The Dana Show with Dana Loesch - Friday May 17 - Full Show
Episode Date: May 17, 2024Biden gives a speech in front of the NAACP to hemorrhage the Black vote. A screaming match occurs in a committee hearing between AOC, Marjorie Taylor-Greene and Jasmine Crockett. Does Hunter Biden goi...ng to trial affect his dad? Dr. Jay Bhattacharya joins us to discuss the WHO urging the US to commit to a new global treaty to prevent and manage future pandemics. The backlash of Harrison Butker’s commencement address continues. World No. 1 golfer Scottie Scheffler was detained by police in handcuffs after a misunderstanding with traffic flow in front of Valhalla at the PGA Championship. Missouri AG Andrew Bailey joins us to explain how he is demanding accountability after Kansas City doxxed Chiefs Kicker Harrison Butker over his faith.Please visit our great sponsors:Ammo Squaredhttps://ammosquared.comEnsure you are prepared for whatever comes your way with ammosquared.comBlack Rifle Coffeehttps://blackriflecoffee.com/danaUse code DANA to save 20% on your next order. Goldcohttps://danalikesgold.comGet your free Gold Kit from GoldCo today.Hillsdale Collegehttps://danaforhillsdale.comVisit today to hear a Constitution Minute and sign up for Hillsdales FREE Imprimis publication.KelTechttps://KelTecWeapons.comSign up for the KelTec Insider and be the first to know the latest KelTec news.Lumenhttps://lumen.meUse code DANASHOW to get $100 off your Lumen.Patriot Mobilehttps://patriotmobile.com/danaGet free activation with code Dana.ReadyWise https://readywise.comUse promo code Dana20 to save 20% on any regularly priced item.The Wellness Companyhttps://twc.health/danaGet 15% off with promo code DANA.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
My name's Joe Biden, and I'm a lifetime member of the NWACP.
But I said that little earlier, the president, he said, oh, your dues paid up. I got a check.
Oh, my Lord. So many, so many people here today, you changed the world.
70 years ago, you changed, I say the world, that's not hyperbole. I'm not exaggerating.
No, it changed the United States. It changed our role in the world.
in a fundamental way.
I know there's a lot more to do.
President Johnson, that introduction.
Thank you for your leadership.
But most importantly, for the NAACP.
It's an honor to be with all of you here
at the National Museum of African American History and Culture.
Remember we're trying to get this built for years?
It's pretty neat, isn't it?
By the way, I want to thank the staff who runs this place
to do an incredible job.
Together, the NACP and this museum are monuments
of the power of black history.
And black history is American history.
It's American.
It's a really important thing to continue to, we have a whole group of people out there trying to rewrite history.
Trying to erase history.
It's a tribute to heroes known and unknown who pursued our nation's North Star.
We're unique among all nations of the world.
And I mean that.
Every other nation is based on ethnicity, based on religion and other things.
but we're the only one based on an idea.
We hold these truths to be self-evident.
All men are created equal,
endowed by their creator with certain and able rights
and should be treated equally their whole lives throughout their lives.
We've never fully lived up to that idea to state the obvious,
but we've never walked away from either
because of so many of you in this room and so many more.
70 years ago,
when the Supreme Court ruled in Brown v. the Board of Education,
that racial segregation in public schools is unconstitutional,
a prayer was answered and a long struggle for freedom.
Yesterday, I welcomed the family of plaintiffs
of that landmark case to the White House, to the Oval Office, their office.
Once upon a time, they were excluded from certain classrooms.
But 70 years later, they're inside the most important rooms of all,
the Oval Office, where they belong.
There was a living reminder that once upon a time
wasn't that long ago.
And all the progress we've made is still have more to do, and there's still groups are trying to erase it.
You know, one of the cases that led to the landmark decision was in my home state of Delaware.
Black mother from Hokas and Delaware joined by parents in any of their students in Claymont,
town I moved to when we worked out in Scrant, Pennsylvania, and we moved back in third grade,
moved here to Delaware in third grade.
all in Claimant. They just wanted a simple proposition. They want the kids to be able to attend school and be treated with dignity and respect.
They asked the man who I looked up to and really admired and helped me out as a young public defender, Lewis L. Redding.
He was the first man, the first black man ever admitted.
So that's the president of the United States giving his address. He's trying to get the black vote. That's what it is. I mean, that's ultimately what it's all coming down to.
We were talking a little bit about this yesterday with some of the things that he's been trying to do.
Welcome to the program.
Dana, last year with you, got a little bit of a tech issue with in-ear monitors.
So we're going to deal with that as we get going.
But we are going to, as we roll through the show, we got the hits for you.
We got a lot of stuff to get addressed as we roll into this weekend this Friday.
And we're going to follow everything from the latest of 2024.
And, you know, this is Biden trying to, he's trying to campaign.
I guess. This is his version of campaigning.
So he's, but it's all like race-based.
Everything is race-based. It's all race.
It's all, you know, everything that's everything that he's doing.
He's not talking about inflation.
He's not talking about job loss.
He's not talking about taxation.
He's not talking about any of these things.
What he's actually, I mean, he's not talking about any of that stuff.
he's talking about the issue of race and how everybody is bigoted and et cetera, et cetera.
And we've, you know, we're going to be able to remedy all of this through government policy,
through more government programs.
And that's what's kind of been like the nonstop thing in this, you know, from the,
that's what has been his push.
So that's, I don't know how well that's going to go over because they've been hemorrhaging,
as we've talked about numerous times.
They've been hemorrhaging Democrats.
and not just Biden either.
I mean, this is something that's a down-ticket thing.
They have been hemorrhaging black votes, Hispanic votes,
in numerous surveys, I mean, for what, months now.
And I just don't think that something like this is going to be the thing that does it.
I don't think that something like this is going to, you know,
just giving speeches like this is going to be the thing that does it.
That's going to be the thing that gets people over the line.
Like, yeah, it's okay that our dollars don't stretch as far as they used to.
You know, yeah, it's all right.
you know, the stuff that, you know, we, we can't afford basic things and that it's going to get even
more unaffordable because with the tax, the taxation scheme that they're talking about implementing.
Yeah, I mean, it's not, that's all right.
Go ahead and talk to us about, what was it?
Yesterday it was pot.
And then he was talking about menthols.
And then he was trying to do like a bailout for the, or like a little hat tip to the rust belt.
Oh, yeah, we're going to pause some of these, you know, ethanol things.
We're going to pause some of the, oh, we're going to have tariffs.
We're going to reinstate the Trump tariffs.
as it pertains to China, even though, like the He undid them right when he got into office.
But, you know, I digress.
I just, all of this stuff seems like it's too little, too late.
And whether or not that's going to be, because we're still, yes, we're still like five months out.
But whether or not that's going to be something that helps the deficit and helps stop the hemorrhage,
I just don't think that's going to work this time.
previously it was able to work with them.
Democrats were able to do that.
And it's worth, but I don't think it's working anymore.
I mean, you got this, like audio sound bite, like for instance, I want to get in because
they say that it sounds like every, when he goes out there and when Kamala Harris goes
out there, it's all a grab bag.
It's all a gimmee grab bag, right?
I want you to listen to this.
This is audio soundbite 8.
So Harris, when she was speaking, she was talking about grants.
Remember, we went through something like this with Too Big to Fail.
We went through something like this with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
And you guys remember that when you had banks that were being forced to lower their criteria
and they were being forced into lowering their criteria for loan acceptance and issue loans to ultimately
people that would not have previously qualified for them.
Is this kind of going back to this?
Audio somebody, listen to this.
We have now proposed.
that if you are the child of parents who,
or you were raised in a family where the folks who raised you were not homeowners,
when you want to go buy a home,
you will be entitled to a $25,000 grant toward down payment for a home.
Hmm. You know where that's coming from? That's coming from the taxpayer.
That's the tax. I mean, where else does that come from?
Where else does that come from?
it's a taxpayer that's it that's it i mean 25 000 down payment from where where does that where is that
money where is that money coming from is again i just i get some i get way i get too big to fail flashbacks
here but they're what they're doing is they want to they they they want to buy everybody off this is
about buying people off is what it is and instead of you know why don't you just come up with a good
policy why don't you just come up with good economic policy why don't you just what don't you just
get government out of
get government out of it all.
Good heavens.
So we got this.
We got a bunch of stuff to hit today.
This is just one of the start
because this is what you can come to expect
from the, you know, their campaign.
This is, you're going to hear about freebies.
It's hard to run against Santa.
It is.
But hopefully people do the math.
Well, wait, am I being,
we have some of the dumbest people in the world.
Biden did some math this morning.
You want to hear some of Biden's math?
I want to hear Biden math.
I love Biden math. Go ahead. Hit me.
There has $400 million billion over the next 10 years.
400 million billion dollars. It sounds like a lot of money.
It almost sounds like a carpillion dollars.
It's close to it's just under a caprillion.
Yeah, it's a lot. It's a lot. That's a lot of dollars.
He doesn't know math and he doesn't know money and he can't earn money.
If you get the newsletter that I send out, did you guys see this headline?
Joe Biden's carrying debt of up to $800, $815,000, according to financial records.
apparently they also failed to net royalties from three of their book titles.
That's a huge thing, by the way, to not make money on the books that you sell.
I mean, good grief.
I get royalty checks.
That's kind of, and I'm not the president of the United States.
Nobody's buying their books.
Most of the debt is on their Delaware house and they have an equity loan on that home.
And it said their debt consists of a short-term loan of about 15,000.
thousand dollars. They have a loan against a mutual fund for 50. They have, you know, some assets,
etc. But apparently they did not make, they came out with how many books and they haven't made
any money off of them because nobody's buying their books. They can't, they can't, they can't sell.
Nobody wants to buy them. And I, because they got a pretty big advance for these books, didn't they?
I mean, you have three books and you can't.
make royalties off of them?
So they probably didn't go into like secondary printing and all of that either, I would imagine.
I, uh, wow, okay.
That's, they're just, they're, because they don't know money.
They don't know how to make money.
They don't know how to do any of those stuff.
So they're carrying, they've got debt.
They've got debt.
And, uh, I think this is one of the reasons why you see them wanting to merge out the,
whether it's the vice presidency office, the office of the vice president, whether it's the
White House, you know, really, really merging that out. Interesting. In the meantime, you got Hunter Biden in court.
And there's there, I read a piece this morning that was at Politico, and they were citing what they said were, listen to this headline.
Biden aides worry about psychological torment as Hunter heads for trial because he's got this trial coming up.
June 3rd, June 7th. Starts in June, beginning of June, first week of June. And they're concerned because that he might actually spend some time in prison.
it wouldn't be totally a shocker.
They said they're going to have to watch and wait because these are the felony gun charges that he's coming up on.
So we're going to talk about some of this because now this is being floated out there.
I think in an effort to explain Joe Biden giving him a pardon.
I think Joe Biden's going to pardon him and they're going to try to lay this as the groundwork.
Oh, psychological torment, et cetera, et cetera.
Meanwhile, Dexter Taylor is still sitting in prison for not doing a single damn thing.
We got a lot to hit today because we got some cultural stuff.
fallout continues from that Harrison Bucker thing. We're going to be, we got, we got two
guests coming up for you today. We're going to be talking to the Missouri Attorney General,
Andrew Bailey, who is joining the show because he was, he, I think he wakes up in the morning and
is like, who's ass can I kick? He woke up and was like, wow, why is Kansas City doxing this
football player simply because he spoke, gave a commencement address that made some of the woke
scolds mad. And they docks them and they're like, yeah, he lives here in this town, etc.
So he's looking into it. He's going to be joining us as well. We're also,
coming up. We're going to be discussing this distill the fallout and the legacy, I should say,
of the fallout as it pertains to COVID and lockdowns and all of that stuff continues. And so we're
going to talk about some of that as well coming up with Jay Badachar Charya, who is Stanford School of
Medicine, the World Health Organization, they've been trying to get everyone to commit to a new global
treaty. Are they going to have Taiwan be excluded from it like they did the last one? We're going to,
we'll talk about all of this and more. So we got a lot of stuff to hit. So there's a company that I just
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like back in what, 2019, 2020, when there were certain calibers that were kind of hard to find.
And we ended up calling, we were calling some of our retail friends and saying, when do you get
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prepared for whatever may come your way. That's Amosquared.com. Don't let these people think you're a
moron. Biden claims he brought inflation down from 9 to 1% blaming corporate greed and shrinkflation.
He says that people like you actually have money that they don't want to spend. Check out the
Watchdog on Wall Street podcast on Apple, Spotify, wherever you get your podcast.
And now, all of the news you would probably miss. It's time for Dana's Quick Five.
I don't like robots that do human stuff. It's like weird and think for themselves.
So in this freak robot that apparently was made in China can learn, I don't know, really was it?
Or is this China being like, no, no, no, we don't have like crappy tech at all.
I don't believe when I read stuff like this.
But they said apparently they're trying to expand this humanoid robot offerings that they have.
And they have this S-1.
And apparently it can actually hold 22 pounds per arm.
It can go at a pace of 32.8 feet per second.
And it's only wires and metals right now.
And they said apparently it even can do calligraphy and open and pour wine, flip a sandwich in a frying pan.
And it also folds and irons laundry.
That's, I don't want it to do all that stuff.
Just, I don't need all that.
Humans, you've got to be careful here.
You're going to outsource everything you do in life to robots.
You can't.
I cannot wait for this.
South Park is going to tackle because of Cartman.
The Ozimic craze in an end of obesity special.
The seventh Paramount Plus South Park storyline in date has been announced.
And they're calling it the end of obesity.
And so Cartman is denied access to life-changing medication.
And the kids jump in action.
and so he's being told that his weight is out of control and he needs to get on smegulitude
whatever that is he needs to get what is it like a derivative of it he needs to get on that
that's what he's got to get on so this is going to be so i'm so watching this also
inflation is a problem but i don't know what's going on to amazon amazon workers say they're
struggling to afford food and rent they're also struggling to not run their trucks head first
into people that i know i'm just saying
But they said that they're having, their warehouse workers are struggling.
I don't know.
I always like wonder when I, you know, you kind of do wonder this stuff.
Like how?
It's more inflation than Amazon.
Yeah.
Like what, yeah.
Like how's it going there in the Amazon warehouses?
Frozen human brain tissue brought back to life in a major breakthrough.
I feel like we shouldn't be doing this.
They said that they may be able, scientists may someday be able to freeze brains, bring them back to life following a major breakthrough in cryogenics.
This would explain some of the stuff I've been seen on Twitter lately in terms of behavior.
Again, though, this is.
one of the things where they say, well, it's researchers. Some of the researchers are from China,
which makes me question the viability of any of it. We have a lot more on the way, including
the latest. We've got culture and a St. Louis police officer under fire because he lit a cigar
while arresting a suspect. It's kind of cool, though. So set immigration politics aside for a
moment. New diseases are entering through U.S. borders and infections. The University of Nebraska's
Med Center has been tracking it. USA Today's written about it. All kinds of infections, diseases.
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the Dana Show.
I'd like to know if any of the Democrats on this committee are employing Judge
Mershan's daughter.
Please tell me what that has to do with Mary Garland.
Is she a porn star?
Oh, Goldman.
That's right.
He's advising.
Okay.
He's advising.
Do you know what we're here for?
You know we're here about AG.
I don't think you know what you're here for.
Well, you don't want to talking about, I think your fake eyelashes are messing up.
No, ain't nothing.
Hold on, hold on.
Order, Mr. Chairman.
Would you, that's beneath even you,
order of your committee.
I do have a point of order, and I would like to move to take down Ms. Green's words.
That is absolutely unacceptable.
How dare you a,
A terrible, a physical appearance of another.
Lady Moly.
Are your feelings her words down.
Oh, oh, girl, baby girl.
Oh, really?
Don't even play.
Baby girl, I don't think that.
We are gonna move and we're gonna take your words down.
I second that motion.
So who will have to play on?
Ms. Green agrees to strike her words.
I believe she was apologizing.
No, no, no.
Okay, hold on.
Then, after Mr. Perry, she'll be recognized, then Ms.
I'm not apologizing.
Well, then, you're not straight to your words.
I am not apologizing.
Now, let's go.
Come on, guys.
Why don't you debate me?
Mr. Chairman, the minority...
I think it's pretty self-evident.
You're not...
Yeah, you're not...
You don't have enough intelligent.
You're out of order.
Chair recognizes Mr. Perry.
This needs to be like...
This needs to be a cartoon.
And then we need to do like the bad lip reading over it.
Can you imagine this animated?
Oh, man.
Can you imagine this being animated?
I mean, and I actually feel bad for...
once for the men in this room because it's like just it's just it's crazy i i got to check out these
eyelashes now first uh welcome back to the show dana last year with you oh man Dana last year with you
we're uh here at the top bottom of the second hour i'm i got to look at these eyelashes because that's a
i mean they are kind of long okay i get it i i mean the the images of the men that are sitting
there they're dying laughing over this stuff and it they can't hide it they're just they're
laughing over this. Can we save this? I just want to just put this in a folder somewhere.
She was asking, because you had Jennifer Van Larr, who did a lot of really great work over at Red
State. She was the one who broke the story about Judge Merchant and all this stuff. And it was
like it was stolen by grifters and repackaged to make them look like they do original reporting,
and make them look like they do stuff. And it was all Jennifer. I mean, she was the one who
broke this stuff. But she's, I mean, we've been watching her story go around here. And,
I'm looking at that I don't so this came out because green had said she was asking about whether or not I guess that daughter had been fundraising for any of the Democrats on the committee and that's when Jasmine Crockett got that's when she got involved in this and she's from she's from Texas and she Dallas she's she's uh she's uh part of part of some parts of the county I'm in but she's not my rep so
I find that that's fascinating.
But yeah, she went after her eyelashes.
That's a serious thing, man.
What did she say?
I think your eyelashes are interfering or something like that.
Messing up your vision or something.
Yeah.
Can I just be real for a minute?
Are we really going to act like there's any civility left in D.C. or elsewhere?
I'm not advocating for it to not come back.
I'm just saying you have people who are in committees and they go through the formality of committees
and they engage in heinous policymaking, truly heinous policymaking.
And we're supposed to believe that the formalities of these committee proceedings lend it an air of class or make it more palatable.
Does it make sense what I'm saying?
Like the formality of the committee proceedings make the fact that government's bending you over a bare,
and Robin you blind, it makes it more palatable and classy, right?
Yeah, it makes it proper.
So I really, when you see things that happen in D.C. that match what D.C. is doing to you,
I feel torn because the part of me that thinks that civility is maybe one of the last
shreds of anything that we have in keeping the society together is at odds with the part
of me that is like, yeah, blanket, let the bridge.
as I burned light my path.
You know, that's kind of, I don't know.
So I'm torn.
What do you think, Kane?
Was this out of line for Marjorie Taylor Green?
I don't know what led up to this, except from this exchange.
I don't think it's out of line.
I think that they get, they love to police language the left.
And in these, you know, committees, you're not supposed to be disparaging to anyone's
personal appearances or their personalities.
So there's, that's part of the rules.
So because that is the rule, Democrats are going to, you know, utilize it to the best
of their ability.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, I
That was something
That was an exchange all right
And then they got real mad
And then AOC gets in because AOC
Has never seen a fight that she has not wanted to get involved in
And have someone else hold her back
And then what is up with the baby girl? Like who talks to your grown woman?
I found that more cringe than the eyelash remark
Stop. Just stop it.
There's so many cringe people in politics.
It's so ridiculous.
You got a lot of the loudest people
out there do the least amount of work and move the needle the least. That's the truth. You know it.
And they are thirsty. Man. But why did she get involved in this? So it just descends into this like,
I don't know what it is. And this woman, this lawmaker, I think she's what this is her first term.
And this Jasmine Crockett. So she's, you know, first term. I can I do, I will say something about
the fake eyelashes. In tech, in TV, they are.
always try to make you wear them, you know.
And when you do TV, you're supposed to wear them.
I mean, if you go on any network, I used to go to networks with my, with makeup already on my face,
because they grab you and they paint you to look like an oompleum put a match.
They're set lights, and then they stick spider legs on your face.
And I can't stand it.
And it used to be a big point of contention whenever I would go in to do network TV.
It was a big point of contention because I hated wearing all of the spackle.
And all, I just can't.
I love it.
and I will say some of them get a little carried away, Kane.
You know what I mean?
If you look like one of them baby dolls that you get at the store where it's, you know?
Or if you look like you're sleepy because your lashes are too big, then maybe they are.
There is a line, you know, and then it's obvious when that line's crossed.
I don't put girls.
I mean, ladies like them, I don't care.
But when they are so, when they're comically big.
Right?
Like when you can affix jewels on them.
And you feel the breeze with every bullet?
Yeah, like if you got, if you got to comb them, I feel like they might be too big.
Just saying.
So it, I don't know.
I just think it's funny that that I, the men though in that room, they did not know what to do with that.
And then you had, what was it, James Comer is trying to keep it all together.
It's not happening for him, but he was trying.
He was trying to keep it all together.
So that's, that was one heck of a, that was one heck of an exchange that they had there.
Oh my word.
It's just another day in Washington, D.C.
Ladies and gentlemen, that's all it is.
Now, I wanted to go back to this story because we were talking about Biden campaigning.
And, you know, we got this trial coming up for Hunter, Hunter Biden, right?
A 55-year-old baby infant, Hunter Biden, little baby Hunter, who is going to be going to trial on both gun and tax charges.
Because if you remember when he was writing his memory, he was writing his memory.
memoirs. He was writing his memoirs and he was writing in his book how high as a kite he was during a specific period where he's naming dates and talking about how high he was. And then it comes out that this 4473 that he filled out to go and purchase his firearm was done and dated at the exact time that he wrote about in his book of being high as a kite and going around and just being a druggie. Yeah, that kind of means that you lied on a federal reform about whether or not.
you're a drug user and you're purchasing a firearm.
And so I just think if the ATF is going to go after FFLs for grammatical mistakes and strip them of their license,
then they can go after Hunter Biden for literally lying on a federal form.
I mean, Dems de rules.
You all wanted this.
So now you got to live in the, you got to, you made the bed laying it.
So now he's going to be going, he's going to be going to trial.
And I think Joe Biden's getting ready to party him, pardon him or party, you know.
I think that he's going to pardon him because they're trying to already, this is being
pushed out. Like, oh my gosh, is this, you know, Biden aides are so worried. The president has expressed
some fear that his son may serve time in prison. And they said that the president's allies,
they said, are, you know, they're looking and waiting back to see what happens at the trial.
But apparently, you know, the president is concerned. And they said, oh, the Republican attacks
on his son. You know, they're not impacting
the Republican attacks. This is, he
engaged in behavior
along with his dad that compromised
their
legitimacy. And observing that fact is not an
attack. That's not how that words is used.
Nor does
that infer such.
But they said that
people were, that
they're not, he's worried about
people not being hands off.
And, you know, they are, you know,
they are,
they're worried because he's got these two cases. It really does seem like they're
kind of floating the potential for a pardon, you know, because Biden's so worried. Right?
I kind of get that. I sort of get that from this. The president worries about Hunter every
single day. From the moment he wakes up to the moment he goes to sleep, one of the advisors
told Politico, that's only going to pick up during the trial. They're saying that he's he could be
suffering from psychological torment. He's concerned. They're fretting about how the weight of the
trial is going to affect the president. So I guess the argument is that if you don't, if you let
Hunter go to trial, you're imperiling the country. Is that, that's kind of the, the intimation,
is it not? I mean, that's, that seems he worries about him all the time. When, when Hunter
Biden was living in the White House, well, the Biden just wanted to keep his son,
clothes. And then they started finding
cocaine everywhere, which is the first.
You know, finding
all that. I told you they found more in the White House
right there in the Capitol.
Police, headquarters.
This story
of the St. Louis police
officer, speaking of police.
Our hometown, Kane.
A St. Louis police officer
was recorded
on videos straddling a suspect during an
arrest at a nightclub and lit up a cigar
while doing it. He
got this person detained on the ground.
He borrowed a lighter from another officer,
had a stogie outside of the marquee restaurant and lounge.
The officer was not identified.
He had his right arm on the suspect's chest
as he lit the cigar with his free hand.
And so he was on,
and he was just as cool as a cucumber.
The guy was trying to free his hands.
It wasn't going to happen.
He wasn't going to get up and get free.
I don't even know what led to,
apparently there was like some kind of altercation
and the guy had to be removed from the venue.
But there were no injuries, all this.
Why is there a controversy over this out of curiosity?
I'm just, you know, I don't know why there would be.
And so the department is investigating the incident.
How is this an incident?
I don't know.
He's pinning the man down.
And then he lights his cigar.
Well, if he's got to stay there for a little bit, you know.
I mean, you know what he's got to do.
Maybe he needed a cigar.
I don't know.
I mean, this is the home of the, this city is the home of the knockout game.
It's where the knockout game was born.
You're going to be mad about the cops smoking a stogie while he's arresting this guy?
Come on now.
I just think he's kind of badass.
I mean, he's doing nothing wrong.
He's not being mean with him.
He's not roughing him up, right?
What am I missing here, Cain?
Why is all this drama?
If that was on like Washington near like, I don't know, I think 11th Street somewhere around there,
there's a big cigar bar right there.
So my guess is maybe he was right by the cigar bar.
Just couldn't help himself.
Yeah, this, well, I mean, you know, that could be true.
I just don't see the issue, like, was there a victim because he lit up the Stogie?
Was there some sort of property damage?
No.
Was there any sort of personal damage to any individuals because he lit up a Stoge?
I mean, it's right near Washington Avenue.
Yeah, I'm not seeing what the issue is.
It's literally also, by the way, like a street over from the police.
From their department.
So, I mean, it's not that far, but, I mean, the club is literally, it's like right off Locust.
It's in downtown.
For those who don't know,
it's like right there in the middle of,
right there in the middle of everything.
So it wouldn't be that far from that cigar bar, actually.
No, I'm looking at it.
It's not, it isn't.
But this is our hometown.
I know exactly where this is.
Actually, you're right, it's right by that.
So what's the deal?
I don't see a problem with it.
Good on that guy.
Yeah, all right.
That's all.
I just wanted to bring that up.
I thought it was pretty cool.
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Like sands through the hourglass, so are the days of the United States.
Food is the third biggest source of cities' emissions right after builders and transportation.
But all food is not created equal.
The vast majority of food that is contributing to our emission crises, lies in
meat and dairy products.
Oh, you're not coming for that.
Why is he talking about any of those?
Eric Adams,
agriculturalist.
I like how they assembled.
Who can we get to stand here behind you?
Let's get some official-looking people.
We need someone with one of them little chef's hats.
Yeah, we need a chef.
Yeah, let's get us a little chef up there.
Yeah, we're talking about food.
Yeah, we're talking food.
Get a chef up there.
You know, like that head that mouse worn right of tooo.
Get it up there.
Right?
Get him out there.
get him off there behind because we're talking about food and stuff.
I'm saying.
Why are they talking about, that's Eric Adams in New York.
Why is he talking about, they don't even have farm animals in Manhattan.
What's happening?
I mean, they do.
This is his way of making it up to the Biden administration.
They're on a Mississippi.
What?
Maybe this is his way of making it up to the Biden administration.
For what?
Remember how he always talked about about the immigration thing?
And he was kind of lambasted a little there from Democrats on it.
So maybe this is his way of trying to get back into the good graces.
I don't even know what
I don't get it
I don't even understand what his point
What he's I don't get this
I don't get any of this
So why does he
Cows are bad
Cows are bad
I want
I like cows
I love cows
They taste amazing
Yeah they're so tasty
And they're fun to watch
They're vegan
Yeah they don't hurt nobody
Yeah they don't eat meat
No they're not out there
They're not out there talking about anybody's eyelashes
Or anything like that
We have more of that drama
By the way
If you thought that was the only cut
that we had. Baby girl. Baby girl. We got more. Collie, grown-ass women. I like, what is it?
I retweeted him. Who is it over at Kyle Mann over at the Babylon Bee? He goes, there should be a
separate girl congress where the girl congressman can yell at each other while the regular
congressman can get work done. We're going to talk more about this here coming up. We're also
going to talk about the World Health Organization because we just can't get away from these fools
and this insistence that we work with the World Health Organization and adopt somehow a new global treaty to prevent pandemics because that didn't work the last time.
Stick with us.
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and tell them Dana sent you.
You just voted to do it.
Order.
I'm trying to get clarification.
Calm down.
No, no, no, no, because this is what you all do.
So I'm trying to get clarification.
You're not recognized.
Ms. Croquet.
I can hear you with your yelling.
Calm down.
Please.
Don't tell me to calm down because y'all talk noise and then you're out of control.
Because if I come and talk about her, you'll have a problem.
Mr. Chairman, Mr. Chairman.
All right.
Chair, okay.
Order.
Chair now recognizes Ms. Green for four minutes and 21 seconds, four minutes.
Let Ms. Green talk and then you all can, I'll recognize one of this time.
I must strike her words for a second time based on her second set of personal remarks attacking another member.
Who?
Who?
Chairman Comer, because you all cannot seem to apply the rules of the committee, we have to do this every time.
I'm recognized.
I'm recognized.
I'm going to go ahead and start talking.
I know, I know.
Look, I don't know if you've noticed that I have two hearing aids.
I'm very deaf.
I'm not understanding.
Everybody's yelling.
I'm doing the best I can.
Can we not recognize Ms. Green and let her yet?
We cannot because of the rules of the committee, Mr. Chair.
That is what I'm trying to communicate in the president.
to communicate in the present moment.
We have a moat.
Okay, which is the most?
As opposed to any other moment?
Hell.
So, so it,
this is the thing that is most entertaining to me today,
because this is the snapshot of politics.
All hell broke loose in the house.
And I like the joke that Babylon B said.
We just need to have like its own girl Congress.
Just have girl Congress and then the regular Congress.
And then the girl Congress can fight about stuff.
Because that's how it started.
Welcome back to the show.
Dana Lash with you.
you top of the second hour. Can we this is, I will say this is how it started. Can we play it?
Just place that because this is, this is how all of this started. It had to do with eyelashes.
Listen. I'd like to know if any of the Democrats on this committee are employing Judge Mershan's
daughter. Please tell me what that has to do with Mary Garland. Is she a porn star? Oh, Goldman. That's right. He's advising.
Okay.
Do you know what we're here for?
You know we're here about AG?
I don't think you know what you're here for.
Well, you don't want to talking about, I think your fake eyelashes are messing up.
No, I ain't nothing.
Hold on, hold on.
Order, Mr. Chairman.
Would you, would you be in getting the order of your committee?
I do have a point of order, and I would like to take down Ms. Green's words.
It gets crazier now.
That is absolutely unacceptable.
How dare you?
you a tap the physical appearance of another person.
Are your feelings her?
Move her words down.
Aw.
Oh, girl, baby girl.
Oh, really?
Don't even play.
Baby, girl, I don't think.
We are going to move and we're going to take your words down.
I second that motion.
So, so who will have to.
What is that?
Ms. Green agrees to strike her words.
I believe she's.
No, no, no.
Okay, hold on.
Then after Mr. Perry is you'll be recognized.
I'm not apologizing.
Well, then you're not straight to.
I am not apologizing.
I mean, Comer's just like, the hell.
I just want to get done with this.
And then he comes, he's like, I'm deaf.
I just want to get done.
Oh, my gosh.
It's Congress, everybody.
Your tax dollars pay for this.
Welcome back, Dana Lash again.
Oh, man.
The greasy skids of Congress.
Yeah, the greasy skids of Congress.
Greasy for who knows why.
But, again, I do agree.
I think we need a separate girl Congress.
just take y'all's drama over there i don't even know this had to do with the uh what was it the
the ongoing like green had asked but she was looking to see if anybody there in sitting in the
committee had actually been working with uh judge rashon that's jennifer van lars independent
reporting that was stolen by some plasticine grifters and you know they try to pass it off as
their own original reporting but uh she's the one who broke all that stuff
over at Red State. And it, uh, they were, she was asking as to whether or not any of the Democrats
on the committee had benefited from that lady's fundraising. You know, Steve's right. I mean, I was waiting
for somebody to go, Jerry, Jerry, just waiting for it, waiting for a chair to get thrown. There was
always a chair to get thrown. I wonder how many chairs they went through. It's always a chair to get
thrown. But did they get it back on track after that? I don't know. I just wanted to
you know, I don't know.
Did they get it back on track?
I mean, I am just mesmerized.
And I said earlier, I don't know how I feel about stuff like this because as someone,
I mean, I told you yesterday, I cut my teeth in activism in the streets in St. Louis,
like literally running around raising money and raising hell.
And I, you know, I kind of always felt that the stuff in Congress,
there's a lot of very improper things that happen and are done and and carried out over the American people.
And they're given this veneer of propriety from the processes through which it happens.
Now they sit there and their businessware at their little oak desks and they sit in this committee room and they gavel in and they gavel out and they go through all these processes.
And it looks very official and very orderly.
but the stuff that's being done is neither orderly nor official, nor is it moral, nor is it half of a constitutional.
And they go through this whole, this whole Rube Goldberg of the appearance of propriety.
And yet what's being done to you isn't proper at all.
What's being done to taxpayers isn't proper at all.
And so it's like they think that somehow, though, keeping it there, ensconced in the well-carpeted committee rooms,
that that makes it somehow more,
makes it right it makes it proper it makes it moral makes it good right and i just don't know i just
so part of me is like i understand that civility is really the last line of defense against a completely
just broken down society but at the same time there are a lot of people who don't deserve civility
and i'm not in a position to indulge people with the welfare of giving it when i don't feel it so you know what i
mean like i i don't know right right am i being wrong on this or should we be like no this is you know
They can't act like this.
Everybody be adults.
Should always strive to treat people fairly, Dana.
I think people should be treated as they deserve.
That's me.
Yeah, there's actually an argument for that too.
This is where my very diogenistic cynicism comes in.
But most of mine, the reason I go that route is because, you know, it's like anger.
It's like drinking poison, expecting your enemy to die.
It's not going to happen.
You got to find a center.
Got to find your calm.
Well, it's not that.
They just get drunk.
dramatic over everything.
Well, that's what I mean.
This is the lesson for them, is what I'm saying.
I do think that the eyelash thing, that was like kind of some weak sauce.
Yeah.
I mean, you didn't have to.
What was the point of it?
But still, the strike those words, it's like, I don't know, was that disparaging?
She's like, she just said maybe your eye lashes.
They were large eyelashes.
Yeah, she's like, maybe your eyelashes are doing this.
I mean, they're like stage size.
You know, I don't know.
To each to their own, but, you know, I'm just saying, you know.
So, yeah, that's the same of the same.
stuff that's happened. I wanted to get into some of these other things. Did you see the story,
Greg Abbott, had pardoned this former U.S. Army Sergeant. He was released from prison. This
had to do with a 2020 riot that took place. And the decision, because the governor doesn't get to
make the decision. He doesn't have like the executive authority over this. You have a Texas
Board of Pardons and Paroles. They're the people who vote to do it. And I think that some people
don't understand that that's how that works in Texas. And I, you know, however you want to take it.
I've seen any time pardons or anything like this has come up before, people get mad if Abbott doesn't do something or if he does.
And he has appointed, I think, a lot of the people on the board, but ultimately they still have to make the vote.
But they did vote and recommended a full pardon and restoration of firearm rights for Daniel Perry.
By the way, how familiar are these names?
Daniel Penny and then Daniel Perry.
Just weird to me.
If you guys remember, this had to do with, it was a BLM riot.
and there was a guy who approached his car with a rifle and then Perry had reacted in self-defense, shot in
self-defense, because they had, you know, at some of these, and there was video of it.
At some of these riots that were happening in the middle of the street, BLM Burn Luke Murder Rioters
were shutting down like entire city blocks.
And there, I mean, there's buildings on fire and all kinds of stuff.
There were stories of, there was a story of a woman and her daughter and their dog who were
trying to navigate around all of the shut the closed streets around the riots in one town i think this
was actually in tennessee and they ended up uh they had their car attacked because they
drove too close to like one of these assembled riot riots and and they went after their car so this
guy he was um wasn't he like an uber driver or something like that and he got rerouted because
it was the same situation they had a bunch of streets and i do remember this they had a bunch of streets
that had been closed down
and he was trying to
navigate around it
because if you have protests or riots
happening, it's not like Google Maps
is going to go, oh, by the way,
there's a riot happening here.
Let's reroute you.
They will keep trying to reroute you.
Maps tries to route you through
the way that it still thinks is open.
And so he was, you know,
he was trying to figure out
what to do with this.
So anyway,
he ends up at this intersection.
He ends up at this intersection.
intersection and there were all of these riders that were coming towards his car. And there's video of it.
That's the other thing. He was sentenced. He would, they, first they convicted him and they
sentenced him to 25 years with this. They, they said that he had killed a man named Garrett
Foster. And Garrett Foster was walking around with a rifle. And he, they were blocking the road.
It was a, it was a BLM protest. Perry had stopped. He was trying to honk his horn at the protest.
but he was trying to get away because, guys, how many videos have you seen if people's cars being attacked at that point?
It was happening absolutely everywhere.
And so there was a guy, this Garrett Foster guy, who had an AK-47, and he walked up.
Perry was trying to get away from the crowd that had already surrounded his car.
This guy had done nothing at this point.
This was all on video.
And so you had this Garrett Foster guy who walked up with the AK-47, and he was very aggressive.
And sorry, it wasn't in low-ready.
When you look at the stills, the dude's pointing it at him.
So yeah, you point a rifle at someone, you're probably going to get shot in self-defense.
Don't draw on someone unless you're going to kill them.
What the hell was Perry supposed to think?
He's sitting in the car.
You got a guy.
I mean, there's stills of this.
I've watched this video, and I've looked at these stills so many times.
What are you going to give the guy walking up towards you in an aggressive manner during a riot where people won't let your car pass?
Are you going to sit here and be like, well, I guess I'll just sit here and wait and see if you shoot me.
F-A-F-O.
Good night.
You don't have to apologize for being legitimately
worried about your life, particularly
when there have been so many
incidents of people having their car stopped
and being attacked by rioters.
See, he got sentenced. He was sentenced for
25 years in prison, which I thought was ridiculous.
And I know apparently
the governor did as well.
And then, apparently, the
Paroles Board did. So they
they pardoned him. So he's out and he's got his firearm rights restored. And in the meantime,
you got, you know, the Democrats out there. Oh, he's a murderer who was on a mission to commit. He
wasn't on a mission. That's so stupid and irresponsible. The guy was trying to get away from the riot
and he was trying to find out how to get around because the GPS wasn't helping them because
they, the GPS system did know that the streets were closed because of riots. I mean, imagine how
scared you would be. You know, it's at night and you're trying to just get done with your job. You're
trying to get home and you're sitting at a damn light and a bunch of people come and they're
surrounding your car and you're just trying to get away. And then that makes them more aggressive.
And then you got this this moron with a coming towards you. There's a difference between
open carrying a rifle and then bounding towards someone on camera aggressively and pointing it at them.
So, you know, so he was pardoned. We're going to talk a little bit more. We've got more about
this case. We've got other stuff as well, including a very
unlikely defender of Harrison Buckers. And then also we're going to speak with coming up,
Professor at Stanford School of Medicine, epidemiologist Jay Batacharya. He's going to talk to us about
the World Health Organization. They're trying to get everyone to join their little fun treaty
because they think that they're going to be able to manage future pandemics better. Really? Is that
what this is all about? Hi, I'm Margaret, a rhetoric and media major at Hillsdale College. Here's Hillsdale
President Dr. Larry Arne with a Constitution Minute.
forget today that the Constitution is outdated because it addresses problems peculiar to the 18th century so long ago.
And some of it does read sort of quaintly.
But consider the injunction against titles of nobility in Article 1, Section 9, for example.
Is that so outdated?
The purpose of that injunction is to prevent the government granting special privileges for partisan reasons.
This strikes at the rule of law, the rule under which were all to be treated the same.
The Coney capitalism so common today, where the government gives favors and tax dollars to some businesses and advantages over others, is exactly the kind of thing the Constitution was meant to prohibit.
The Constitution is not outdated at all.
To learn more and get a free pocket constitution, visit constitutionminit.com.
And now, all of the news you would probably miss. It's time for Dana's Quick Five.
So apparently there, I was reading the story about a modest,
Mexican taco restaurant that won a Michelin Star.
It's a hole-in-the-wall taqueria.
It's one of the very first restaurants in Mexico.
That's kind of hard to do because they kind of look down on Italian,
like the Michelin people look down on Italian and particularly Mexican cuisine
because it's rustic and, you know, that's not like over-processed and with them, you know.
But they said that it's one of the first ones they got, they got a star in the Michelin Guide.
It's Al-Khalifa de Leon.
It's one of the 18 restaurants, either given one or two stars in the inaugurates.
Michelin Guide Mexico that was unveiled this week.
So they only do like four types of tacos.
So don't, you know, you get one of four types.
That's it.
So that's pretty impressive to get something like that.
A New Jersey town wants to gas geese to death over a park because they keep, they're ruining
it.
They said that they're just taking dumps in the park and it's just ruining it.
And community members are apparently they're opposing what they said as an inhumane approach
to the problem.
They said that this council, town council voted for a plan to hire federal wildlife officials to round up 60 geese in Liberty Park.
And when they can't fly and they gas them to death.
They said they can't rid the park of the nuisance geese.
And so they've called in exterminators.
Geese aren't kind of mean, though.
But you don't need to be gasing them.
That's so stupid.
I'm thinking food for the homeless.
Right?
Like, you know, you can have a nice goose, cook goose.
I'm just saying if you're going to do something, like make it, you know, worthwhile.
A Boston man was arrested for allegedly pointing a powerful laser at a Coast Guard helicopter.
He, Philip Gagnon, 59.
I mean, you grew old enough to know.
You're not supposed to do that.
The pilot had to abort the landing.
It was an MH60 Jhawk.
And they said the guy who did it lives in a fourth floor apartment that overlooks the flight path used by helicopters.
And so, yeah, they said that aircraft laser, like when they strikes are on the rise, they said.
Interesting.
If you're looking for a leg, it looks like they may have one.
CRC, KR, CR, CHR,
Shasta Lake, California.
They found literally a,
well, it's a prosthetic leg
that was just like left at the lake.
Someone left their leg at the lake.
One of the guys said,
he found it, he found it.
He goes, I found generator, cell phone, wallets, and keys.
The scuba divers said I've never found a leg.
Jay, Botta Cherry up next.
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or wherever you get your podcasts.
I was part of Warfrey.
These are important vaccines.
We saved a lot of lives.
They're important for the most vulnerable people, those over 65, 60, 65 years of age.
They really aren't that critical for those that are under 50 or younger.
But those vaccines saved a lot of lives, but they're also, we have to be honest, some people got significant side effects.
from the vaccine. I have a number of people that are quite ill and they never had COVID,
but they are ill from the vaccine. And we just have to acknowledge that. So that's Dr. Redfield,
who everyone became very familiar with during the Trump administration in the early days and
even after of the pandemic, the lockdown, everything else. And he, I think was, I find him to be a
very interesting official because he, I don't agree with him on everything, but I do think that
he was a little bit more critically, more critical, transparent maybe than some of the others who
were in the, who were in the government making these decisions. Welcome back to the program,
Dana Lash with you at the bottom of this second hour. And I've been very eager to talk to our next
guest because I, when we went into, when pandemic and lockdown and everything else happened,
we live in an era where we have more access to information than we ever have before. And you
would consider this such like a great period of enlightenment, a great period of being able to ask
questions and get answers and have honest discussions and not try to relegate people who are
simply asking questions and wanting transparency, relegating them to like the trash heap of censorship.
And in fact, what we got was the exact opposite, which then made people distrust everything that
they were hearing even more. And as it turns out, for good reason. Joining me right now,
you're very familiar with Dr. J. Batataria, professor at Stanford School of Medicine. And he's
been very outspoken with all of this, particularly too, with the censorship.
of obviously we've talked about Biden v. Missouri or Murthy v. Missouri at this point. And also his new
piece that he has over at Real Clear Policy talking about the World Health Organization, now urging,
not just us, the United States, but over 190 other governments to agree to this global treaty
to prevent and manage future pandemics. And I got to say, Dr. Batatari, I'm a little surprised by this
because aren't we still conducting our own inquiry into this?
How can we even come to a position of entering into a treaty with them
when we're still doing a looking at everything that we did wrong?
I mean, Dana, I think you hit it right on the head.
The problem is that the WHO failed during this pandemic.
They absolutely failed.
They failed.
And they've elevated the people who potentially may have been contributed to causing the pandemic.
The chief scientific advisor of the WHO is a man named Jeremy Farrar.
who was the head of Welcome Trust,
which supported the Wuhan Lab and the Eco Health Alliance.
The WHO mismanaged the pandemic,
recommending lockdowns at scale,
essentially copying the Chinese approach.
We should not be trusting them with more power.
And that is exactly what this AAHA treaty is asking for,
that we should give them more power over our health decisions,
over our management of future pandemics.
It's not wrong to have international collaboration on pandemics.
I want to make sure people understand that's clear.
But the problem is that these people do not deserve our trust.
And to come now around and say, we should keep the same people in charge as if they did nothing wrong before we've done an honest investigation of all of the problems that they caused.
I think that's just a tremendous mistake.
And it's interesting, too, where you mentioned, you know, some of the misleading information the government gave, particularly with gain of function.
Because now it's, now, even though we've known it the whole time, now the stories are coming out.
Oh, it's official national institutes of health.
They came out and said, yes, you know, we did fund gain of function research, even though we were denying it.
It makes it difficult to believe them.
And to your point, too, with the WHO, correct me if I'm wrong on this.
But I remember distinctly when China was talking to the WHO about entering into kind of group projects like this with other nations.
Taiwan was excluded, even though they had been leading in terms of contamination and prevention and reducing numbers of infections.
but nobody wanted to talk to them about what they were doing because of the animosity with China and Taiwan.
Oh, no, that definitely happened.
And the WHO, Taiwan is persona non-grata, or I guess country non-grata in the WHO because of the Chinese influence there.
In fact, there was a very awkward moment of one of the lead, sort of the lead official of the WHO,
this man named Bruce Allward.
It was being interviewed by this journalist.
And she asked him about Taiwan.
This is like early 2020.
And he pretended to not hear her and then logged off the Zoom call because he couldn't talk about China, about Taiwan.
I think a world organization devoted to health is a good idea.
We need honest, transparent leadership.
We need open communication.
We should not be having the kind of sort of anti-science decisions not being checked by other scientists.
And certainly we should not be having this leadership that led us.
through very poorly this pandemic, just get more power.
I mean, the premise seems to be of this WHO treaty
is that the only problem was they didn't have enough power,
that they didn't take over the decision making
of countries enough.
And I have no idea why anyone in the United States
thinks it's an American interest to do it.
For all 190 countries, anyone that's listening,
I'd recommend don't sign on, ask more questions,
demand more answers before you say, yes, please take
my sovereignty. Yeah, especially when, as you've noted as well, there's a lot of questions as to what
actually this entails, because you said that when you read the current draft of this whole treaty
itself, it doesn't talk about harm prevention. It talks about things like fighting misinformation,
which you have some experience. Right. I mean, their problem, they think that the problem was
that they were outside critics of their anti-science policies. They changed the definition of the
vaccine during what a vaccine is during the pandemic. They changed the
definition of herd immunity. They embraced social distancing with no science.
Admittedly, absolutely no science behind it. They recommended lockdowns to the poorest countries
where millions of people starved as a consequence of it. So they, you know, the problem,
and you know, it's fine, I guess, in science you can be wrong. The issue is like science
corrects itself by allowing people to criticize each other, to talk to each other. What the
WHO wants to do is essentially silence criticism. That's what, when they write, we want to suppress
misinformation. What they mean is they want people to stop criticizing them effectively. And they
essentially are leaning into this movement, unfortunately worldwide movement to censor people who
disagree with government policy and to use their control over social media to do that.
Yeah. And which you've been censored. You've been targeted just because you've been asking
questions and sharing transparently information, which if that's the goal, I love you. You said,
science corrects itself, which it does. I mean, if this is purely academic and it's purely,
you know, to find answers and to remedy these issues, well, then there's no, then you want to
take all good ideas and you want to have those answers. But that's not what was wanted.
No. And in fact, as you mentioned with Missouri v. Biden or Murphy v. Missouri at the beginning
of the of your segment, that essentially just solicitors understand, I'm sure your listeners
to understand data, but like the we actually have Andrew Bailey. He's going to be on later later this hour.
He's amazing. He's one of my heroes. I love what he's done.
And so what that case found was that the U.S. government, the Biden administration essentially
was going to social media companies and telling them, you know, censor these people and these
ideas, or else we're going to go after you. We'll use our regulatory party to destroy you.
This is the threats to social media companies. And of course, they complied.
I was put on a Twitter blacklist. The day I joined Twitter for the crime of sharing the idea
that lockdowns were a bad idea.
I think that the COVID era has revealed powers that our government shouldn't have.
And it is incumbent on ourselves to hold the government to account and to put in place
traditional American notions of checks and balances.
I mean, the First Amendment is a great idea.
The problem is we didn't have one during the COVID era.
And I think that that's part of the reason why the United States fared so poorly, the world fairs so poorly.
And the WHO, what it wants is a power grab.
It wants to suppress speech.
It wants to censor people so that people won't criticize them.
I mean, it's not that all the criticisms are fair or good or right.
I mean, but that's just the way that the marketplace of ideas works.
The good ideas rise to the top because they're true.
The bad ideas don't.
You can't ex ante say, oh, I know exactly what.
what what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what good ideas are,
I'm the government, therefore you shouldn't criticize me.
Yeah.
That is a recipe for catastrophically bad decisions.
And this treaty, I know that from what I've been able to see, I don't think that the
president has signed on to it, but I am interesting if this is going to, I'm
interested to see if this is going to be treated like as an actual treaty and go through the
process as is required in the Senate.
I just saw a letter from I think 49 different senators led by Ron Johnson.
Um, all Republican.
demanding that if it is, if the United States does want to consider this, that it be treated as a treaty,
that it actually be subject to a two-thirds vote in the Senate.
I mean, I think that American people deserve at least that.
If we are going to sign away our sovereignty in this way, at least two-thirds of the Senate should agree on it.
And we should have a massive public debate.
It should become a central issue of the presidential election, right?
If we are deciding, I mean, we saw what happened in the last four years, every single
American's welfare is at stake in these decisions. It's not a theoretical thing. It will happen again.
And if we give the kinds of powers the WHO wants, it's going to impact the life of every single
American. And I think you're right with this because you've noted, Dr. that we've not repudiated
the failed policies that, I mean, had such a disastrous effect, not just on our population in our country,
but elsewhere. So why would we even entertain this idea? Because that's what it is. I mean,
all of this is going to happen again because we did not thoroughly repudiate it the first time.
I entirely agree with that, Dana.
And the, and the, I mean, I, I, I, I read, you know that on the naive I was, Dana.
In 2022, I wrote a piece, uh, actually in 2020, I wrote a piece in the Wall Street Journal calling for a honest COVID commission.
Kind of like if you have a plane crash, you, you see what happened and you make some reforms.
In 2022, I put out a blueprint for a, for what an honest COVID commission would ask.
There's something called the Norfolk Group document.
It's still online.
You can go check me and my friends, we wrote this thing, but just questions that you should,
ask and honest quote, none of those questions have been answered by any official body. Not one of them
has been answered by any official body. And at this point, it's quite frustrating. I mean, I honestly
thought, because of the catastrophic mistakes we made during the pandemic, that scientific bodies
would come together and say, well, for the good of the people, let's do an not to a portion blame,
but just to say, here's what we're wrong, here, the reforms we need, let's take the undertake them.
I have not seen that happen in the United States. I mean, we do have the Republican Congress
looking overlooking with this COVID commission starting to make some progress but it needs to be a
bipartisan thing public health is not politics uh it you don't win with 50 plus one in public health
you need basically universal support uh and you gain that by being honest about about about ideas
about evidence we have not had that to date we haven't had it and i worry that we won't i love what
you had said previously we're talking with dr jabadotaria where you had said that um going back in
Enlightenment in the Gutenberg Press and the democratization of ideals and that we are at this
sort of second, maybe second enlightenment. And we have a choice. Are we going to go towards
being able to actually access and share information? Are we going to go towards tyranny? And I don't
honestly think we've made that decision as a society yet, do you? We have not. I would have thought
it would have been the easiest decision to make in the history of mankind. But we, like,
what's happened, what's, it's interesting because when the internet sort of exploded, people
thought this is an engine for unleashing the creativity of the world, communicating with people
from way far outside of our normal realm and the interchange of ideas would just lead to human
flourishing. But it turns out that the same technologies can be used for control or suppression
or creation and maintenance of authoritarian power. And so we do. We face a decision.
Are we going to use these technologies that allow us to talk with each other very freely outside of the control of anyone looking over our shoulder and then use that the same way that Guitnera Press allowed people to print books and communicate with each other, which led to the scientific revolutions that we enjoyed?
or are we going to allow
authoritarian powers to use that same
technologies to contain us, to suppress us, to censor us,
to allow us to put us in a corner
where we just have to bow to the powers on high
who say that they are the science itself.
Yeah, that's a great point.
Dr. Jay Badacharya, we so appreciate your speech on this
and your fight in this.
And of course, you know, we're watching the SCOTUS case as well.
We're talking to the AG, Andrew Bailey,
coming up next hour, so it should be a good conversation too.
And I definitely am going to mention this, but it's so good to have you on.
I would love to have you back.
But thank you.
Thank you for your transparency and your honesty and your true criticism.
It's, we need more of it.
We appreciate you.
Thank you, Dana.
Thanks for having me on.
Of course.
Thank you.
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It's his life mission to make bad decisions.
It's time for Florida Man.
So I'm trying to get my head around this headline.
Florida Man is accused of stealing $30,000 in Pokemon cards and is foiled by a topless
MMA coach.
It's a lot of stuff happening here.
First off, I know a little bit about Pokemon because when my kids are
were like super little. They were into Pokemon and they had the cards and all that. So I know that some
of them are very valuable. But $30,000 in Pokemon cards like, dude, what cards were you going for?
You know what I mean? Like what he, so this was earlier, actually, about 10, two weeks ago.
The guy entered pro play games in Miami. He wanted to see a binder full of Pokemon cards.
He snatched him, attempted to flee. The store's general manager said that they felt so helpless because
it was like watching $30,000 to $40,000 of their hard work just walk off.
And then buy standards confronted them.
And then so they say topless.
They make it sound like it's a woman.
It was a shirtless MMA.
You stupid.
It's Newsweek.
What's the matter with you?
A shirtless MMA guy.
He, the shop owner, I guess, was yelling outside because it was kind of a strip mall thing.
And two martial arts coaches went out to help and they caught him.
And they whipped him on camera.
It was pretty entertaining video.
But yeah, that's how.
Yeah, they can be like super super.
Like for instance, there's like, what is it?
A PSA grade 10 Illustrator card that one dude who's on YouTube got for like 5.2.
The most expensive card ever.
That's wild.
Like you thought beanie babies were bad.
I didn't even remember those.
That was a big deal in the 90s, wasn't it?
I just remember as a kid and it wasn't kids who had beanie babies.
It was like adults who had them.
It was weird.
It was like a-
What were those little porcelain things that people would collect?
What were the name of those?
They were like little dolls or something.
Precious moments?
Was that it?
I don't know.
Did they have the big eyes?
I'll have to look it up, but yeah.
I don't know.
A Florida man busted for battery.
This is gross.
No.
No.
This guy used his soiled diaper as a weapon.
According to the smoking gun,
this happened with an 18-year-old Damien Kasten,
who was arguing with his brother.
And Kasten, cops reported,
is paralyzed
but ambulatory by using his upper body.
I'm reading the charging ducts.
Casting damage walls, he
apparently
took his diaper off
and threw it at his brother
and struck his brother in the chest.
And then that, so now he's charged
with domestic battery.
I am fascinated by this.
The guy with the wheelchees
because he took his diaper
and threw his diaper
and it became a weapon and that's like assault.
The house goes.
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So the NFL released a statement that he gave this speech in his personal capacity. And they
do not the NFL does not share his views so you know listen I like when people say what they need
to say he's at a Catholic college yeah he's a staunch Catholic these are his beliefs and he's
welcome to him I don't have to believe him right I don't have to accept them the ladies that were
sitting in that audience do not have to accept them the same way we want respect when Colin
Kaepernak takes a knee right we want to give respect to people
whose ideas are different from ours because the man who says he wants to be president,
you know who?
Yeah.
He says the way to act is to take away people's right to say how they feel.
We don't want to be that.
We don't want to be those people.
So I'm okay with him saying whatever he says.
And the women who are sitting there, if they take his advice, good for them.
Mm.
I, would be Goldberg kind of coming out a little bit for him.
That's surprising.
That's, yeah, I didn't expect that.
I mean, and I can't believe that this guy's still getting criticism over this.
It's that Harrison Buckers, the kicker for Kansas City Chiefs, because he, at his, at Benedictine College's commencement address, he came out and he was saying that women should be celebrated if they want to stay home with their kids and if they want to be a homemaker.
And apparently that made some of the woke scolds, like super angry.
And I don't get it.
I don't get why.
People are weird, man.
Welcome back. Dan Alash with you, top of this third hour.
And this, we're going to have, we're going to actually talk with Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey coming up at the bottom of the hour.
Because he caught wind, caught wind, he saw, is it the tweet, the X, the post?
What is it? What do you call it now?
The city, it's X now. By the way, officially, I don't think Twitter.
Like the singular post to X. Do you?
Because the URL is still Twitter.
No idea. But yeah, no, the URL changed today. The URL is now X.
dot com. Interesting. So we post an X or is my friend Dave Burgess crunching some grocks?
Like I don't know. Anyway, long story short, Kansas City like the city docksed him.
Docs, buckers over this, docks him. And said, oh, he lives, you know, here in this town.
And that seemed pretty shady. So the AG is looking into it. Why would you do that in Missouri?
with that with bailey is your AG why would you just even start F a in why why do people do this do he wakes up
and he wakes up and he pulls one of those roughty rottie Piper moments like I'm here to chew bubblegum and
kick ass and I'm all out of bubble gum that's what he does every single day like who can I sue and
make a lot their lives hell today why would you do that in the state of Missouri when he's the AG do stupid stuff
like that. Anyway, so they, uh, people are still giving him trash over this. It is weird,
like in a weird societal thing, man. And I've been seen a lot of this on the right. Have you seen
a lot of this on the right? Where you get, they call them red pill bros. And they're these like guys and
some of these chicks, some of these plain looking chicks, these people that get out there and they're
like, marriage is a, is a sham and you shouldn't get married. And they get mad at, uh,
They want to lecture about relationships and children, but yet they're single in their 30s,
miserable, lonely, childless, and bitter, which is no way to go through life.
And they want to lecture everyone else who actually has happy, successful marriages and has raised
kids and actually has experience, interpersonal experiences that go beyond just the screen on their
monitors.
It's weird to me.
And a lot of the reaction, because there were some people on the right that were mad at him
for saying this, which I don't get.
I really feel like there's been a sci-op to infect part of the right with.
the same stupidity that you see on the left because I see some people on the right who are just
leftists. They act like leftists. They talk like leftists. They embrace the same ideals that leftists do.
But they think that somehow they are exempt because they can call themselves conservatives and they're not.
They're not. It's the weirdest thing. But it's those people that I have seen that were joining
with the left and reacting to this. And I don't, I still don't get the, I,
just don't, I don't get the pushback that he's getting. Now, I'll say this too. I don't think it's a, I don't, I didn't agree with her, um,
comparison to Kaepernick because the criticism that I think, well, that speaking for myself that I had of
Kaepernick is that I thought that his protest was based upon a lie because it was. The idea that
there's this specifically, I, there's a breakdown between, uh, in relationship between the black
community and policing. I mean, that's not a lie. But to say,
that the police, that it was a fact that they were targeting more black assailants than white
assailants when it comes to police brutality and or police shootings is not statistically
supported by any publicly available number, not by any of the FBI uniform crime reports,
not by the Bureau of Justice statistics, none of it. In fact, it was that the police shootings
involving white assailants were greater than that of black assailants, and there are more
brutality cases involving white assailants. And there's a lot of, I touched on some of this in one
of the books that I've written about previous numbers that were released. But it's just not
something that's supported by by fact. Now, that's not to say that you can't object over
cases where there looks like there's something that happened that's incorrect. Like, for instance,
the shooting of the airman that was in Florida, right? The Air Force guy in Florida, where we talked
about this, what, last week when the cop showed up and he, the guy answered the door after
after the police were pounding, the officer was pounding on the door and the guy answers the door
and the officer just shoots him. And the guy had a firearm because he had no idea who was beating
down his door. And I shared a number of stories of home invasions that happened in broad daylight
where people will beat down somebody's door saying the sheriff's department or whatever. And then
they come in and they tie up their wife and kids. Like that happened most recently in Georgia,
broad daylight. So it happens. And so I understand you have the right to the Second Amendment in your own
home. But the guy hadn't drawn down on the cop and immediately when the door opened, the officer
fired. So I think that there leaves some, there's a lot of questions as to why the officer
responded the way he did. And also, he was going off of this third party like information from
the building manager who what didn't even sound certain that it was that particular apartment that
she heard any kind of disturbance from. And there was no disturbance that was happening there at the time
at all. So it was weird. So like instances like that, yeah, absolutely ask questions and hold people
accountable, but to make these like grain universal statements and then say, well, I'm going to
take an E for the end. I mean, that's why, that's what I didn't, I am for a peaceful protest. And I thought
that was much more preferable to the burning, looting, and murdering that we saw out in the streets,
you know, afterwards for what, two or three summers in a row. But I, I thought that the premise was,
well, I didn't think the premise is based upon a lie. And that's what I disagreed with. So it's like,
if you're going to make a, if you're going to protest about something, protest about something that is
based in truth, especially if you're trying to persuade people to share your viewpoint, which
kind of is the whole point of a protest, is it not? So I didn't think it was right to compare
Bucker's commencement address with that, because he wasn't saying anything that was
wrong or inconsistent. He wasn't denying women choices. He wasn't doing anything. He was
saying that women, if they choose a different path, that that should also be celebrated.
And I thought it was, he's getting all this heat. But you know what?
this Harrison Buckers thing, he's getting all this heap, but did you see? Yeah, and I did see
already. I saw the NFL had already sold out his jersey. Rachel McAdams gave an interview where she
said that she said that motherhood was the greatest thing that ever happened to her hands down.
And she says, your life is not your own anymore, but I had 39 years of me and I was sick of me.
So I was happy to put the focus on some other person. She said, I waited a long time for motherhood.
And she talks about how it's the, you know, her favorite role and how pleased.
she is with it. And I thought it was, you know, I mean, that's, that's, that's, yeah, I mean,
that she's right. But they're not, no one's, and she isn't denying or denigrating anyone's,
anyone else's choices. She's saying in this interview that she feels like that's, you know,
that's one of the greatest roles you can have. And so no one's going after her. They're going
after him because he spoke at a Catholic commencement address and he's a man. That's why it's
a sexist reaction. They're going after him because they, because he's a man.
There's nothing that he said that was wrong.
Are you shocked that Wobie Goldberg defended him?
I actually am still.
I can't get over that.
Right?
That was unexpected.
Yeah, that was a little unexpected.
So we're going to talk with the AG coming up about all this because he's looking into it.
He said that they want accountability because he's expressing his religious beliefs.
And you have the Kansas City on Twitter, like doxing him.
And that is true.
That's a government account.
it's not just like a rando account it's a verified city like a town it's like the city of dallas verified or
something you know it's a so through that technicality it's a government account that's targeting
someone because of their speech and then they took it down but the internet's forever guys it was
up long enough to get engagement and a lot of people got screenshots so just saying it's um
law and order i don't know anything about golf Steve this is this is
thing with golf. Scotty Sheffler was charged
with felony assault
at a police of police at an
accident scene outside of Valhalla. And the only
thing that I keep seeing on social
media is people complaining that his
$80 pair of pants
were ruined.
He's the number one ranked player in the world,
winner of the Masters last month. He was handcuffed
and charged with felony assault of an officer
at the Valhalla Golf Club because he would not stop
at the scene of a fatal accident at the course
entrance. It was about 7.30
in the morning.
And he had said in his statement that he had had that he was proceeding as directed by officers.
It was chaotic and understandably so it was tragic.
And he said there was a big misunderstanding of what I thought I was being asked to do.
He said, I never intended to disregard instructions.
And he said, I'm hopeful to put this to the side and focus on golf today.
Because didn't he show up in the tea time after that?
So there was an accident.
And then he, because there was somebody who was hit and killed by a shuttle bus, which is
sad. And he, I guess, they were saying that he was driving recklessly and he got charged with felony
assault of an officer. Okay, explain to me that because I am hearing so many things. Like, did somebody
throw themselves on his car? Like, what happened? That's what I heard. That's what I heard too.
And I don't know, because Steve and I've come at it from two different angles because I think he saw
some information this morning. I saw some different information this morning. But it looks as though
the cop was trying to, you know, obviously directing traffic.
And then when he saw Scotty going off to the side, he went over there and tried to block him and then got on his car, I guess.
Like, you know, got in front of the car or something as he was advancing.
So that is considered to be assault on a police officer.
Because they said that eyewitnesses said that Shuffler didn't do anything wrong.
And he's going to play in the rest of the, he's playing in the rest of the tournament.
But there were eyewitnesses who were like, he actually did.
didn't do anything wrong. But there, it's, I mean, it's sad. They said that subject refused to comply
and accelerated forward dragging Detective Gillis to the ground. And he was in full uniform. He had a high visibility
rain jacket on. And officer, his uniform pants were $80 were damaged beyond repair. And people were
saying that actually is false. Like he didn't drag him. What in the world is this? So I don't know.
So what it looks like, no, yeah, Jeff Darlington, who works for ESPN, has been doing a really good job
with this, but he said, like, he was trying to drive around the fatal scene that he had,
that Schaepler had nothing to do with. And the officer tried to grab onto his, I was assuming
a very expensive car and that he just, like, wouldn't let go. And so the charges are only a second
degree assault of a police officer and then like criminal mischief and reckless driving is all he's
getting. But he's playing right now and he heard he keeps burying. So he's doing all right.
He's doing all right. After having a muck shot. Yeah. Man, what a way to start your
too many Christmas. That's like, it's one way to start it. Yeah, so I don't know. I mean,
it seems, does it seem like there was a little bit of a, some overreactions, maybe?
Yeah, it sounds a little bit like that. But I mean, it is a fatal scene. Yeah, I mean,
it's tragic. So I get it. They shut down highways running high. Because these officers,
they see stuff, you know, it's like, I get it. I get it. Anyway, that's some of the latest,
some of our law and order. All right. So coming up, we got headlines on the way. We're also going
to, as I said, talk to Missouri, attorney.
General Andrew Bailey. Because I do think when you consider the, like your town or your government
agency, their social media account, that's the government. That's a government account. It's the
government. So there is a case to be made that if they're like trying to go after you and docks you
and violating a term of service, by the way, because that's what that was. We're going to talk to Andrew
Bailey about all this, the AG of Missouri, because he's looking into that Kansas City going after
Harrison Buckers. This is all wild.
And now, all of the news you would
probably miss. It's time for
Dana's Quick 5. Because
everything can't be stupid enough, NBC
is unveiling a gay Animal
Kingdom documentary series called
Queer Planet.
They're going to showcase gay
penguins,
gay lions, and gay fish.
But like, what about trans
lions, though?
Like, what about those?
I'm just curious.
They said it's the first of its kind documentary.
And so they're marking, again, it's Pride Month.
Pride is a sin, by the way, with a whole documentary and queer animals.
Why do we got to go to this extent?
Guys, look at the way the animals do it.
So it's basically a bunch of people, like, trying to creep on animals.
Dude, so many people are a little obsessed with to sex.
I mean, there's, there's, I had an unhealthy,
level. I didn't know there were mentally ill animals until now.
I mean, what in the world is this? Like, why do you got to do the animal stuff?
Like, can you just stop? Gay Peng, what in the world? Trans lions. I can't. I don't even want to.
I don't want to. Where are we? Where I just lost everything? Where's it at? Let's see here.
We also have, a fifth American tourist was arrested at Turks and Kekos airport after ammo found in their luggage. Look, everybody. Let me tell you something. Two things. If you can afford to go to Turks and Kekos, you can afford to get a travel bag.
that you don't take to the range and you don't take on a hunting trip.
This isn't a Second Amendment issue because they don't have that there.
And they, you know, yes, I think it's kind of going above and beyond.
But at the same time, you've got to be very careful with this stuff.
Andrew Bailey comes next. Stick with us.
Ready to grow your intellectual Rolodex?
Download the Dana Show podcast and join the ranks of those who refuse to settle for the same old boring content on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome back to the program.
Dana Lashier with you at the bottom of this third hour.
And, you know, we've been talking about this, Harrison Buckers, his speech that he gave at Benedicting College.
And I think a lot of the people that are upset about where he celebrated women and women's choices, which, by the way, he didn't deny anybody's choices the way that Linda Hirschman has done over the years or Gloria Steinem has done over the years or third waver, fourth waiver, fifth waiver, infinity way feminists have done over the years.
If women don't make the choices that they make, because it's, you know, pro-choice is just a schick.
but he also held men to account, which is what they missed.
I thought it was a great address, but apparently the city of Kansas City did not think so.
I've never seen anything like this, homegrown in Missouri.
And I feel like they forgot that Andrew Bailey was the attorney general of the state of Missouri.
And I was joking, and I hope he doesn't take this the wrong way because we're going to bring him on in a moment.
But I'm like, he wakes up in the morning.
And he's like, who am I going to mess up today?
That's what he does.
He wakes up in the morning.
He's like, somebody's going to get kicked in the neck.
Who's it going to be?
Who's stepping on taking everybody?
and it happened to be Kansas City.
They were just like, we're going to tweet and docks this guy, Harrison Buckers, and tell everybody where he lives.
And they were over his commencement address.
Well, the AG got wind of that.
He didn't like it too much.
He thought that's kind of weird.
A city, a government institution going after this guy for his free speech.
So they gave him something else to do.
He's got so much stuff on his plate already.
And the attorney general joins us now via Skype.
I hope you don't take that the wrong way, General.
But it's true, though.
I mean, you're just like taking all comers.
But you made a good point because it's a government entity going after him.
Yeah, Dana, look, this is a ridiculous attack by a progressive city official to try to silence Harrison Butker from his free expression of his religious beliefs.
That's not tolerated under our system of government.
It's not tolerated under Missouri law.
Fortunately, the Missouri Attorney General's office has authority under the Missouri Human Rights Act to fight back against this kind of discrimination on the basis.
of religion and we will absolutely use every tool in our disposal to hold accountable
anyone who is going to deprive Missourians of their right to free exercise of religion.
And that's what's going on here against Harrison Buckler.
We've got to continue to fight back.
Yeah.
And this, because this wasn't done as, I don't know how this could be interpreted as anything
other than intimidation, what they did.
Yeah, that's right.
It's retaliation.
It's intimidation.
It's coercion.
They didn't like what Harrison Bucker said in his religious speech where he was
expressing the tenets of his Catholic faith to a group of graduating students from a Catholic
university and they took umbrage at that they didn't like it progressives don't like the Christian
faith they want to silence the Christian faith and if you listen to what Harrison
Butker said that was a large part of his speech was that like look the left wants Christians
to remain silent wants them out of the public domain you know practicing worshiping in
private where no one understands the faith no one understands what they're saying and
Harrison Bucker said he's not going to be silent.
And I'm proud that he wasn't.
And at the end of the day, we're going to stand with anyone who wants to express their
religious beliefs in the state of Missouri and prevent this kind of discriminatory
retribution, retaliation, coercion against it.
There is no rational explanation for why a city official would express the home of
residence for a public official who made that kind of statement unless it was retaliation
against their religious beliefs.
Exactly.
We're talking with Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey.
and I'm glad that you're standing up to this because I can't imagine, especially in this type of environment where, you know, people have been attacked for wearing red hats.
They get attacked if they define what a woman is.
They get in all of this.
And you have all of these college grads that are watching this guy, you know, Benedictine College, just say things that weren't even controversial five years ago, 10 years ago.
And that's a chilling effect because they are evaluating their own speech because they see how this guy, who is an NFL player, how he is being treated and targeted.
by the city. And they're probably thinking, my gosh, if they can go after him, who's to say that they
couldn't do the same thing to me? And I have like so much, you know, less of a platform than an NFL
player. Yeah, that's right. Look, the whole idea behind the First Amendment is that it protects a
free, fair and open marketplace of ideas to include religious beliefs. And the left can't win the
argument on the merits. So they have to silence any voices in opposition. We've seen that in our case
against the federal government and the big tech lawsuit, Missouri v. Biden, it's pending at the
United States Supreme Court. And we see it in cancel culture now. Certainly that's what's going on
against Harrison Butker. But look, this is shameful behavior on behalf of the left. And really shame on the
NFL. You know, their DEI officer who's supposed to support diversity and inclusion.
Yeah.
But moans what, you know, bad mouse what Harrison Butker said. So basically they're, they tolerate
inclusion and diversity unless it's Christian beliefs. Yeah, they had no problem when Travis
Kelsey was chugging a beer at a commencement. But, you know, if you're, I mean, I'm not just
passing shade on him. I mean, you know, come on.
But they did.
There wasn't a problem with that, but there's a problem with Harrison Buckers and what he said.
I just feel like that that's such a double standard as well.
But one didn't threaten the institution of, you know, government, whereas the other one does
because, you know, tyrants don't like the building block of family.
They don't like the building, they don't like the building block of actual choice like that.
That's right.
Again, I think Harrison Bucker had it correctly when he said that the progressive tyrannical left
wants to drive Christianity from the public domain and prevent anyone from
expressing Christian beliefs.
We're not going to let that happen on my watch.
I'm proud to stand with Harrison Buckner.
Protect all Missourians' right to free exercise of religion.
And that Missouri v. Biden case.
I wanted to ask you about that as well because we just had last hour.
We had Dr. J. Bata Chari on to talk about the World Health Organization because he's
part of this.
And I know that you guys know each other.
By the way, he had some wonderful things about you.
But this is, I know the Supreme Court heard opening arguments.
We're expecting, tell us what the latest is on this.
Because I know SCOT's season isn't until like June.
for just yeah i think that's right i think at the end of the day we'll get a decision in june you know we
argued that case and i was appalled that uh associate justice kentaji brown jackson you know
had the audacity to say well it seems like the first amendment inhibits the government's response
to a pandemic or an emergence like yeah that's exactly right that the constitution exists to protect
us from the government those are god-given rights they don't come from man they're codified in the
constitution is a bulwark a defensive measure to protect us from the government so we clearly have a
understanding by a Supreme Court justice about the very foundational principles of this country
and our national identity. But at the end of the day, I think that Justice Alito and Justice
Thomas clearly pointed out that at a minimum, what happened here was the government, the federal
government significantly encouraged or actively participated in censorship on big tech social media.
We still believe that we've made a submissible case that big tech social media was actually
coerced by the federal government. And if you look at the evidence that's come out from
Congressman Jordan in his congressional hearing,
he will show you the emails from big tech where they felt they were coerced.
But under any of those standards, we still win.
And at the end of the day, this case is still pending at the trial court.
And regardless of what the Supreme Court does, we're going to be back down at the trial court level in merits discovery, rooting out the vast censorship enterprise.
I'm confident that the First Amendment right to free speech, free from government censorship will be vindicated.
I can't wait for that day.
And we appreciate you leading the charge on this.
Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey, watching up for all Missourians.
We just need to copy and paste you.
and all these different AG offices across the country.
Good to see you, sir.
Thank you.
Thank you, ma'am.
We have more to come, folks.
It's true.
I wish, like, can you imagine
if you had an army of AGs like that?
Golly.
Because think of it.
All of these fights that have been on speech
and, I mean, just think about some of the big battles
that we've had in some of these major court cases.
It's been AGs that have been leading the cause on this.
Like, Paxton's a very good one.
Bailey's a very good one.
Schmidt, now he's in the Senate.
He was a very good one.
not everyone has the same i think there's something to missouri a gs though isn't there i don't know
what it is there's something about the missouri agis they grow them differently there they're a little
different in our home state i don't know what it is is it the show me thing i don't know like
they don't mess around that's why i was like shocked when i saw this thing with kansas city like
why would you do this you know this guy's here and and then if he ever runs for hire office or does
something else, you're going to get somebody else.
They just, they grow them different there in Missouri.
It's just, you know, very different.
All right. So this, and we're going to be watching that speech, the Biden v. Missouri
or Murphy v. Missouri, because that's go to season when they come up with all the decisions,
it's usually around like June is when it happens.
That's when it's scotice and they come before they go recess and they have all their final
decisions.
And they, after they reviewed all the cases and heard, you know, the opening arguments,
et cetera. So he thinks we're going to hear about that coming up. And then if going to the lower courts,
you notice he mentioned the process of discovery. Dude, the endless new cycle. That's going to happen
over that. I am very excited for the process of discovery. I don't think that the left appreciates
how excited we are over that process, particularly when some of the stuff that we've seen,
like, for instance, with Amazon and the other, that, because that's, that's the other story that
came out, how Amazon was, you have the Biden administration putting pressure on these digital
retailers so that they would, they would tamper down and alter the algorithms of what books are
recommended to you and even alter the sales rate and what, if someone can be reflected in the
best selling list or not, based on whether or not the content of the book contradicted their
narrative that they were pushing on COVID and the pandemic and all of that stuff. I mean, so it's,
It's very interesting, interesting stuff.
We have some more things I want to make sure that we hit too.
Because this,
I have a lot,
we got some a lot of really good audio.
But I wanted to touch on,
let me pull this up.
Because this was,
where's this at?
Kane asked me, he was begging me to make sure I hit audio soundbite 9.
So this is the vice president,
Kamala Harris.
Is this like her economic policy pitch?
Just listen to it. This is wild. I'll hear some by night.
And I was sharing with Mr. Phelps that we, the president and I, because of the
inflation reduction act, the infrastructure act, we are dropping trillions of dollars on the streets
of America right now to build back up our roads and our bridges, our sidewalks, to invest in a
clean energy economy.
That, okay, all right. So trillions of dollars?
trillions.
I mean, she's saying what they didn't want to say
if we're being honest about it.
I mean, that's the truth of the matter.
Ooh, interesting.
Interesting, interesting.
Trillions of dollars in the streets of America
for bridges and roads.
What was our deficit again?
Oh, it's 35 trill.
Caprillion.
Yeah, something insane like that.
Yeah.
Mm-hmm.
All right.
So what is that going to
That sounds like
What was the plan under Barack Obama
Where it was busy work?
It wasn't build back better
That's Biden's
It was some infrastructure thing
Yeah, he had a big infrastructure thing
And they were really trying to sell it
That's when he was trying to shore up votes
In the blue wall and elsewhere
Yeah, yeah, yeah
But most things called, whatever they're called in Congress
It's like opposite of what they actually do
Like the Affordable Care Act
You can break with that
It's not affordable at all
We have more to come
as we barrel towards today in stupidity.
Although I don't think anything can get dumber
than NBC's queer animals for Pride Month.
Who does that?
It's like, I'm going to go find some gay lions.
I'm going to record these gay penguins, getting it on.
Like, who does that?
Like, who sits around there and thinks about that for content?
NBC, apparently.
That's who doesn't.
Follow Dana on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcast,
because knowledge is your ultimate superpower.
They're saying things.
like from the river to the sea, you know, that's just not some cheeky chant.
They're basically saying they want to see the destruction of the state of Israel and a second Holocaust.
That's what Hamas wants. That's why Hamas baked babies in ovens.
That's why they were raping the mothers. That's why they were beheading elderly people on October 7th.
You know, it's interesting. I didn't see those folks protesting Hamas' actions.
They were very quiet about Hamas' actions. Now they're just,
just doing and they're protesting this, but I'd also say people should learn their history.
The fact of the matter is, there's never been a country or state called Palestine.
Jews have the longest connection to that territory. It goes back to biblical times,
thousands and thousands of years. They were displaced by hostile forces over the years,
but just in the immediate history until World War I, that was hundreds of years of
rule by the Ottoman Empire, by Turks. That was not a Palestinian state. And then the Brits took it over
after World War I. They had the mandate for Palestine. And the vision was to have a Jewish state
and an Arab state. And in the UN, after World War II, adopted Jewish state, Arab state. Jews
accepted it, founded a modern Israel. The Arabs rejected it and went to war against Israel, a war that
they lost.
Wow. Some history there from Ron DeSantis. I love hearing people just get right to the point of it. And he's exactly correct in all of this. You know, I bet half of the people who are building those pup tent encampments didn't know the history of this area. They still don't. Like they didn't even know what they were talking about when they were chanting that heinous from the river to the sea nonsense. They remember the lady who was like, what do you mean, what sea? Like what?
really really
Jiminy
welcome back
this conclusion of our third hour
so this just happened
you guys remember the dude
who broke in a Pelosi's house
and attacked her husband
with a hammer and there was some weirdness there
right
he's described as former nudist
David DePape and he was
the leftist people kept
trying to act like it was
you know they tried to act like Trump sent
to an assassin
and a guy was like a leftist who at his house remember he had all the flags flying like literally
and he was given the sentence today he was convicted of kidnapping and assault he broke into
the house and there was that weird video where you had her husband who was in his britches
and he was in it it was weird it was there's some weird stuff I don't know do you still feel
like we got the whole story it's weird but the fact he got 30 years and I guess no one's
be able to talk to him and get a story out of him?
Who knows?
I don't know.
Yeah, he's put away for a while.
Yeah, he's going to be going away for it.
But it was weird.
Yeah, like it showed up and they opened the door and he's standing there in his boxers.
And then that tubby depape dude is standing right there next to him.
And it's just weird.
And also 30 years.
Do murderers get 30 years?
Well, I think it's like the type of assault.
It was like breaking and entering and all of that too.
Maybe he was, you know, I'm trying to be.
benefit of the doubt
because any alternative is weird to me.
But maybe he was just trying to talk him away
from hurting him and trying to de-I don't know.
I don't know. But he also seems slashed.
So it's just the whole thing's weird.
Anyway, the guy got 20 years for one count,
30 years for another count. They were run concurrently.
He was also given credit for the 18 months that he's been in custody currently.
So that's the latest.
All right. Today's stupidity came.
All right, it is New York City's Mayor Eric Adams.
He's going after American meat.
He's going after steak.
He's going after burgers.
He's going after ice cream.
Listen to what he says here.
It's cut 19 one.
Sorry about that.
Food is the third biggest source of cities' emissions.
Right after builders and transportation.
But all food is not created equal.
Yeah.
What's the worst stuff?
The vast majority of food that is contributed to our emission crisis.
crisis,
lies in meat and dairy products.
Yeah, it's too bad because we're not going to,
I'm just going to keep eating it.
That's how that's going to work.
Folks, I hope you have a wonderful weekend.
I will be back behind the mic with you on Monday.
Happy Friday.
We made it.
Have a great weekend.
