The Dana Show with Dana Loesch - Absurd Truth: VEEP
Episode Date: October 2, 2024Dana recaps the best and worst moments from the Vice Presidential Debate and fact-checks claims from Tim Walz, J.D. Vance and the moderators. Meanwhile, heroic Americans are getting arrested for tryin...g to rescue people with their own helicopters after Hurricane Helene.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. Cozy Earthhttps://cozyearth.com/danaGet the ultimate in comfort at up to 40% off with code DANA. Hillsdalehttps://danaforhillsdale.comClaim your free pocket Constitution today at DanaForHillsdale.comKelTechttps://KelTecWeapons.comInnovation. Performance. Keltec. Learn more at KelTecWeapons.com today.Patriot Mobilehttps://patriotmobile.com/danaGet a free month of service with code Dana.ReadyWise https://readywise.comUse promo code Dana20 to save 20% on any regularly priced item.Relief Factorhttps://relieffactor.comDon’t mask pain, fight it naturally with Relief Factor. Visit online or call 1-800-4-RELIEF today!Tax Network USAhttps://TNUSA.com/DANADon’t let the IRS control your life—empower yourself with Tax Network USA. Visit TNUSA.com/DANA
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Dana Lashes
Absurd Truth podcast,
sponsored by Keltec.
It's his life mission to make bad decisions.
It's time for Florida man.
Yeah, so, um, got a couple things here.
This, I, I, I, I, this is an older story.
Hold up and do this one.
So a guy's son was,
gets caught
trespassing, right?
Why is it always at a Walmart?
I'm not kidding you.
Like every time I've got like a trespass story,
it's always at Walmart.
So Florida man gets arrested
because his son was trespassing
at a Walmart and when the dad
showed up, Flager County,
he attacked the deputies
who contacted him to get his kid.
So Flager County Sheriff's Office
responded to multiple reports of juveniles
causing disturbances and a
Walmart. They were all under 16. They were on bikes at the store, yelling, cursing, setting off car alarms.
And deputies found the group, recognized the teens, contacted their parents. And one of the parents,
this explains why the kid was doing what he was doing. Thirty-four-year-old Jonah Harrington from Palm Coast arrived in immediately confronted law enforcement.
He gets out, runs up to the deputy and just shoves, shoves him. It's all on body cam footage.
And dude, don't you know that he's, if you had to guess, like, was he wearing his hat with a
straight bill and did you have like a goofy shirt on and, you know, look like he got a D-Back?
starter kit. The answer is yes. Yes, he did. Two other deputies tried to
detain him, and Harrington punched one officer, resisted the efforts of another deputy
to secure him in handcuffs. So then he tried to flee. He was apprehended after a struggle.
And the sheriff said the apple doesn't fall from the tree. You know, we asked these parents
to come pick up their kids because they were causing trouble, but this parent chose to attack
our deputies instead. So now you see, right? He's right. It does not fall far from the tree.
Can you imagine? God help my child, if the
police called me and they were like ma'am you have to come get your child i would turn into granny boots
granny boots would get real quiet and she'd point to a willow tree that she had in her front year you know
we killed this tree she had 23 grandkids we killed this damn tree we had to go cut a branch off it with a pair
utility scissors she would strip the leaves off with her hand and fold it and whip us with it i i never
got a whooping because i was an angel and i was yep and i was granny boots as favorite so but all my
other cousins got beat. But that's like the scariest thing ever. I would show up with like a whole
thatch of them things. Be like, you tell me where my kid is, officer. I will handle this situation.
I'm just saying, golly, runs up and he's on and you know these places. It's like you can see their
body cam, their body cameras. Why would you do that? This debate last night, good and bad.
The worst moment was got to give that, got to give that ribbon to Tim Walz, who just started falling all over
himself when he was asked, well, why did you lie about China? I've never heard anyone take so long to say that
they didn't lie. Listen to this. Governor, just to follow up on that, the question was, can you explain
the discrepancy? All I said on this was, is I got there that summer and misspoke on this. So I will just,
that's what I've said. So I was in Hong Kong and China during the democracy protest, went in. And from that,
I learned a lot of what needed to be in governance.
Hmm.
I mean, you could have just said that you lied.
I mean, they asked him and he's like, well, it was the best of times.
It was the worst.
Just do.
Just say that you lied.
Well, I misspoke.
You lied.
And then, you know, he told on himself because he was like, you know, and I, how did he put it?
I quoted it at the time.
He had said at one point, he was like, yeah, I, you know, I to, you know, sometimes get into,
I slip into the rhetoric.
Well, you just admitted that you lied then at that point.
I mean, that's, what in the world is your damage, dude?
You just admitted that you lied.
That's all I got to do.
All I got to say.
But that was a really, that was awkward.
That was a very awkward moment for him.
And there were a lot of very awkward moments.
Yeah, he's, he didn't, he doesn't, he didn't have a lot of room last night except to play
the, yoke, y' y'c, I'm a knucklehead stick.
But then he was like, well, I get caught up in the rhetoric.
Okay, you just lied. You lied. And then he tried to cite scripture, which, as you know, if you're familiar with the merchant of Venice, even the devil can quote scripture. But there you go. He's, I don't think that he, he didn't get angry. And I was actually kind of anticipating for, I was waiting for him to do so. Because from what I know, he's got a short temper. And he just seems like a jack wagon. He's one of those dudes, right? He just seems like that. But he didn't take the bait. And he was very disciplined in that regard. And he was very disciplined in that regard.
there was J.D. Vance and J.D. Vance stayed on point. Now I'm going to say something that's
unpopular. His answer on guns was horrible. Yes, Walsh was. Walsh's answer on guns was bad. But I was an
impressed with J.D. Vance's either. I don't think he's a gun control guy. He's not a gun guy,
though. That's evident. And would I say that he's not a gun guy? I mean, he's not a hunter. He
probably doesn't shoot regularly. I don't demand that you be a hunter or that you go out and
shoot regularly in order for me to like you as a candidate. But I do
demand that you agree with me on these issues relating to our enumerated rights. And I do agree,
I do demand that you don't use the language of the left. So here was the question that was asked.
And we'll get into all the other stuff. But this is where I'm going to be, I'm going to call balls and
strikes on this stuff. And this was the first time Vance was really tested like this. I think on this
issue. So this was, what was the? It was like 11,400 million 83 audio sound bite.
The one where Nora is asking the question, Nora O'Donnell.
And first off, the question's wrong.
Audio Soundbite 19.
Go ahead and kick this one.
19,000, million, 11D, 40,000.
That one.
Turn now to America's gun violence epidemic.
The leading cause of death for children and teens in America is by firearm.
Okay, that's wrong.
And right out of the gate, when that question came in,
that should have immediately been established and it wasn't. Why is that wrong? Here's why that
question is a presupposition based on fraudulent, not even evidence, just based on lies.
First off, it is not the leading cause of death. The only reason, the only way that they can make it the
leading cause of death is, and this is what the CDC did, they redefined the age of a quote-unquote
child to go all the way up till 20. So 18 to 20-year-olds are now factored in.
into that average. When you remove that age demographic, the 18 to 20 year olds, guess what?
That falls down behind car accidents and drownings. Now, let's go back to that subset. I've written
about this. It's in one of my books. There's a lot of evidence on this. So I'm not making anything
up that's not publicly available on the internet according to the CDC and the DOJ and the FBI's own
criminal statistics. This subset, this age subset, the 18 to 20 year old, why does it inflate that
number so much because it's gang and drug violence. And it completely correlates when you look
at the numbers given by the CDC for 18 and younger, and then you add in the FBI criminal
statistics, FBI, the uniform crime reports, when you add in the publicly available crime data
it tracks. The CDC inflates that number by including 18 to 20 year olds and defy,
finding them as children. That is why they then can say, oh, well, look, it's the leading cause
of death for children, because they redefined it. Again, when you remove that subset, then 18 and
under, it falls behind the child, the leading cause of death falls behind automobiles and drownings.
Now, suicides are also factored in there. That is a mental health issue. In fact, suicides
comprised one third of that statistic for that subset.
Now that's a whole other conversation.
But the reason it is inflated is to fearmonger and scare people into thinking that their
children could be statistics.
When these incidents, although one is too many, are incredibly rare and they're always
preventable.
But we don't talk about the preventable aspects of it, which is one of the things that Vance
did touch on.
What I didn't like that Vance did, and I was not a fan of his language on this,
is he borrowed the language of the left. He used the language of the left in his response on firearms.
He said the phrase, gun violence epidemic. And he and Walsh were very nice to each other on this. And he also used the phrase illegal guns.
Here's why I have a major problem with this. Again, I don't demand that you be as hardcore about 2A as I am for my support, but you do need to believe that my right, my enumerated right should not be infringed upon.
language like gun violence epidemic, language like illegal guns, those are words of the left.
You cannot win a debate on this issue.
When you are already validating your opponent's points because you're incorporating their rhetoric into your argument.
This is rhetoric 101.
For instance, there's no such thing as quote unquote illegal guns.
a gun isn't an inanimate object. There is criminal possession, but there isn't an illegal gun.
By saying the phrase, illegal gun instead of criminal possession, you are ascribing a moral aesthetic to an inanimate object, which is exactly what gun controllers want to do.
Because that continues to validate the anti-gun language, which dictates that inanimate objects somehow possess the ability to,
influence the carrier of said object towards criminal behavior.
A gun itself is not illegal.
It cannot be so.
The legality or illegality is determined by the willful way in which a person chooses to use or acquire it per law.
And there's no gun violence epidemic.
There is, and this is where Vance left a ton of meat on the bum.
I don't know how you don't get into Tim Walse's.
behavior during Minnesota, the riots.
Vance left that meat on the bone.
There is, and this is where he could have done it, there isn't a gun violence epidemic.
There is an epidemic of lawlessness that is brought on by the sort of restorative justice
that's supported by Tim Walls and Kamala Harris.
Look at the riots in Minnesota.
How many of those people were not even arrested, not even detained?
Kamala Harris was promoting their bail fund, the bail fund of people who burned down in
communities, historically black communities, I might add. You know, the communities that Gwen Wall says
she enjoyed smelling burning, and that's why she left her windows open. He left a lot of meat
on the bone there. And that was very disappointing. I expect Wals to be anti-gun, but I don't
expect my Republican candidate to validate their language by speaking recklessly on it.
Because we are in, we're, I mean, it's a match where you cannot give any kind of ground. And words do
matter, folks. Because when it comes to this sort of thing, when it comes to gun law, the words you
use invoke different aspects of the law. And with it, different penalties and consequences.
And with that, different abridgments of your rights. So your damn right language is important.
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Tell them that Dana sent you for the love of all things holy.
And now, all of the news you would probably miss.
It's time for Dana's Quick Five.
So I thought this was funny because they are saying now that Gen X is the most stressed generation alive, but they're also the best at handling it.
And we're also called the coolest generation.
Just got to say, Gen X, people who are born between 65 and 79, I'm there.
I'm there.
So stop gatekeeping.
I barely got in, but I'm there.
Stop it.
It's official.
I just cited this very official news article, Kane.
It's America's goofy middle children sandwich between the boomers and millennials.
And Gen X is all individualistic, nonconformist.
I mean, you know, we did punk zines and tech startups so everybody can step off.
It's a loof cool, right?
But they're also really self.
We're the latchkey kids.
According to one marketing study, Gen X went through its all-important formative years
is one of the least parented, least nurtured generations in U.S. history.
It was the first generation that experienced both parents working outside the home.
So we had to be self-sufficient for survival.
That's why we can handle stress.
And in Gen X fashion, we don't like to let people see that we are stressed.
That's a huge study, and they're totally correct.
This is weird.
A long lost seafloor discovered beneath the Pacific Ocean could rewrite Earth's history.
Are there aliens?
Scientists have mapped it.
They found that it was unusually thicker and cooler than the surrounding areas, which would signal aliens.
The ancient sea floor challenges existing theories about Earth's interior structures.
Is that where King Kong was down there?
And anyway, it's the NASCA plate and the East Pacific Rise.
So if that's, you know, your jam, it's kind of interesting.
Let's see.
Oh, I don't care about this chick who left the Washington Post.
She's literally nobody.
Green Day was banned from Las Vegas radio stations because Billy Joe Armstrong is a D-Bag.
He called the city a poo hole.
He didn't say it like that, but he did.
And he got mad.
And I just don't know why.
I feel like he's got an arrested development because he's like 70,000 years old.
And he dresses like a 20-year-old in 2003.
And it's just the height of cringe.
It's the height of cringe.
I want to switch gears here.
And I want to touch on this very interesting thing that I've been seen with regard to the,
the helicopters and the way that they have been, like the privately owned choppers and how they've been responding to a lot of this,
there was a very interesting piece that I was reading about the U.S. helicopter community.
I love that we have a helicopter community. God bless America.
I've never, I've flown in a chopper.
I've never flown a chopper per se.
Kind of now I'm interested in it.
but it talks about like for instance in north carolina they have all of these privately owned
choppers that are out there doing these rescue efforts and it's amazing to see some of this stuff
and they've i i i mean the photos and the video air their airlifting supplies there it's like
the cajan navy but like in the air cajian air right cajian air that's an air wouldn't you fly
that airline i would totally fly that airline
Instead of peanuts, they give out gumbo or something?
Dude, here's your cup of gumbo.
Now, we ain't giving you no peanuts up in here.
You get a cup of gumbo.
Oh, my gosh.
Cajun Navy, come on.
You all got to make that happen.
Cajun Air.
I would demand to fly Cajun Air everywhere.
Oh, there's your slogan, Cajun Air Air.
There it is, right there.
So they have been going in and around trying to help all these people.
And I know that there's also this.
People were asking about Fort Bratt,
because there's a lot of helicopters at Fort Bragg,
and people were asking, well, why are they not getting,
why are they not getting involved,
where are they not getting, you know,
power and get out there, get supplies in?
Because a lot of the people have been saying,
well, the government aid is nowhere to be found.
And they've got video of all of these helicopters
that are privately owned volunteering their time and their fuel,
and they're running supplies because the roads are impassable.
They're running supplies.
They're rescuing people.
They're dropping stuff up in the hills.
I mean, it is just wild.
And there was one guy who told, who was told by the fire chief that if he went back and he's a guy who owns a chopper, if he went back, they would arrest him.
He had to leave this dude on the mountain.
Why?
Okay, I'm real confused about this.
Why are people, why are some of these, it seems like some of these private choppers, why are some of them being deterred from doing this?
Is there, I mean, you're in a.
It's a natural disaster.
It's an emergency zone.
And people have been, you can see how people have been following like flight tracker and all this other stuff.
And they can see how many government assets like helicopters, government helicopters are operating with rescues.
And they're able to filter out civilian and passenger aircraft.
And people are wondering, it seems like there's more privately owned than there is government owned.
Here's an interview with this guy who was saying that he was told he basically had to stop making these rescue efforts and dropping supplies.
Listen to this.
This is wild.
Why?
Started helping with coordination.
He gave me radio frequencies to coordinate with them on, set up a landing area for me to come back with the other victim.
And in the middle of the whole conversation and then blocking the road off, I was greeted by the, at that time, I didn't know.
Lake Lure Fire Chief or Assistant Chief maybe, and he shut down the whole operation.
So at that point, there was, I felt like the conversation wasn't going any further.
And again, he asked me to leave, and I said, hey, I have no problem getting out of your area.
If that's what you want us to do, we'll leave, no issue.
At that point, I asked him, you know, what was the reason I had to leave them there?
And he said, again, you're interfering with my operation.
I just need you to get out of the area.
I said, sir, I don't know where you were trained at, but I know how my training you.
and I'm not going to leave personnel behind.
I'm going back to get my co-pilot.
He said, if you turn around and go back up the mountain,
you're going to be arrested.
So I'll say this.
I get it if, you know, you are, you know, the firefighter EMT,
and you've got a rescue plan and resources in place,
and you don't want anyone interfering with that.
But that's the question, isn't it?
Because the assertion is that there wasn't a plan,
nor were there resources in place, right?
That's the whole thing, right?
So, and this is just one, apparently, one example, because emergency responders are so overstretched in these areas. It's insane. And I think that you would take that into account and would welcome or try to incorporate as a part of your plan, people who are able to help out, who have the ability to get,
to these areas that are impassable
due to landslides and busted up roads and all this stuff.
And I get that, you know,
you want to secure an area and you're trying to do everything.
But again, a lot of these people are,
a lot of these first responders are totally overstretched.
I understand you don't want every time Dick and Harry
coming up and getting involved and all that,
but you need people with choppers
because apparently there are not enough.
And I think it's,
It's important, especially if part of your plan is making sure that you're rescuing people off the mountain and you don't have the fully available resources to do so.
Why would you have people wait up on the mountains being stranded for days when you could have like privately owned choppers, people and assist those people and organize them and use their resources, use them as assets and have them rescue people so that you're not stretched so thin?
I feel like there's a better way to do this.
and the crazy thing is
is that if we had a better
I think
I think some of these
if we had a better response
in some of these areas
I think that this conversation
would be
it would be unnecessary
but that's
I mean the devastation
I mean I oh my gosh
they still don't even really have estimates
as to how much
and what all is going to be required
I mean it's just so they're still just trying
to ascertain the level of damage
and and
save people
And I also think that the other issue with this is there's not, do you feel like there's not enough attention on this from national press?
Like they talked about it and now I just feel like it's sort of fallen by the wayside.
Am I being too sensitive with that?
No, you're not.
I believe that this media has been consistently running cover for the left and I think this is another example.
But do you think that they're not reporting on this as much because it's southeastern states that are mostly affected?
Again, I don't want to sound like I'm trying to cause a problem unnecessarily, but I do have to wonder why the coverage is so completely lopsided.
Well, I remember, and I put this story in your prep last night, that back in Hurricane Katrina, they couldn't immediately get to the area, right?
And so when there was a lag in FEMA help and all of that, people were going.
all over the media and saying how George Bush hated black people and all of this stuff and made it a race issue and the whole nine.
So if those rules applied to what we do today in how we respond in the media on this, then yes, it would look like based on the lack of FEMA and obviously the lack of interest that both Kamala and Joe Biden had in this whole tragedy, apparently they hate white people and they hate people that vote mostly for Trump.
I mean, apparently, Helene is already one of the deadliest, costly storms to hit the United States.
It dumped 40 trillion gallons of rain on the southeastern states.
40 trillions.
40 trillion gallons.
That's enough to fill Dallas Cowboys Stadium 51,000 times or Lake Tahoe just once.
That's how much.
Now, the reason I bring this up is because, and Steve made a good point, Hurricane Cindy got so much.
coverage. Not that it didn't, you know, deserve to get a lot of coverage. But you have Katrina,
Harvey, Ian, Andrew, and Sandy was listed at number four. But Helene is right now in the top 10.
It is a, it's a, it's a bad hurricane. But, and the devastation seems like it's in multiple states and not
just really concentrated on a couple. But there does seem to be like there's lopsided coverage because
the media is mostly centralized in the northeast.
And anything that happens to the media just takes over, you know, the whole day.
My gosh, you get a snowstorm and it's just, you know, wall-to-wall coverage.
And you get major flooding like in Tennessee and there's like barely a blip.
And now the recovery efforts for Hurricane Helene are just starting to slip past and they're rolling off what they call above the folds.
So when you get your newspaper and it's folded in half, all the most important stuff is above the fold.
so that before you even fold it, unfold it to be the full broadsheet, half broadsheet,
then all the most important stuff was there.
So above the fold is what they refer to.
That's like the order of importance.
It's already fallen below the fold.
Now it's going on page 1A2A.
So this is, it's, I don't know.
I'm not trying to be overly sensitive, but it feels like, you know, considering some of the devastation,
like in North Carolina, they got hit so bad and the landslides are,
horrific.
I'm, I'm one, and they're still trying to find people.
There's still tons of people unaccounted.
159 fatalities so far with ABC had that 20 hours ago.
It's probably more now.
Florida peanut farmers say this is worse than Adalia.
They say that they're dealing with devastating losses with peanut crop.
So it's, and they think that the, that Helene is going to join the five most damaging.
It's technically in the top 10, but it's being estimated that's,
going to join the five most damaging hurricanes of all time.
Thanks for tuning in to today's edition of Dana Lash's Absurd Truth Podcast.
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