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September 24, 2024 106 mins
House Republicans plan to sign a spending bill with nothing to make sure only citizens are able to vote. The US flies Zelensky to Pennsylvania on a military plane to electioneer for Kamala. A new poll shows Kamala leading Pennsylvania by 5 points. The US is sending more troops to the Middle East. The second Trump assassin’s son is arrested for possession of child pornography. The DOJ releases the letter that the assassin wanted to share with the world. Bill Gates says there should be censorship on misinformation that stopped people from taking vaccines. South Portland Mayor Misha Pride tells seniors to take out a reverse mortgage to afford the city's sharp increase in property taxes. Justin Trudeau tells Stephen Colbert it would be a lot better if the US had universal healthcare. First Lady Jill Biden announces the Pentagon intends to commit $500 million to women’s health research. Kamala Harris plans to skip the historic Al Smith Dinner that raises money for Catholic charities.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
When the Continued Resolution comes up on the floor this week,
we expect that to pass by a wide margin.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
Let me just be clear.

Speaker 1 (00:07):
Everybody heard me here last week say that I thought
the best play under the circumstances was the CR with
the Save Act. It's about a ninety percent issue in
the country. No matter where we are in the country,
everybody understands that only US citizens should vote in US elections.
This was our opportunity to both fund the government and
ensure the security of the election. But we came a

(00:28):
little short of the goal line, so we have to
go with the last available play. By the way, I'll
say that the two hundred and six House Democrats have
voted against that Save Act, most of them twice. I
have to explain that back home. I'm not sure how
they can. But what we're going to do this week,
as you know, is a very narrow, bare bones CR

(00:49):
to do only what's absolutely necessary. As was noted, the
Democrats wanted to load it up with billions of dollars
in new spending, but we fought them off from that,
did we though?

Speaker 3 (00:58):
I mean I get we had chipped roy On. He
was on what was on last week? Yeah, he was
on last week, and he was on the program and
talking to us about the uh uh, the machinations Democrats
plans and how they were trying, how they were they
were they were trying to push this into greater more

(01:21):
spending and ultimately, you know what Republicans were trying to
do to stop that from happening. And I don't know,
I just I I don't like it, but I understand
what ship Boy was saying. And I sent I had
that I went out. I think that was one of
the things that was in one of the previous newsletters

(01:43):
that I had sent out. If you're a subscriber over
at Substack, I don't know. It's frustrating because it's all
of our tax dollars and it's I'm with you. But
they're voting on that this week and the continuing resolution.
If you're freezing it at the existing levels and not
increasing spending, I mean, you got to I understand what
they're saying. They're they're kind of in a tough spot

(02:05):
because there's not a lot you can do until elections,
until you get more conservative lawmakers in those seats. And
there is well, there is the addition, and that was
in our headlines sent out this money that was there
is the addition it's like two hundred and something million
for Secret Service. Here's my question though on that doing.

(02:28):
Is it a question of more funding or better operations?

Speaker 1 (02:32):
Right?

Speaker 3 (02:33):
Hold that thought. Welcome to the program, Dana lash with you.
We're at the top of this first hour here on Tuesday,
and a few things to hit. We're gonna talk about
this Zelensky and Pennsylvania thing, all of that, but at
the top this this voting that we're going to have,
the voting that we're that's taking place this week on

(02:55):
this cr And they say, that's that's my thing. I mean,
I understand that we're spending uh, there's there's there's there's
need for attention within Secret Service. I completely get that. However,
is it a question of spending money or is it
a question of better structuring and better operation, better administration,
better leadership within Secret Service? And I don't know have

(03:17):
we have we figured that out? I mean, I know
that there were hearings after Butler County and there I
know that they've been asking some questions after the mar
A Lago attempt, But do we feel like that got
sorted out? Kaye, do you feel like that got sorted out.
I feel like we just I feel like they had
the hearings and a lot of people said, yes, it's

(03:40):
really messed up, and they they really are gonna need
some uh, they're gonna need a lot. They're gonna need
some uh you know, uh, more agents and better training
and all this stuff. And that's it. There you go,
and then we all kind of just like what became
of it? What? I what is the point of having
hearings if nothing's gonna I understand the I understand getting
it out and front of people, but come on, right,

(04:05):
I don't know. So that's some of the latest that's
going on, and we're gonna we'll keep we'll keep an
eye on all of that as it goes towards as
it makes its way through the system. But the Save
Act are not The Save Act is not going to
be attached. And the Save Act is about protecting the
integrity of the vote. It's making sure that people show
ID when they go to vote. And you know, I was,

(04:27):
I I understand the the big the capital l's almost
said big l's the capital L. Folks out there libertarians
that say, well, you know this is elections are they're
run by the states. It's at the state level. So
this is an overreach. I really don't think it's an overreach.
I don't think it's an overreach because it is, again

(04:48):
what we've talked about so many times. States can run
their own elections, but there's an agreement amongst us all like, Okay,
we'll accept your results as long as you're aying pull
no Shenan again, like, we have an agreement. This is
how we're running our elections. This is how you're running
your elections. We are all agreeing on this, and we're

(05:10):
making these determinations. We're all accepting it. And then when
someone changes something radically, or when they say we're just
going to accept mail in ballots without signatures, I mean,
to hell, if they even have a date on them,
we don't even care. We're just going to count them.
I mean that kind of You know, if you want
everyone else to accept your your votes, then you need
to make sure that you're operating at the utmost level
of and you're holding maintaining the integrity of the process,

(05:34):
and that you're accountable for it as well. And so
I think it's incredibly important that we also have you know,
can you just show ID. You got to show ID
to buy beer. Are you telling me that buying beer
that it's more important to hold people accountable for beer
than it is to hold them more accountable for voting.
That's asinine to me. You know, you know the only
people who say that are idiots. I have no idea

(05:54):
how that's a viable argument. Well, it's not. You have
to show an ID to into a hotel room to
rent Lisa Carr, or if you're gonna reun a car,
you have to show it. You have to show ID
to buy damn pseudo fed. I tell you this every
fall that because I fight with allergies, Like right now,
my thoat's not so where I feel great. It's just

(06:15):
allergen induced voice box issues. And whenever I go to
like the Tom Thumber, the Kroger or the CBS, can
you know the drill, you gotta go up, you gotta
go get your pseudo fed, and they make you sign
this ledger right, And I always put every single time,
not for meth. Every time I don't just sign my name,
I don't. I have to just take it up a notch.
I'm like, no, Also, not for meth, not acquiring for meth.

(06:40):
And that makes me mad because the meth heads made
it to where I have to take an extra step
and I have to sign something like, yeah, I'm taking
it because you know Allergen Congestion said season it's not
for meth. You have to show ID for that. Kane says,
he's got you. I mean, that's right. You got to
show ID to get your own money out of the bank.
But if you're gonna go vote, you know, if you're
going to make a decision about the most important thing

(07:02):
in the nation that's going to affect not just your life,
but the life of your children, the life of your grandchildren. Ah,
you know, whatever honor system, how that works. So the
Save Act is incredibly important in that respect. So they
were I know that they wanted to attach it to
the CR. Now it's not going to happen because there's
not a We don't have enough Republicans, I get it,

(07:24):
but we need more. We need more conservatives. We need
more conservatives in well House did it. The Senate's got
to go through it. The Senate has to get there.
We need more conservatives in Congress period. We're by like
what one in the Senate. We're actually on pretty good track.
And as we go towards the election, as we get
closer to the elections, I mean we're weeks away, we're
going to start looking at some of the Senate polls

(07:46):
and kind of look and see what shape the Senate
could take, and also look and see who's going to
maintain control of the House. I think, if anything, Republicans
must keep control of the House. That is. I think
that's the most important. I know it's crazy to say that,
but the power of the purse supremely important. And then
the Senate, it would be great, it would be great

(08:07):
if we could. I'd even be happy by taking it
just by one. I'd be happy just by that. But
incredibly important. So we're gonna look at all of that,
all of that stuff. It's all their all of their maneuvering,
all of their strategies in order to get all of
this through. Now, the other thing that we're looking at,
I don't know if you guys saw this. I know
we've got I'm gonna pull up my audio. Sorry, I
actually I closed it as I was talking to you all.

(08:28):
I have no idea how Zelensky this is really weird.
Let's look at audio SoundBite or listen to audio some
bite eight. And for the simulcast viewers, if you're watching
channel thretey forty seven Direct TV or on x or
rumble where the chat is, you can watch it. So
this is Zelensky, Vladimir Zelensky. He's in Pennsylvania. Now interesting
how he got there, and we'll talk about that after

(08:50):
you watch this. But he's here with Pennsylvania Governor Shapiro,
who is signing bombs at an artillery shell plant Scranton.
I guess presumably that are going to Ukraine. Watch. He's tweened.

(09:14):
He's not just little. The man is tween and so
Shapiro's signing these shells and tiny Zelenski's behind him. I mean,
he think could easily yat him, yeat him right up
into the atmosphere. And he's got his goggles on. I
don't know why he's got goggles on. Nobody else he's
got his goggles on and he's smiling. They're signing their shells.
So I have got a lot of questions about how

(09:34):
in the world. You know, how he got there?

Speaker 4 (09:37):
Right?

Speaker 3 (09:38):
He was flown to Pennsylvania on US Air Force on
a US Air Force C seventeen. That's a military plane, right,
and flying to a battleground state. He's touring ammunition factories.
He's in a battleground state. He's touring ammunition factory, and

(10:01):
he's in a battleground state flown there on military assets. So,
just to put that in really clear perspective, the Biden
Harris administration is literally using our military resources to fly
a foreign leader into a battleground state and he's electioneering.

(10:23):
By the way, I remember when, and my friend Dan
McLoughlin made this great point. He says, I'm old enough
to remember when using taxpayer resources to obtain purely partisan,
domestic political benefits from Zelenski was considered an impeachable offense. Yeah, King,
that's so crazy. Uh, what did they impeach Trump over?

Speaker 2 (10:44):
Was it the quid pro quill?

Speaker 3 (10:45):
Was it that there's the perfect phone call? Was Zelenski
the perfect call? That's why they That's literally why that's
why they impeached him. So here you have this, you have,
I mean quite literally, you have Dolensky being taken over
there by Democrats by the way, he was he decided

(11:07):
that he was going to start electioneering and making remarks
about our system our election. The New Yorker had pulling
this piece up. The New Yorker, I guess, had asked
him some questions while he was there, and he decided
to trash the Republican nominee and the vice president nominee.

(11:30):
This guy who's over there, How is this not election interference?
He says, because remember when Trump was impeached, it was
back in that for that call in twenty twenty and apparently,
I mean, I would say, this is like way over that.
There's absolutely this is a crazy double standard. So the
New Yorker had talked to him. Telegraph also had a

(11:50):
story on it. Zelensky said that Trump doesn't know how
to end the war and that Vance is too radical.
He was asked about the so he was asked, you know,
isn't it cause for more alarm talking about the war
with Russia? And Zelenski says, quote, my feeling is that
Trump doesn't really know how to stop the war, even
if he might think he knows. How When he was
asked about Fancy says, quote, he is too radical. Why

(12:15):
are we asking this guy what he thinks? How in
the world is this not election? Why are we Why
are we using military resources to fly a foreign leader
to Pennsylvania to campaign for for Biden Harris, I mean
literally Trump was impeached for less. He was impeached for
less than that. I mean, he was impeached over nothing.
This actually is something. I mean they he was with
the governor and then and then can and we're gonna

(12:38):
talk more about this. Do you know part of the pitch,
part of the language that they were using when he
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Speaker 5 (14:27):
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Speaker 6 (14:47):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's quickfive.

Speaker 3 (14:53):
Okay, so first up this I just lost this because
I'm a genius. Men's brains shrink by eight pm every
single day, apparently, according to a new scientists I don't know.
Some scientists discover this. They said, yeah, you know, does
it though? They said that they scanned a twenty six
year old a twenty six year old's brain forty times

(15:16):
over thirty days and found that after shrinking, his brain
reset overnight. This is so weird. It's from University of California,
Santa Barbara. They say that the cycle of growing and
shrinking coincides with rising and falling levels of steroid hormone
hormones testosterone, cortisol, and astradiol whichever. What I don't key

(15:38):
you know, you probably know what that is. Kombucha eating,
nut hugging thing. Let's see the study co author They
said that males showed the seventy percent decrease from morning
to night in steroid hormones. And they said women's hormones
fluctuate daily, but it's not as pronounced as the dudes are.
So are do you like they get dumb at night?

(15:59):
I think so if you're gonna, if you're gonna, like,
you know.

Speaker 6 (16:02):
I just think back in my life and everything I've
ever done that was dumb was at night.

Speaker 3 (16:07):
Really yeah, this is fascinating to me. So if you're
you know, I like to play practical jokes in my house,
so now I know I have to do it at night.
Let's see the last full sized kmart and what in
the mainland United States is closing the last full size kmart?
What do zoomers even know what blue light specials are?

(16:27):
I don't even think they do. They said that they
still have like a small convenience store version of itself
on my So what you're telling me there are no
more kmarts? I just I've not noticed that. Are you serious? Chat?
Are there no more kmarts? For real? Wow? Didn't Martha
Stewart have like all her stuff in the kmart? I
am amazed at this. Anyway, the last like full size one,

(16:49):
Jeff Blue made a rapid emergency landing in Kansas over
smoke alert in an intense few minutes that left travelers
in tears. And then another pilot made an emergency landing
on I twenty five, fixed the plane and it took
off again. That literally comes from Cowboys State Daily. God
Bless America. Oh and we'll talk about this coming up.
The Pentagon is going to spend five hundred million dollars
on women's health research. Uh huh. Stick with us. Our

(17:12):
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Speaker 7 (18:23):
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Speaker 8 (18:34):
I think it's just important to note that those that
are here are human beings, and we want to make
sure that they are not anything other than cared for.
And they are here under a legal status based on
this administration. And that's what as a local leader, as
a one of five commissioners, and a mayor is dealing with.

Speaker 3 (18:52):
So that's the mayor of Springfield, Ohio, and that's great.
I mean, no one said that they weren't humans, but
they are breaking the law, is what people said, you
absolute moron. They didn't. No one said that they weren't human.
But being here illegally doesn't make you a victim. When

(19:13):
you knowingly come to the United States and you're bypassing
the proper legal protocol, that is called a criminal action.
Like if you bypass the proper legal protocol, if you're
driving a vehicle while impaired, that's considered a criminal action.
I mean, if you steal, that's considered a criminal action.

(19:34):
If you break into someone else's home, it doesn't mean
that you're an undocumented guest. It means that you've committed
a criminal action. So no one's saying that people who
are coming illegally are not people, but they are criminals
because they are breaking the law. And when you break
the law because apparently we need a schoolhouse rock the

(19:55):
Springfield mayor, that makes you a criminal. The praise data
on seeing the logic here. I hate that stupid argument
that people make that somehow demanding accountability for people who
are committing criminal actions means that you are denigrating their personhood.
That's so stupid, and that's such a cop out. You're
trying to dodge accountability by acting like the people who

(20:16):
are demanding that everyone be present in front of the
law equally and not one group promoted over another unconstitutionally.
To present that as some sort of bigotry is malicious
and evil, and they do it for a purpose. Welcome
back to the program. Got some polling for you. I
know we were going over it. We're I was going

(20:37):
to go over it every single day. I got some
Pennsylvania stuff out by the way. Now, I want you
to realize this is going to fluctuate back and forth.
It's so close right now, it is so close. I
think they're actually tied. I don't really. This is a
spotlight Pennsylvania poll that came out, and they're saying it's
forty nine to forty four in favor of Harris, and

(20:59):
it's I'm not actually, I really don't think that this
is a great poll. It's only eight hundred likely voters,
so they're not even registered voters. It's eight hundred likely voters.
And they it was text message to an online survey,
and so I will say that it might be a
little bit more instead of just like cold calling people,
I think maybe texting in that and having that kind

(21:21):
of participation might be a little that might be a
little more legit because not everyone has a landline. It's
like when they just call them on landlines. But they
did say that they incorporated some landline and they used
both landline and cell phones. They were the responses. All
of this was measured between September twelfth and the eighteenth.
But it's only eight hundred likely voters, So I don't

(21:42):
know how much stock I put into this, and the
I don't know like what parts of Pennsylvania they were
looking at. They said that the it's weird because their
favorability of Kamala Harris was forty nine to forty eight favorable,
but Trump it was forty four to fifty three, fifty
three unfavorable for Trump. So I they said that the

(22:03):
country fifty eight percent is headed in the wrong direction.
So looking at the cross tabs for these, I feel
like I do think it's overstampled by left leaning voters.
They're not registered voters, So I don't really put a
lot of stock into this survey. But I want you
to know that this is it's going to go back
and forth and it's going to fluctuate. And I see
a lot of people talking about this, but it's forty

(22:25):
nine to forty four. This is actually far beyond what
I've seen other more legitimate polls measure sentiment as so
I would actually kind of disregard this one. Here's the
issue though, that you need to keep in mind, especially
when you're looking at some of the aggregates for these surveys.
Not every single pulling aggregate, whether it's like real Clear
Politics or five point thirty eight. You know, That's what

(22:46):
I mean when I say pulling aggregate, Not every single
one of these is going to disregard what I think
are kind of shoddy polls that will they'll also be included,
so they're they're always going to be slightly skewed. It's
not an ex act science. It's really people are guessing,
you know, the prognostications are sometimes they're right and sometimes
they're a little off, but it depends on the quality

(23:08):
of the polls that they're incorporating. And so much of
it back in twenty sixteen was push poll on behalf
of campaign, on bath of Democrats. Really they were trying
to set a narrative, and they underestimated Trump and then
they overestimated in twenty twenty, and they were trying to
push the idea of a red wave, and that was
again that was still a lot of like manufactured polling.

(23:29):
I think that was skewing what was being measured by
these aggregates or what was being represented as measured by
these aggregates. So I don't I don't really I kind
of disregard this one, but I do think it's incredibly
close in Pennsylvania's I mean, it's a battleground state. It's
one of the Pennsylvania, North Carolina, these are states that
are incredibly important. But I do think it's also interesting

(23:50):
that they took Zelensky to Pennsylvania and they had this
event there and they made remarks in favor of Biden
Harris because they skewed having the governor Joshapir as the
VP on her ticket, and a lot of people, myself included,
thought that's kind of a weird move to make, especially
when you could have locked up Pennsylvania. I think it
was dumb that Democrats won with the Minnesota governor because

(24:10):
Minnesota is going to be already a lock in for Democrats.
But for Pennsylvania it was done for them to do.
I kind of feel like this is them sort of
backtracking a little bit, and because they've done a couple
of events in Pennsylvania and I think that they're not
ready to totally let it off the hook. Their main
play was for Georgia to and but I think now
they're like, just in case, because North Carolina is so close,

(24:33):
just in case, let's kind of keep Pennsylvania in play here.
So there's this there's this cookie poll in Cincinnati, and
if you saw this, this is completely unscientific. I don't know.
They said that it's predicted every election but one since
nineteen eighty four, and it's who gets the most, who
gets the most cookies of whatever. I just think it's

(24:56):
people it's easier to get Trump cookies becau Kamala cookies
don't look fun I just I just didn't say that,
So I don't know how scientific it is, but I
do think it's kind of funny.

Speaker 9 (25:05):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (25:05):
The election betting nods have the h They have Kamala
Harris at fifty two and Trump forty six. Take that
what you will. They also have North Carolina going Republican.
They have Pennsylvania going Democrat, and they have Georgia going Republican.

(25:26):
But they still have Kamal at fifty two to forty six.
That's the election betting Nods and they update every minute
and that so it's very kind of interesting. And that's
I do think that that website because I know the
people who are behind it, and it's it's John Stossel
and Maxim Lott, Maximots, John Watson and God loved them.
They're all nerds. And I say that like very as
a as a compliment, not as a pejorative, So it's very.

(25:48):
I think they weed out some of the bad stuff.
So that's that's kind of an interesting one to sort
of keep on hand. You have RCPs averages right now,
they have Harris at plus two point three. That is
the RCP average the surveys out of all of the
surveys that have been taken since September third, and this
is one, two, three, four, five, six, seventy eight, nine, ten,

(26:11):
eleven out of the sixteen surveys that they have taken
since September third, Emerson, New York Post, Yahoo, ABC, IPSOS,
New York Times, Sienna Fox. Two of them. Trump has
led the Atlas, Intel and Rasmus, and he was plus
three and plus two respectively on those. Everything else has
been Harris. So I'm just putting this out here. It's close,

(26:34):
it's and I'm just letting you know what is being said.

Speaker 4 (26:37):
Now.

Speaker 3 (26:37):
Some people can say, well, the polls don't really measure
a lot. I think you have to. This is when
you have to really pay attention to what the polls are, because,
like I said, in twenty sixteen, there's a lot of
shenanigans going around because they just honestly, they didn't think
that Trump was gonna win. They thought that that I mean,
Hillary Clinton didn't even campaign for Crann out loud. She
didn't even feel like she needed a campaign. And so

(26:58):
it's I think that that's something to keep in mind.
Comparing it to twenty twenty twenty twenty. I feel like
they try to make Republicans think believe that they had
it all wrapped up in the bag, and they didn't clearly.
So just it's not an exact science, but it's close,

(27:19):
and I actually do believe that it is. There's a
lot of other indications out there, so I actually do
believe that it is a few other things to look at. Goodness,
So this I think I had also in your headlines
if you get the newsletter on more troops to the
Middle East, yay, warrying, everybody warrying. So the latest on this,

(27:44):
the BBC has that we're sending apparently fifteen hundred extra
troops to the Middle East amid increasing tensions the ongoing
threat posed by Iranian forces. Congress was notified of the plans.
According to the Department of Defense, the fighter jets, drones
and other weaponry are going to be deployed. Well, this

(28:05):
is well, sorry, they're sending extra tubes in Middle East.
I'm looking at two different stories here. They're not sending
fifteen hundred. They're sending a couple they're supposed to be training,
doing some like training exercises and holding different things. I
had this and may pull this up in my forgive me.
I'm looking at a million different windows here for the latest.
So this is the the for Israel has bule of fighting.

(28:27):
This is Pentagon Press Secretary Major General pat Ryder. He's
made the deployment announcement Monday, but he said there's not
a lot of additional information because they we already have
forty thousand in the region and the troops. They're urging
Americans to leave Lebanon. They said that, you know, the
increased tension, it's just out of abundance of caution. They

(28:48):
are augmenting forces that are in the region, is what
they're saying. And so this New York Post piece is
the is the proper piece here. And so this they
said that they would come from the Navy, the USS
Harry S. Truman aircraft carrier, the strike group deployed east
from Norfolk. And this is and if we can, let's

(29:12):
not put that this is an old article that we
have up on the simulcast. The New York Post piece
is the correct piece. So this is augmenting the personnel
that's there, the ongoing tension. So they're telling people leave Lebanon.
It's in there are different factions in Lebanon, like you have,
different factions are now splintering off and pushing back against

(29:36):
Iran backed Hesbela and Lebanon. So in addition to Israel
dealing with Hesbel and now you have some of these
other groups in Lebanon that are pushing back against Hesbola
because they've been terrorized too. So this is you know,
I mean, we're coming up on the year of October seventh,
one year and still so many hostages never returned, so

(29:59):
many hostages now return. They've reduced the capacity of their
commercial flights. They said that the US Embassy was urging
citizens to leave Lebanon. They still had some commercial options available,
according to the State Department. But the Israel said they're
going to make Hasbila stop their near daily strikes, and
that I mean they have been. Hasbel has been striking
Isten norther than Israel daily. So all the push for

(30:22):
ceasefire just ignore it because they've got to deal with this.
You have Hamas in the south, you have Hesbel in
the north, all back by Iran, and I mean, this
is what happens when you are incessantly bombing your neighbor.
One day they're going to strike back. So coming up,
a drunk illegal immigrant runs over and kills an eighteen

(30:45):
year old, an eighteen year police veteran in Saint Louis
who had stopped to help at a crash site. We're
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Speaker 7 (32:09):
Get the loadown on the latest news with a side
of laughs whenever you want. Subscribe to the Data Show
podcast on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast.

Speaker 2 (32:20):
Like SAMs through the Only Glance. So are the days
of the United States, you know.

Speaker 10 (32:26):
I do think that several members of Congress and some
of my discussions have brought up media literacy because that
is a part of what happened here, and we're going
to have to figure out how we rain in our

(32:47):
media environment so that you can't just spew disinformation and misinformation.
It's one thing to have different opinions, but it's another
thing entirely to just say things that are false, and
so that's something that we're looking into.

Speaker 3 (33:06):
Hmmm, yeah, so that's AOC who is You don't need
the government to reign in the media. I mean, you
don't need the government to rain in the media. What
a stupid SoundBite. Welcome back to the program. I think
for now on people who send me text on radio,
I'm just gonna read them like I'm on air, stop it,

(33:29):
got it, I have it on silent. But people are like,
can you look at this? No I can't. I'm it's
like AOC level logic. Stop it.

Speaker 6 (33:38):
But isn't it just the I mean, it's just like
democrats to have to shut something down instead of actually
intellectually debate it, Like why don't you just have the
intellectual debate. Why is the first move to somehow control
speech or control how other companies, you know, modify or
moderate their platforms. It's so it's ridiculous.

Speaker 3 (33:59):
It's not for the government to make that determination. That's
not that's not their purview. It's not for them. I
don't want any of these gas bags determining what I
can or can't say on any platform. Why do these
little speech Nazis are Why are they do? They have
such a fetish with controlling everyone else's mouths. Stop it,

(34:20):
good grief. I don't go to the bar and knock
the drink and mix her out of your hand. Why
do you sit in here? Did oh? Did you get up?
Did you get nervous? Yeah? Right over there. It's not
really how that goes, but you know, or for all
intents and purposes, I'm just saying, just uh, there you go.

Speaker 2 (34:36):
So thank you God for small miracles.

Speaker 3 (34:39):
You know. I try. I try. I was telling Cain
and the rest of the the staff, I'm like, cause
my birthdays this weekend, and I and I had said,
I I'm not. I did not make any unrealistic demands
for my birthday. I what did you jerk your head
like that for? I'm gonna put a camera on you.

Speaker 6 (34:58):
You better stop over the Really, you weren't making any
unrealistic I.

Speaker 3 (35:03):
Just said, that's how nice would it be if you
guys got on Space Marine two and we and everybody
the whole crew could squat up and we can go
and you know, for the Emperor and get in losers,
We're gonna go kill some tyrannids.

Speaker 6 (35:16):
But no, that sounds great. Now do you want to
be successful in that campaign?

Speaker 3 (35:21):
What do you mean?

Speaker 6 (35:23):
Well, I mean, what else could I mean by that question?
Do you want to be successful in the campaign of
us in the staff who.

Speaker 3 (35:28):
Already be the campaign? This would be just like PvP who's.

Speaker 6 (35:31):
Never played before. But what are you not trying to
accomplish something in the game.

Speaker 3 (35:36):
I just want to I just want to get a
dripped from my outfit. I was started as a raven
guard and everybody's cos uomers are dying. Started as a
raven guard. Now I'm a blood angel and it's like
super sweet, Like my shield is amazing and I wish
it was a purse that carry around everywhere.

Speaker 6 (35:52):
I guess my overall point was, I know that I'm
no good at that game. I never played Have you
ever played it?

Speaker 2 (35:59):
One? Never played it either?

Speaker 6 (36:00):
So you want two people have never played the game
to squad up with you, and you want to accomplish something,
And I'm just saying, how that doesn't work.

Speaker 3 (36:07):
That's I mean, maybe you could guess it practice and stuff,
you know, I mean, that's just a possibility.

Speaker 2 (36:15):
You know you're speaking truth?

Speaker 3 (36:17):
Yeah, right to say, Oh my gosh, Anyway, all right,
So coming up, this is what we got for you
if you this, uh the I don't want to say
the guy's name, so I'm trying to figure out how
to say it. With the one of the Trump assassins,
his son or would be assassin apparently has he is

(36:40):
a pediaste. Oh, we've got updates on that and more.
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Speaker 11 (38:04):
She is the worst polling Democrat against Donald Trump in history.
On national polls, no one is performing worsener. No one's
performing worsener among blacks, among Hispanics, the worst worming democrat
in modern history among the demographics, worst performing polling wise
among Jews. She is losing key factions of the Democratic
based Muslim voters. She's under fifty two percent in the

(38:24):
latest care poll among black Muslims.

Speaker 3 (38:27):
She is not hmmm, Kamala Harris, she's not doing so
great with polling. She's having she's on the struggle bus.
But there's still not a lot of difference, believe it
or not, between her and Trump right now. And there's
you know, there's We've talked, you know, a little bit
about some of the reasons why. So welcome back to

(38:47):
the program, Dana Lash with you, and we are at
the top of this second hour and getting into all
this stuff, getting into everything. So this I wanted to
because we went over a lot of the polling last
hour and I'm looking at and I do want to

(39:09):
keep touching on it. We will more and more as
we get closer to election. But like I said, there's
still some daylight. I think it's interesting that they're trashing
her on CNN, right, it was CNN right, yeah, yeah, yeah,
cn it oh, not trashing her, being honest about her, Yeah,
thank you, being honest about her on CNN. Very interesting

(39:30):
they're being honest about her. The more do you think
that she would actually do I mean, I know she
says she wants to do another debate, but really would
she would she can you imagine. I don't know that
she could do that twice. I had this conversation with
a friend of mine. I don't think that she could

(39:51):
do that twice, do you. I don't think she could. Yeah,
I don't think she could. Danauss with you here again,
we're at the top of this SAS second Hour. You
can find us on Channel through forty seven Direct TV,
also on Rumble that's where the discussion happens. You can
also find us on x and Facebook Official Daniel Aash
on Facebook. You can find me on Instagram as well.

(40:12):
I threw up a shot on my Space Marine two
thing yesterday up there as well. We all we always
got good stuff up there. I really don't want to
talk about the story, but it's an update on the
attempted the second attempted assassination of Trump. It's so gross.
This story is so gross. I have to discuss it. Kane,
this is so gross. I was trying to think of

(40:33):
in a more artful way. So this is ABC News,
and ABC News says the son of the guy who
was accused of the second attempt on Trump's life, and
I don't want to say his name. So his son

(40:54):
was taken into custody on federal charges of possessing child pornography.
They said that they found hundreds of files during a
search on or in or oron Rout's residence in Guildford County,
North Carolina, and he added, it's receipt of it and

(41:16):
possession of it. I think if you possess it, put
you to death. That's me. That would be my executive order.

Speaker 4 (41:24):
Oh.

Speaker 3 (41:24):
I am a big, big supporter of the death penalty,
huge supporter of the death penalty, particularly for predators. If
you're a child predator, instant death. I don't even think. Now,
let's just reduce your time. Let's just walk you right
out back behind the courthouse. Let's go. I'm sure that
there are a lot of Americans that would be willing
to provide the service for free, so we don't even
have to pay the cost of a needle. Right, So

(41:46):
they found apparently all kinds of stuff. Is anybody surprised?
Anybody surprised on this? The whole fam damily, they just
sound really well together, right, well, put together, family, healthy family,
good grief. The investigation, his father, he's still he's got

(42:07):
obviously still in custody, and they they searched the Sun's
phone and his Galaxy Note device, and they also looked
at a couple of others and they apparently he had
it all over everything. He had it like all over
like everywhere. They had graphic descriptions and videos from a

(42:31):
chat uh and he was apparently advertising content for sale,
so he was apparently was also selling it as well.
Oh so gross kill the guy done done? They they
also and I this letter put this out here. The

(42:51):
first attempted assassin the DOJ. You saw they released that
letter right that he had the letter to the that
he wrote saying that I before the saying I failed you.
The the the guy called on this guy the again,
the second guy in the attempt. I don't want to
say their names. The second attempt This guy apparently had

(43:14):
written a letter and said that it was addressed to
the world and he was offering money to people who
would complete the job. Why did the DOJ release this?
And the reason I bring this up is how long
did it take to get the diary from the Nashville murderer?

Speaker 8 (43:35):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (43:35):
Wow, right, I'm not I'm not being overly picky, right,
and comparing those two, like how long did it take?
How long did it take to get the the diaries
what they were calling the manifesto, but it wasn't the manifesto,
it was the diaries. How long did it take for

(43:55):
them to get the diaries from the Nashville murderer and
then published this guy's note and it's all over the media.
They published this guy's note where he's offering cash to
someone who can finish the job. Bill Barr blasted the
DOJ over this. He said, he's absolutely dumbfounded that this

(44:17):
was released. They released this note in a court filing
that was yesterday, and I mean, it's like proof of
his intention to kill the former president. And Barr had
said that he was dumbfounded that the DJ made it
public and apparently the letter was left with an acquaintance
prior to his attempted assassination. And Barr said that he's

(44:41):
just dumbfounded that they allowed that to be released. And
he said, even if they thought it was important to
provide the letter to the court, Barr said that it
could have redacted the inflammatory material at the very least,
or arranged to have it submitted under now. Bill Barr

(45:03):
also added, quote, it was rash to put out this
letter in the midst of an election during which two
attempts on the life of former President Trump had been made.
It served no other purpose than to risk inciting further
violence end quote. I think he's absolutely right. And Bill Barr,

(45:24):
he's not best friends with Trump. They had a falling out.
They're not best friends. Why so that's why I asked.
They fought to not release the Nashville Killers diary, not
really manifestor, but diary. Apparently there were tons of them,
and Lorraine wrote about it over as substack, so they

(45:45):
they thought to the nailder to not release that. But
this they released instantly. They didn't redact anything. And the
guy has I mean, he's got a bounty out there.
He put a bounty on him. That's a bounty came right,
That's that's headhunting now, whether or not he's legit or

(46:07):
he could even pay the six figures that he was offering.
I mean, the guy was broke. His house is falling
apart in Hawaii, and he apparently all the talk of
having these Afghan soldiers trained that he could just order
to go somewhere on demand never actually apparently it came
to fruition in real life. So I don't know. It's

(46:30):
doubtful that even has it, but the fact that he
did it because they're probably I mean, who knows. Maybe
there are not jobs out there that don't know that
he's broke, that don't know that he's living in he
had lived in a dilapidated house in Hawaii. They don't
know these things. So that's I'm just it seemed purposeful
that they put it out. Now they didn't they didn't

(46:54):
issue it with redactions. Kane that letter, oh yeah, oh yeah,
that's right.

Speaker 8 (46:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (47:00):
When they did put it out ahead a point full
of redactions?

Speaker 3 (47:02):
How many there were tons of it in there too.
There were like entire chunks that were just.

Speaker 2 (47:06):
They put this letter out, nothing blacked out at all.

Speaker 3 (47:11):
So how was he going to get that it? Did
he have many? Where did he get the money from?
Because he was broke, So where would you get this
money from?

Speaker 2 (47:18):
One hundred and fifty k's got to come from somewhere.

Speaker 3 (47:21):
I don't know. In there for twelve up on that
golf course, posted out there for twelve hours, just wild.
I just think it's I actually agree with Bill Barr.
I think that it is very it's it seems purposefully
insightful the way that they released that letter. Now you
had the story. Tell me about the story that you
had about I don't want to say his name, but

(47:42):
the Vegas killer his brother.

Speaker 6 (47:45):
Yeah, it was weird because I saw this noted this
morning when I was floating around X and after the
Las Vegas shooter was you know, pronounced dead and all
that was behind us. Just days later, his brother was
accused of child porn and having child porn and distributing
child porn and almost like this is how big my

(48:07):
tinfoil hat is. It's almost like these family members of
these killers have some truth that needs to be told.
But in order to shut them up about their motivations
or whatever the case may be on these shooters, I
think I think some of it could be to paint
a fuller picture for people to get closure in the

(48:27):
public on things like this. But in order for people
to not talk, what do you do? You got to
put them, you know, in this situation where they're accused
of something horrible, so that nobody would ever believe a
thing they say about where the motivations were.

Speaker 3 (48:43):
I believe that could be possible, But I also believe
that I mean, you know, all the pederasty and the
weirdness is on the left.

Speaker 2 (48:49):
Yeah, no, that's that's absolutely.

Speaker 3 (48:51):
And so that then it makes sense because if fits
a character profile.

Speaker 6 (48:54):
And I admit it's a tinfoil hat position that I've
just articulated there, But to me, it doesn't seem out
of the realm of possibility.

Speaker 3 (49:03):
Like, didn't his didn't the brother of the Vegas killer,
didn't he like disown him after that?

Speaker 6 (49:12):
Yeah, there was a there was a lot of you
know again when people were searching for all the information
they could have.

Speaker 3 (49:19):
Those charges were dismissed though back in twenty eighteen, I
should say, yeah, and charges against the brother, Uh well
apparently yeah.

Speaker 6 (49:28):
I mean, so it was either a false accusation or
there was something that the state got out of it
that they needed on some sort of other prosecutorial situation.

Speaker 3 (49:39):
But they cannot find who snorted the cocaine in the
White House. That is a total mystery. I mean, can
I just you know, they found cocaine in a cubby
hole in the White House.

Speaker 2 (49:48):
Well twice, didn't they find cocaine?

Speaker 3 (49:49):
Twice? They found cocaine And you have a big koke
head that lives there, and they found it in the
part where people would live total mystery. They don't know
who that bookers are belongs to. They don't know it
is a total mystay. They have no clue. In an
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Speaker 6 (51:12):
And now all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 3 (51:17):
So this is sad news. Brett far for farv say it.

Speaker 2 (51:24):
It's just Brett fire Far. Yeah, spread far bread.

Speaker 3 (51:28):
Fire Far still sounds weird. But he made a shock announcement.
He's battling Parkinson's disease fifty four years old. He just
like recently released just recently revealed this and he's been
speaking out, I speaking out about it. That's a wild
so goodness. The California governor signed a law banning all

(51:51):
plastics shopping bags at grocery stores. This is Gavin Newsom.
I mean, you've got needles and feces everywhere, high taxes,
you're in the red pest. I can do span plastic bags,
you know, just take a pawn chop style best. I
can do span plastic bags. That's all I can do.
Uh No, it's not even a choice. Now, this is
why I would actually I don't know. I feel this
is so shoppers have to purchase bags that are made

(52:13):
with thicker plastic that makes them reusable. I actually always
reuse my plastic bags.

Speaker 2 (52:19):
What are we gonna put in those little tiny trash
cans in the bed.

Speaker 3 (52:21):
They're perfect for the little tiny bathroom trash? What are
we gonna do? Okay, that's so dumb, gosh, so dumb.
A North Carolina man stole a cable company truck with
the worker in the bucket. Oh my gosh, that had
to be terrifying. So this guy, uh, he just literally
stole the whole dang truck WSOCTV. It was Caldwell County

(52:44):
and the guy they were repairing a line and the
worker thankfully was attached to a safety harness, but because
he actually came out of the bucket at one point
and that he was able to free himself and remove himself,
but he did hurt his leg in the process. Us.
The guy that they caught, the suspect who stole the truck,
a guy named Frank Moody. Sounds like a always sending

(53:08):
Philadelphia character. He was taken it and he looks like
an away Sunny inc Philadelphia character, he was taken into custody. Wow,
just crazy, still in the bucket, that's terrifying. A vandals
rampage at a main car dealership costs thousands of dollars
of damage to seventy five vehicles. This sounds like a
Tulsa King episode. A main man damaged seventy five vehicles

(53:28):
on an automobile dealership, smashing windows, denting the hoods before
he was arrested. Twenty five years old, ninety thousand dollars
in damage to seventy five vehicles. That's crazy. Human cases
of a raccoon parasite what this is apparently a new thing.
It's a rare infection. Two people in LA were infected

(53:51):
with a raccoon parasite that causes some frequently fatal infections
of the iciers and organs and central nervous system, and
people have If you survive it, you still have neurological impairments.
It's a there's a parasitic roundworm that I can't pronounce.
It's bus there's some that's the name. But it's in
raccoon feces and humans get infected if they eat dirt

(54:12):
or other material that is contaminated with that feces. They're
rare infections. But La says, oh, well, you know, because
a large number of raccoons live near people, the infection
rate is likely higher. So that's why you'll pet. The
trash fan is, yeah, they're not. I mean, yes, they
look like adorable little burglars. And yes, you might feel
like you're snow white. And you can talk to one,

(54:33):
talk one into becoming your pet. It's not gonna happen.
They're gonna scratch your eyes out and then poot by
you and you're gonna get like a round worm and die.
I just so just don't do it. Your eyes will
fall out and you'll rot. I just stop, Just don't
do it. And mortgage rates and home sales are down
as buyers are waiting for the right moment, which is
never gonna happen if the country goes the way of Democrats.
In November, we have a lot more in store, including

(54:53):
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Speaker 7 (55:58):
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Speaker 2 (56:12):
It's going to be.

Speaker 9 (56:13):
The most the biggest change agent in the next ten years.
Mostly good stuff, mostly, but will we get it right?
You know, social media, we're still arguing about, Hey, we
shouldn't have let young kids use it as much. And
how do you balance free speech and versus crazy stuff
that you know, got people not to take vac scenes

(56:36):
for example.

Speaker 3 (56:37):
I don't know, maybe just realize that not everyone agrees
with you on the issues of government injections, Bill Gates.
And then also, don't raise morons. I mean, you don't
have to have the government handhold you and tell you
that's not real. If you have a brain. Welcome back
to the program. Bottom of the second hour, Dana Lash
with you. It's so easy to figure out what's fake
and what's I mean it is. I mean sometimes we

(56:58):
joke and we're like, oh my gosh, real life is
so crazy. It's it's you know, it's indistinguishable from satire.
But you really do know what's the difference? Come on, people,
Bill Gates doesn't think that you do. He thinks that
everybody's dumb and they can't tell the difference. And you
really need the government to be able to tell you
that's a fake video. By the way, I did spein

(57:20):
at Ai, which is not totally great yet. By the way,
AI is weird looking. There's always something off right, There's
always something off, and there's always one of the things.
I my youngest son, who hates AI. He was remarking
on the blankness of everything that's created with AI, like
art and everything else. It is flat and soulless. It

(57:43):
really is. And in substack they have a feature now
where you can generate AI images and I asked AI
what It gave me a number of completely bizarre images.
I asked AI what I looked like like, I literally
put in my name. I put in my name. That

(58:03):
was the prompt, Dana lash and it show if you're
watching the simulcast, it showed me with a gone bigger
than a little mini tank. I'm in. It looks like
a Mario Kart character like that could be Princess Peach
in a tank.

Speaker 2 (58:15):
Oh my god, I'd play that character. Is that that's
a fifty cow, isn't it?

Speaker 3 (58:19):
That's an eleven y cow? And then it would have
it showed me, so that's me apparently in a little tank.
And I really want this now. I really feel like
I need I need the little tank. I don't know,
it's just fascinating to me. But it showed me all
kinds of weird images. There was like one where it
had the scope backwards like you know, the Navy the
guy the Navy officer, but it also had like the

(58:41):
barrel backwards of a like it was I guess it
was supposed to be a glock, and then it would
have like I'd have an extra finger. And then there
was one image where the trigger was an ear, like
an actual human ear. It was the weirdest thing. It's
so bizarre. And then one of the images was me

(59:01):
with three arms and various guns that don't exist in
each arm.

Speaker 2 (59:06):
You have the right to bear arms.

Speaker 3 (59:07):
Yeah, but three of them, you know. I mean I
looked like, was it general grievous? So AI is not,
you know, but like how Gavin Newsom, he was acting
like he was coming to the defense of Hollywood and
the actors and voiceover artists and saying, I'm going to

(59:27):
make sure that no one can use your likeness. And
I understand different contractual disputes and things of that nature,
but he's banning parity in California in addition to plastic bags.

Speaker 4 (59:37):
So I.

Speaker 3 (59:40):
Don't think that you need the government to regulate speech.
You have to have free speech because that is that's
one of the ways that the people hold the government accountable.
And when the government doesn't want to be accountable, it
doesn't want you to have free speech. It doesn't want
you to have the free ability to be able to
point out its shortcomings and where it is not doing
its job per the Constitution. They don't want to be

(01:00:02):
told that stuff. And Bill Gates is out here, well,
you know, we should have regulations on crazy stuff like
info that makes people not want to get a vaccine?
What info? You mean the fact that it didn't actually
inaugulate you. What about that? I mean you weren't actually
immunized from it, You could still actually contract the virus.

(01:00:25):
So what crazy information that makes people not want to
get the shot that didn't actually prevent you from contracting
the thing for which you were supposed to get this
injection for in the first place. What's crazy? Is it
crazy to point out that truth? Or is it crazy
to just what I don't understand his measure here? Crazy

(01:00:50):
stuff that makes people not want to get it. People
don't want to get injected with something that a they
don't even know what it's about, be there's all they
no long term study on it. See. I get it
that it was a weird time and everybody was trying
to rush stuff. But there were a lot of consequences
to this, and there were a lot of adverse effects
to this that the government also didn't want to address.

(01:01:12):
And is it crazy to point out that they didn't
want to talk about the adverse reactions. It's not crazy,
that's legitimate. There are tons that actually happened, but apparently
you're not supposed to talk about that. This is what
they're trying to shame you into thinking that if you
disagree with the status quot then it's crazy. Ooh, you

(01:01:32):
don't want to be like those crazy people that ask questions.
They're trying to appeal to this belief that people really
want to just be homogenous and behavior and like the borg,
everybody just wants to be in lockstep. The left really
believes that that's when everyone is supposed to be the happiest,
when everyone is controlled, equal happiness for everyone, that's what

(01:01:57):
they believe. That's what this is. Oh heaven, forbid you
be like one of those crazy people that asks questions,
what do you mean the injection that doesn't actually prevent
you from contracting the virus like we said for over
a year it would. You're crazy if you point that out.
That's crazy stuff. We need regulations on that. Or how
about ivermectin, which is a therapeutic. They tried to misrepresent

(01:02:20):
what people were saying about it, and they were claiming
that those who were talking about its therapeutic uses were
claiming that it cures the virus, and they acted like
that was crazy. But they were literally out there touting
an injection that were supposed to cure a virus, which,
by the way, that's not how viruses work. You just acclimate.
You don't stop and kill. You don't cure the virus.

(01:02:40):
You have to acclimate. And they were acting like it
provided some sort of immunization when it didn't. But that's
not crazy you How about the craziness of lying to
people over and over again about this. How about shutting
down the whole damn economy over a lie. If you
want to have a discussion about crazy stuff, that should
be rightlated. It's not the people who should be regulated

(01:03:02):
it's the damn government that needs to be regulated. Just
as nine he's buying up all our beef COWSCNE. I
don't like that. Got a few other things. I want
to make sure that we hit Ooh so let me
pull this up. This do we have this audio? This
is the California mayor or no, sorry, south Portland mayor,

(01:03:25):
Misha Pride. They were listening to residents and they ended up.
It's funny because the main Democrat leader didn't want to
lower property taxes and then she got hit with two
property tax liens. But this South Portland mayor told seniors

(01:03:46):
that they needed to take out a reverse mortgage to
avoid the city's sharp increase in property taxes. Is that
an unbelievable We have this, by the way, I thought
we did, but they it was the residents were saying, well,
our taxes are going up. It's making it more difficult

(01:04:06):
to afford, you know, basic daily things. And their response was,
we'll just take out one of those reverse mortgages that
Tom Sellick tells you about all the time, those commercials.
They that's what they well they didn't say it like that,
Oh my gosh, No, they did say that, but they
did say, take out a reverse mortgage. Yeah, we to
avoid the property taxes. Go ahead and uh, just take

(01:04:28):
out a reverse mortgage on your house. Listen, this is
crazy and it's really unfortunate.

Speaker 4 (01:04:33):
I'm really sad.

Speaker 2 (01:04:34):
And you know, my taxes are going up to and
have every year for the last five years.

Speaker 6 (01:04:39):
Seeing as our property values are so high, seniors may
want to consider a reverse mortgage.

Speaker 2 (01:04:46):
It's it's I know it's an ugly word, but there
are just saying if I know, it's.

Speaker 6 (01:04:51):
Horrible, but it's sort of a last resort.

Speaker 3 (01:04:56):
Aren't they aren't they often don't they have like a
predatory nature the mortgages. Isn't that historically? How wow, that's crazy.
What about I don't know, giving people like an abatement
or not having property taxes, which are communists and makes
it to where people can't ever really own their own property.

(01:05:17):
Can you imagine like you could have your property taken
over if you're behind your property taxes a few thousand dollars,
like a fraction of what your property is actually worth.
And I can just rob you. It's ridiculous. It's it's
it is. I mean, at least, you know, at least
crime organizations are honest about what they're doing, or lower taxes.
I think, just get rid of property taxes. Just get

(01:05:37):
rid of them. There are better ways to go and
fund emergency services and municipal issues, way better ways than
stupid communist property taxes that drive everybody out. It's just
it's asinine. It's like one of the things in Texas
that we fight is property tax Like, yeah, we don't
have a state income tax, and I think that, you know,
we still make out way better than states that do

(01:05:59):
have income to taxes. But the property taxes can be ridiculous,
and that's that's, you know, one of the things you
got to consider. But to take out a reverse mortgage
or just stop wasting everyone's it's it's frustrating why I
don't want to have to pay for services that I
don't use. Do you ever find yourself like give people
their tax money and let them send their kids to

(01:06:20):
whatever the schools they want. I don't believe in the
public funding of schools. I absolutely do not. I think
that you should empower parents and stop stealing their money
and let the parents pay for their kids' education. Because
buy a large public school funded, I mean they pay
more per pupil in a number of states than you
would on like decent, like actually good private school education.
I think where were were We were in Ohio, I think,

(01:06:43):
and they were spending I can't remember. I can't remember
the cost. It was something like eight I can't remember
per student. It was what they were paying was almost
I mean one and a half times per pupil, one
and a half times greater than what we were paying
per child for our private school tuition. And that was

(01:07:06):
public school funding per people in Ohio. I was floored.
And it's like that in so many states, like in Texas.
It's like that in so many states. And then when
you compare the results, I think that you make schools compete.
I don't know why people are so terrified of that.
And I realized that there are organizations involved that exclusively

(01:07:27):
donate to Democrats, and so they have a quid pro
quo arrangement here. But no, I don't believe in the
public funding of education. I don't. I think that let parents,
because parents are going to know what's best for their
Let them keep it their money, and then they can
get even better education for their kids. It doesn't have
to be that's lazy and it's so noncommittal. It's like

(01:07:48):
the least you can do publicly subsidizing something like that,
where oh, I'm not even gonna look at it. I'm
just gonna throw money about it and pretend to care
and then turn to blind eye. That's just so lazy.
That's so lazy. That's not stewardship of your fellow man.
That's not civic pride or responsibility. That's lazy Marxism, I mean,
which was what Carl Marx was. And let's not have

(01:08:09):
you forget that. The only positive contribution that Karl Marx
made to this world was his bloated, just obscene, chonky
carcass feeding the worms in the ground. That is the
only positive contribution that Karl Marx ever made to the world.

(01:08:31):
He fed some worms with his own fat rolls after
he kicked the bucket. There you go, chonky, smelly, dirty,
lazy Carl Marx. No, he never worked a dana's life,
and he grifted off all of his friends. All right,
So we got more to come.

Speaker 6 (01:08:48):
It's his life mission to make bad decisions.

Speaker 2 (01:08:54):
It's time for Florida, man.

Speaker 3 (01:08:56):
Good heavens Okay, So this uh Florida let's start with
this one a Florida. Actually, I'm gonna do this one.
The Florida man who tried to swim back to the
US from Canada. There's some that I got a couple

(01:09:17):
that are a little inappropriate, So I I thought I
was gonna get real brave. This Florida man disoriented Florida
man under the influence, tried to swim back as from
CBS News, tried to swim back across the Detroit River
from Canada. On This was just Yester or Yeah, yesterday,

(01:09:38):
the crew was notified police about a person swimming across
the Detroit River. They had to send out a boat
search for him. They did get him. They pulled him
up on the boat. They threw him a life ring.
He was an American citizen from Florida trying to get
back into the US. He seemed disoriented and under the influence.
He didn't have any physical injuries, so he was taking

(01:09:59):
a shot of transfer to an EMS unit. I've never
heard of that kind of I'm sure they happened, but
that was that's a new kind of crossing. There's definitely
new kind of This one was from yesterday that I
didn't get to A Florida man stumbled upon an suv
on top of a dumpster. I don't even know how
that happens, but that's what happened. We had this yesterday

(01:10:20):
and I didn't have time to get to it. A
Florida man named Scott Greenberg stumbled upon an suv resting
like almost perfectly. The one of the back wheels was
off of the dump like on top of a dumpster.
Like the dumpster top was closed, and this suv was
on the top and I'm looking at it was parked
at a construction site, and it didn't look like there

(01:10:40):
was like a bridge or anything where it could have
driven off. I have no idea how this got I
have Okay, Well, he was at a construction site. They
said the suv was literally on top of the dumpster.
Now they used a forklift apparently to put it up there,
but they didn't tell anybody for the longest time and everyone,
I mean like for a whole day, people were trying

(01:11:00):
to figure out how this happened. But that's you know,
they got it on video. It's on video, But it
was on top of the dumpster and they used a
fork They used a forklift. Can do that? Like it
had to be a pretty big forklift then right, yeah,
forklift operating.

Speaker 6 (01:11:16):
I guarantee you he was probably parked somewhere where then
where was in the way of construction. And so these
guys are like, Eh, I'm gonna show this guy good.

Speaker 3 (01:11:26):
This is from a website called motor Biscuit. This story,
this Florida man. He imagine that you're on the beach
and you come across a deserted car, just parked, and
it's a sunset, beautiful out, but there's you know, you
can't really take in the view because you're distracted by
this mysterious knocking coming from the trunk of the car.

(01:11:48):
This was in Monroe County, Florida. As it turned out,
this Lincoln Continental it parked at a beach in the
Florida Keys. This dude brought his drugs to the beach
present simmably to do them, and then somehow locked his
own self into his own trunk. Thirty two year old
Rob Moore he when the Sheriff's office showed up, they

(01:12:11):
were telling the person they were telling people get out
of the car, and he literally couldn't because he was
locked in his own trunk. And he said that he
was hunting for his lost keys when he somehow managed
to fall inside of the trunk, which closed and then
locked him inside, so his keys were still missing. He
was just going to go to the beach and smoke
some weed apparently, you know Florida man. And he got

(01:12:32):
a citation for possessing drugs and paraphernalia at they Motorbiscuit
says that the car had been three years newer the
they would have had an emergency trunk release. It was
a ninety seven Lincoln Continental the two thousand and up
started having the because that was my first thought, like,
how was there no emergency trunk release? Also, couldn't you
just kick out the backseat? I mean I don't know.

(01:12:54):
So just wow, that lost his keys. How do you
look for your He's so hard in your trunk that
you fall in it and then it closes behind you
and locks you in there. But yeah, but he only
had like pot on him, apparently, can you get so
high that that happens? Stick with us their hour on
the way.

Speaker 6 (01:13:13):
We come up to you guys to get cheaper drugs.

Speaker 7 (01:13:16):
Yeah, we'll come over the border.

Speaker 2 (01:13:17):
For cheaper drugs, you guys. Okay with that?

Speaker 8 (01:13:19):
We're happy to try and try and help you out,
but it'd be really easier if you guys had universal
health care.

Speaker 3 (01:13:27):
You know, we would have your health care, but we
prefer living and not dying in a waiting room while
we wait for your crappy government care. I can't tell
you how many people I know who are actually Canadian
who've come to the United States for treatment, including brock Lesner.
Remember with his diverticulitis, he almost died. He almost died,
and he had to come to the United States, leave
Canada to come and get health care. So don't welcome

(01:13:48):
back to the program. Top of this third hour, Dana
lash here with you can listen coast to coast channel
three forty seven Direct TV. For not listening terrestrially on
a station across the country, also find us over at
rumble x is where we're at as well. Why I
don't know what, I don't know what Little Castro is
going on about. That's justin Trudeau, Canada, Little Castro. The

(01:14:12):
first off, twenty percent of Canadians didn't even have a
doctor at all. And this is according to let me
pull this up. This is according to the National Library
of Medicine that seems like one in six Canadians don't
even have you know, at the number of or even
can see a regular family doctor. They wait months for

(01:14:34):
basic things, even just like diagnosis. Diagnosis for a serious condition,
you can wait years for procedures and they'll and some
procedures that are actually necessary will be classified as elective.
They had in one study and The Guardian, you know,
the big conservative publication called The Guardian, it's literally a

(01:14:57):
Marxist cess pool. They actually had a p that they
did in twenty three where it was called Canada's Haves
and have nots health system lags behind Europe study fines. Oh,
it wasn't just that they lagged behind Europe. Their healthcare
system was heinous. What this piece discovered was that their
system was heinous. It found that many many Canadians have

(01:15:18):
to travel to the United States for healthcare, that they
have widespread burnout and short end medical staff shortages. They
said that sixty three percent of Canadians didn't they lack nurses, doctors,
medical technology and drugs. The Guardian even noted that there
was an IPSOS poll that was taken where they said
that forty two percent of Canadian surveyed had to travel

(01:15:41):
to the US and they would personally pay more for
routine healthcare if needed, and that is a ten point
and over ten point increase since January of twenty twenty three.
The Canadian healthcare system is a mess. It's an absolute mess.
They literally say in Canada, what we have are the
haves and have notsaj's study, which was led by physicians

(01:16:02):
and researchers from the University of Toronto and this was
published in December of twenty twenty three, also was comparing
the Canadian healthcare system to Europe, Finland, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands,
New Zealand, Norway in the UK, and they concluded that
their systems they actually have access and that they produce

(01:16:25):
far different and better outcomes than those in Canada. They
said some of the important comparative differences included higher rates
of primary care funding, more doctors, better organization information systems support,
and greater physician accountability. But they also said that primary
care is something that they actually focus on and they
try to prevent and eliminate the need for further procedures

(01:16:48):
or treatment because they want to catch things early, whereas
in Canada you can wait legit forever. The CMAJA study
also showed that five point three percent is the what
Canada is spends of its total health care budget on
primary care. It is dramatically lower than the other countries
to which they were comparing, in fact, the other healthcare budgets.

(01:17:12):
It's like double and triple that. It's crazy, and in fact,
in some of the Canadian jurisdictions it's been so bad
the government care that they've been enabling increasing privatization of care.
The Globe and Mail, I know, the Canadian paper, Globe
and Mail, the big conservative Canadian paper, Globe and Mail,
Eyes Roll. They had a piece that came out a

(01:17:33):
year ago in Quebec talking about how more family doctors
are leaving the public health system and it's actually driving
the privatization in different Canadian jurisdictions because their government healthcare
has been a disaster. So I don't know what Justin
Trudeau's talking about here when he's up there kissing butt
on Colbert, But you know, I wish if we had
the same healthcare that they did, we'd all die in

(01:17:55):
waiting rooms. We wouldn't be getting the primary and preventative
care that we need. So no thank you, no thanks.
The studies say everything that we need to know. They
speak for you, They speak for you on that. Golly,
what is up with a left's fascination with bringing in
foreign people to try to come an electioneer during an
election season? We got Zelensky in Pennsylvania flying on MILLI

(01:18:18):
I don't I don't bust my ass and pay all
this money in tax so I can fly a little
short stack over here from Ukraine to come in and
lecture us about the Republican nominee while he's touring munition
factories in Pennsylvania. That of stuff that we're giving him
for free, Like why like why would why are we
doing that? How much do you think that all cost?
How much do you think it costs that bring him

(01:18:39):
over here?

Speaker 6 (01:18:39):
Kanem on the military planes?

Speaker 3 (01:18:43):
Yeah, ce seventeen, oh.

Speaker 6 (01:18:44):
Man, because you know they had to have planes for
cover and all of that. So I'd say it's in
the millions, like multiple millions probably.

Speaker 3 (01:18:53):
I mean a lot of people couldn't afford to take
a vacation this year. But hey, we're flying this guy
over and he's electioneering, talking smack about the Republican nominee.
All of this. I mean, I just why. I again,
Trump was impeached for nothing. He had a phone call

(01:19:14):
with this dude. And I also feel like, didn't you
sort of get the sense that Zelensky, I mean he
had at the time when there was the controversy around
the perfect phone call that Trump had was Zelenski. Don't
you kind of get the idea now or the impression
now that Zelensky is maybe some of the reasons that

(01:19:36):
he ran his mouth or because I mean, I think
Trump Advanced had made it clear that they wouldn't give
more to Ukraine, and doesn't it sort of seem like
a punchback for that? Did you get that impression, Kane?

Speaker 2 (01:19:48):
I mean, did he announced more money? Right?

Speaker 3 (01:19:52):
I mean he announced it, well, Biden did, but Trump
Advance have said Okay, enough's enough. And I feel like
him criticizing them over here in Pennsylvania, Yeah, a battleground state.
I feel like that was revenge for that.

Speaker 6 (01:20:05):
No, I agree, And the media will not look at
this like they should, and that's just a shame. Our
media is garbage and always has been, and they'll continue to.

Speaker 3 (01:20:15):
Be just wild, wild, wild. So in addition to all
of this, where's my other? Oh boy, you're going to
love this story. Pentagon is going to spend five hundred
million dollars on women's health research. Why do we need
to spend half a billion dollars? Jill Biden announced it.

(01:20:36):
You know, Jill Biden, with all of her expertise on
all of this, announces that the Pentagon is going to
commit five hundred million to women's health research as part
of a broader White House push to increase funding for
the study of women's health. What why is the Pentagon
doing this? They should just kick ass and win wars Caine.

(01:21:03):
What they don't actually say? What what the need is?
They actually don't get into.

Speaker 2 (01:21:09):
Is there a.

Speaker 6 (01:21:09):
New female ailment that we don't know about? Is this
about impacts? What is this about? Can't be about impacts clearly?
So what uh? What are we doing?

Speaker 11 (01:21:25):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (01:21:26):
I don't know. Well, we've got the gender neutral sub
I don't know. We have our borders wide open, and
we have all of this international instability. We have like
an actual way of allies you know in the Middle
East that are fighting for survival, and we're spending half
a billion dollars to study women's health. These people can't

(01:21:52):
even define what the hell a woman is? How do
they know how to spend half a billion dollars on
women's health.

Speaker 2 (01:21:58):
And to expand on that.

Speaker 6 (01:21:59):
Are we studying now the rise of testicular cancer and
prostate cancer in women?

Speaker 2 (01:22:07):
Because is that what it is? I'm not behind that.
I'm not for that.

Speaker 3 (01:22:13):
Why is she announcing something that is really under the
purview of the president and it's fine? I mean, this
is so stupid.

Speaker 2 (01:22:20):
She's a real doctor.

Speaker 3 (01:22:21):
I was reading the hillpiece. Shush up. Biden sent this
executive order back in March directing these agencies to strengthen
research and data standards on women's health with the purpose
of better leveraging federal funding. And it directed agencies to
prioritize funding for women's health research and encourage innovation. What

(01:22:43):
he gets in, Uh, they don't even they can't even
define it again, remember birthing person and all that stuff. No,
they said that, listen, this is what this is the
purposes of the order. Listen. Quote. The term women's health
research means research aimed at expanding the knowledge of women's
health across their lifespans. I'm reading from the White House website,

(01:23:04):
which includes the study and analysis of conditions specific to women,
conditions that disproportionately impact women and conditions that affect women differently. Uh.
They said that they want to enhance the study of
women's health across all This is all just nonsense. Consider
women's health is appropriate during the evaluation of research. That's it.

(01:23:31):
This is stupid. I don't even understand why this is needed.
It's not needed. I mean, we we we don't need
any of this. Is this Is this just giving more
money to healthcare agencies that got fat cash during RONA.
I mean again, everything is going to hell. But they're like, oh,
let's spend all this money on. Let's spend the money

(01:23:54):
on half a billion dollars on what do you need?
What else do you need to study? Well, as you know,
women have beings is now, so it's very important that
we study this.

Speaker 6 (01:24:03):
We have a private sector healthcare system. Why does the
government need to do any of this research or funded
or any of that. If the market requires some research
on a specific health issue, the private sector would be
getting together to incentivize the creation of that response and
then find a way to make money off of it.
Government is a waste of money.

Speaker 3 (01:24:25):
And it's interesting to note that she made this at
the Clinton Global Initiative Forum.

Speaker 2 (01:24:31):
It's not going to any health.

Speaker 3 (01:24:33):
Things getting laundered.

Speaker 2 (01:24:34):
Good, it's totally getting long.

Speaker 3 (01:24:35):
This is getting laundered, and that's all this is getting.
They study nothing here. No, Bill Clinton is going to
personally study with the women. He is going to personally
study the women, and he's going to tell you what
he thinks about women's health. That seems probably more appropriate,
That's why. But this is defense money. Unless you're going

(01:24:57):
to send women who have like a blood raid, you know,
during that time, out into the battlefield. I'm using Warhammer
terminology and bringing all the things together here, Kane. You're
sending out unless they're unless they're you know, gonna turn
you know this this the adeptist the start is into
some women by getting them all worked up into like

(01:25:18):
a literal blood rage and sending them out into the battlefield.
I'm just curious as to why in the hell we're
spending defense money on this stuff. I feel like that
was inaccurate, right, Why are they Why why you don't
know that? Like you literally have a class uh like uh?

(01:25:39):
Kane of the the one of the chapters is a
as a of Space Marines as a blood angel, and
they they get real sensitive about certain stuff and can
get real worked up, and their blood rage can consume them.
It's just how you get fourth wave feminism.

Speaker 2 (01:25:51):
Meter that measures the bloods.

Speaker 3 (01:25:53):
Yeah, you gotta quell it. You got to ride the quell.
So like you get them worked all up into a
blood rage, send them out there. You gotta ride that quell. Ladies,
just take it on out just.

Speaker 2 (01:26:03):
I feel like most of the people don't understand what
you're saying.

Speaker 3 (01:26:06):
No, they It's like Vince Klortho from Ghostbusters. You know
are I can tell you many have something to slore
that day. I mean, I get it, it's the same thing,
but swear it makes sense in my mind. But why
is she announcing it? No, they're gonna have bill. I'll
be up here, I'll look, I'll inspect the ladies. Oh girls,

(01:26:27):
you know, and then rf K Junior will help him.

Speaker 4 (01:26:29):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (01:26:29):
In the meantime. It's true though, and you know it.

Speaker 6 (01:26:37):
See and now all of the news you would probably miss.

Speaker 2 (01:26:42):
It's time for Dana's Quick five.

Speaker 3 (01:26:45):
So I have a couple of friends who are actually
in Germany and Austria attending this this year. Kane's like,
I can't believe it's not even October. How is there
in Octoberfest already? Well, they had their ceremonial kent tapping king,
It's all ready to go. Octoberfest is open in Munich.
Mayor detail Writer officially started Octoberfest at noon on Saturday
when he inserted the tap into the first keg of beer,

(01:27:09):
signaling the one hundred and eighty ninth start of the festival.
Thousands of beer lovers have celebrated in the Munich Fairground
as the first to cling some mugs. Theren's the largest
folk festival cane and these huge beer hauls. Yeah, yeah,
you got the winches out there, the Brunhilda's, the Heidis,
you got them all out there, just saying let's see

(01:27:31):
a this is so gross. A flight was diverted because
the passenger found an actual living mouse in their meal.
The aircraft was flying from Norway's capital to Spain. Norway
to Spain. They had a divert to Copenhagen. The diversion
was because of a little mouse in like actual food,

(01:27:51):
a box of food. It was in a box of
food and this guy was sitting next to this woman
on the flight and apparently it just like got out
of the as he opened it, a go out of it?
Oh oh, they had to divert the flight. Would you
divert a flight for a mouse and a box of food?
I don't think I would.

Speaker 2 (01:28:09):
When the mouse got out and it's running around of
the cabin.

Speaker 3 (01:28:11):
It's not going to crash the plane.

Speaker 6 (01:28:13):
What really do you would? I would expect if they're
close to where they took off, I'd expect them to
turn around.

Speaker 3 (01:28:21):
Well, and what kind of mouse? Like if it's a rat,
blow just no, blow the bread up.

Speaker 7 (01:28:26):
No.

Speaker 3 (01:28:28):
But if it's like a little mouse, you know, wheen
of the like a little field mouse, little feel mouth
the no, like you Pennant needs a pet. U gen
Z says that, oh my gosh, Tamagotchis are back. Zoomers
are reviving Tamagotchi's, the digital virtual pet that was like

(01:28:50):
a key chain. I think everybody let theirs die, just FYI.
So they're bringing those back, the little pixelated creatures. That's
actually I just okay whatever. Previously unknown Mozart music discovered
in a German library. Unreleased Mozart music. Stick with us,
We've got more in store.

Speaker 7 (01:29:09):
Keep your finger on the pulse with a Dana show
podcast delivering timely news with insightful analysis whenever you want,
straight to you on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get
your podcasts.

Speaker 3 (01:29:23):
We're disappointed.

Speaker 4 (01:29:24):
We were looking forward to giving the Vice president and
enthusiastic welcome, and we kind of we were confident that
she would find this. You know, she speaks very much
about the high ideals and how it's good to get
away from division and come together in unity and all.
That's what the Al Smith Dinner is all about. We
haven't given up yet. We're not used to this. We

(01:29:46):
don't know how to handle it. This hasn't happened in
forty years since Walter Mondale turned down the invitation, and
remember he lost forty nine out of fifty states. So
I don't say there's a direct connection there.

Speaker 3 (01:29:57):
But so we're not used to this already. Starting So,
the only thing that I know about the Al Smith Dinner,
and it's a big thing that they did to raise
money for Catholic charities in New York, is they sit
on a like in tiared Rose and eat dinner on
a stage and then everyone else is sitting and eating
in the floor in front of them. And I always

(01:30:19):
thought that's so awkward because you're eating in front of people,
like you're eating in front of them, and then people
get up and they roast each other. And I was
just I'm like, I'm a real awkward like when you're
added thing and you eat in front of people, you know,
I don't know, it's weird. Welcome back to the program, Dana,
last year with you. We're at the bottom of this
third hour. Hillary and Trump did it back in twenty sixteen.

(01:30:42):
Well it was actually twenty Yeah, it was twenty sixteen
when they did it, and uh it it was interesting.
They've everybody's been there. Markin Schwort's been there, Bush's been there,
everybody's everybody's been at this dinner. Jimmy Carter was there.
It's the thing that everybody goes to. And you're supposed

(01:31:04):
to be able to put partisanship aside. Is that the
role and go and and that's It's just but it
is kind of funny.

Speaker 9 (01:31:12):
He was.

Speaker 3 (01:31:13):
He was pretty brutal. I did watch that.

Speaker 9 (01:31:16):
He was.

Speaker 3 (01:31:17):
Maria Bartiromo was sitting behind him, like a couple of
tears up and she was trying to control You can tell.
I mean, when you're used to being on television, you
control your expression. She was trying to really control her expressions,
and Trump was basic. I mean, he was just sh writing.
Hillary Clinton. She was sitting behind him, and her face
was her eyes told it all. She's keeping her face

(01:31:39):
real still, so she didn't show anything. She didn't you know,
didn't want to be behind him in that, you know.
But it was hysterical. It was really funny. It was
a very funny, uh event when they did it there.
But it's all a bit it is. It's like they
set it up, it's in they they're in these tears
and it's it's just weird. I don't know. You've you've
watched it. I don't. I don't. I think the last
time I really actually watch, yeah, the.

Speaker 6 (01:32:00):
Ones with Trump and Hillary, that one was really kind
of like awkwardy type because.

Speaker 3 (01:32:06):
Oh my gosh, it was so Trump was.

Speaker 6 (01:32:08):
Literally reading these jokes off of a script. I think
there was one where he's like I recently.

Speaker 3 (01:32:12):
But then he'd add something else and then it was
just like, oh my gosh.

Speaker 6 (01:32:16):
Like Hillary bumped into me and she said pardon me,
and then I told her just wait till I get
an office.

Speaker 3 (01:32:22):
Yeah, Oh my gosh, it's always so awkward. Oh oh,
but they that they roast each other. That's what they're
supposed to do. It's like a roast, by the way.
I like the roast where they know each other, like
the old I'll watch old videos of like the Rap
the rat Pack days when they would roast, but they
all knew each other and you knew that they all

(01:32:43):
knew each other. Now it's just scripted and stupid. I
don't enjoy any I don't watch any of them anymore.
But these everybody knows who each other is. Kamala Harris
isn't going. Why why is she not going? I mean
even Winston Church address the Al Smith Dinner in nineteen
forty seven. Yeah, it's a tradition. Why is she not going?

(01:33:08):
I don't know. I think that's weird. I don't get.
I don't get why she's not she's skipping it now.
She's I guess, going to a battleground state and she's
gonna I don't know, but she's not gonna. She's not
gonna show up there. Trump is going to be there.
I don't think so.

Speaker 7 (01:33:28):
She's mum.

Speaker 3 (01:33:31):
I don't think so. I actually don't know. I don't
believe she is, but yeah, she's this is the first
time this has ever happened, well since eighty four. As
you heard, I think, who's at Dolan say that? But
Trump is going to be there. It's just not going
to be people like it. Honestly, the only reason why
people watch the clips in that of it is because
they love the awkward nature of it. It's so awkward

(01:33:53):
when all these it's so awkward. You guys know, she's
so awkward, and that that's what makes it so delicious,
right You just people up there squirming and you're like, oh,
this is so great because you always have your problems
to worry about all throughout the week, and it's nice
to see the worm turn right, even if it's for
a short time when they're just joking around. They in

(01:34:16):
ninety six. Walter Mondale declined in eighty four, and as
you know, he lost against Reagan in ninety six. They
did not invite Clinton and his and Bob Dole who
challenged him because Clinton vetoed a late term abortion band
per the AP, so they did not They did not

(01:34:38):
have them there for then at that point, Trump was
when he was intimating that she was corrupt and hated Catholics.
That's when someone boot him in the audience. I mean,
he was just brutal. So we'll see. I don't know,
but they during the lockdown, they had to do everything virtually,
so anyway, we'll see. But she's skipping. It's kind of

(01:35:01):
just kind of I don't know, she's kind of weird.
I feel like she just thinks maybe that she's got
it in the bag. Oh, I don't need to do this,
but I don't think. Also, but they're saying that she's
going to a battleground state to campaign, and that's you know,
she's needed there, and they're which which seems believable, right,
that seems believable. But I ultimately what I think is

(01:35:22):
the issue is they don't want her in front of
the press because there's a lot of members of the
press that are there, and there are a lot of
members of the press that are sitting there on this stage.
I just think that they don't want her in an
unscripted environment. Really like that, right, because they have cameras everywhere.
You can see her and you can see how fake
and awkward she is. I mean, that's ultimately what I think.

(01:35:45):
That's what I think the truth of the matter is.
I think that she they just don't want her in
this unscripted environment, and that's why she I think that's
why she's skipping. Do you think that's why she's skipping?
Seems that's like to me the I mean, I.

Speaker 2 (01:36:03):
Have all kinds of different theories. But yeah, wait, what.

Speaker 3 (01:36:08):
Do you mean you have all kinds of different theories?
Why else was she skipped? She just can't hang publicly.
She just cannot hang and be challenged or have to
be like witty off the cough because that's not her.

Speaker 6 (01:36:18):
No, that I totally agree with. I think that that's
probably the base of it all. But I think there's
other things too. Because hearing I don't think she has
the ability to hear jokes about her.

Speaker 3 (01:36:30):
I think she's going to get mad and that she can't.

Speaker 2 (01:36:32):
Yeah, I would. I would think that she wouldn't be
able to hold composure very well, or if she did,
it would be a lot of work like that damn debate.

Speaker 3 (01:36:39):
Yeah, that's a good point. Yeah, and it's when is
the stunner anyway? Because they got the VP debate on
the what is it the first or second? So the
VP debates like the first or second of October. So
maybe they're trying to limit I don't know. I don't
know what they're I don't know what they're thinking. They
don't they don't want Harris Walls out too much. I

(01:37:01):
don't know. It's weird, Harry Walls. It's just weird. I
just think that she really needs to humanize herself as
much as possible, and skipping stuff like this is not
the way to do it, because, yeah, she can go
to a battleground state, but just think about how many
voters doing an event like this is going to reach,
particularly when they usually televise it and cable news usually carry.

Speaker 2 (01:37:21):
This would be the seventy ninth annual.

Speaker 3 (01:37:22):
Especially in an election.

Speaker 6 (01:37:23):
Here exactly on October seventeenth is when this dinner is
supposed to happen. So she was all about a debate
on the twenty third, wasn't she? Didn't she say something
about being for a debate on the twenty third.

Speaker 3 (01:37:34):
She's almost too late at this point, considering early voting started.
I know, I know, it's weird, it's super weird, but
we'll see. Just saying just you know, some some very
interesting interesting things. A couple of the other we've been
hitting some of these other issues we've been talking about

(01:37:54):
the election, getting into some polling, all of this stuff.
And also let's see him making sure that we don't
miss I don't want to miss anything, I will say.
When we were talking about the Zelensky in Pennsylvania as well, Uh,
which maybe we'll get information on that, maybe we won't,

(01:38:16):
you know, we'll see this. We had discussed the that
assassin the second attempted would be assassin I guess, and
how his letter had been published in full without redactions
by the DJ and MS. It's weird because CNN shared it.

(01:38:38):
DJ just related, you know, just release it outright, uh,
and other media entities were picking up. Bill bar slammed it,
and he was like, it serves he said, it serves
no other purpose than to risk further inciting violence. But
CNN put up the whole letter. MSNBC did not. They

(01:39:00):
omitted the part where he offers six figures for someone
to finish. It. Very interesting. They they didn't even mention it.
CNN they not only mentioned it, but they showed it.
But MSNBC did not. I'm really shocked by that. They

(01:39:20):
in fact had said in their they actually had said, quote,
there's a call to action and some other things in
the letter which we're not going to share because there's
not reason to encourage any sort of potential violence. Wow. Wow, MSNBC,
like CNN, was all over it images they I mean,

(01:39:42):
they literally showed it in writing. MSNBC would not. I
don't know what to think of that. That is very interesting.
It's very unex I mean, very unexpected, and and yeah,
MSNBC did not at all, they would not all uh
include it. Hmm, So I don't know what I think

(01:40:05):
of that. I mean, good on them for not putting it.
I mean, because I am, It's all over everywhere else,
you know, ABC, CNN, CBS, but MSNBC was the only
one that would not actually do it. So I guess
I can't believe I'm saying it's kudos to them for
not caving to that and not and not publishing that.

(01:40:28):
I mean, I didn't really want to mention it, but
but yeah, they had a they had a live report
and they refused to mention it.

Speaker 6 (01:40:34):
But you said it at the top of the show.
It would it's a normal thing to redact that information.

Speaker 3 (01:40:39):
So well, the Nashville the Nashville Killers diaries, they redacted
tons of stuff out of it.

Speaker 6 (01:40:45):
So it was an oddity that we saw all of
this information. I think MSNBC just fell back on their
usual thing of redacting the information they would normally redact.
Everyone else that put it out was the one doing
the abnormal thing.

Speaker 3 (01:40:59):
Very true, Very true.

Speaker 4 (01:41:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:41:01):
MRCTV had the they're the NewsBusters fixed, they had the
clip and they had that note of it. That's interesting stuff.
All right, we have more on the way to get
into because you've got oh, by the way, you've got
all the un stuff in Manhattan this week, it's gonna
be all the UN people are going to be doing
all their all that stuff in Midtown. It's going to

(01:41:24):
be a mess up there. And you're gonna hear all
these all these all of these foreign leaders coming to
prime real estate in New York and nothing ever gets accomplished.
We'll we'll touch on that. We've got more on the
way today in stupidity as well.

Speaker 7 (01:41:40):
Subscribe to the Dana Show podcast because who says you
can't make fun of people while staying informed on your
own personal time. Subscribe on YouTube, Apple or wherever you
get your podcast.

Speaker 10 (01:41:52):
We need to allocate some of this money for our
black children by a black community.

Speaker 12 (01:41:59):
Fifty one million dollars for migrants brought some loud and
vocal opposition from the public, to the point where police
had escort people out of the city council meeting several times.
Mayor Brandon Johnson asked for a two minute breather.

Speaker 6 (01:42:11):
You want to make sure that we could continue to
conduct the business of the people.

Speaker 3 (01:42:17):
Wow, that much for what just thirty days? That's crazy.
Those are those people's tax dollars? Do you think that?
I mean, I wonder if those people think that their
taxes are too high? If you were to ask them,
are you happy with the amount of taxes that you're paying?
Do you think that your taxes are too hig? I'm
sure they would say yes, and then that's what their

(01:42:37):
money's going for. I mean, it's understandable how people are
that angry. Why the hell they keep voting for this? Then?
Why do you keep voting for this stuff? Why do
you keep voting for the same thing over and over
again and in thinking that somehow because you swap in
a different Marxist that that's going to get you a
different result. It's the ideology. It is the ideology of it. Goodness,

(01:42:58):
I don't know. Meanwhile, I saw that video of Trump
handing that lady a one hundred dollars bill at the
grocery store. Okay, so what is the name of the store? Spankles?
Wasn't that? Is that the name of the store, the
grocery store that they were in, or spangles or something
like that, Sprinkles, is it? Okay? My grandma would say

(01:43:20):
sprinkles like that, sprinkles, and I can That's so I
could not. I was looking at the store name, and
I'm like sprinkles. That's how my grandmother said, sprinkles, sprinkles.
Just put some sprinkles on it. Anyway, go ahead, this
is he gave her a hundred dollars. She's at the
grocery store. If we got those, he's gonna go down

(01:43:41):
on it.

Speaker 2 (01:43:42):
Just went down a hundred bucks. We'll do that for you.

Speaker 5 (01:43:46):
For the White House, all right, everybody.

Speaker 11 (01:43:51):
There, you get.

Speaker 2 (01:43:53):
Perfect.

Speaker 3 (01:43:56):
I read that she is going to frame the money.
She's not going to spend it. She said she was
kind of frame it. I had the story that I
just saw it somewhere. She had said that she was
going to frame it. She wasn't going to spend it.
He said, we're going to do that from We're going
to do that from the White House for everybody that
would be nice, can we please? But I don't know.

(01:44:19):
I mean, we'll see how.

Speaker 2 (01:44:23):
I mean, he's doing everything he should be doing at
this point.

Speaker 6 (01:44:25):
He's talking about he's you know, the economy and specifics
on what he's going to do in order to lower
energy costs, which by the way, bleed into every other
cost of every other service that we talk about. So
he's doing what he should be doing right now. The
media is not covering it, and they're doing that intentionally.

Speaker 3 (01:44:41):
Well, here is why it's so, I mean, here's why
it's so odd with us this election. You have two
people that everybody really knows. Everybody knows Trump and they
know his record, and people know Kamala Harris and her life.
Thereof this is and so I don't understand people who

(01:45:01):
don't when they when they take these polls and they
always say, oh, they're just undecided. How were you undecided?
I mean, it's not like we're dealing with two unknowns here.
This is a really odd election and that I don't
know that in my lifetime, we've never had any had
it like this where you were not dealing with two unknowns.
Today's stupidity, Kane, what do we got?

Speaker 10 (01:45:20):
All?

Speaker 2 (01:45:20):
Right?

Speaker 6 (01:45:21):
Well, it actually does tie into the economy. Apparently, if
you thought you were better off four years ago, you're
just misremembering the economy under Trump.

Speaker 2 (01:45:30):
That's what you're doing. You're just misremembering that.

Speaker 3 (01:45:32):
That's what?

Speaker 2 (01:45:32):
Uh is this? Chris Coons? Yeah, listen to what he
says here.

Speaker 13 (01:45:36):
You're right, Joe, it is narrowing the gap between Harrison
Trump on who do you believe will chart a better
economic future for us? Has narrowed quite a bit by half.
Part of it is that Americans, when you ask the
question are you better off today than you were four
years ago? Many Americans misremember just how bad the economy
was four years What are you talking about it?

Speaker 3 (01:45:56):
What does that even mean? Misremembering? Miss They're just misremembering
stuff from whatever though. That's so stupid, folks. That does
it for us today. I hope you have a wonderful
rest of your day. Find us on Substack, Facebook, chapter
and verse U Zebra at Substack. I'll be back with
you tomorrow.
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