he tried
to kidnap a woman in Orlando and he had an
inkle monitor on and it was four thirty pm Monday,
and he tried to put her in the trunk of
the car, and he was threatening to kill her, and
witnesses said that she watched, she turned and looked as
(01:12:38):
the victim's legs were flailing out of the trunk. They
did get him, They saved the woman, and they got her.
He's going to court now, obviously he's in prison. Third
hour on the way, stay with us, Welcome back to
the program, ladies and gentlemen. Dan I last year with
you at the top of our third hour this broadcast Thursday.
And there is a new executive order out, a new
(01:13:00):
executive order that targets machine guns and three D printed,
three D printed firearms, un serialized firearms, all which are
already regulated by the federal government. Now, this was announced
(01:13:21):
just a little bit ago, these executive orders, I was
announced last actually Monday, I think that they were going
to put forward more executive orders on guns, and so
you kind of knew, I mean, we really didn't have
an idea as to what they were going into. But
it looks like so they're looking at they have the
(01:13:42):
an I'm rite I'm going to write about this more
over at substack, chapter and verse my newsletter because it
gets into a couple of things, specifically, the it gets
into drills, like, for instance, they said that they're he's
going to have the Surgeon General and the Secretaries of
(01:14:03):
Education and Health and Human Services to develop and publish
guidance for schools on how to conduct shooting drills and
minimize you know what they said, try to I mean,
they're gonna do these. They're gonna do drills and minimize
unnecessary trauma, which that's not I mean, this is not
(01:14:29):
an issue that I have with people.
Speaker 6 (01:14:34):
I hope they.
Speaker 3 (01:14:35):
Bring in like professionals to do these if they're going
to do something like this, because I don't have a
lot of faith in some of these institutions to discern
what is a threat and what isn't a threat. And
I have a story that highlights that coming up.
Speaker 9 (01:14:50):
It.
Speaker 3 (01:14:52):
Yeah, I mean we had tornado drills and that doesn't
you just sit there like what, I mean, what do
you mean? What kind of drills? I just feel like
that's not the right way to go. Oh, I mean,
define do whatever you have to do. I mean, have drills,
have the locking doors, whatever. But when you're not actually
looking at the problem and ignoring it like, for instance, Parkland.
Parkland can do a million different drills all they want to,
(01:15:13):
but the problem was that there was clearly a threat.
Speaker 6 (01:15:17):
They all law.
Speaker 3 (01:15:18):
Enforcement knew it, The superintendent of the schools knew it.
The teachers knew it. I talked to back when it happened.
I talked to a teacher off the record who did
not want her identity disclosed. And she was not the
only teacher I spoke with at Parkland either. At Marjorie
Stoneman Douglas, I talked to several educators, and I talked
to some people who work in administration. They all knew
(01:15:41):
who this kid was. Even though it's a larger system.
That killer was so bad and he was so violent
leading up to what happened, They all knew who he was.
He had to have a minder that went to school
with him, and they he had been in trouble law enforcement.
They were bragging about reducing the school to prison pipeline,
(01:16:02):
and much in the same way that they're trying to
pretend that the crime rate is gone down. It's not
that the crime rate has gone down, and it's not
that they did It's not that they actually reduced students
getting in trouble with the laws, just that they literally
stopped reporting it. And that killer in Parkland was one
of the people whose crimes they just stopped reporting. And
(01:16:22):
I'm not talking about little misdemeanor stuff. I mean there
was like serious, like felonious activity happening. I mean this
this killer previously already held a gun to a student's head.
He had knocked his own mother's teeth out of her mouth.
He was already threatening to kill students. He had been
doing it. This was like months and months leading up
to this this tragedy. They had police go out to
(01:16:46):
his house dozens of times, and he had his Like
this murderer's own family was calling law enforcement. Robert runs
he knew about it. That bad cop sheriff knew about
it as well. But see, they were trying to put
on this front, well we got reduced. We have to
make it look like we're actually having an impact in
reducing calls to law enforcement on from student body and
(01:17:07):
all this, and Robert Runsey got an award from Arnie Duncan,
who was at the time the head of Department of
Education under Barack Obama. They gave Robert Runsey this big
award because he had at least visibly reduced the school
to prison pipeline. That the number of criminal actions reported
to law enforcement, and it wasn't because they had rehabilitated
(01:17:28):
the behavior of the student body. It was because they
stopped reporting it. That's not me saying it. It's parents
there saying it. It's the teacher saying it. And it's
the official conclusion of the Marjorie Stone and Douglas Commission
that put that in a report. You can do drills
all you want to when you are not accurately assessing
(01:17:50):
and doing something to mitigate threats. I mean drills when
you're leaving your doors unlocked into and all this other stuff,
and then not, I mean, not doing anything about this
this killer who actually could have been adjudicated unfit, so
he could have never really never have gotten a firearm,
and he probably could have been committed to but nobody,
(01:18:13):
law enforcement didn't do anything. And they just they they
I mean, the FBI was aware. I mean, that's how
bad it was. So that's I don't know, they don't
do anything to address that. There's nothing in here that
I've and I've glanced at it so far, I haven't
read all of it all the way, but I've been
glancing and I haven't seen anything yet that addresses it
beyond they wanted to talk about drills, right, okay, I
(01:18:35):
mean you're doesn't do any drill by itself kind of
create trauma because they said, oh, we want to minimize
unnecessary trauma. Well, doing a drill when you won't do
anything else to protect students does that? I mean that
just seems like you're introducing trauma because and then you're
also trying to convince them that something that is statistically
(01:18:56):
super rare is an inevitable reality and that is also traumatic.
You're you're conditioning them to think that, and it's you know,
one mass casually incident as a school is one too many,
but these are rare occurrences, and it seems like you're
you're trying to condition kids into thinking that it is
(01:19:17):
an inevitable occurrence when it is a rare thing. Then
they look at machine like the machine machine conversion devices.
By the way, the whole report that they're doing, because
they have their task force that's looking at at machine
guns and the convert the conversion devices whatever that's that
(01:19:37):
report is not even going to be submitted until post election,
like you're like three months after the election is when
that reports not even do. And the ability to put
a switch on for the just put in a lamage
and put a switch on a gun and make it
full auto is already regulated. That's that's a that's it's illegal.
(01:19:57):
It's already regulated. So I don't know how you make
that illegal or with their it feels like they want to.
It feels like they're blaming Glock. They hate Glock. Clock
is an Austrian company. They don't like Block, and I
feel like they want them to maybe change how they
make their firearms so that I don't know, it's what
it feels like. It feels like they're just weird. I mean,
(01:20:19):
if their argument is going to be that, well, anything
can be converted, and because anything could be converted, then
we'll just ban all the things. It seems like a
move in that direction. It really does. But then I mean,
that's if the argument is, well anything can be a
machine gun, then we'll ban all of it. That also
is a very interesting argument as it relates to law
(01:20:40):
enforcement too, but that's a whole other discussion. So this
is I don't know, it's it looks kind of nonsensical.
They are talking about the address the emerging threat of
firearm without serial numbers also referred to as ghost guns. Well,
you to be able to you can't sell firearms without
there being a serial number on it. That's also regulated
(01:21:03):
number one, number two. There isn't there's not evidence to
support that this idea of un serialized or what they're
trying to say is privately made by hobbyists. But they
don't want to get into the weeds on that. They
want you to think that there's an epidemic of unseerialized guns,
which actually was a manufacturing thing that again the government
(01:21:24):
exploited and turned into a tracking system. But they want
to make it. They want to make it seem like
it's an epidemic and that something has to be done,
when it's actually again, that's not what drives the crime.
That's what that's not what felons when they've been surveyed
by the DJ twice now n or Barack Obama, that's
not where they're getting their stuff. They said that they
want to focus the ATF's resources on identifying developments and
(01:21:46):
illicit fire market marketplaces, including the use of new technologies.
What are you talking about to make an undetectable firearms
that all those other They at some point they're probably
going to ban three D printing machines. I'm just waiting
for that to happen. But they have the machine conversion,
the machine gun conversion devices, the three D printed firearms.
They want to go after three D printed firearms. They
(01:22:07):
said that they can be used for illegal purposes like
gun trafficking, et cetera. They're people are not there fabricating
their own guns though there's no evidence to support that
accusation there there isn't. And furthermore, i mean, when you're
talking about three D printed guns, they're even you have
to have good quality material. There's that's a big conversation
that Look, gang bangners are not having They're not getting
(01:22:29):
three D printers and printing the stuff off in their garages.
That's just entirely wholly unsupported by the evidence. It. I mean,
people can get say otherwise, but the evidence doesn't support that.
It sounds like they want to go after three D
printing though. Interesting so it this is basically this is
they're just using this as a political football in an
(01:22:51):
election season. That's what it is. It's just a political
football in an election season. But you can't underestimate that
and think that nothing will come of it or that
it won't be used, won't be further used by the
left because they always they always throw a bunch of
stuff out there and then they'll stake the claim on one.
So they always try to gain some kind of ground
no matter what. So that's the latest that EO from
(01:23:13):
the Biden administration. By the way, we were talking about
the suicide pod a little bit earlier, and Lorraine said
that the pod detect because you apparently we're trying to
figure out.
Speaker 6 (01:23:27):
What you do.
Speaker 3 (01:23:27):
Does it use like how do you get out of it?
Like does it just like you know, fling your body
like like a Highland fling. Does it just like throw
it into the atmosphere? Like what happens? She says, it
detaches and it's used as your coffin and then they
three D print another one for the next person.
Speaker 9 (01:23:46):
So that quells your fears of gunk being in there.
Somebody else.
Speaker 3 (01:23:49):
Well, I think they're horrible, but I'm just like, yeah,
like did they clean it out? Because it's nasty, Like people,
don't you lose control of your foot stuff?
Speaker 9 (01:23:55):
You've also brought up a great question. So they don't
embalm them.
Speaker 3 (01:24:00):
Well, that's what I ad. I'm like, do they do?
You do they embalm the people and they're they're just like, okay,
it's done because you're then you're in there and you're
like all juicy still so but still that you know
for real, like what ew juice? Yeah, it turns into
like a Cadbury, a gross Cadberry egg chose Well, I'm
(01:24:20):
just trying to It's sad, and I feel sad for
the people who feel like there's no other option. But
do you realize how ludicrous this thing is? You go
into a giant space egg that marks you.
Speaker 9 (01:24:32):
It's like Mork from Orc, only written reverse.
Speaker 3 (01:24:35):
And it it's so it's such an anticlimactic way to
go get into your egg. Okay by now then they'll
bury you in it. That's I don't know. I know
it's a very macop thing. It's spooky season, so I
don't know, just the whole thing is odd. So the
other thing we were discussing is this Eric Adams. They
(01:24:55):
said he's taken what was the look at This was
the number that he took over one hundred thousand dollars
in bribes. I made the point that he's almost taken
as much as the Biden's and the Clintons. Almost he's
almost taken. I mean it's not anywhere near what they've taken,
but you know, he's almost there. He's almost there. And
(01:25:16):
I I don't know, it's sad that we're that we
just assume that, Okay, well, this is this is Democrats.
This is what they do, this is how they how
they operate, this is you know, it's sad that it
is so customary with either Bob Menendez. Now you got
Hunter Biden and Joe Biden, and the Clintons and Eric Adams.
(01:25:40):
Andrew Cuomo though, thinks that he's got a shot. He
thinks he's got a shot. Andrew Cuomo is eyeing this
up one side, down the other. He's looking he thinks
that he actually may be able to get in there
and become mayor. He's eyeing a comeback. Axios has the
story how he's already flowed it out there to folks
(01:26:01):
that he's preparing to run for mayor. You remember disgraced
former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo who killed Ayoll's grandparents
in New York. There's he wants to go from a
disgraced governor. He was the only reason that he was
actually forced to resign was because of a sexual harassment scandal,
not because he killed everybody's grandparents. So now he's considering
(01:26:23):
a comeback. We're going to talk about this coming up
and now.
Speaker 9 (01:26:26):
All of the news you would probably miss.
Speaker 1 (01:26:28):
It's time for Dana's Quick five.
Speaker 3 (01:26:30):
So wealthy gen zers are leaving California. According to a
new study, they're leaving. They they're defined as people who
run households under the age of twenty six if they
bring in more than two hundred thousand dollars a year,
so they're classified as high earners by the IRS because
of their agent income. And they said that wealthy gen
(01:26:52):
Zers are leaving, and they're going. They're leaving West Coast entirely.
A lot of them are going to In fact, this
is there where they're going to. Where's the New York
they which is blows my mind. Why are they going
to New York? Florida, Tennessee, Colorado, and Texas? Those are
(01:27:14):
the top five? I think you go to New York
because maybe if they want to live in the city,
you know, if they're they're young, they don't have kids,
maybe they think that's where to go. How weird is
that though those states saw the biggest influx of top
earning gen Z household New York is. That's so weird
to me, But.
Speaker 5 (01:27:33):
That is what it is.
Speaker 3 (01:27:34):
The saying, you know, also a couple other of course,
it's not going to pull up. It may not pull up.
Let's see here. You have to forgive me because I
had everything freeze again and I'm not able to pull
anything up. So what do I have on there? Throw
it up? I?
Speaker 6 (01:27:53):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (01:27:53):
There it is. Oh, this is like what was the
movie with counter Reef's Speed, wasn't it? This is a
so police chase. They chase this hijack bus and this
is literally speed with Keanu Reeves. They chase a hijacked
bus in Los Angeles and it had hostages on boards.
(01:28:14):
The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority it hostages on board,
according to them. There was a shooting victim on board
as well. According to Katla. Then they surrounded it yesterday
in downtown Los Angeles and they were able to get
people out, and they didn't really say anything about the
perp only that they were able to take them into custody,
and that's kind of it. We have more of the
show coming up. Don't Go Anywhere. Stick with us.
Speaker 7 (01:28:37):
Not Able to catch all three hours of the Dana Show,
Subscribe to the full podcast and get news and laughs
delivered in short, easy to digest episodes. Ideal for your
busy lifestyle on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.
Speaker 11 (01:28:52):
Expanding that child tax credit or you mentioned housing before
giving that extra money for a first home. If you
can't raise corporate taxes, or if GOP takes control of
the Senate, where do you get the money to do that?
Do you still go forward with those plans and borrow?
Speaker 1 (01:29:07):
Well, but we're going.
Speaker 5 (01:29:09):
To have to raise corporate taxes, and we're going to
have to raise We're going to have to make sure
that the biggest corporations and billionaires pay their fair share.
Speaker 6 (01:29:20):
That's just it.
Speaker 1 (01:29:21):
It's about paying their fair share.
Speaker 5 (01:29:24):
I am not mad at anyone for achieving success, but
everyone should pay their fair share. And it is not
right that the teachers and the firefighters that I meet
every day across our country are paying a higher tax
or not than the richest people in our country gets
just said it this week.
Speaker 11 (01:29:41):
If he was in charge of taxes, he would have
paid more. But how do you find that line to
make sure corporations are paying their fair share but they're
not leaving our country.
Speaker 5 (01:29:50):
Well, listen, I work with a lot of CEOs. I
have spent a lot of time with CEOs, and I'm
going to tell you that the business leaders who are
actually part of the engine of America, this economy, agree.
Speaker 1 (01:30:02):
That people should pay their fair share.
Speaker 5 (01:30:04):
They also agree that when we look at a plan
such as mine that is about investing in the middle class,
investing in new industries, investing in bringing down cost, invest
in entrepreneurs like small businesses, but the overall economy is
stronger and everyone benefits.
Speaker 3 (01:30:22):
That is first off, she knows nothing. Oh that was
That was Kamala Harris's interview with Stephanie Ruhl, who what
in the Wednesday Adam's hell and I say this is
a goth kid? Was she wearing? That's not an appropriate
outfit for that? And also why the red shoes with that?
That's just not no. Uh, but that aside, did you
(01:30:46):
see did you watch her expression, Harris's expression when she's
talking because she doesn't know what she's saying she has
no idea how to answer this question because she doesn't
know anything about the economy. So she's like, well, pay
their fair share. She just her brain went there because
that's she defaulted to it, because it was her highest
level of knowledge on it. Just pay their fair share,
(01:31:07):
you know, if they if they pay their share, which
is fair, if they share fairly, you know what they
get with their pay. Pay their fair share, share their
faye pair, pare their share fey. It's like she's like
Moira Rose. If you love fruit wine as much as
(01:31:29):
I do, you'll love earth birth flickers wine birth her flicker.
That's it. If you just pay your fair share share
fair pair hair. So I gotta do pay your fair
hair's pay your fair hair. That's what we're there's a
wise rabbit in the top hat. I don't even know, man,
(01:31:53):
where's it happen? Where's it going? I don't know. That's
so stupid. It's based on a myth. It's because we've
all did so. First off. Number one. I don't understand though,
when when you look at the most recent data that
is available, and I got tons of notes on this,
it's pretty stunning when you see who actually does pay
(01:32:17):
the fare share? In twenty twenty one, the top one
percent they earned twenty six percent of income, but they
paid like over forty seven percent of all the federal
income taxes. That's just the very very top one percent.
Is that the fair share? They paid more than the
bottom ninety five percent combined? So what how do you
so you're telling saying that they have to pay more
(01:32:39):
to make it fairer.
Speaker 9 (01:32:41):
Wait, are you saying the rich, the top.
Speaker 3 (01:32:43):
One percent, the top one percent.
Speaker 9 (01:32:46):
They're paying ninety five percent of the tax burden.
Speaker 3 (01:32:49):
Yes, well no, I'm saying they're paying more than the
bottom ninety five percent of im buying. I mean, so
they've earned twenty six percent of the income, but they're
paying like forty seven percent of all or income taxes.
Speaker 9 (01:33:01):
So it sounds like we need numbers from them. They
need to be specific as to what looks what looks like?
Speaker 3 (01:33:06):
So if they pay more, is that fairer? If you
give up half your income in taxes, is that more
than half your income to make it fairer while nobody
the other people don't pay as much? I mean, it's
that's these are like from these are actual irs. You know,
they what do they what do they?
Speaker 6 (01:33:25):
Hell?
Speaker 3 (01:33:25):
They mean the fair share thing? These people have no
idea what this is.
Speaker 9 (01:33:28):
What I also hate is that they conflate the two
different numbers, like they'll say a dollar amount or they'll
say a percentage. Like so if the rich are only
paying eight percent or they're not paying let's say they're
only paying two percent, and these firefighters and nurses and
the people they like to bring up that are paying
say twenty.
Speaker 3 (01:33:45):
Oh listen, because we got you got the top one percent.
You're gonna get really mad, Kane. Do you want the
top ten top ti? Because we weed with the top
one percent? All right, So maybe they don't pay. Maybe
if you put more people in there, they pay less.
Speaker 9 (01:33:58):
Are the richest ten percent of America?
Speaker 3 (01:34:00):
Okay, so you have the top one percent, Remember they
pay it's like forty seven percent. Uh the uh top
I mean, what is it? The top fifty percent paid
ninety seven percent of all federal taxes came. That's where
you're that's probably what you're thinking about. The ninety cent
(01:34:20):
then percent, Yes, the top fifty percent that paid. Actually
it's almost ninety eight percent. It's approximately ninety seven point
seven percent. The bottom fifty percent paid two point three two.
Speaker 9 (01:34:35):
Point three yes, yes, still the narratives A lie.
Speaker 3 (01:34:41):
Oh my gosh, it's a completely totally a lie. I mean,
one thousand percent a lie. And looking at this, you
have the top one percent, you have the I'm trying
to find my notes on there's a lot there. You
have the top ten percent. They I mean, the tax
rate of the top ten percent was like what, twenty
(01:35:02):
two percent, and they ended up I mean, they end
up paying seventy five percent of total income taxes paid.
So the top ten percent, actually it's seventy six percent. Sorry,
it's seventy five point eight, So round up. So the
top ten percent pay seventy six pay seventy six percent
of all of the total income taxes. Are you okay?
(01:35:27):
I think Cain literally just had a stroke. Are you okay?
Speaker 6 (01:35:29):
Over there?
Speaker 3 (01:35:30):
Seriously? You are you breathing?
Speaker 9 (01:35:32):
I was looking it up too. I saw what Carol
Roth posted this morning, and according to this, and this
is just a screenshot of her googling it, yeah, fifty
nine point nine percent. So sixty percent of US households
paid income tax in twenty twenty two. The remaining for
nothing paid no taxes at all.
Speaker 3 (01:35:51):
They paid nothing that is correct. That is correct. Oh
and by the way, all of this stuff that i'm
the figures that I'm citing, I'll give you the I'll
give you the website. It's irs dot gov slash Statistics
slash SOI tax stats individual statistical tables by tax rate
and income percentile. So some of the governments. This is yeah,
(01:36:14):
but wait, there's more. The bottom fifty percent two point
three percent is what they paid. Their tax rate was
about three point three percent. Top fifty percent, average tax
rate sixteen percent, top twenty five eighteen percent, top ten
twenty two percent, top five twenty three percent, top one
(01:36:38):
twenty six percent.
Speaker 9 (01:36:40):
And I also feel like people don't know what payroll taxes.
Speaker 3 (01:36:43):
No, they don't are.
Speaker 9 (01:36:44):
And what they mean, and how it's double dipped every
time the company.
Speaker 3 (01:36:47):
Has Oh yeah, that's true exactly. So the idea of
fair share is an ABS that's for her to say
this is is economically ignorant and it's embarrassing. But she
has no I mean, this is all she's made of. Wait,
this is okay. Audio sound bite fourteen. Stephanie Ruhle was
(01:37:08):
like telling her, you're not actually giving me straight answers
on many of those stuff. Listen her work and.
Speaker 11 (01:37:14):
One could watch that and say, well, she didn't give
a clear, direct answer. That's okay because we are not
talking about clear or direct issues.
Speaker 3 (01:37:22):
It's okay to not have clear answers because we're not
We don't know what the hell we're talking about. I mean,
what in the nonsense is that? That's crazy? That is
so that is so embarrassing you, guys. Audio sound bite six.
(01:37:42):
This is she's talking about her plan here, guys, Dreams
and ambitions.
Speaker 11 (01:37:48):
Madam Vice President, you just laid out your economic vision
for the future. Yeah, but still there are lots of
Americans who don't see themselves in your plans. For those
who say these policies aren't for me, what do you
say to them.
Speaker 5 (01:38:05):
Well, if you are hard working, if you have the
dreams and the ambitions and the aspirations of what I
believe you do, you're in my plan.
Speaker 7 (01:38:21):
You know.
Speaker 5 (01:38:22):
I have to tell you, I really.
Speaker 1 (01:38:25):
Love and am so.
Speaker 5 (01:38:28):
Energized by what I know to be the spirit and
character of the American people.
Speaker 3 (01:38:32):
We haven't campaign, we have aspirations. She again drunk Hallmark,
That's what it sounds like. It just doesn't she called,
what did she say the buzzword that she used? Oh,
she was trying to say that. She said holistic three
times in a fifteen second period. She said, looking holistically
(01:38:58):
at the connection between that and how and looking holistically
at the incentives being the federal government can create for
local and state governments to actually engage in planning in
a holistic manner that includes prioritizing affordable housing. Hey, Kane,
you like that holistic hippie stuff. How many times do
you say holistic a day?
Speaker 9 (01:39:19):
None?
Speaker 3 (01:39:20):
How many times do you listeners out there and viewers
say holistic a day? I literally never say it. I
never ever say it.
Speaker 9 (01:39:27):
I can't. I mean, I've said it to describe what
other people is.
Speaker 3 (01:39:29):
Sing what is holistically at the incentive? Isn't getting the
federal and government involved, like literally the opposite of holistic.
It's that's so stupid. I just can't. I don't know.
I don't think she understands that. She says, she talks
in like vent diagram word salad. That's all it is.
(01:39:51):
That's all it is. This should terrify you. She has
no idea how, she has no idea what to implement.
She has no policies, economic policies, because she doesn't know
how the economy. She has never worked and she doesn't
work in the private sector. She doesn't work in businesses.
She doesn't know how to do that. I wanted to
get to this story really quickly. I wrote about this
over at substack, chapter and verse. You got this last
(01:40:12):
night if your subscriber. In Mountain View, Missouri, Liberty Liberty
Middle School suspended thirteen year old Riley Grundin because he
made a gun out of doctor Pepper cans. Like he
didn't fashion like a fireable gun out of doctor Pepper cans.
He laid actual doctor Pepper cans on his bed in
the shape of what looks like a lowercase K, but
(01:40:33):
it's in the shape of a rifle. And so his
school suspended him, and they gave him two marks on
his permanent record, one for cyber bullying and another for
making a school threat, even though he never made any
threats ever to anybody anything anyone ever, and no bullying
took place. This is what the school said, quote, we
(01:40:54):
have enough information to believe the video has caused fear
for one student, so they I was looking back at this,
I don't think the mom because we talked about this yesterday.
I don't think the mom is taking legal action, but
I think she should think about this. The anti gun
brigade has spent the last decade shaking kids down over
NERF guns. Remember that NERF guns. They went after a
(01:41:14):
kid he got kicked out of school because he had
a NERF gun. There was in New Jersey. Amazon, you
can't get NERF guns. They'd like banned all these toy guns.
They have scared kids over finger guns. You remember the
ten year old who was suspended because he was playing outside.
They were literally like playing cops and robbers. He was
a fifth grader and he made a finger gun and
he got suspended from school. I mean, I have so
(01:41:36):
many examples of kids literally getting suspended from school for fingerguns.
It's crazy. Or what about the kid who ate his
pop tart at school in the shape of a gun
and he got in trouble. This was in Maryland. A
seven year old ate his pop tart into the shape
of a gun and got in trouble. It was at
Park Elementary School. They suspended him for two days. This
(01:41:58):
is and this is what I touched on when we
were just seeing the executive orders on gun control and
they're talking about doing shooter drills. These schools, like Liberty
Middle School has zero proper threat assessment capabilities. That's appalling.
They teach kids to fear non threatening situations, but then
they shame them for like listening to instinctual fear over
(01:42:19):
actual threatening situations like the girl in Virginia who walked
into the girl's bathroom and because a boy who played
pretended to be a girl was allowed in their per
school trans policies, he was able to attack the girl
in brutally raper in the school's bathroom. So when you
have Liberty Middle School that clearly can't differentiate between a
real and not real threat, it makes me concerned about
(01:42:42):
their ability or lack thereof, to properly handle anything, including
actual threats. Like why didn't they reach out to this
kid's mom to assess the potential threat level before they
suspended her kid? Or like why didn't the school tell
the student that cans can't hurt you? Or uh, why
didn't the school reiterate that while one of these incidents
(01:43:04):
is too many, they're extremely they're very, very impreventable, because
if anybody was bullied here, I think it's this kid
Riley Grundan. They're they're making everybody afraid over everything. When
you make everybody afraid over everything, there's security for no one.
I don't know. I I maybe when you consider that context,
maybe it's understandable that there was a kid who felt
(01:43:26):
fear over a doctor pepper can. I mean, we tell
kids not to eat tidepods, apparently some have to be told.
Maybe their parents should be told too at this point.
But I really don't think that the fear in this
is genuine. I think honestly it's just politically motivated and
they're masking it as fear, which I think is so heinous.
And I don't know they're they're they're punishing the citizen kid,
(01:43:49):
and I feel bad for him, But man, I really
do think the mom should, you know, kind of honestly
kind of look at her options here, because this is
going to go on his record that's going to follow
like all throughout school. He's going to have a record
and they're going to look at him as a troublesome kid.
Speaker 7 (01:44:05):
The Danish Show podcast You're fast, funny and informative news
companion for those always on the move. Subscribe on YouTube,
Apple or wherever you get your podcasts.
Speaker 3 (01:44:16):
This is the point at Chuck E Cheese where a
super excitable staff member would bring me out like a piece,
like some birthday pizza and cake and all that, and
then the what is it the jam band that they
had at the Chuck E Cheese would start playing. This
was before Five Nights at Freddy's confirmed that, yes, you
were right as a child to have an instinctial fear
(01:44:37):
of these animatronic animals because they're filled with demons. Disguest
you to know that, did you? It's not my birthday today.
It's my birthday officially Saturday, but I'm off air tomorrow.
But I thank you for playing the track. That's the
only surprise that I'll allow. I hate surprises, I hate them,
but I this one's nice, very nice.
Speaker 9 (01:44:56):
Twenty nine this year.
Speaker 3 (01:44:57):
Yes, it's correct, that's correct. I will not be having
any mummy neck cheese. I'm saving this headline for you
for Monday. But she's dating back almost four thousand years,
was found in a Chinese tomb and a necklace on
this Chinese mummy's neck. I just think that she looks
like somebody would shop at anthropology. She's like an Asakat
and she's got like Polosi legs, and you know it's
(01:45:18):
you know, if you wanted a headline at like Zoomer style,
it would be like dead Mommy with her neck cheese,
Dead Mommy with her neck cheese.
Speaker 9 (01:45:25):
Anyway, it reminds me of what Jamarkuai fans would look
like years ago.
Speaker 3 (01:45:30):
Oh I feel that, all right, Kate, today's stupid.
Speaker 9 (01:45:32):
All right, well, and this is cut ten. Now, keep
in mind, this is our president of the United States,
at least as far as we know he is still
but he was in New York and this is how
he greeted this crowd in New York. Listen to this. Oh,
(01:45:53):
swinging a miss, Yeah, swinging a miss.
Speaker 3 (01:45:57):
Yeah. That's it, folks. That's it for us today. I
am off tomorrow, but I will be back behind the
mic with you on Monday. Make sure you sign up
over at Substech, Chapter and Verse, fin Us, Facebook, Youtubeken subscribe.
Have a great weekend.