The Dana Show with Dana Loesch - Absurd Truth: Parkinson's Palooza
Episode Date: July 9, 2024The White House held an absolutely CHAOTIC press conference where KJP had to field questions about Biden possibly having Parkinson’s Disease. Meanwhile, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson blames rising c...rime on Richard Nixon.Please visit our great sponsors:Black Rifle Coffeehttps://blackriflecoffee.com/danaUse code DANA to save 20% on your next order. Byrnahttps://byrna.com/danaVisit today for 10% off and get the protection you need. Hillsdalehttps://danaforhillsdale.comWatch a portrayal of Thomas Jefferson reflecting on the Declaration of Independence in one of his final letters and get your free commemorative copy of the Declaration of Independence today.KelTechttps://KelTecWeapons.comSign up for the KelTec Insider and be the first to know the latest KelTec news.Patriot Mobilehttps://patriotmobile.com/danaGet free activation with code Dana.ReadyWisehttps://readywise.comUse promo code Dana20 to save 20% on any regularly priced item.The Wellness Companyhttps://twc.health/danaUse promo code DANA to save 15%.
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Dana Lash's absurd truth podcast, sponsored by Keltec.
It's his life mission to make bad decisions.
It's time for Florida man.
That's right.
We got several Florida men here making news, which is what they do every single day.
First, a guy in Florida who fell asleep in a Taco Bell drive-thru
was found to be intoxicated behind the wheel of said vehicle.
Not all that surprising if you fall asleep after.
I don't know if you even ordered the tacos, but you're like, man, I'm real hungry.
But also it's nap time.
So I'm just going to pass out for a bit.
I wonder if you even had to breathalize the guy.
Or if you just looked at him and you're like, look, sir, it's Florida.
You're asleep.
You're in a Taco Bell drive-thru.
Let's just go ahead and have you plead guilty to DUI here.
I don't know if you're going to have to try that hard.
But nonetheless, yes, he was drunk.
Yes, that's a crime.
Even if you're not moving, well, currently behind the wheel of a running vehicle.
So you were booked and there are going to be charges and what?
not. I find that very interesting, again, that he couldn't decide which was more important.
A few Zs or finishing the Taco Bell drive-through and then maybe passing out in one of the parking
spaces with taco on your face. You can eat some of the taco and then go to sleep. That seems like
a better move. Not trying to help him do things better, just saying. Another guy in Florida led police
on a high-speed chase after actually very, you know, kind of frighteningly striking an officer with a
stolen car. The officer is going to be okay. I had some injuries. But apparently that wasn't the
only part of this chase that was wild. The guy even like ran into basically the forest at one point
had cops chasing him. Tazers were involved. Other things happened. I wonder at what point
in the I'm running from the cops thing. Do you know it was a horrible decision? I would think that
most of us don't do this because we know from jump. We shouldn't do it. But I think when you
you're out of the vehicle as a dude, running in some sort of place you shouldn't be in anymore,
and there's tasers and a bunch of cops there, it's got a dawn on you. I probably shouldn't
run to begin with. I probably shouldn't try to get away in that stolen vehicle and done this other stuff.
I imagine that's the moment. Now, the only disappointment I have in this story is that unlike most
Florida stories, the guy didn't just strip naked at some point because that also seems to happen.
It doesn't help anybody. It's not something that makes anything better. It would make me much more
intimidated by a dude who's breaking the law if they're also naked. But nonetheless, it's probably
the best strategy that I'm glad he didn't try to employ himself that also failed. You also don't
get away from the cops based in some sort of we don't arrest you because of nudity rule.
But nonetheless, didn't happen this time. Usually happens in this type of Florida story.
Quick break, a lot more. Craig Collins-field-in on the Dana Show.
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All right.
Let's start here.
I thought part of the White House press secretary back and forth with the White House press
corps was really fascinating.
And the reason why is these questions should have been asked, I don't know, three years ago by a lot of these press members.
And they should have been angry that they weren't getting better answers three years ago.
But now everybody is pretending as though.
This is new and not something we've seen for a while,
and they're asking these questions finally,
and the White House is being caught in weird lie after weird lie.
There's like a two-minute version, or even a three-minute version,
of this back and forth with Corinne John Pierre,
the White House press secretary,
and CBS News, the correspondence, and other, you know,
it's not just Fox News for anyone that wants to get mad when they ask the tough questions.
This is all the legacy media people that have been ignoring these questions for way longer
than Fox has. Here we go. Here's a little bit of that back and forth.
Well, that he gets every year that we provide to all.
Okay. And that's a very basic direct question.
Wait, wait, wait. How dare you?
Eight times or at least once in regards to the president specifically.
Hold on a second.
All right. Now again, I want to pause it for a second. That is CBS News. That's their
press guy. She's going to call him Ed a whole bunch of times. And if you can't see it,
because obviously this is radio. That's who's.
that is. But nonetheless, he's just asking a very basic question. Actually, other reporters were
asking it, too. Did a neurologist that specializes in Parkinson's disease see the president eight
times over the last two years starting in about December of 2022? Is that something that happened?
Because the New York Times says it is, will you tell us whether or not it's something that happened?
Did the president see this doctor? Oh, by the way, as you'll hear in this back and forth,
that should be public information. That's not.
something that you should be able to keep secret behind the podium as the press secretary,
which apparently Corinne John Pierre is willfully unaware of or absolutely aware of and doesn't
care. Here we go.
Wait, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, wait a minute. How dare you? Please, a little respect here,
please. So, every year around the president's physical examination, he sees a neurologist.
That's three times, right?
So I am telling you that he has seen or a neurologist three times while he has been in this presidency.
That's what I'm saying.
I'm telling you that he has seen them three times.
Where?
That is what I'm sharing with you.
I love how desperate the questions get, by the way, because the where might help answer who it was,
because the New York Times said that this happened at Walter Reed and not actually at the White House.
So just tell us where, and maybe we'll be able to piece this together.
Right?
So every time he has a physical, he has had.
to see a neurologist. So that is answering that question. No, it is. It is. You're asking me,
I just, I also said to you, Ed, I also said to you, for security reasons, we cannot share names.
darn those security reasons that are definitely not real, that you can absolutely give information about something that's
supposed to be public record. That makes no sense.
You cannot share names. We have to, we have to. Others he would have met with. We cannot share names in
In regards to, if someone came here in regards to the president.
We cannot share names of specialists broadly.
From a dermatologist to a neurologist.
We cannot share names.
There are security reasons.
We have to.
We have to protect.
It's a visitor law.
I understand that.
I hear you.
It's right there for anyone to see.
I love it.
I love that the CBS guy is like, I looked it up right before I walked in here.
It's a public record.
I'm just asking you, did this doctor who came to this place see the president?
or somebody else.
And she's like, how dare you, sir?
This is completely inappropriate questions.
It just keeps going crazy.
I hear you.
I cannot from here confirm any of that because we have to keep their privacy.
I think they would appreciate that, too.
We have to give them.
We have to keep their privacy.
I hear you.
I have.
Guys, guys, guys, guys, hold on a second.
There's no reason to get back and go back and forth and be in this aggressive way.
around here about how information's been shared with the press board.
What do you miss about?
What do you miss about?
Everything he just asked about.
And then every time I come back and I answer the question that you guys asked.
I never answer the question incorrectly.
That is not true.
I was asked about them.
Yes, you don't answer questions.
You do answer questions incorrectly.
And most of the time, you're like, you got to ask somebody else.
I'm not privy to that information.
You got to go this direction.
You know, it's so funny about this?
The biggest reason why I think that so many Americans would actually claim so many left-leaning Americans that get their news from specific places would actually claim that this is brand new information to them, that the president's mental decline is something that they didn't know about until the debate, which is one of the only things that a whole lot of people usually watch before a presidential election, at least just the first one.
So Biden really only had to get the first one right.
He could have screwed up the second debate instead and gotten the same level of everything's fun.
he got after the State of the Union, where it seems like he was hopped up on a bunch of stuff
in order to sound somewhat better than he usually does. But nonetheless, and there were still
mistakes. I love that. I played, I remember, several mistakes from the State of the Union,
which have been ignored by most media. But I love that now all of these other places are starting
to embrace this idea. Here's NBC News. And they brought on a Parkinson specialist, Dr. Tom Pitts,
and it's hilarious to hear him say
toward the tail end of this clip
how easy it is to tell
that Biden is likely suffering
from many of the common symptoms
of Parkinson's disease.
Here we go.
You noticed anything that gives you a red flag
as a doctor?
Oh yeah,
I see him 20 times a day in clinic.
I mean, it's ironic because he has just
classic features of neurodegeneration.
I mean, word finding difficulties
and that's not, oh, I couldn't find the word.
That's from degeneration of the word retrieval area.
He's also overcome stuttering, though.
Could that be part of that, too?
No, this is not a palatal issue or a speech discrepancy.
I love that you do all the basic stuff.
You're like, well, but the stuttering thing, that probably makes you incapable of thinking, right?
Which is very different from a lemono dysfunction, actual word retrieval, where you pick a similar question or talk around the issue, plus the rigidity, monotone voice.
Wait, go back to that the rigidity.
What do you mean?
Oh, rigidity loss of arm swing, standing up lordatically.
You notice when he turned, it's kind of end block turning.
It's not a quick turn.
Yep.
So that's one of the hallmarks of Parkinsonism is rigidity and bradycannesia, slow movement.
And he has that hallmark, especially with the low voices that said was a cold hypophonia.
A small monotone voice like this over time is a hallmark of Parkinsonism.
I could have diagnosed him from across the mall.
He could have diagnosed him from across the mall in D.C.
I love that sentence because these are the things that make no sense.
And these are the things that should wake a whole lot more people up.
It's the same thing with the Hunter Biden laptop.
And I know that somebody on the left rolls their eyes and gets all mad when you say Hunter Biden laptop.
But my favorite was when they were saying they could not confirm the accuracy, the legitimacy of the laptop that Hunter left.
And then years later, not only can they confirm it, but the government uses it in their case against Hunter for his felony gun charge.
That's about as amazing as it gets.
there's no better way to demonstrate to those that that put their fingers in their ears and ignore everything, that media lies to you.
And it lies to you by taking advantage of you and how trusting or gullible or whatever it is that some of the people out there in the world are.
I know a whole lot of other people are very awake and aware of what's going on.
But nonetheless, these people who are asleep at the wheel, they just allow media to make excuses to say it's not what you think.
it's not what you think.
And then media hopes for just one example that backs them,
as opposed to 25 a day that totally throw out of, you know,
the ether,
throw out of any level of accuracy what they're saying is true.
And then as soon as that one example happens,
like, see, look at that.
That's what we mean.
Everything's fine.
How dare anybody question this at all?
You know, John Stewart did do a pretty long rant about how bad Joe Biden has gotten.
Of course, he crapped all over Trump.
Trump too because it's the daily show and it's John Stewart.
And to be fair to him, he's only been in a media again, at least at that gig for a few months.
And he has been challenging the narrative that Biden is fine mentally the entire time he's been on TV,
which not many people on that side or any people on that side of the aisle are doing.
And he's certainly still very left in his opinions.
But I did think two of these moments were interesting because even Stewart is pretending as though this is brand new information.
And it wasn't brand new information to Stewart three months ago.
So I don't know why people think it's so brand new or even he would say that about the debate being the real point of, huh, that's going on.
And here, he even proves it because he does a little bit and I'll play a little of the audio of where some of the biggest, the worst moments for Biden have been and how far back they've been.
I thought I would take a moment to explain where the concern about Biden's performance might be coming from and why these concerns.
may be seen as a more foundational issue.
You see, even before the debate,
there had been some troubling moments of disconnect
from the president.
There had been a ton of troubling moments of disconnect.
Here, he pulls out a little graph,
and he starts to mark moments
that he calls ha moments.
And again, he goes back to 2022
to the start of this,
but if you've been paying attention to conservative media,
a media that Corinne John Pierre called fake media,
or she called it, you know,
deep, cheap fakes, I think is what she called them actually, which was where the video was real,
but it was edited in a way to make it look worse for Biden than it is.
None of those seem to actually be true anymore for a vast majority of people.
But here we go.
This is a couple of the ha moments that John Stewart is willing to acknowledge.
For instance, in 2022, when we saw Biden give a shout out to Representative Jackie.
Representative Jackie, you here?
Where's Jackie?
I didn't think she was going to be here.
Unfortunately, Jackie was dead.
It's something that the president seemed to have known six weeks earlier when he released a condolence statement about her death.
That's a bad look.
And that's just one of the things that John Stewart is actually willing to say out loud into his cameras, into his microphone.
There are more.
Ha!
Ha!
Then there was the recounting of a recent conversation that the president had had with his counterpart, the president of France.
And Mitterrand from Germany, I mean from France looked at me and said, you know, why, how long are you back for it?
Unfortunately, Mitterrand is also dead.
for longer even than that first lady.
Yeah, quite a bit longer than that first lady.
And also something that demonstrates how Biden has no idea what time it is.
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And now, all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick 5.
I love when stories say that this guy is usually thought of as very nice.
Elton John is someone that a lot of people said.
It was a great meeting.
I enjoyed him.
He's, he's, you know, kind.
He's humble.
He's all that stuff.
One, a French shoe store owner, excuse me.
I didn't feel exactly the same way.
He said that Elton John came into his store.
Said he had to go to the bathroom.
The guy was like, I'm sorry, but I've got no restroom for you.
So Elton John decided to, this is a real thing,
according to this guy, at least,
pee in a water bottle in the middle of the store.
You didn't even, like, find an area to go in.
You're like, well, you can't go anywhere.
so I guess I'll go here.
And then you just, you went.
And then the bodyguard took the water bottle from him.
That's got to be a terrible job.
And then went about the rest of his life.
I don't know if he bought shoes or not.
None of that is updated here.
That's a weird story.
That's an interesting move.
Other things out there, as far as quick five topics go,
United Airlines lost a wheel on takeoff of one of their flights recently.
Yep, it was a Boeing airplane, a 757-200,
that just a wheel fell off.
Like, ah, we probably need that.
Ah, we'll be fine.
They did land okay.
They land safely, which is impressive for the pilots.
But I love the fact that on the heels of the story about how Boeing took a giant plea deal to not be tried for any sort of felony issues.
And then they have wheels continuing to fall off a plane.
That's still a thing out there in the world.
Other stuff, the rock paper scissor challenge is the latest viral social media, specifically TikTok trend.
That is incredibly dumb.
No, you're not just playing.
playing rock paper scissors.
Apparently, you stand next to a whole bunch of fast food of some kind that you just bought
somewhere.
Maybe they even sponsor the video.
You play a rock paper scissors with a friend, and whoever loses has to run a lap back and forth
from whatever room you're in from the wall back to the food.
And the person who wins gets to stuff their face with as much food as they can in as short
as possible of an amount of time.
and the viral video trend actually usually ends with one person eating all of the food,
way too much food after just one game of rock, paper, scissors.
Don't do this is what they're saying.
A whole bunch of people are throwing up and doing other things because of it.
Not smart is another thing that I'll just say about this move,
but it's out there and it's real and it's dumb.
Also, another quick story, apparently according to a brand new study out of Ohio State,
if your boss is a huge jerk, but really good at their job, you're fine with that.
You accept it.
You're happy with it.
I'm sure there's political connections that people can make to this story.
What I found interesting about this is I don't know when bosses were trying to be buddies and friends with people.
I don't think you can be a good boss if everybody likes you because that means that you're never telling them to do stuff that makes them mad.
And a whole lot of people need to be told a lot of times to do things.
You wouldn't have quiet quitting in office places where people just stop doing their work but don't actually leave their job if you had bosses that are like, hey, do work or you're fired, which is something that should exist and still I think does exist some places.
But I love this.
That essentially people are like, yeah, I like my boss.
If they're good at their job, they yell at me, that's fine, as long as they're not terrible.
It's basically the lowest common denominator version of my boss is as good as they should be at something.
I don't know why this is rare or weird or any of that.
But anyway, that's another story out there, another study that some people were surprised by.
I thought this was interesting.
This might feel like it's off the beaten path a little bit.
The mayor of Chicago, Brandon Johnson, blamed Richard Nixon for the violence that exists right now in Chicago.
It's real.
I'll play the audio for you so you understand that I'm not just making that up.
That's the strangest thing.
I know that Biden is unaware of what year it is.
know if Brandon Johnson has to be added to the list of people who are unaware of what year it is,
but this is a bad shot. This is a bad attempt. And there's a motion that seems to be fakingly
pouring out of the mayor as he talks about this. If you don't know, Mayor Brandon Johnson is a black
man. He's going to talk about violence in the black community. I have some thoughts on that too,
and I'm a white guy. And I'm not going to be worried about the fact that guess what? I'm going to
tell you my thoughts are. But first, here's the mayor of Chicago. So we cut off the pipeline of
boys between the ages of 10 and 19 being either victims or the perpetrators.
So, yeah, it is personal.
Black death has been unfortunately accepted in this country for a very long time.
All right.
I want to pause it right there.
There's something that I find fascinating about that conversation.
Usually it's couched in some sort of version of, well, police and we've got to change policing and this and that and whatever it might be.
But the truth is, and this is coming from someone who lived in Chicago for over 10 years of my life.
I still live just near the city of Chicago currently, if you need that information too.
It's usually black individuals, and unfortunately over the last few years, young people that are hurting other black individuals.
That's the black death that Mayor Brandon Johnson is referring to by and large.
It is a crime within a community on the community in which it is happening.
happening. So there's a problem with the narrative that say white people or say, you know,
political structures don't care about this violence or they accept it as as something that's a
byproduct of quote unquote racism, which feels like that's baked in out of some of these positions
that Brandon Johnson or anyone else is going to take. But the simple truth, the reality,
and this is needed to be talked about in order to solve a problem, like any issue,
that exists in the world, like the fact that Joe Biden's a terrible candidate and people denied
the fact that he was a terrible candidate for a long time and now actually talking about that
might help the Democratic Party have a better candidate who probably would also lose to Trump.
But anyway, what I think is so interesting is it's often ignored that this issue happening
within a community against its own community is demonstrative of something very different than
racism. It's demonstrative of something that is being taught within a community,
Whatever that might be, it might be that you don't have the opportunity to succeed.
And because of that, you wind up turning to, you know, gang violence because you've given up.
And it's not everybody, of course.
The vast minority or excuse me, majority of people in any community don't enact in horrific violence.
It's a very small, it's handfuls of people in every state that are the suspect of a majority of crimes.
You can find that a bunch of places, by the way.
Also not baked in any kind of racism for anyone that wants to scream and yell about me.
I think the New York Times and others have reported on this.
I think Indianapolis was one of the places they used as an example where they say it's like two dozen individuals that they feel are more likely than not the perpetrators of a vast majority of violent crime within bigger cities.
And that's an estimate, but it is true.
And a police officer who's being honest with you would tell you that or a police chief.
for a police captain who's not worried about being attacked by politics.
So then what's the real solution to the problem?
The solution to the problem is using a community to reach the young people, to reach the
individuals who are throwing their lives away by participating in violence that is also
harming the lives and upending families of people that are also in that community.
That's something that matters.
That's something that deserves to be talked about.
And when I did do radio and other things in places like Chicago, I often would talk to community leaders, whether that's priests and religious leaders in communities or other individuals.
Sometimes individuals who say they had a checkered past themselves and had found a way out of that past that said that they're the best conduit to reach a young person that thinks that their only avenue in life is violence.
because those individuals can say that that's not true
and they can help you become a person that doesn't do that.
That is the truth of this.
It's not Richard Nixon.
But here, I'll finish the Brandon Johnson clips.
You can hear him say it.
Years ago to get at the root causes
and people mocked President Johnson.
And we ended up with Richard Nixon.
I'm going to work hard every day to transform this city.
That's what it takes to build a better, stronger,
safe of Chicago and do everybody step up.
You have to convince people that think that it's the right thing to do to hurt other people to not do that.
That's what you have to do.
It's that simple and that challenging.
Thanks for tuning in to today's edition of Dana Lash's Absurd Truth Podcast.
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