The Dana Show with Dana Loesch - Jimmy Carter Reaction, Trump Backs Musk On Visas, & Bird Flu Vax?

Episode Date: December 30, 2024

Craig Collins sits in for Dana. President Jimmy Carter dies at 100. Trump sides with Elon Musk over the debate about H1B immigrant visas. Trump endorses Mike Johnson as House Speaker. “Health expert...” Dr. Leana Wen calls on the Biden administration to authorize “bird flu vaccines” before Donald Trump takes office. A montage is put out of Biden Administration officials claiming Biden’s mental acuity is just fine. Mexico is creating an app that alerts family members if they are being detained in the US. Speaker Johnson thanks Trump for his support. A Federal Appeals court upholds the verdict finding Trump liable for sexually abusing E. Jean Carroll. The media admits they should have scrutinized Biden’s cognitive decline.Please visit our great sponsors:Black Rifle Coffeehttps://blackriflecoffee.com/danaUse code DANA to save 20% on your next order.  KelTechttps://KelTecWeapons.comInnovation. Performance. Keltec. Learn more at KelTecWeapons.com today.PreBornhttps://preborn.com/danaEvery contribution counts.  To donate securely dial #250 and say keyword BABY or visit Preborn.com/DANA. 

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 This is the Dana show. My name is Craig Collins, filling in. Thrilled to be with you. Follow Dana Lash all over the place. You can go to DanaRadio.com or D-Lash or Dana Lash Radio on X on Twitter. I'd stay connected to her and all the things that she's up to. Incredibly talented, famous, smart individual in the world of politics that I highly recommend you stay connected to.
Starting point is 00:00:24 And obviously you do if you're listening to this show with an idiot like me, filling it. thrilled to be here right before the holidays. U.S. President, former President, Jimmy Carter, passed away at 100 years old. It is interesting, the longevity, the lifespan of our most recent presidents. 93 is the age at which several of our most recent presidents passed away, now 100 as the age of Jimmy Carter. In retrospect, a lot of people are being nicer about a one-term president than say they would have been
Starting point is 00:00:55 shortly after he left office. The comparisons to Carter's presidency and Bidens are often kind of, you know, all over the place. But after Jimmy Carter passes away, probably not the right time to have deep dives into some of that. Even Trump put out something relatively nice about Jimmy Carter, which is interesting to me, and you shouldn't do this. I don't mean to do this. But Carter was fairly not nice, fairly mean to Trump calling him an illegitimate president, all kinds of things, blaming Russia for his election. And yet what Trump said about Carter seems to totally ignore that. For anyone that's narrative is that Trump's just a mean guy who hates people who hate him.
Starting point is 00:01:36 This seems to not be the case. Here is what President-elect Trump put out in response to Jimmy Carter's passing. I just heard about the news of the passing of President Jimmy Carter. Those of us who have been fortunate to have served as president understand that it is a very exclusive club, and only we can relate to the enormous responsibility of leading the greatest nation in history. a great start to the sentiment, sir. The challenges Jimmy faced as president came at a pivotal time for our country, and he did everything in his power to improve the lives of Americans.
Starting point is 00:02:07 For that, we all owe him a debt of gratitude. Jimmy was a good person by the standard of today's politician, to say the least. A lot of people could live up to the individual himself, something that they actually often pretend Biden is, even though Biden is someone who's had controversy after controversy surrounding him and his own family and the behaviors of his family and the, you know, a pardoning of Hunter Biden being the latest version of he's not the guy you thought he was, well, also not just being mentally capable of being the President of the United States over the last few years, according to many, someone who has a lot of corruption. It seems like in his potential past that we may find out about in the near future. So it seems even crazier that in response to a question about Carter and his significance, President Biden tried to reference Trump in some way, shape, or form, tried to say how decency was part of Jimmy Carter as a person,
Starting point is 00:03:08 and decency will be lacking when someone takes office in the near future. It is amazing. The things that Biden did that were just terrible during his time in office, the failure in Afghanistan, you can go through the whole list, inflation being as bad as it was, partly because of his war on energy, et cetera, et cetera. And for him to also say, even after pardoning his son for crimes that really feel like they tie to the big guy, you know, after all of that, saying that decency is something that apparently he thinks we have now, we had when Carter was president, and we won't have in the near future.
Starting point is 00:03:41 Thank you. President Dr. Mr. Carter. Decency. Decency. decency. Everybody deserves a shot. By the way, it was almost as if he was trying to be a ventriloquist for a bit there, because he smiled as he said decency multiple times,
Starting point is 00:04:00 and I don't know that his face moved as much as it should. It's a weird criticism, but I can't help it. But that was Biden's response to, is there something that Trump should take from Carter? And granted, again, Trump really took the high road in what he said about Jimmy Carter after Jimmy Carter passes away. I thought George W. Bush said something nice, too. in his reference to the family members, naming several of them,
Starting point is 00:04:24 in saying that Jimmy Carter is someone that will be missed and your heart goes out of the family. That's kind of the human response we don't get as much from others in society, but George W. Bush would have had his own loss in the last few years in his own family, so maybe he understands it better. I'm not really sure what the reason was for that, but I thought that was uniquely good. All right.
Starting point is 00:04:45 Another big thing that's been a discussion for some time now has been the H-12, 1B visa. Donald Trump over the weekend, President-elect Trump came out and said that he likes it. This is something that he hasn't exactly said in the past before. Some of his policy has even made or attempted to make the H-1B visa
Starting point is 00:05:05 harder for the government or harder for companies to get. This was right before he exited the White House in 2020. It's something they ran out of time and actually getting done. But here's the thing. And I guess what MAGA or whatever they call it online. Mainstream media hates when people seem to get together
Starting point is 00:05:25 and have a consensus opinion that seems to be conservative or supports Trump anywhere. Twitter is a hellscape to those individuals because there's people that actually like Trump and like certain things that are there, including Elon Musk. But here's the takeaway for me is that you did have a real debate, a debate where people went back and forth.
Starting point is 00:05:46 And maybe Elon was the only guy that got over the top for a bit, with some choice words about it. And at the end of it, you seem to have a consensus opinion that will push us in a better direction. Robert Sterling is probably the best person on social media to dive into as far as this issue is concerned in actual data at Robert M. Sterling on Twitter on X, if you want to find it. He dove into the numbers.
Starting point is 00:06:10 And one of the best things he pointed out is that that visa is only supposed to be approved a little under 100,000 times a year, about 85,000 of these visas are supposed to be available. However, in 2024, we gave out almost 900,000, meaning 10 times the limit we were supposed to give out. And if you look at the financial numbers for people who gain this visa and then the salary they have when they first come into the United States, and you should take as a caveat a grain of salt there that's not necessarily pointed out in this data, that this would be someone's first job more likely than not in coming into our country.
Starting point is 00:06:47 But the numbers don't seem to make sense compared to what you'd expect them to be. $75,000 a year or less. 17% of people who gained that visa in 2024 had a salary in that range. 21% of people had a salary range between 75 and 100,000. Again, if you're hiring high-end, top-shelf, programmers, coders, tech sector people, you'd assume they're making more money than this. 22% make between $100 and $125,000, and only 15% make more than $125,000 a year when you dive into this data, which seems to show you that there are a lot of companies that are using this visa to convince somebody,
Starting point is 00:07:29 whoever they need to convince that they need a worker of a certain skill set, when in reality they just need to pay somebody less money, and they know they can do that with someone who's coming to the United States, and in some way, shape, or form according to some online, would even be, sort of an indentured servant because if they lose their job, they also lose their status in the United States. So they're going to be a more agreeable employee than say someone else might be. So there's certainly issues. Elon Musk responded to this thread by saying this is easily fixed by forcing the costs of the visa to go up significantly to make it harder for employers to actually
Starting point is 00:08:05 net benefit from using it. They should net lose compared to hiring an American, which would incentivize them to hire an American, even if the American isn't as good at the job as a foreign person is. This seems like the best possible course of action. But again, the thing that a lot of people seem to love about this is that you had a debate. The side of the aisle that didn't like it was within the side of the aisle that was saying it was okay. So an infight, and it ended in us having a clear path forward. That's how a mature party handles some sort of friction. And you have to ignore everything in the world of mainstream media, everything in the world of far-left politicians who are desperate for this relationship to crater completely. They would like Elon Musk and Donald
Starting point is 00:08:50 Trump to hate each other. They want X and Twitter to hate Elon Musk or to also hate Trump more than it does. They want everything about the coordination of it to go away because it's harming them and their ability to do things behind closed doors. The biggest way to beat, you know, D.C., Washington, the elite crap that goes on, is to stop having our eyes closed, is to stop plugging our ears, to stop pretending that there's good guys and bad guys, and not mostly bad guys, and that if your team is the team doing something, that you don't have to be critical of it. And my favorite audio actually out there in response to this is some audio from CBS. So one of the pundits on CBS News said that her biggest regrets of 2024, at least when it comes
Starting point is 00:09:37 to, you know, media in general is not trying harder to push on the question of is Biden's brain broken, which to me is hilarious for a variety of reasons because a whole lot of us knew that the brain was broken. And when we yelled and screamed about it, most of the rest of media said that we were being far right crazy people who, how dare you enhance a conspiracy theory or, quote, cheap fake? Here, I'll play some of this audio quickly because I do really love it because there's no more unaware than this. To say out loud that whoops a daisy, this is what we got wrong and we should have tried
Starting point is 00:10:11 harder when the reality was you adamantly fought against this narrative for as long as you did and you use the excuse of there being bad guys and good guys and the media that you say is bad was the one that was talking about this for four years.
Starting point is 00:10:27 Mainstream media missed this. Conservative media did not. We didn't even come close to missing this point that Biden can't think, can't exit stages, can't say words and sentences together. And I love how much of media is pretending that didn't happen. Undercovered, underreported. That would be, to me, Joe Biden's obvious cognitive decline that became undeniable in the televised debate.
Starting point is 00:10:52 At the presidential debate was unquestioned. You could not hide it anymore. Sorry, continue. You know, it's starting to emerge now that his advisors kind of managed his limitations, which has been reported in the Wall Street Journal. Yeah, it has been reported. But a lot of other people were saying time and again when, say, Biden would say something, and then his own administration would correct him via a press release that we kind of
Starting point is 00:11:14 seemed like they were managing him before, or when there were more reports of the amount of access and lack thereof for the president for anyone within the White House, let alone press and people wanting to ask tougher questions. That was something we knew about for a while, lady. For four years. And yet he insisted that he could still run for president. we should have much more forcefully questioned whether he was fit for office for another four years, which could have led to a primary for the Democrats.
Starting point is 00:11:41 It could have changed the scope of the entire election. No, it wouldn't have. To be honest, I really doubt that anyone would have been an heir apparent to come forward and defeat Trump. And the biggest reason why I believe that, that Trump was unbeatable in this last election, is the way that they went after him. It didn't matter who they were running against him. What mattered is how they were trying to hold him accountable in, you know, federal courts for things that made no sense, or they found him guilty in a court in
Starting point is 00:12:08 New York City of a crime that's almost always a misdemeanor that he didn't even seem to commit, but is a felony for some reason, because his name is Trump. Those reasons, the attacks on Trump from the left is what made him unbeatable. Oh yeah, and then they tried to kill him, and he stood up and he said, fight, fight, fight. That seemed like another moment where Trump became an unbeatable politician in the world of this country and what this. country stands for and believes in. So I don't think that pushing Biden into the closet earlier would have actually helped the Democratic Party. But I digress, they could have shot the messenger a tad less and not been so mad that the thing that was being pointed out that was obviously
Starting point is 00:12:47 true was coming from the conservative media places that they like to pretend aren't actually telling the truth ever. And that's why they ignore or at least claim that they're ignoring and not just willfully helping the other side in whatever way they ask. All right, quick break, a lot coming up. Greg Collins filling in on The Dana Show. Our partners that help bring you the program, Preborn's a great organization that helps out mothers as they are making the difficult, they're making the decision. They got an unexpected pregnancy, unplanned pregnancy, and preborns are working out there to save lives in areas that get a lot of abortions, that see a lot of abortions. And so they meet these mothers. They offer them an ultrasound so they can hear their baby's heartbeat and meet their baby,
Starting point is 00:13:24 see their baby for the first time. And studies have shown that a baby's chance for life doubles when that happens. But this is all made possible because you donate. It's all donations. All of this is donations from people like you. And they have so many stories of women who chose life and then went on to raise healthy, healthy, happy babies and have, you know, great families. And with preborn, they don't just stop at the ultrasounds. They partner with women up to two years of life. So they're there with maternity and they're helping with diapers. And they're there when, you know, in a pinch when they, when these women need it the most. And that just goes so above and beyond. And that. And it just goes so above and beyond. and I think just showcases the dedication to life that preborn has.
Starting point is 00:14:04 It's super simple and easy to donate. You just dial pound 250, say the keyword baby, and you can also visit preborn.com slash Dana to donate online. Every contribution counts, but that's dial pound 250. Say the keyword baby. You can also donate securely at preborn.com slash Dana, and they're matching all donations, so your donation can go twice as far.
Starting point is 00:14:26 Save a life this Christmas. It just starts at $28. simple and easy. Preborn.com slash Dana or dial pound 250 say keyword baby. Subscribe to the Dana Show podcast because who says you can't make fun of people while staying informed on your own personal time? Subscribe on YouTube, Apple or wherever you get your podcast. This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins filling in. Let's do a real quick, quick five. And now all of the news you would probably miss. It's time for Dana's Quick Five. That's right. Warren Upton is the name of a 500.
Starting point is 00:14:58 and five-year-old Pearl Harbor survivor, who sadly passed away over the weekend as well. Jimmy Carter passed away at 100. Warren Upton passed away at 105. Again, oldest living Pearl Harbor survivor. Benjamin Netanyahu underwent a prostate removal operation. A court testimony was delayed in informing people about this. That's not exactly unsprising. You delay that information. Greg Gumbull, CBS Sports Broadcasting Legend, also passed away over the weekend.
Starting point is 00:15:28 and he died at 78. That was a sad, you know, thing to a lot of people who were big fans of sports in general, because Greg Gumbull at one point was a lot of places in sports media and quite good at his job. And finally, one last one that I thought was interesting. Abortions are actually up in the United States since Dobbs, since the overturning of Roe versus Wade. I know it's not something I'm going to celebrate or I'm not happy about. It's just an interesting stat that flies right in the face of anyone that said,
Starting point is 00:15:58 that the woman's right to choose was being overly controlled, that women's health was in tremendous jeopardy, et cetera, et cetera, all those different narratives. It would be the weirdest counterpoint possible to be just a simple, demonstrable fact that this, in fact, is a procedure that's increasing within our country, not decreasing, maybe not increasing in every single state,
Starting point is 00:16:20 of course, ones that have made it harder make that more challenging, but there are states that are seeing more of this. And then also, and I keep reminding people about this whenever I talk about it, which is really seldom, I hope, especially during the holiday season. In the actual, you know, decision by the Supreme Court, Brett Kavanaugh, of all people, said that there should not be any punishment if someone chooses to cross the state line and do something in one state that's legal that might be less legal or not fully illegal, but controlled in another state. So there is no fearmongering about that topic either, I think. But that's a real story out there in the world that you're not going to hear about from a lot of Democrats who claimed other stuff. All right, quick break. A lot coming up.
Starting point is 00:17:01 Craig Collins filling in on The Dana Show. The only coffee worth drinking. This is actually a great Christmas gift, too. If you join or subscribe to the Black Rifle Coffee Club, so you know this is veteran-owned, veteran-operated, active duty and retired veterans. And they make the best coffee on the market. They have their freedom roast, smooth, full of flavor. 20% you can save using Co-Dana. And again, when you subscribe to that coffee club, you get free shipping and automated orders sent right to your doorstep.
Starting point is 00:17:29 You choose the brews you want and you are able to get it delivered. Shipping's free to your doorstep. So you never run out of coffee. It's always super convenient. And they also have whole bean k cups ready to drink and you can find apparel, kettles, grinders, mugs, all kinds of stuff, whatever it is that you need for the perfect brew. So it's black rifle coffee.com. Get your freedom on. The freedom roast is one of their newest ones.
Starting point is 00:17:56 You can also check out just black, silence, or smooth, all other top shelf roasts. Whatever you decide, 20% off using code Dana. But it's only with code Dana, 20% off at black rifle coffee.com. The Dana Show podcast. Your fast, funny, and informative news companion for those always on the move. Subscribe on YouTube, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts. This is The Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins, filling in.
Starting point is 00:18:22 Follow Dana Everywhere, D-Lash or Dana Lash Radio on X, on Twitter. One of the best ways to stay connected to her. You can't predict him. He's all over the place. He's here. He's there. He's everywhere. I feel like I almost want to do like a Roy Kent chant.
Starting point is 00:18:37 If anyone watched any version of that TV show, Ted Lazo, that got terrible by the third season. All right, anyway, Donald Trump came out today and endorsed Speaker Mike Johnson and said that He has, quote, my total and complete endorsement and then MAGA with exclamation points as well put in there. The reason I say this was unpredictable is you had many people believing, and I strongly think this as well, that Mike Johnson's days were numbered as the Speaker of the House because he has not done a good job of having a backbone. That seems to be the biggest issue with him is he is on multiple occasions, especially when it comes to preventing the shutdown of the government, went ahead and sided with some Democrats behind closed doors to come up with.
Starting point is 00:19:19 with some plans that really didn't make sense, spending-wise, to a whole lot of, well, Republicans or conservatives or just American people, I'm going to go ahead and say. I think this makes sense, though, from a political strategy standpoint, whether this remains to be the case, say, after Trump is inaugurated and our president, we'll see, because if you disappoint the man, once you're actually in the position of power, he will let you know that too. And anything that he's done maybe before. Maybe it's like a 20-25, let's start fresh, let's start new, let's see how much more of a backbone you have when I'm actually in the White House, because that feels to me where this is going. But to give you some of the post that was put up on truth social and then
Starting point is 00:20:03 shared all over social media and actually even Speaker Johnson put it up on X and thanked President Trump for his support, saying he was humbled and honored by it. And a lot of us, I think, hope that it's not misplaced, although, again, it might be temporary support more so than long-lasting, if I'm going to guess about it. But Trump said, we are the party of common sense, a primary reason that we won in a landslide, the magnificent and historic presidential election of 2024. All seven swing states, 312 electoral college votes and the popular vote by millions of voters, despite large-scale voter fraud taking place in numerous states, including California, where votes are ridiculously still being counted and under review.
Starting point is 00:20:44 That is true, by the way. Trump's saying that it's kind of insane. The California is still trying to figure out what happened there, and yet we knew that somebody won the Powerball in California within 24 hours of that occurring. That feels like something you've got to fix a little bit. Jumping ahead in Trump's tweet, or I guess he put this up as a truth first,
Starting point is 00:21:06 and then it got shared on X. $11 million to Beyonce, who never even sang his song. two million to Oprah who did next to nothing, 500,000 to Reverend Al, a professional conman, an instigator who agreed to interview with quotes around it, their star-spangled candidate, Kamala and Joe. That's hilarious. He said that this demonstrates just how terribly the Democratic Party wasted $2.5 billion, most of it still unaccounted for, according to President elect Trump in their failed attempt to beat him in a presidential election. Finally, getting to the tail end, it says they ran a very expensive sinking ship,
Starting point is 00:21:46 embracing the DOJ and FBI weaponization against their political opponent, me, but it didn't work. It was a disaster. Let's not blow the great opportunity, which we have been given. The American people need immediate relief from all of the destructive policies of the last administration. Here it is. Speaker Mike Johnson is a good, hardworking religious man. He will do the right thing, and he will continue to win. Mike is my complete and total endorsement.
Starting point is 00:22:10 Maga. He will do the right thing is the part that I like, because it's not necessarily saying out loud that you have 100% faith that he has done the right thing so far, but he'll do it. And if he doesn't do it, we'll let him know. The biggest reason for this, by the way, and I know I took a lot of time to read a lot of that message that I probably didn't need to. You can go find it on truth social or on X, is that you can't have turmoil right now. You just can't. And I don't think it's necessarily a bad thing that it's, takes the Republican Party, or at least recently did take the Republican Party a while to land on a speaker. That's politics like we used to have it way back in the day. However, when you have to
Starting point is 00:22:52 certify an election, when you have to go ahead and let the president become the next president of the United States, you can't have anything throw a wrench in that system that's a self-inflicted wound. And the biggest debate in Fox News was one of the places that put this out there over the last week or so, is if there was a new speaker fight, would it take so long as to disrupt some of President Trump becoming President Trump again? And if so, that would be bad. So I imagine that's the biggest reason for this is for now, Mike Johnson's got to stay the Speaker of the House. But if you need him removed, if Trump turns on somebody in the next, I think, six months to a year, that person's political career is over. Trump just decisively won. And so up until maybe two years from now,
Starting point is 00:23:37 he loses if he even does any sort of, you know, ownership of House and Congress and connection and the Senate connection between branches of the government. I think for now what he says will wind up working. And I think it actually is a reflection of people voting him into that office in the degree in which they did, which he points out there. You love him, you hate him, I don't care. He is at the forefront of political power right now demonstrated mostly by the fact that he's wielding so much influence and he's not even actually the president yet, which seems to matter.
Starting point is 00:24:13 And actually, I thought one of the best analysis of Biden will be that he'll be most remembered as the guy who served between two Trump terms as opposed to someone who had a significant presidential impact. All right, I want to play some audio that for the most part I just use as a silly story and wouldn't treat it seriously. And I'm not trying to treat it more seriously
Starting point is 00:24:33 by doing it here. but you had a doctor, Dr. Wend, pop up on Face the Nation over the weekend and say how bird flu is a big deal, how we have vaccines and all this other stuff about and I'm about to play a bunch of this audio
Starting point is 00:24:48 and we need to do more before Trump takes over to essentially mimic some of the worst mistakes we made during COVID. And she's saying it as if we learned good lessons during coronavirus, seeming to forget all of the valuable analysis that has finally been made public that demonstrated how many huge mistakes we actually made. But here's a little bit of this
Starting point is 00:25:09 audio. What should be happening in the Biden administration right now that isn't going on? Yeah, there are two main things that they should be doing in the days that they have left. The first is to get testing out there. I feel like we should have learned our lesson from COVID that just because we aren't testing, it doesn't mean that the virus isn't there. It just means that we aren't looking for it. Yeah, even though our tests were terribly flawed and didn't tell us the right things more often than not. Oh, yeah, continue. We should be having rapid tests, home tests available to all farm workers, to their families, for the clinicians taking care of them so that we aren't waiting for public labs and CDC labs to tell us what's bird flu or not.
Starting point is 00:25:45 And the second, very important thing is this is not like the beginning of COVID where we were dealing with a new virus. We didn't have a vaccine. But actually is a vaccine developed already against H5N1. The Biden administration has contracted with manufacturers to make almost five million doses of the vaccine. However, they have not asked the FDA to authorize the vaccine. I got to stop it right there. How amazing is that? That apparently we paid a whole crap ton of money to the pharmaceutical industry to make five million doses of a vaccine that we haven't even actually tried to make available to the amount. Not that I'm telling you to take it. I think that maybe a whole lot of Americans would go ahead and say no to this. But that sounds like
Starting point is 00:26:24 we just lit money on fire and handed it to the pharmaceutical industry for them to enjoy, basically is the admission there. But what's crazy to me is that this is happening again in December, around the holidays, right before Trump takes office. Maybe it's another reason that he's coming out in so much support of Mike Johnson and trying to put out the fires on the MAGA side of the aisle or whatever you want to call it. Again, I don't always believe that as many people are the version of MAGA that the hard left describes as or what they think it is,
Starting point is 00:26:57 than the reality in the world. But I digress. The fear mongering, the whatever it might be that's going on here, hopefully it goes in one ear and out the other for a whole lot of Americans, unless a lot of people actually get sick. Don't tell us we're going to get sick. Let's react to it after the fact and let's make sure it actually is that and not somebody who got hit by a car and then was diagnosed with coronavirus,
Starting point is 00:27:19 which happened a bunch of times. And then, this is why this is a serious problem, even though probably the getting hit by the car part might have been the issue for the individuals that had those types of things happen. But anyway, this is the latest version of this. There's many stories out there about it, a whole lot of trying to convince us that this is going to be terrible and bad, and then eventually starting to surrender our rights all over again. I think this will fail.
Starting point is 00:27:44 At least I already assume it's failing so far because it's definitely already being attempted. And this is the best part of what COVID did for our society. It taught whoever was skeptical lessons that a lot of us needed to know or needed to understand the depth of them and essentially allows us to now see anything going on at a D.C. in these places as Boy Who Cried Wolf at best and something worse at much worse. All right. Another great montage, and this is the year of montages, the year of this kind of stuff coming out.
Starting point is 00:28:17 But another great one emerged on social media over the weekend of media telling us just how intelligent and sharp our president was, even though he was absolutely anything but that for the entirety of his presidency, and even while running for that office, he was someone who was diminished and the people around him knew it. His wife, if you think about the first lady, one of the people who will go down in history as the most deceptive to the American people will be someone who barely had the impact I think she wanted to have,
Starting point is 00:28:49 at least, you know, impact that we give her credit for. Who knows the amount of impact she actually had behind closed doors is Dr. Jill, Dr. Lady Biden, who again, I think contractually, I have to say that several times that MD is not in health. I just like to point that out, too, because she would have known more than anyone else to decline in her own husband, and she hit it as hard as everybody else did. I mean, look at Hunter Biden, if you believe the narrative and the fact that he did a bunch of stuff behind his dad's back for years, which we don't believe. A lot of us obviously think that Joe is in on it. But the other narrative isn't much better. And then you have Jill Biden essentially allowing her husband to be a puppet for several years and wielding whatever power she could from it. That will be one of the darkest legacies of this presidency. But I'll play this montage of all the times we were told that everything's great, which literally sounds like the state media of places like North Korea, China, Russia. This seems real bad. And I'm sure this is something that media will not apologize for. the degree that it should, or it'll blame somebody else, conservative media, whoever,
Starting point is 00:29:53 for being so willing to lie to us as profoundly as they did. Does the president have the stamina physically and mentally do you think to continue on even after 2024? Don, you're asking me this question. Oh, my gosh. Oh, he's so great. He's the United States. You know, he, I can't even keep up with it.
Starting point is 00:30:10 The most difficult part about a meeting with President Biden is preparing for it because he is sharp, intensely probing, and detail-oriented and focused. You know another reason that it's difficult to prep for one of those meetings? According to the Wall Street Journal, you had to submit all your questions in advance, and you weren't actually allowed to ask any during. So you had a lot of homework before you met with Joe. Testify because I've been working very closely with this president for the past two years. I've been knowing it for 30 years.
Starting point is 00:30:38 And I'm telling you, this guy's tough, he's smart, he's on his game. Joe Biden has vision, he has knowledge, he has a strategic thinker. president is focused. He's detail-oriented. He's always thinking about the big picture. He's a man's man. He's an Adonis. He's a sl-I don't know what other roads they went. It honestly sounds a little bit like Chuck Norris jokes. If I'm not dating myself and making that reference, the amount of Joe Biden is, which should probably be a viral trend on Twitter, on X, to tell us just how great of a person and how intelligent he was. It sounds exactly the same as those jokes about the ridiculousness of, you know, um, the, um, the, um,
Starting point is 00:31:18 The sun doesn't rise. Chuck Norris allows it to get up a kind of stuff out there. That's what they said about Joe, and Joe's brain was broken the entire time. He's probably not even aware of all the gushing praise he got until eventually he was shoved into a corner. All right, quick break. A lot coming up. Craig Collins filling in on the day and a show. We got a lot more on the way as we rolled towards headlines. Our partners who help bring us the program, it's our friends over at Caltech, the P-15. It stands for 15 pews, standard capacity. That might be a little bit more for the people who have weak arm muscles.
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Starting point is 00:32:44 Heltechweapons.com. That's K-E-L-T-E-C-Wpens.com. Tell them Dana sent you. Get the lowdown on the latest news with a side of laughs. Whenever you want, subscribe to the Dana Show podcast on YouTube, Apple, or wherever you get your podcast. This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins filling in for just one more day. Dana is back after the holidays.
Starting point is 00:33:06 D-Lash, Dana Lash Radio, great ways to stay connected to her on X on Twitter. The University of Iowa announced in the middle of this a month that they were going to get rid of American Studies in general. gender, women's and sexual studies, and also end some of the majors that existed in American studies and social justice. Iowa said that they had less than 60 students combined in those fields, and they're also responding to the changing landscape of, quote, DEI, or the terribleness of it. I love the fact that in light of that recent video has gone viral of a teacher at the University of Iowa being very upset that this is going away, saying she's disappointed, saying it was a
Starting point is 00:33:46 growing major at the school. 60 total students across all of it. Again, something we learned about several weeks ago. Here we go. It's disappointing. It's a little, it's sad. She teaches gender studies from social justice courses and says she's seen a spike in student interest. We've seen our majors grow.
Starting point is 00:34:04 Huge. Social justice was one of the fastest growing majors of the units that are being sort of restructured. I love if she says that as in like, we used to have 10. Now we have 20 students. seems insanely big, 100% growth in our field, but they're going away. Maybe common sense is finally prevailing, at least in some places of education, but I like how disappointed she is in what's being taken away and what it's being replaced with. Because actually a course of study called social and cultural analysis sounds like it might replace it. And that maybe will
Starting point is 00:34:38 have two viewpoints as opposed to one. Maybe you'll be told that some of the viewpoints you were taught in these previous versions of, you know, departments or whatever majors was actually opinion and not necessarily fact, as often was the case and usually the problem for a lot of these things. But I loved everything about this. The decision comes after Iowa State Board approved 10 recommendations to scale back diversity, equity, and inclusion throughout the Hawkeye State because, again, this is brainwashing. This isn't actually teaching people how to be critical thinkers. This is telling them that a specific version of facts are the only facts they need to care about, even if they're not facts at all, darn it. And even if they're written by
Starting point is 00:35:18 people who have tremendous opinions and not necessarily a lot of information to back that up. But I did like that story being all over and out there, especially since again, she called it one of the fastest growing majors at the school one more time just to make sure that the people in the back heard it. 60 total students in those majors across multiple different, uh, focuses at the University of Iowa, probably not exactly taking off and becoming the thing that she's claiming it was being. One last thing, too, I just thought this was interesting. Democratic policies have devastated San Francisco.
Starting point is 00:35:52 There are housing prices that are plunging and widespread tech layoffs. So when you declare war on some things or allow certain things to exist, I guess what? You harm the place in which you actually live as San Francisco is further falling apart. More on that later. Craig Collins filling in on the day. Dana Show. This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins filling in. Thrill to be with you. A bunch of stuff to talk about just before the holidays. D-Lash, Dana Lash Radio. Great ways to stay connected to her or Dana Radio.com as well. Donald Trump issued a statement about the passing
Starting point is 00:36:28 of Jimmy Carter, who died at 100 years old. Several of our former presidents who passed away recently. I made it at the age of 93, kind of eerie, that you have a couple people pass away at that same age. And then Jimmy Carter makes it to 100. So the longevity or the life expectancy for former presidents is certainly quite high, which actually, to be honest, is probably a good thing. It says something about the quality of our country if our presidents live long lives. And also, I think, interesting, the way that Trump praised Jimmy Carter, well, not necessarily saying he was a great president, was presidential in behavior, especially since you have to remember that Carter called Trump an illegitimate president who won because of Russia
Starting point is 00:37:11 interference in our election, at least in 2016. This is what Donald Trump said on social media. I just heard of the news about the passing of President Jimmy Carter. Those of us who have been fortunate to have served as president understand this is a very exclusive club, and only we can relate to the enormous responsibility of leading the greatest nation in history. The challenges Jimmy faced as president came at a pivotal time for our country, and he did everything in his past.
Starting point is 00:37:36 to improve the lives of all Americans. For that, we all owe him a debt of gratitude. I will play one other piece of audio. I'm not trying to celebrate the passing of an individual. That is sad, of course, the heart goes out to family, to loved ones, offer prayers, all that stuff. Any sort of loss in our families is tremendously difficult. It always is.
Starting point is 00:38:00 Be a human about that. But Mike Francesa probably said it better than anyone as far as not relitigating the Jimmy Carter presidency itself as anything other than what it was. President Jimmy Carter has passed away at the age of amazingly 100. I don't know if he's the first president to ever make a hundred. He is? He was not a great president. He's not a great president.
Starting point is 00:38:29 That was simply accurate. A one-term president who lost 44 out of 50 states when Ronald Reagan defeated him because a whole lot of people were upset about it. I kind of feel this is a weird way to say this, but part of the praise of Jimmy Carter coming from the left, especially from people like Biden, is because they see Biden as the next Jimmy Carter. Everything about Biden's presidency has mirrored, if not done tremendously worse than Jimmy Carter did. On top of that, Biden seems like a much worse person than Jimmy Carter, even though we were sold as him being like this great guy, the amount of controversies and potential horrible doings that are tied to. Joe and his family are through the roof. You can't say the same about Jimmy Carter as far as being a man of faith, of God, of, you know,
Starting point is 00:39:16 character that is true. And if you're Joe Biden, you also want to take a shot as you're going out toward and going out of the office of president toward President Trump and say that he's not a person of character, again, with a straight face as the amount of things you're accused of are crazy. Here's a little bit of audio of President Biden saying that you can. can't picture Jimmy Carter behaving the way that Donald Trump behaved. I will tell you that right before I play this audio, my immediate thoughts goes to all the horrible things this president and a whole lot of Democrats have said about MAGA Republicans, not just Trump, which they say he's a
Starting point is 00:39:55 horrible threat, the democracy, dictator, whatever, but a lot of people who vote for it. They've said horrible things about those people too. But again, let's pretend that we've always taken the high road in any of these discussions. Is it dropped to take from President Carter? Decency. Decency. Decency. Everybody deserves a shot.
Starting point is 00:40:20 Everybody. Uh-huh. Can you imagine Jimmy Carter walking by someone and you need something to just keep walking? Can you imagine Jimmy Carter referring to someone by the way they look or where they talk? I can't.
Starting point is 00:40:38 I can't. We can think about you, sir, attacking people for a whole lot of things that seemed like they were outside the scope of what presidential elections were supposed to be about. We can think about you doing that. We can also think about you blatantly lying to the American people about a bunch of stuff and also pretending everything's fine when it's not, which is what you and several people around you have been doing for years now. But darn it, go ahead. Pretend you can get on the high and mighty horse and judge those around you when talking about Carter. and also the press who want to ask the question about how does Trump connect to Carter? What's the difference there?
Starting point is 00:41:13 Well, one thing that Trump does get to say is that he resoundingly beat, not even Biden. I wonder what that actually would have been. I wonder if Biden had stayed in the race and they didn't replace him with Harris. Would things have actually gone worse or better for Democrats? I know they wouldn't have won. I know Trump would have won the popular vote and won all the swing states just the same. I wonder if it would have been a more resounding defeat that echoed the first. 44 to 50 state victory from Ronald Reagan over Jimmy Carter.
Starting point is 00:41:41 Again, not trying to be mean to a man who passed away, who lived a long life at 100, but also not pretending that the truth isn't the truth because of what happened over the weekend. I will play this audio. This is a talking head on one of the TV public whatever or cable stations. I know I call it public for a second. I just saying something very quick about Kamala Harris. Could Biden have been Trump? What do you think?
Starting point is 00:42:08 I think he would have had a better shot than Kamala Harris. Nobody ever liked Kamala Harris back in 2019 when she was running. She couldn't get a foot in the door. Yeah, I know. Nobody liked her. Nobody liked her very much at all. That is absolutely true. I don't think Biden would have done better, though.
Starting point is 00:42:23 To be honest, I think that the mental decline of Biden would have caused a lot of people to be incapable of even voting for him, even if they wanted him and hated Joe, or excuse me, hated Trump, which I think would have made even less people show up to vote this time around than did. I think, if anything, Harris did get more votes of people who could say, I'm voting against Trump, and I'm willing to accept whatever bad comes with it. You couldn't say that about Biden anymore after that debate. And that was one of the biggest issues, I think, that we saw. All right, another thing out there that I thought was pretty interesting, Mexico is going to be creating an app that lets migrants send alerts if they're detained in
Starting point is 00:43:01 the United States. This typically will be used for people who are coming into the country illegally. I don't know that the people will even all be from Mexico per se, but they would be using an app created by the Mexican government that can alert family members to being detained and even try to alert, you know, authorities to the fact that they're being detained. This app seems to be designed in trying to, at least in some way, shape, or form, benefit people that think that they're being detained, you know, legally unfairly, but also might have a byproduct that's valuable of telling a lot of people
Starting point is 00:43:36 that they're not succeeding in an attempt to say get into our country illegally. And that's what we need. We need a deterrent that needs to be a thing that causes us to get a grasp or a handle on what's going on. Mexico is also alerting citizens about the likelihood of being detained in the United States. So that's something that's certainly growing in, you know, awareness as Trump gets closer and closer to becoming the next president. And as Tom Holman, the borders are, continues to say out loud the amount of stuff he's going to do the moment. moment he's actually in that role as president because darn it, there's a whole lot of things that matter and a whole lot of things that become important about doing much better than we've
Starting point is 00:44:16 done so far. And actually, when you talk about the border specifically, one of the more interesting discussions on CNN was about the cost of handling, you know, deporting a lot of people, moving people out of this country that shouldn't be here. And one of the more ownership moments that I've seen in a while with Abby Phillips on CNN involved talking about exactly this topic and having her own people, her own talking heads on the TV, telling her how wrong she was about what she was saying because she was claiming that the expense of deporting people is just going to be too high, darn it, we're just not going to be capable of doing it. And there's some issues with that way of thinking. There's some issues with that way of discussing this topic because the amount of money
Starting point is 00:45:02 that it's costing us to have people be here illegally and be supported by our government is well darn it through the roof. But I thought that that was an interesting moment on television because if people say the part out loud that you don't like them to say, you eventually just get quiet enough to where you try to ignore that you just lost.
Starting point is 00:45:20 And then I think the go-to move is also to take a break and to get away from the topic entirely. But that was interesting to me because more and more often, I guess I can say that this way before I play any of that audio for you. More and more often you are watching parts of media, at least accept the person on the other side
Starting point is 00:45:40 who's saying the thing that, you know, is true, that many Americans believe to be true, that many Americans would say is one of the bigger reasons that they say voted for Trump to be in office. And what I think is so fascinating about that is these are the types of rhetoric points that you wanted to ignore in the past, that now you just have to silently accept.
Starting point is 00:46:03 And here I'll play an example, and then I'll tell you what I mean. This is that conversation back and forth with Abby Phillip and her panel talking about how she thinks it's going to be too expensive to actually remove people who are here illegally. One of the things I've heard about give a lot of interviews, and I know he understands the problem that they want to solve,
Starting point is 00:46:20 but he doesn't seem to have a sense of the scope of what it's going to take, what it's going to cost. And that's a critical question. I actually had a meeting with Tom Holman the other day, along with a number of my colleagues, we talked about this very issue. That's Mike Lawler, by the way, being like, we do know about this. Look, it's already costing states, like New York,
Starting point is 00:46:40 billions of dollars of taxpayer money to provide free housing, clothing, food, education, and health care to illegal immigrants. Then you have the situation where you have criminal aliens committing violent crimes, just as we saw a woman being burned alive on a subway by a man who was previously deported and then came back into the United States illegally. So that's another moment that we've seen this conversation evolve. If you were to say that people who are here illegally, sometimes not always commit horrible crimes.
Starting point is 00:47:12 In the past, the left would yell at you for being a racist. But now that there have been enough high-profile instances of people who don't have the right to be in this country, who also did horrible things like that, a person who lit someone on fire on the New York subway, now you have to accept that there is an indebted, increased amount of dangerous people that have come into our country. Again, I'm not trying to say that everyone who comes across the border is in that group. It's sort of insane to say that.
Starting point is 00:47:39 And Democrats are pretending Republicans say that even when they're not. And Tom Homan's stated mission is to remove the dangerous people from our society, not people who are simply here illegally, but people have done terrible things after coming into our country illegally. That should be a no-brainer discussion for most Americans. Like, yeah, I don't think I want people to be allowed to stay, who've committed horrible acts of violence or, you know, serious crimes who also don't have any right to be here. There's no real argument to keep someone in our country when that is the scenario they're in, even for those bleeding hard people who want to say that there is an argument on the other side for other individuals. And yet somehow this is still
Starting point is 00:48:19 a debatable point, well, people are now finally seating that part of the discussion and not attacking a person on a CNN for saying it. All right, quick break. A lot coming up. Craig Collins filling in on The Dana Show. Brighten up your timely news consumption with a Dana Show podcast, where every update comes with a little dash of Not So Serious on YouTube, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts. This is The Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins filling in. Let's fire off a quick five. And now, all of the news you would probably miss. It's time for Dana's Quick Five. This is a new story. This isn't an old story. A bubble boy was rescued. I feel weird. in the way I just said that.
Starting point is 00:48:59 In Brazil, a sailor by the name of Rafael Garcia de Prado, found a dude, a kid, eight years old, drift in the sea in a bubble. The bubble seemed like it was fragile, maybe even punctured a little bit. So the guy moved his ship into a spot where he could rescue the eight-year-old who thanked him repeatedly in Portuguese.
Starting point is 00:49:20 Since this was in Brazil, if I can't play the audio, we're getting him out of the bubble and into the ship and bringing him back to safety. Some questions still exist. They had the boy, get into the bubble and get in the ocean in the first place. But darn it, saved a kid on the water. That part is a great.
Starting point is 00:49:36 I love part of that story. So, so much. A police commissioner has been ousted after dozens of NYPD bosses, you know, complained and a bunch of other information has come out. It's one week after a sex scandal also rocked the NYPD. I am pro-cop, definitively pro-cop. being pro-cop means that when cops do bad things, you tell the truth about it, but you don't allow that to overshadow all the cops who do great things every day in our society,
Starting point is 00:50:05 in our country, in the world. But what's interesting about this is sometimes the way the New York PD behaves, say, compared to other departments, maybe more of their press people than the actual people serving and protecting the city. And sometimes the arrogance of some of those individuals winds up hurting them like I think it did in the place of this commissioner, who had, spoken negatively quite a few times about quite a lot, even called reporters, pieces of trash, and winds up out of a gig for, well, seeming to be someone who's not exactly living up to the
Starting point is 00:50:36 standard you're supposed to live up to. I said that nicely. I didn't have to be nice, but it's almost the new year. I saw this story too. There was someone with a sword in a parking lot. In Indiana man was arrested in Indianapolis after allegedly pulling out a machete at a family dollar. I feel like a lot of things about this story are terrible. Mostly the family dollar machete part, who brings a machete to the family dollar? I have that question first and foremost. Can't exactly buy one there. I don't think that's something you're picking up on the way.
Starting point is 00:51:05 But apparently an argument of some kind causing an issue in a parking lot ends with luckily no one being hurt, but a machete being wielded, which got to be a weird moment, too, once that happens. And then finally, one last story that I thought was interesting. Three relatives actually passed away after eating the same Christmas cake months after after a baker's husband died from food poisoning. This question has asked, this story has begged the whole lot of questions
Starting point is 00:51:32 about what the heck is going on as far as this bakery is concerned, as far as individuals connected to this story are concerned. This feels like a conspiracy theory that's going to deserve more attention, although probably it will, you know, pale in comparison to all the political stuff we talk about in the new year.
Starting point is 00:51:48 But three relatives have passed away after eating a Christmas cake, months after someone's husband also died from consuming products from this. Baker's store. But all right, that's a story that's real and out there in the world and terrifying and not uplifting at all. Hey, college football is coming up in a few days. At least that's going to be wonderful. I'll throw that in as the last topic as a palate cleanser. A quick break, a lot more. Craig Collins filling in on the Dana Show. Make some common sense of the crazy headlines with
Starting point is 00:52:16 the Dana Show podcast. You're on the go guide for getting up to speed on today's most important stories. Subscribe on YouTube, Apple, or your favorite podcast platform. This is the Dana show. My name is Craig Collins, filling in. Thrilled to be with you. A bunch of stuff out there to talk about. Find Dana at D. Lash or Dana Lash Radio on X on Twitter. One of the best ways to stay connected to her.
Starting point is 00:52:38 Speaker Mike Johnson has thanked Donald Trump for his endorsement. Speaker Johnson put up on X. Thank you, Mr. President. I'm honored and humbled by the support. By your support, as always. Together, we will quickly deliver on the America First Agenda and usher in the new Golden Age of America. Now, here's the thing.
Starting point is 00:52:55 Trump did endorse Mike Johnson, which might have surprised some people. Essentially, he's, you know, bobbing when people expect him to weave and vice versa right now before getting into the office of president. But that's the biggest reason why he's not in there yet. So let's not have turmoil. I imagine is the position that he or anyone in his incoming administration will have incoming, you know, group. Because darn it, the last thing you want to do is a self-inflicted wound that delays the process of making Trump our next president. opening the door to Democrats doing crazier stuff. That would be exactly the kind of stuff they claim that they would never do, and that only Republicans do again and again. Let's not have any of that happen. But anyway, Trump put up on Truth Social a long post about how successful of a presidential campaign he run. He ran how convincing of a win he gained all seven swing states, 312 electoral college votes, et cetera, et cetera.
Starting point is 00:53:52 He put up there how Democrats wasted. $2.5 billion, which is insane. $11 million to Beyonce for never singing at all. $2 million to Oprah for doing almost nothing, $500,000 to Reverend Al to do a quote-unquote interview with their, I love this. Star-Spangled candidate Kamala and Joe, that's something that Trump said on Truth Social. He said, we ran a flawless campaign, have spent far less with lots of money left over. They ran an expensive sinking ship campaign that embraced DOJ and FBI weaponization. against their political opponent.
Starting point is 00:54:26 Me! And he put me in big bold letters, which is absolutely true. I agree with you, sir. Toward the end of this post, he says, Speaker Johnson is a good, hardworking, religious man. He will do the right thing, and we will continue to win.
Starting point is 00:54:38 Mike has my complete and total endorsement, MAGA. I imagine, if you're Trump, you make a phone call that you've been making a lot recently, that said, hey, the past is over. I mean, look at who his vice president is. Trump seems to be someone who's going to say, let's start fresh, let's start new. I'm not going to care about the past.
Starting point is 00:54:58 Even when you read Trump's praise of Jimmy Carter, which is not, you know, long, but certainly kind, the words he said about the passing of the former president who died over the weekend at 100. Jimmy Carter had called Trump an illegitimate president and someone who won because of Russia. So it is interesting the way that Trump moved forward, totally different than what people tell you the behavior of the man is.
Starting point is 00:55:21 But nonetheless, I imagine that starting in day one of his administration, he will see everyone as starting from scratch and he will be hopefully very quick to you know pull the plug if you don't do the stuff he wants so i imagine this was a bending of the knee sort of thing from mike johnson you will have a bigger backbone you will fight more for issues that we think matter uh we will have control the house control the senate control the white house we want to see you actually behave as though you're in a position of power something you failed to do even though you are speaker of the house for the last couple years We want to see something change there.
Starting point is 00:55:56 I imagine that was the discussion. And then if it doesn't work out, we will very quickly say that you've disappointed us if that needs to come to that. But it doesn't have to happen now. And I've kept saying that, and I'll keep saying that, by the way, before I move on to something else, about the totality of Trump's nominations and all the crazy discussion of them or whatever the issue might be. And I'll get to the visa stuff in a second, too. But nonetheless, all of these issues, you can have one opinion right now. and if it doesn't work out, given some level of opportunity to that position, you can go ahead and say,
Starting point is 00:56:28 all right, we tried it, let's go ahead and do something else. That's better than, you know, going crazy and saying horrible stuff to begin with, or what media is doing and trashing the idea of everything that's being attempted or hopefully will be attempted over the next several years to clean up the broken corruption that exists in D.C. And our bureaucracy in general, it seems like a good thing that we're going after that, but I digress. I thought this audio is interesting. This was a CNN debate in which someone was actually trying to say that President Biden will go down in history favorably, which is insane. And actually it's odd that Jimmy Carter passes away now at 100, you know, lived a long, valuable life.
Starting point is 00:57:10 And some of the people who are talking about Jimmy Carter and his one-term presidency seem to be remembering it differently than a lot of Americans felt it went when he was in office. I'm not saying that to be mean. I'm saying that to not be dishonest, even though someone sadly has passed away and the family is rightfully in mourning. It feels like the way that Jimmy Carter was remembered for most of his life after his term in office will be similar to the way that Biden will be remembered
Starting point is 00:57:37 after he leaves office. And maybe that's the reason that Democrats are so quick to say nice things about both of them right now. But here was a back and forth in which Scott Jennings absolutely owned somebody on CNN. It was pretty great. I think he's still, look, he showed up for the job. He got the work done.
Starting point is 00:57:53 I think some of the accomplishments also. I got to stop it, by the way, too. I love that the barometer for Joe is he was there. We're not sure if he was actually the one thinking things or saying stuff, but he was at least in the room. We're pretty sure. Middle East, informed policy. We'll also stand the test of time.
Starting point is 00:58:08 Do you think the Middle East is in better shape today than when he took office? Well, I think he got our hostages home. I think that's a big deal. I think it's important. I'm sorry, which hostages? Did he now? He's gotten a number of people home. There's still 100 people over there.
Starting point is 00:58:21 Well, there were more than that. Including some Americans. Look, nothing is funny about the fact that there's still hostages there. What is funny is how quickly the wilting of that narrative goes when someone questions it right now. He did a good job in the Middle East? Well, no, but he might have gotten some hostages. He got a lot of them home. Well, he got some of them.
Starting point is 00:58:36 He showed up for the job. Remember I said that at the beginning? I think he's going to leave office in disgrace. The Hunter Biden pardon was disgraceful. He's going to be remembered largely for inflation. Correct. And for the disastrous Afghanistan. out. And I think as we continue to, we're just getting the first draft of this now, but as we continue to learn about the massive cover up that went on, not about his health, but about his mental acuity to cover that up, the efforts that were undertaken by the White House staff, by his family, not in the last couple of months, but for all four years, I think it's going to be a really ugly chapter. It's a diminished presidency because of it. And I think we still don't know the full extent.
Starting point is 00:59:19 of what they did to try to hide what they've been doing over in the West. Yes, over in the West Wing, I absolutely agree with him. I will say this. I think time will be even less kind to the mental acuity or lack thereof of of Biden and the stories that, and this is what Jennings is saying, we're getting a first draft version of understanding it. And what we probably will remember most about these 12 years from when Joe Biden takes over from Trump or when Trump first gains the Office of President
Starting point is 00:59:49 to begin with or when he regains it now, is media's obsession with Donald Trump. That'll be all it is. Left-wing politicians or just politicians in general who are afraid of any of the we're going to clean up the swamp stuff that gets said, whether it happens or not,
Starting point is 01:00:05 is something that immediately they need or can fight about. But I really think that's it because if you look back to 2020, regardless of if you believe the election was legitimate or not, Trump got a whole lot of votes. That's undeniable, regardless of what. you say about it, but a vast majority of people who probably admit to voting for Biden didn't vote for him. They voted against Trump. And the campaign was all anti-Trump. And they tried it again
Starting point is 01:00:29 in 2024 with both Biden and Harris, and it failed. But everything about the last eight years and the next four years will overwhelmingly be the dominance of Trump in the news cycle. And I think there's no denying that, no debating that. And honestly, if Trump actually in these next four years creates the legacy that people hoped for him, his first term in office, the true dismantling of the, you know, bureaucratic crap that exists in D.C., the true ripping apart of a lot of the, say, hidden, you know, behind closed doors, a terribleness. I think he'll go down legitimately as a tremendously important president. People won't all still like him and the things he said.
Starting point is 01:01:13 But if he delivers on what he promised, and I don't think the promise is just, to lower the price of groceries. I think that's important. I think we'd like to see that. We'd like to see the economy simply do better. People make more money, even if grocery prices don't go down. The percentage of which they cost of our income
Starting point is 01:01:29 would be nice if that changes. But what I think is even more important is, and truly the reason that even Democratic friends of mine say they voted for him, or at least decided not to vote at all because they didn't care if he won and they couldn't vote for Harris, is because that system has gotten so broken.
Starting point is 01:01:45 We hate it. I keep comparing these things, and I can't help doing it. So when you look at the debate about the visa, the H-1B visa and how it's supposed to be designed to bring in a lot of very high-value individuals, which it does to some extent. That's not all it does. According to a data deep dive, it probably brings in a lot of less high-value individuals who are willing to be paid less money to do jobs that Americans are qualified for. but there are some jobs out there that we don't have the entirety of the elite market as far as job applicants go. And that's not a bad thing. That's something that makes us a stronger country by taking the cream of the crop from everywhere else.
Starting point is 01:02:28 But I digress. The thing that's so interesting to me about this is the hope that the way that America stops losing these jobs, at least in some of these circles of the debate, would be to simply make it something the government overly controls. And for so many other issues, usually the side of the aisle that might be advocating for this is against that. And we want a meritocracy where you rise to the top by being the most successful, the person that deserves the opportunity or the, you know, role you're being given. That's usually something that we praise and we look for in this issue. It's something that's getting more complicated than that. And I understand that there's a certain value in the discussion and a certain amount of people who are mad, even if they don't work in tech at all, or have never lost a job because,
Starting point is 01:03:11 because someone with this type of visa took that job from them. But I understand that what we actually need to do is fix the brokenness of the system. The education system itself needs to be reformed. The education department needs to go away because it's tremendously corrupt. We know it, you know it, no matter what side of the aisle you're on. And yet some people behave as though it couldn't go away because that would cause chaos. And yet it would be better for something that's broken to vanish and something new to replace it than to try to root out all of the deep-seated horribleness that exists in these places.
Starting point is 01:03:44 I'm a huge proponent of that, at least trying to do it, because the opposite is just letting Washington live as it's lived, letting D.C. do the same as always business. And that's why you need outsiders to be appointed into positions of power within these organizations. You need people who are truly willing to root out a bunch of the crap, don't have friends that they're going to protect along the way, in order to change the system that is not benefiting, many of us. And I think that that's something that would be universally thought of and agreed upon
Starting point is 01:04:14 if it happens as a good thing. But the H-1B visa could also change. I think the back and forth debate was actually good. And Elon Musk, even though he came hard at one point in the paint on a lot of people, saying the F word and whatnot, quoting Tropical Thunder, which was actually kind of funny, in my opinion. But eventually relented and said, yeah, there are parts of it that's broken. I've always said they're broken. And Trump's saying that he actually likes the visa and he's used it before was surprising, almost as surprising as him being, you know, in on supporting Mike Johnson, at least for now. But again, with all this stuff, I think that the end result was healthy debate and then a path forward
Starting point is 01:04:52 that looks to change a system or completely remove a system if it's too broken to be fixed. In the case of the visa, Elon says, you know, it's an easy fix. I make it more expensive. Make companies have to pay more in order to obtain it and keep it. make certain restrictions possible, that just make it all a financially, you know, not valuable thing to do.
Starting point is 01:05:14 You can't hire someone at a lower wage that would be anywhere near the price of an American worker. Let it be for just the truly elite where the company doesn't mind spending even more money and where typically the person coming from the other country doesn't mind getting less than what they deserve in order to have a job that someone in our country would probably get paid more for.
Starting point is 01:05:33 Let it be for a very specific amount workers at a negative cost to an employer to the degree that they don't want to do it a whole lot, and also just stop approving it as much as you do. You're supposed to do something like 80,000 of these a year, and they did 800,000 last year. That seems to also be a broken part of the system. Let's fix that part, too. But I like that. The debate turned into a potential change that might actually make something better and not worse. An adult version of a political party does that and does a lot of that. Quick break, a lot more. Greg Collins filling in on the Danish show.
Starting point is 01:06:08 It's his life mission to make bad decisions. It's time for Florida man. Thrilled, I get to pay off what I started last Friday. This is The Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins filling in. These are the 10 best Florida man stories of 2024, including one that just happened over the weekend. A Florida man crashed into a trooper after a high-speed chase with other cops in Tampa
Starting point is 01:06:35 running from cops usually doesn't end well. If you crash into a different cop that's not part of the pursuit. But that happened. That occurred just over the weekend. Some of the other craziest ones from this year that are great. A Florida man took on a bizarre challenge of eating raw chicken every day. He promoted this on social media in the earlier parts of the year and then stopped posting on social media by about June of this year. We assume he's okay.
Starting point is 01:07:01 We hope he's okay. At one point, he had half a million followers on Instagram specifically as he talked about the fact that he was. was planning on consuming raw chicken every single day as much as he could until bad things occurred, which again, you hope for all the best there. No one's heard from him in a while. A Florida man saved his neighbor from the jaws of an 11-foot alligator. This happened back in April of this year. The way he did it, hit the alligator with his car. A man said that he saw his neighbor in a potentially deadly situation. So he did the only thing he could do, waved his arms, waves his hand, got in his car and started driving, and the alligator regretted the entire
Starting point is 01:07:39 situation. Interesting story. A friend for life as far as the neighbor goes if they weren't already. You made it all the way that was top, all the way to the top was a question that was asked to a Florida man who for no reason at all scaled a cell phone tower. As the Florida man climbed back down the cell phone tower, the police seemed to be impressed with his ability to climb and then promptly arrested him for the illegal activity, which I love a lot. The guy was proud of himself. He's like, yeah, pretty crazy. I didn't think I could do it and I climbed it and now I'm going to go to jail. A Florida woman led deputies on a chase in a stolen ambulance. That was a real story that happened in the middle of this year in June. And then one final one, and I think this might be my favorite
Starting point is 01:08:21 Florida man, a Florida man got arrested after sending in a bomb threat against himself and then complaining that nobody in the police seemed to care about the bomb threat he made about himself. No, there's no top to that. There's, there's a bomb. It's going to go off on my property. There's people who, you know, told us they're going to leave a bomb here. There's a bomb, you know, threat situation. You guys got to come out.
Starting point is 01:08:44 And then when they didn't do it, the guy was eventually like, what do I got to do, man, to convince you that my bomb threat against me is real. And that's probably the part where they went a little too far. He says he made a mistake in the threats he made against himself. And he was attempting to get revenge on someone else and just, mistargeted a little bits or a lot. Sounds like there might be some mental health issues there. But that Florida man probably both regrets the, you know,
Starting point is 01:09:10 initial bomb threats against himself and then also eventually asking the cops why they're not doing their job better at taking down him, the bomb threat individual. But those are some of the best Florida man stories of the year. That is Florida man. Dana will be back next year with brand new ones. Craig Collins, filling in on the Dana show. This is The Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins, filling in.
Starting point is 01:09:34 Thrilled to be with you. Dana is on vacation. She'll be back just after the holiday. You can find her, D-Lash or Dana Lash Radio on X on Twitter. One of the best ways to stay connected to her. For anyone that's actually been reaching out to me and found me on social media, Radio Craig C is how you find me if you want to.
Starting point is 01:09:52 Nowhere near is active or interesting as Dana. So a follow if you feel like it, and thank you for it. Let's play first the breaking news audio and then some other audio that's making the rounds. I do want to take you on to some breaking news that we are following at this hour, as a federal appeals court has now upheld a $5 million verdict that E. Jean Carroll won against Donald Trump when a jury found the U.S. president-elect liable for sexually abusing and later defaming the former magazine columnist. There was not a lot of evidence in this case to begin with, and then there was a piece of video that has gone viral again in the wake of the challenge, also winding up failing for Donald
Starting point is 01:10:34 Trump, the appeal court not finding a reason for Trump to get to revisit this case. That video that's going viral is from Eugene Carroll's own interview on CNN when she said some odd things to Anderson Cooper. This was a video that was not allowed to be played in the courtroom when people were deciding what the likelihood is that Eugene Carroll was telling the truth and that the claim she was making against Trump, which very much were, I am the only person that is aware. There are no witnesses that are coming forward and saying things, and Trump is the only one who can defend it. So it's my story versus their story. But this is part of that audio that's going viral. Yet again, E. Jean Carroll probably wishes
Starting point is 01:11:13 didn't exist at all, but darn it does. Don't feel like a victim. I was not thrown on the ground and ravished, which the word raped carries so many sexual connotation. This was not, this was not sexual. It just, it hurt. It just, you know. I think most people think of rape as a, I mean, it is a violent assault. It is not a, I think most people think of rape as being sexy. What?
Starting point is 01:11:39 Let's take a short break. Think of the fantasies. Let's take a short break is what he wanted to say in response to that, because it made absolutely no sense. And again, this is something that they were not allowed to play in court to try to question the veracity of E. Jean Carroll's claims. Only two people, no, for sure and then God, what actually occurred, and whether or not it's a extension of all the other
Starting point is 01:12:03 weaponizations against Trump in all the media places and all the, you know, places within our judicial system that went after him. I don't know. I've always about that one story individually. I wondered how someone can come forward that many years later with that little evidence, I claim what they claim and get a win like they got, a $5 million lawsuit. And it's not exactly forgotten on me that this also happened in New York, the only place that found Trump to be guilty of any sort of felony, a felony that's almost always a misdemeanor, that having nothing to do with Eugene Carroll, but having to do with businesses and, you know, record keeping in businesses, which is crazy in and of itself. And that's the only thing that he was found guilty of whenever
Starting point is 01:12:45 somebody says, 30 counts felony, they don't seem to always understand it was only the one case. By the way, there is reporting saying that Joe Biden is most disappointed in the fact that The judicial system didn't move quick enough, the DOJ against Trump, and that he essentially regrets having Merrick Garland be in a position of power within the DOJ because he should have made someone else powerful who would do more to harm Trump quicker. That's real stories and reporting out there. Biden also seems to not regret a lot of the things he actually did. Well, he was in office, which is insane because he did a lot of terrible stuff that you would think,
Starting point is 01:13:21 looking back in it, he would be able to say out loud, I wish I had done that differently. but some reason he can't do that, which is shocking for a variety of reasons to me and everyone else. But it's just politics as usual. Denied, deny, pretend everything went great. Actually, speaking about that, Jamie Raskin went viral for some of what he said about the weaponizing of the DOJ. He's scared of it. He's scared that it'll be politicized. And of course, Jamie Raskin says stuff out loud that a whole lot of Trump people are like,
Starting point is 01:13:51 this just happened. This just occurred. You guys did this. we go. And he, you know, seems to want to treat the Department of Justice as a mere adjunct under the unitary executive theory of his own presidency. So we are going to try to defend the principle of the independent integrity of the law enforcement function under the Department of Justice. And we will resist and oppose any efforts to politicize the department so that it goes after the president's enemies in the current parlance or goes easy on his friends. That is simply not how
Starting point is 01:14:32 the rule of law works. By the way, just for your information, not that Raskin has a whole bunch of hair on the top of his head, but it looks like for some reason he got in a fight with like a fork that he tried to comb his hair with right before he went on television. Things seem real bad. Things seem to have gone or a wind tunnel somehow was a part of his commute to this hotel that he's in. Nonetheless, Raskin claiming that all this stuff Trump wants to do is terrible and bad. And of course, not what anyone should do, even though it feels like they just did it. By the way, a lot of media is having a comeuppance.
Starting point is 01:15:04 No, I'm kidding. They're not truly admitting what they did wrong. But they're at least saying that they should have done better in not being as on the take on the Democratic side of the aisle as they evidently were during the entirety of Trump's, excuse me, the entirety of Biden's presidency. And now with Trump coming into office, I want to play. this, this is CBS News and one of their correspondents, Jane Crawford, saying we should have done a better job of asking questions about the mental health of a president that couldn't figure out how to walk off a stage or disappeared into the rainforest, if you remember that one, which was uniquely amazing. Here we go. Undercovered and reported. That would be to me, Joe Biden's obvious
Starting point is 01:15:42 cognizant decline that became undeniable in the televised debate. At the presidential debate was unquestioned. And, you know, it's starting to emerge now that his advisors kind of managed his limitations, which been reported in the Washington for four years. Who thought that was happening the entire time? A whole bunch of conservative media. And yet he insisted that he could still run for president. We should have much more forcefully questioned whether he was fit for office for another four years, which got to a primary for the Democrats. It could have changed the scope of the entire election. I love that the next thought there is how it would have impacted politics.
Starting point is 01:16:21 because that's why you didn't tell the truth about Joe is you wanted to impact politics in a positive way and for you a positive way and make sure that Biden got reelected and Trump didn't. The other big challenge with Democrats ever being honest about Biden, and this doesn't get talked about enough, is if they had told us the truth, say, two years in, three years in, whenever they thought that the campaign season truly was starting,
Starting point is 01:16:44 when Trump announces that he's running again and you want a candidate to be running against him from jump and having that entire process, how do you not also have to impeach Biden? If you admit that he's not mentally capable of being president for the next four years, and you do it in a way that media is now calling for actual honesty, and just he doesn't want to do it anymore. He's giving up, you know, sooner as opposed to, you know, telling us that he can't do it, then how would you keep him?
Starting point is 01:17:12 And if you didn't keep him in office, if they had told us the truth, and this is the reason they didn't do it, and they had impeached him, which you would have to do, if you admit that his brain doesn't work, you would have broken a glass ceiling by accident in a way that you didn't want to do it. The Democratic Party wants their politicians elected
Starting point is 01:17:29 by more than just their policies. Actually, they want them elected in spite of their policies. They want you to elect the first woman president because it's a candidate on the Democratic side of the aisle. They want you to elect the first black woman president, who knows, as they continue to look for other different things, that they're going to say, yeah, elect somebody for this reason.
Starting point is 01:17:48 And if Biden had been impeached, changed, Kamala Harris would have become the president, and you would have lost the breaking of the glass ceiling. And I don't even think Harris wanted it, which is kind of crazy, not in that way, not then. And what I mean by that is she didn't want to feel blamed for the first few years of Biden's failures. Everybody wanted to pretend they were starting new, although Harris did a terrible job, among other terrible jobs while running for president, in trying to distance herself from Biden because darn it, she's the vice president. and she'd have more say and probably even knew, you know, in the back corners, as did many of the people in her administration, that she was more in power than he was. Although other people in power, I think, Jill, Dr. Jill, Dr. Biden, as I'm contractually required, I love that all the time.
Starting point is 01:18:33 I stole that from another radio guy that I respect a lot. But anyway, I have to call that person, Dr. Jill, Dr. Biden, much because even though she's not a medical doctor, I got to make sure I remember that she received a doctor. it, but I think she wielded a lot of power and did it behind the scenes and behind closed doors and, you know, Hunter Biden was doing his own stuff and selling art. It's just crazy. The amount of things that happened over the last four years outside of just the cratering of our economy or a few other of the issues that everyday Americans faced, but the true scope of lying. And again, in retrospect, pretending as though you wanted to ask more serious questions, challenge things more and force a primary process as if you didn't evaluate what also would come with that and how that would have been bad for your political side of the aisle. The only reason that media
Starting point is 01:19:22 can be honest now is they know Trump was inevitable. They couldn't beat him. It didn't matter who they picked. He wasn't losing. And they refused to accept that all the way up until election day. And now that they have to accept it, they're going to look back and be like, well, we should have done more to try to tell you the truth that we had no interest in telling you because we knew it would hurt us and we knew it would make Trump a shoe in, even though him also surviving an assassination attempt and standing up and pumping his fist in the air was one of the more American things you're ever going to see anybody do, a much less Donald Trump, if you love him or hate him, that, according even to I think Mark Zuckerberg probably
Starting point is 01:19:56 crystallized his opportunity to be the next president, because darn it, it was incredible to watch for anybody. Again, if you hate him or like him, bullet barely didn't kill him. And then he stands up and yells fight. That's something. That's the kind of thing you want from anybody that's in a leadership. position anywhere in this country or world for that matter to not be, you know, intimidated, even if you should have died that day, as horrible as it is to say that out loud.
Starting point is 01:20:24 All right, quick break, a lot more, and he's lucky he didn't. And by the grace of God, in his own admission, he says he didn't. Quick break, a lot more Craig Collins filling in on the Dana show. Not able to catch the full Dana show? Follow Dana's absurd truth podcast and get news and laughs delivered in short, easy to digest episodes. ideal for your busy lifestyle on Apple or wherever you get your podcast. This is The Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins filling in. Thrill to be with you. Let's fire off a quick five.
Starting point is 01:20:53 And now all of the news you would probably miss. It's time for Dana's Quick Five. A couple of these stories I really, really like. First, a Colorado suspect wanted an alleged failed bank robbery after handing a letter to a teller that was incapable of being read. It was illegible. The person's like, I don't know what you want. Are you robbing me? Are you threatening me? Are you complimenting me? How it's happening here?
Starting point is 01:21:19 The delay in the process for the would-be thief and the teller to understand what the message said, left enough time for police to get there and arrest somebody. I love the jokes online saying that this was probably a doctor or somebody else with terrible handwriting. I'm just trying to knock off a bank that wishes they had at least just type this message out or something, man. Take the extra minute, print it. I'm not trying to help you do it. crime better. I just think it's hilarious that this was the issue. I also saw a stat about how terrible customer service has gotten, according to most Americans in 2024. Many people say that
Starting point is 01:21:51 they're having terrible interactions with companies and companies are losing likely $3.7 trillion due to bad customer service experiences of any kind. I've actually had a terrible one recently as well. I don't want to give you too many details and bash the company necessarily, but well who knows maybe later I will no I'm kidding but essentially I wanted something to do better that wasn't working great it was working but I was I thought that the place I was giving it to they could improve it and then they broke it completely that was my favorite part so when I went in there and I'm like well this is not better this is worse they somehow got mad at me for a while and I was happy that I stayed the comest out of anybody in the scenario it made me feel real good
Starting point is 01:22:34 but if you hand something over to someone and ask for them to make it better and they break it entirely. That's probably a moment where you want to say sorry to a customer and not be upset for some other reason. But I thought that was funny. $3.7 trillion. I think a lot of people just don't have patience for customer service. I think even if you're being, you know, frustrated but polite about it, and you're just complaining for more than a couple minutes. People want that interaction to stop, even if they're on the end that's supposed to be listening to whatever the issue is. And I find that to be the biggest challenge that maybe some might face in making that better in 2020. 24. Also, apparently we will end the year with a black moon. This is something you've probably not
Starting point is 01:23:14 seen before. It's something that's not necessarily bad, even if it might feel ominous to many people out there. It's similar to a blue moon. I guess it's just the way in which the lunar cycle works and what you see in the air, but it's rare. And they're saying that, you know, again, if you look up in the sky around New Year's Eve, you're likely to see a black moon, which is going to make you question if 2025 is going to be any better than 2020. and we all hope it is, we all assume it is, for a variety of reasons. Chief among them is that the Biden administration will be out of the White House. And then finally, a backpack containing $1.1 million worth of cocaine were discovered in the wilderness near Canada.
Starting point is 01:23:55 I know cocaine bear was a movie somewhat recently, like a year or two ago. This feels like how that movie becomes a reality. And actually, I think it was based on a somewhat true story about a bear that had consumed cocaine, maybe didn't go on the killing rampage that happened in the movie itself. But this story happening this year, when that movie came out, I think it did at the beginning of the year, if not maybe just last year, is kind of amazing. But $1.1 million just kind of discovered, discarded.
Starting point is 01:24:23 My first question was also, where's Hunter Biden? I'm curious where he's at. Has he been to Canada recently? Has there been a trip that was scheduled and planned? And also, sadly, anyone taking any sort of security efforts in that area of the wilderness probably was using the same security system as the White House, which means it was terrible, which would be amazing if that were actually true. I would love it if that were true.
Starting point is 01:24:46 All right, one last one. I saw this too, and I thought this was pretty interesting as well. U.S. homelessness is up 18 percent as affordable housing remains out of reach for many Americans, whether that's actually rent going up or purchasing a home going up. So more and more you're seeing an increase in some of the biggest struggles in our society. Also not exactly great news, which again means you hope that 20, 2025 will bring way better things, at least in the world of the economy, to fix some of these horrible issues that we're facing. But even in the world of places like San Francisco,
Starting point is 01:25:17 a lot of these issues wound up causing a lot of other harm to the housing market, to all kinds of things there and even now giant tech layoffs, which are happening to. On that uplifting note, we will take a quick break. We have a little bit more coming up. I promise we'll have as much fun as we can't have. Maybe talk about something completely silly and ridiculous. This is Craig Collins filling in on the Dana Show. Keep your finger on the pulse with a Dana Show podcast, delivering timely news with insightful analysis, whenever you want straight to you on YouTube, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts. This is the Dana Show. My name is Craig Collins filling in. Dana is back just after
Starting point is 01:25:56 the holiday. It's been very fun, and I'm very thankful to them, everyone involved with Radio America for letting me sit in and be a part of the show with you, including the entire staff, Dana, Kane, everybody that's a part of the show, Stephen, for making it's so easy to be a part of this this holiday season. Let's play this audio. This is a Chicago Teachers Union Vice President accidentally creating an ad for Donald Trump that they're not aware that they're creating. I do like this quite a bit. Here we go. You can tell this Trump administration is hell bent on our destruction. If we sit back and watch the show, it's going to destroy us. What's it going to destroy, by the way? And we have to be heavily involved. Okay.
Starting point is 01:26:39 For example, this new proposed person for Secretary of Education loves charters. Uh-oh. Loves privatization. Loves vouchers. Oh, God. AIDS unions. Loves vouchers. Loves all kinds of things that might actually be good for a competitive school system
Starting point is 01:26:54 that might thrive and educate our children better than the one that is failing our kids right now. The United States is shockingly bad at educating people between the ages of child. you know, five, six, to 18, compared to the rest of the developed world, we are doing bad on scores across the board. Some people within, I think, a public education, I want to fix things so that we do better on tests, that we can claim that we're doing better for our people. But this debate about H-1B visas or anything else, it does simply call into question why we don't have the best of the best to a degree necessary to populate all of the jobs in California and elsewhere is when people like Elon Musk or Vivek Ramaswami make that claim,
Starting point is 01:27:39 even if they make people mad and just how they articulate it, the truth is that a lot of people wouldn't argue that it's accurate to assume that some of these people coming from outside of our country are people that do deserve these jobs, exactly how many, darn it. Some of that data seems to indicate not as many as you'd think, but still some. And so how can we be failing? How can we not be living up to whatever standard we should live up to? It's probably that stuff, especially the union stuff where the money is getting filtered to the unions and not even the teachers who are teaching the kids in the first place, that part also seems bad. The Biden administration has also had to promise with just a few weeks left to go, and Biden's still on vacation again, that it won't
Starting point is 01:28:19 keep selling U.S.-Mexico border material that it's been selling for a while. This was after an injunction caused them the federal government to have to agree to not do this to continue to continue actually working on the $1.4 billion that was allocated to a wall project, which is something that the Biden administration absolutely tried not to do and sold materials anyway. Whoops a daisy, you've got to go ahead and fix this. Of course, doing it on purpose the entire time, not whoops a daisy, genuinely, as I'm saying it, but nonetheless, a crazy story, I think first reported on by the Daily Wire and the Daily Caller some of the discussion about just how crazy and broken.
Starting point is 01:28:58 And that has also got. And also this story, which I thought was really interesting and kind of terrifying. So another plane crashed. It was not shot down by Russia this time. And Russia didn't apologize for a terrible situation without admitting that they shot down a plane that was just carrying, you know, civilians. But this one, which happened on a flight between Bangkok and another place, I think, South Korea, when it was flying, it landed in a way. that the, and I guess this is the report, the landing gear failed, which caused the plane to crash, roll into a fence, and kill almost everyone on board.
Starting point is 01:29:38 179 people died. There were two survivors, which is crazy as far as the report itself goes. But nonetheless, as you talk about this, you think to yourself, if it was a landing gear failure and a Boeing plane, excuse me, specifically, what caused this to be an issue there in South Korea? that wasn't necessarily an issue anywhere else. And you don't have a good answer for that, or at least we don't have a good answer quite yet for that. So hopefully we know more in the future as to why exactly that happened,
Starting point is 01:30:11 but a uniquely terrifying story, I would imagine, mostly because this is the kind of thing we've been afraid of and talking about for a while now, as air travel is something that I think you have more reason rationally to at least be a little bit afraid of. I don't think you truly believe that something as harassed, as this is going to happen to you because you're, you know, for whatever reason, traveling by plane. But when you hear about doors flying off and people doing all kinds of crazy
Starting point is 01:30:40 things in airlines and Boeing then seeming to cover up a whole lot of stuff publicly, you at least have some ability to wonder and fear. And then this story coming out and information going to hopefully be available at some point, but it's going to take a while. And that is definitely something that's scaring a lot more people than before. But we'll see. And hopefully whatever the issue is is something that would never be repeated again for whatever reason, although it's still a tragic story nonetheless. Something else that I thought was really interesting that's out there and all over
Starting point is 01:31:13 news media. Of course, the debate about the H1B visa is something that's caused a lot of people to overly report at the fractured relationship between Elon Musk. Donald Trump and MAGA, which is what they usually just call Americans who supported Trump in any way, shape, or form, even though a lot of people who were part of whatever that online internet debate is, I think that it inevitably ended with them gaining a better solution to a problem that actually does exist. But CNN debated the Elon Musk issue and tweets and everything else, and I thought Scott Jennings did a good job of responding to some of this discussion here.
Starting point is 01:31:54 I think Donald Trump having a relationship with one of the great, greatest innovators of our time across multiple sectors, and having that person be as invested in the United States and the success of the United States as he can be is unequivocally a good thing, and I'm sorry if people had their feelings hurt by that. But this country needs people like Elon Musk to create, to innovate, to participate in our civic affairs. This is a good thing. To run government policy by tweet, though?
Starting point is 01:32:20 It's not running. It's not running anything. The president's allowed to have advisors and aides, and, you know, some of the best accomplishments from his first term were by, you know, non-cabinet aides. Like, you know, Jared Kushner ran point on getting peace between Israel and five countries. And Elon Musk, he's been very successful in many domains. And, you know, I think he just blew up an effort to keep the government open by tweet. That's what I'm talking about. He actually didn't blow up that effort because the government did remain open. He blew up an effort to overspend in doing that
Starting point is 01:32:51 and allowing us to do something that was much, much different. I love this debate, though, in this discussion because the thing that I will keep saying to you or to anyone whenever I get an opportunity to talk on platforms as giant as this one is the scariest thing to you or the most worrisome thing or the thing that you should most notice is the desire level to which politicians and mainstream legacy media want this relationship to go away. They are desperate for it. Anything and everything, whether it's manufactured or in some way, shape or form real that seems to be throwing a wrench in Trump to Elon to the American people
Starting point is 01:33:28 is something that they will report about constantly. They'll trash Twitter X, even though it's doing better than they thought it would be doing. They'll appraise Blue Sky, even though some data came out recently that said it's a wasteland of racism and other things, which again, I'm not trying to say that somehow that's something that's an accusation on Twitter
Starting point is 01:33:48 and is only true of Blue Sky or vice versa. I don't really care. It's just amazing when you, you think that it's heavily, heavily censored and apparently has all the problems that they claim Twitter has, and none of the parent solutions, even though it is silencing a whole lot of conservatives and making liberals very happy. They can say whatever they want on the platform. I haven't been on it. I don't really care about it.
Starting point is 01:34:10 But nonetheless, what I think is kind of amazing in all of this is that by noticing the degree to which they want this to go away, you have to find some way to use it and to use it for the benefit of everybody, whatever that might be. whoever it is that you would be, you know, listening to, following, paying attention to, based on those platforms to, you know, turn on completely, which just seems illogical and it won't happen, someone like an Elon Musk because he said something you disagree with once. Like that's the, if I can talk about that for a second, that's one other thing that's been bouncing in my head since this all started is the idea that we all have to agree on everything. I like the fact that the conservative party fights within itself and some stuff.
Starting point is 01:34:54 I like the fact that the Speaker of the House took so long for them to choose, and Trump just came out in support of Mike Johnson. I assume mostly because you don't want to see that fight take a while and have any sort of impact that delays his inauguration into becoming the next president. But I digress. There's things about that infighting that's good if the end result of it is a more balanced decision, or at least a decision where the sides have been debated. better. When you watch the Democratic Party move as, you know, sheeple or whatever you call them,
Starting point is 01:35:24 which I love when people get mad about that, but essentially move as a hive mind mentality, that's horrible for any sort of progress, any sort of a change or in reality, one of the biggest challenges they're seeing right now, people like AOC failing to become heads of important positions or, you know, important, um, uh, any sort of campaigning that she's doing to be in charge of any sort of committee, all of that is so stupid to me because it further demonstrates how much of a fight is going on
Starting point is 01:35:56 for whatever the soul of the Democratic Party is supposed to be, how far left it's truly going to become and how far left people want it to go and how that's much worse in silencing whoever the critics are to the degree that you have to shove them in the box just like you did Biden
Starting point is 01:36:12 and assume that it's for the betterment of the party, but it leaves the party completely without any sort of leadership. or any sort of direction. And I'm not saying that the party would be better off by going further left, but the people that are pulling it that way are not being silenced, no matter how much you're trying to stop them. They're just not effectively wielding the power they want, which means you have a broken system and not a, you know,
Starting point is 01:36:34 essential leader at the top. And that's amazing to me, again, that there would be an advocacy for just accepting a certain narrative because enough people said it and not being able to question it, even if it's coming from your own side. and this is the same political party that rejects a whole lot of narratives simply because they come from the right without even trying to see if those narratives are true. Stuff like Hunter Biden laptop bad and real or Joe Biden's brain doesn't work and this is all a big lie, how much they're pretending he's in charge and pretending he's sharp when he's not. Those are things they should have questioned and they didn't.
Starting point is 01:37:08 And now they admit they didn't question them, but they still want to operate as a hive mind and they still think it's bad when conservatives don't operate that way. amazing, but also the idea that you'd give up on Elon because you disagreed with him on one thing is sort of insane in and of itself. All right, quick break, a little bit more coming up. Craig Collins filling in on the Dana show. On the go and need a quick news fix with a fun twist. Follow Dana's absurd truth podcast for bite size and formative episodes. Perfect for your busy schedule on Apple or wherever you get your podcast. This is the Dana show. My name is Craig Collins filling in. thrilled to be with you over the holidays. Dana is back just in the new year, just after the next couple days, she'll be back toward the tail end of this week. Sad news, Linda Lavin passed away, 87 years old,
Starting point is 01:37:55 of course famous for Alice. Early to bed, and in between I cooked and cleaned and wet out of my head. I'll be honest, theme songs are not what they used to be. Theme songs were much better before the TV shows are not quite as good in today's society. for the most part. There's some exceptions to my rule, but for the most part, that's true. But anyway, just sad, quick news out there that went viral earlier today that I figured I'd share for anyone that was unaware. A couple other things and people that care about that. Other things out there, two different parental stories that just amused me a lot. First, there's a woman that
Starting point is 01:38:39 was praising herself for being a, quote, horizontal parent, which sounds dirty, but it's not. A horizontal parent is someone who raises their kids by lying down, whether you're lying down on the ground, in your bed, whatever it might be, you are essentially raising your kids without being physically active. And apparently this is a good thing, because it allows you to relax mentally and be, quote, unquote, lazy, while also being proud to not be thought of as lazy, or at least you yourself don't think of as lazy. You think of it as more relaxed parenting. Then there's this other story about a woman who says she lost a hundred pounds simply by playing with and lifting her children. She's had the physical activity all the time. Exercising with her kids helped her to get in better shape, helped her lose a lot of
Starting point is 01:39:25 weight, and is the kind of thing she encourages other parents to do. I'm sure she'll also be hated or told that somehow she's a bad person and shaming somebody for what she said out there. But I love those two stories and how they are both going viral at the same time, not with the same people, probably on social media, but one saying that you should just be a parent who lays around all the time as you raise your kids, and another one that does the exact opposite. And then finally, this story was interesting to me. A redheads feel both pleasure and pain differently, according to scientists. A new study coming out says that whatever genes are in the human being that is a redhead makes a lot of things different for the redhead. Actually also in the headline,
Starting point is 01:40:09 and I'm not sure why this is there. I'm not sure who this is. makes happy and who this doesn't make happy, or if this was the goal all along, there are some references to, you know, adult activity, romantic activities being more prevalent for redheads than others. I don't know how to even respond to that part, but Oxford was the university that studied this, and they said that there's something about those differences that make pain not as bad and pleasure better, which apparently means that if you're a redhead, you should thank your lucky stars for being one because medically things are going in your direction.
Starting point is 01:40:46 And not a lot of wins for gingers out there in the world. I'm not a ginger. I have brown hair. So that feels like one of them, even though I'm sure that there are people who are going to object to this for all different kinds of other reasons. It'll be out there and in the world and good luck to you. But I just thought that was interesting too. And I do wonder who studied it and what the motivation was behind that, even asking the
Starting point is 01:41:08 question itself before getting the answer. feels like the kind of thing that I might not have done. And then finally, and I do love this story. I thought about playing this audio, but it's kind of hard to hear it. But it's a woman who got a $100 tip on a food delivery, an Uber driver, who thought it was a mistake. And so she went back up to the house, rang the doorbell, said to the person who gave her the $100, whoops, you made a mistake.
Starting point is 01:41:31 You gave me a bigger bill than you intended to do, out of which the person had to go viral and say, no, I'm doing that on purpose for the holidays for this time of year. I'm tipping delivery drivers more than the average amount of money. My favorite reason for this is tipping culture is so insane and people complain about so much of it all the time. That's probably the biggest reason the driver didn't believe it. They were like, no, nobody was trying to give me $100. That's not appropriate. That's not okay.
Starting point is 01:41:57 And so they tried to return it and then be, and they were told that they get to keep it. Now probably the internet's going to send them even more money, I imagine. That's usually what happens. Usually see a story like this. Somebody do the right thing when most people. would do, well, not that it was the right thing. I mean, the tip was intentional. If you had just kept it and been happy about it, that's fine too to me, but someone does a very, you know, humble thing or whatever you want to call it, and then the internet rewards them with even
Starting point is 01:42:22 more gash. So this is the kind of thing that I guess you should do in these moments and then hope for even better stuff, even though that probably flies in the face of all the reasons to do it in the first place. I don't care. I don't know. That's my tip for 2025. I hope the internet gives you even more of what you deserve because you're nice, virally. What a great message to end this on. I'll see you guys at some point. Dana will be back after the new year. Craig Collins filling in on the Dana Show.

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