
In this episode of Scrolling: Pediatricians are pissed off at MAHA moms, unvaxxed singles event in Denver gets canceled, Plus Pee Pee Poo Poo Man has been arrested… for now!
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Haley Carania
Hello and welcome to Scrolling with Haley. I'm Haley Carania. Pediatricians. Man, they are pissed off at MAHA moms. That's right, doctors who are hell bent on jabbing your kids are reportedly exhausted having to explain what's in the vaccines when inquiring parents ask. And that is quite scary. Then a meetup for unvaccinated singles in Denver was canceled after backlash from the vaccinated community there. What happened to my body, my choice, huh? Plus, Teen takeovers and homelessness continue to ravage Democrat cities here in the states and our neighbors to the north. Wild stories of a homeless furry twerking and a crazed man whose attacks have earned him the name Peepee Poo Poo Man. Make sure you subscribe to this show. Everyone in the chat right now has already done this. I already know. If you're here every day at noon, you already know. I don't have to tell you, but when you're telling a friend, you tell them when watch this show rumble.com Haley H A Y L E Y Every weekday at noon. We have a lot of fun here and if you can't catch it live at noon, that's okay. You can watch on Rumble whenever you want. Or you can watch or listen on Spotify or listen on whichever podcast platform you prefer. The podcast episode is available right after the live show ends. So whenever, however you watch, all that matters is that you tell a friend. And I want to tell you about our sponsor for today's show. I hope that you support them. Did you know that helping older Navy dolphins unlocked a secret to healthier aging for all of us? I am excited to share C15 from fatty15, the first emerging essential fatty acid discovered in more than 90 years. When we don't have enough C15, our cells can become fragile and age faster. To help fix that, doctors spent over a decade developing the pure science backed C15 found in fatty 15. It helps repair cells, cellular damage and supports sleep, cognitive health, metabolism and energy. Personally, since adding Fatty 15, I have noticed better sleep and steadier energy. Fatty 15 was developed to help support healthy aging for all from kids to parents to grandparents. All of us. That is why award winning fatty 15 is now available as Pure Capsules, Delicious Apple Mint Gummies for teens and adults and Yummy Berry Blast Gummies for for kids. Fat 15 is on a mission to help support healthy aging for all including all ages and stages of life. You can get an additional 15 off your 90 day subscription starter kit by going to fatty15.com scroll and using code scroll at checkout. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat or cure or prevent any disease or condition. And put your phones on. Do not disturb, because the show starts right now. Foreign. So we have to take a look at this headline in the cut. Pediatricians didn't sign up for this. Doctors describe the daily agony and exhaustion of convincing parents to vaccinate their children.
Co-host or Guest
Wow.
Haley Carania
Get a load of this. Pediatricians are just. They're just pissed off that you have questions, and they're just pissed off that you're taking up their time having to answer them. So for decades, pediatricians, according to this article, have been using the presumptive approach to vaccination. So they assume that parents will choose to vaccinate. They assume that parents will not even question whether or not to vaccinate. They just go to the doctor's office and say, whatever you're having, whatever you're giving, just we'll roll up the sleeves. Right? That's how it's been for a lot of years. So in this article, they interviewed Deborah Greenhouse, who's a pediatrician, and she spoke to this journalist for the Cut, saying that she usually says this to parents. Quote, here are the vaccinations your child is due to receive today. Do you have any questions? So at that point, a parent who's already done the research may ask, why is this necessary? What is this for? How is this spread? Et cetera. But if a parent has bought into the notion that the doctor knows best, they went to med school. I did, and I trust them implicitly. What kinds of questions could they possibly have? Probably none. And doctors will say, you know, I have kids of my own. They all got this. They're fine. I. I've been to doctors before. I don't have kids, but I've been to doctors before where they said, well, I took it and it's fine, or, I know someone, or I've given this to a bajillion patients and nothing's happened. I mean, I've been in this situation where you are trying to advocate for yourself. Doctors know best. And then if you are not strong in your convictions and you are not strong, you don't go into that doctor's office knowing what you want and not want. It is very easy to get manipulated. And doctors tell these stories all the time. It's very easy to get parents to comply. So this next part is very scary and pretty eye opening. So they also interviewed Tessa B. Scripps, a pediatrician at Mount Sinai in New York. And this is what it says, quote, a typical pediatric well visit for an infant or a young child lasts between 20 and 40 minutes. Before the chaos and confusion of RFK Jr. S MAHA movement, a pediatrician might have spent that time discussing growth charts, firearm and water safety, baby eczema and stool frequency. Then at the end of the visit, they would immunize the child. Now we're having to explain the vaccines thoroughly and which ones are in the series and how many we're doing. God forbid, God forbid the doctor has to explain what we're doing here and what they're injecting into your newborn baby. They're like, oh my gosh, these parents have questions. Now, thanks to RFK Jr and all this Maha chaos, parents know what we're up to. That's a problem. So she continues. She does a secret victory dance behind closed doors anytime she sways a skeptic. Awesome. Awesome. That's exactly what I want. My doctor doing a victory dance when she bamboozles me into, you know, poisoning my child. So this doctor and many others are essentially banking on the fact that parents won't ask questions. In fact, they're annoyed that parents are asking questions. And as Dr. Scripps says, she's never learned the answers to some of the parents questions in medical school. So it's taken taking time out of her day. She has to go do independent research and figure out the answers to these questions she didn't even know. And therein lies the problem. The doctors don't even know. They go through med school. They're taught to just get kids vaccinated. A lot of times they probably don't even question it themselves. And now they're being finally asked to question this. Maybe med schools should teach these kinds of things. Maybe doctors should want to do independent research to make sure they're well informed and well versed on what exactly they're injecting into children. So then, Tessa B. Scripps continues, quote, patients will go really deep and ask about preservatives and additives like aluminum and thimerosal and formaldehyde. They want to read the safety inserts that come in the vaccine containers. And they'll sometimes they'll go as far as to ask for the lot numbers of the vaccines. God forbid parents want to know where this stuff is coming from. Many of the concerns parents bring up were not covered in medical school or residency. So Scripps has to conduct independent research to prepare with limited success. Oftentimes, the search goes nowhere. She says, because the data doesn't exist. So instead of questioning why the data doesn't exist for vaccines that are being pushed on swaths of children for decades, doctors who are ingrained in this system will just go along with it, and then they'll shame parents for questioning it. Because it's easier to do that, to admit that what you learned or didn't learn is problematic, or maybe what you learned has changed, and if we know anything about science, it's that it changes. That's why I never understood the reaction, this visceral reaction from the left to RFKJR's warning to not take Tylenol when pregnant. When. When Tylenol, the company said the exact same thing. But I have friends who are pregnant. I have friends who just have given birth, and they say to me, my doctor said that Tylenol is safe for pregnancy. So Therefore, again, before 2020, people were not questioning their doctors in the same way. The doctor said, this is safe. And you would say, okay, of course. I mean, the doctor knows best. And now people are getting all this information on the Internet. Some of it might be misinformation, some of it might not be. Some of it might just be contradictory to what they learned in medical school. So I have friends who are like, shoot. I mean, I took Tylenol when I was pregnant because they said that it was safe. And now I'm feeling guilty. Like, now this is contributing to mom guilt. But I think it would behoove doctors to. To not just assume that you are right all the time, but to maybe admit that the science is changing and maybe there is something to be said for these other forms of information that are coming out. Maybe there is something to be said for this new information and changing science. Maybe I should look into this. But it seems like they just don't have the time in the day and they're annoyed that they have to look into this stuff. I would want a doctor that would want to keep challenging and keep learning personally, but apparently they don't have enough time, and they would rather talk to parents about firearm safety than talk about what they're injecting into their kids. So, anyway, I think a lot of mothers are probably questioning why they've been lied to by their doctors in some cases. And that's a very scary thing to do. It's a very scary thing to admit to admit that there was a breach of trust, somewhat of a betrayal, and people don't want to believe that doctors might not have all the answers. It's much more comforting to think, I'm going to medical care, I'm getting medical care from this person, they are going to have my best interest at heart. Even if these people have a good intention, they might not know. And I think that feeling of unknown is very scary for a lot of people. So then this New York magazine, you know, New York magazine did the, this thing on the cut. It's all the same thing by this journalist. But anyway, they say this with the stakes higher than they've been in decades. Measles vaccination rates have dipped below the threshold needed to prevent transmission of the virus. Only 43% of parents believe Covid vaccines are safe for children. And the percentage of parents going so far as to reject life saving shots of vitamin K for their newborns have jumped 77% between 2017 and 2024. The same year the Make America Healthy Again movement launched. Well, I will say that 2024 is when that really got going. It started before then. But this starting in 2017, that's. You can't blame that on Maha. Maha didn't start in 2017. It started way later than that. But anyway, pediatricians may be the nation's last hope of avoiding widespread disease outbreak. And, and many are questioning how much longer they can carry this particular burden. They feel this is a burden. So they talk about measles at first and how the measles vaccination rates have dipped below the threshold needed to prevent transmission of the virus. Again, if the vaccine is working, then the people who are vaccinated really shouldn't have to worry about it. But measles was eliminated in the United States, never eradicated, because other countries don't have the healthcare that we do. They don't have the access to vaccines. And you know, other countries, they just have different healthcare. But measles spreads very easily and obviously unvaccinated people are going to be more susceptible to getting it. But well, over a year ago, I theorized that the measles outbreaks in the US are because of the open border, not because parents aren't vaccinating for it. Because there was a big, big measles outbreak along the Texas border. And then there was another big outbreak on a college campus in South Carolina. So you can't blame unvaccinated people for the outbreak on a college campus where most kids have to be vaccinated to attend. And they were certainly born and vaccinated well before the Maha movement. If these kids were born in 2021 and now they're in college, that would certainly be Very remarkable. But I think that a lot of these diseases are coming across the border because we don't know who these people are, where they're coming from, what their medical history is. Of course, these people are undocumented in every sense of the word. We have no idea what they have or what they don't have and what they're bringing across the southern border. And for whatever reason, Democrats don't seem to care about this. But I think that along border. Along the border and in border states, it would make sense that if people are coming across the southern border bringing diseases, maybe people who are unvaccinated would be more susceptible to that. I blame the open border. And then again, as we know now, every state is a border state, so it makes sense that there would be outbreaks in different parts of the country. And again, having the outbreak on a college campus, like, you can't blame RFK Jr. For that. These kids are, like, so far from being newborns. It's insane. But the risk of dying from measles in the United States is very, very low. There's one death every 1000 cases. That's what the CDC says, if you want to take the CDC's word for it. And right now, there are about 1800 confirmed cases in the measles in the US this year. But nobody has died. So again, we're beyond the one death every thousand cases. That's just an approximation. But if someone did die from the measles, we would have heard about it. The media would've let us know real quick that someone had died from it. But none have been reported so far this year. And parents are waking up to the fact that some vaccines may not be worth the risk of vaccine injury when the disease hopefully won't be deadly. And that's a risk that everyone has to take. You know, you have the decision with your body. If you wanna go to the doctor's office and you wanna do your own research, and if you think that getting vaccinated is what's best, that's what's best for you. Some people might not want to do that. And again, you could get the vaccine and have a vaccine injury. You could not get the vaccine and die from something. There's always a risk. Both sides, there's a risk. And the cure can't be worse than the disease. That phrase became pretty popular during COVID The truth is, kids these days have seemingly inexplicable issues that previous generations never dealt with, at least not to the degree that we're seeing now. Like Allergies haven't just popped up recently, but the amount that we're seeing, anaphylactic allergies to peanuts and all these things, way worse now than ever before. So we're seeing a rise in allergies, a rise in attention deficit disorders, a rise in autism, among other medical phenomenon. And wherever you stand on vaccines, you can admit that kids these days have more issues than vogue. Issues that people in my parents generation and my grandparents generation and beyond were not dealing with. And vaccines are not the only thing causing this, in my opinion. I don't know if vaccines are causing it, but I don't think that it's just vaccines. There are poisons being sprayed on our food. There are poisons in our clothes and our household products that are causing a whole host of issues aside from vaccines. The attention deficit disorders can certainly be linked to, to food dyes and screen addictions. So I'm not just blaming vaccines here. However, when it comes to all of these issues, it has people questioning what changed? When did it change? And I would like to ask the chat, Are you vaccinated? Are your grandkids vaccinated? Are your kids vaccinated? Do you have allergies? I feel like I developed certain allergies later in life. Like, I don't have anaphylactic allergies, but I have reactions to certain foods and certain enzymes in foods. I have an allergy to mushrooms, lentils, and pecans, but it seems like more of a. I don't know, I don't really know how to describe it, but it's not anaphylactic. It's just, it's gotta be a food thing. And it's probably because I don't know if it's like the enzymes in food. I was told by an allergist that it was oral allergy syndrome. Who knows? But you never hear of other generations dealing with this stuff. Like, it's just us. Okay, so someone says no to the COVID vaccine. Pollen allergies are horrible. I feel like pollen allergies are normal. Like we've heard of. I. I'm more so talking about food allergies. I feel like, like my dad has like pollen allergies, like allergies in the spring. I feel like that's very normal. But people are saying I am vaccinated. Kids are vaccinated, but grandkids are not. Gen X didn't get the COVID vaccine. Just child basic childhood vaccines. Yes, yes, yes. And I'm worse since the 4 first Covid shot. So people in the Chat are in agreement that sometimes the vaccines, you change your mind on vaccines like I used to get. I had all my shots when I was growing up, but I remember having certain shots pushed on me. I remember when I was maybe 12 years old, I remember being in the doctor's office and they were pushing Gardasil on me. They're pushing Gardasils HPV like a sexually transmitted disease. And my mom, I remember my mom being like, we don't need to have this conversation right now. She's 12. And I just find it odd that certain sexually transmitted diseases and vaccines for them are pushed so young. And I'm going to get into that because, you know, hep A and hep B are pushed on newborns and it's just unnecessary. So I think a lot of people are just waking up to the fact that just because you've gotten certain vaccines doesn't mean that you're completely anti vax. But you're waking up and you're questioning what has been done for decades. And autism diagnosis started popping up more often in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Then it started skyrocketing in the 90s, 2000s, and it's been growing ever since. You could argue that diagnoses are being, you know, they're being given out like candy now because kids are more aware of it, parents are more aware of it. People might, say, be able to notice warning signs and then go to the doctor. I think there's just more people being treated. Maybe more kids with less severe autism are being diagnosed now, whereas in years past, they might have been written off as just, oh, they're a little different or whatnot. But maybe they wouldn't have an official autism diagnosis. But something else that has increased in the 80s and 90s and 2000s is the recommended amount of childhood vaccines. Now, the medical community will tell you there's no evidence that vaccines cause autism. And I'm not a doctor, I have no idea if there is a link or not. But the medical community will say, you know, correlation doesn't equal causation, which is true. But I also don't trust the same medical community that profits off of vaccines to come out and admit that they're causing autism. Like, even if they ever did find a link, and maybe they have, I just don't think that they would tell anyone that it would cause, like, mass panic. And maybe that's bad because that's what the medical community has done to itself. I don't trust them. Lots of parents don't trust Them either. And who could blame them? After Covid, we all went through this pandemic craziness. We were told to trust the science. None of these people had any clue what they were talking about, but they pretended like they were the experts. And just because they have, you know, Maryland next to their name, we were all supposed to bow down to them and do whatever they said. And they went to medical school and, you know, they've racked up a ton of debt. So we're supposed to listen to them. And do they know more about medicine than I ever will? Yes. But I'm also allowed to question them when they tell me that I need to wear a mask when I'm alone at the gym. You know, like, there's certain things where common sense kicks in and you're thinking, I know you're a doctor and I know you went to medical school, but what you're saying is not making sense. So I'm allowed to question them. Especially when they told us in New York City to sit in spray painted circles in the grass in Central park. And then you couldn't sit with people outside of your household. You had to keep people in your household in the circle. I mean, it's lunacy to think back of what we did. I'm allowed to question the medical community when they said that unvaccinated people couldn't eat inside at a restaurant, but they could eat at a restaurant in outdoor enclosures built by the restaurants, essentially bringing the indoors outdoors and making the outdoors indoors. And the tables were just as close together. And I didn't need to go to med school to know that that was a load of crap. And the medical community was the reason, by the way, for the pandemic in the first place. They were funding dangerous gain of function, function research and a virus was unleashed on the world. So I'm going to question these people because they're not infallible and they're not omnipotent. So they told us that the COVID vaccine was safe. By whose standards and by what metrics? It was rushed and just because it was FDA approved. What does that mean? The fda, by the way, allows trace amounts of rat poop and rat hairs to be in our food. Also, did you know that that FDA approval actually doesn't mean jack squat? FDA approval doesn't necessarily mean that it is good here. You can not just take it from me. Here's the FDA manufacturing good manufacturing practices website. And these are the defects that they allow in some of the food choices that we have in, in Our. In our. Probably in our pantries right now and in the grocery store. So in ground prep, ground paprika, there is an average of more than 75 insect insect fragments per 25 grams. There's also an average of more than 11 rodent hairs per 25 grams. WHO puts cinnamon in their coffee? I do. And in cinnamon, there's an average of 400 or more insect fragments per 50 grams. What about maraschino cherries? Anyone want to make a Shirley Temple after hearing this? An average of 5% or more pieces of those cherries are rejected due to maggots. And then if you want to put cherry jam on your toast in the morning, the average mold count is 30% or more. What about black currant jam? The average mold count is 75% or more. What about dates? A lot of people, they. They search up, myself included. Healthy snack options, healthy dessert options. I'm on Pinterest. Healthy chocolate covered dates. Right. Put peanut butter on the dates. Okay, well, in dates, the FDA allows 10 or more dead insects, whole or equivalent in one or more subsamples. Yum, yum. Who wants to eat lunch? It's 12:30pm Eastern time. Who wants to eat lunch? My point is not everything that the FDA approves is good. Okay? That's my point. And the entire world was led astray by the medical community in 2020 and beyond. So. So parents started questioning, and then the media, the medical community on the left, they all Want to blame RFK Jr this started way before RFK Jr look in the mirror. This is your fault. And they like to make RFK Jr the face of this movement, because now he's tied to the Trump administration, and people started, you know, asking questions. And people started asking questions way before RFK Jr. But now that RFK Jr. Is HHS Secretary, you know, he wanted to make sure that there were changes made to the vaccine schedule. Changes that make sense, like within reason. Because in the 1950s, kids were getting about five shots by the time they turned two years old. Five vaccines. What about now, in 2026 kids are getting more than 70 vaccine doses, many of which are combined into one vaccine, like mmr, measles, mumps, rubella, one vaccine. And while there is no proof that vaccines cause all these allergies, add autism, et cetera, the spikes line up with the spikes in vaccines. You do the math, you believe what you want to believe. Okay? So RFK wanted to make some changes to the vaccine schedule, reducing the amount of recommended vaccines and then only keeping certain ones in place for high risk. Children. So RFK Jr. Recommends 11 vaccines for kids. So again, still a spike from the 1950s. You know that we're doubling the amount of vaccines since the 50s, five vaccines. Now there's 11 vaccines. So he recommends DTAP, MMR, polio Hib, that prevents meningitis, PCV, the chickenpox vaccine, and the HPV vaccine, which I wouldn't recommend the HPV vaccine for children, but that's just me, I'm not a doctor. And the vaccines that RFK Jr doesn't recommend unless these kids are very high risk are hep A and B, the flu shot, Covid shot, rotavirus, RSV and menal disease. So these aren't far off, by the way, from the vaccine schedules recommended in other countries. And some of these, in my opinion, are unnecessary for kids because we need to get into the childhood vaccines for sexually transmitted disease for the most part. You can get hepatitis A and B other ways, but hepatitis A and B, the first dose of these vaccines are given within 24 hours of birth. The hep B vaccine is given within the day that the child is born. Why? If you know that the mother is negative for sexually transmitted diseases before birth, which they do, they test for that because they want to make sure it's not passed to the baby through the birth canal. Then what is the reason for giving a newborn a vaccine against a trans sexually transmitted disease or a disease that is spread by needles? Needles, razors, things like that. Like babies don't need that on day one, in my opinion. Call me crazy, I've never seen a newborn do drugs. I don't even know what drugs are done via a shot. Like, I don't even know. I'm so out of the loop on drugs. But babies, to my knowledge, aren't doing drugs, at least on their own accord. And babies are not having sex, hopefully. So I think that it's nuts. And another controversial one that people talk about a lot is this vitamin K shot, and they mentioned this in that cut article that, you know, 70% of parents are refusing this. Well, that's interesting. If 77% of parents are refusing this now, maybe there's a reason for that. So the medical community says that if you don't give babies this vitamin K shot to clot their blood, they will have a brain bleed or they're more susceptible to brain bleeding. But the vitamin K that is given to babies in the shot is synthetic. And when babies go through the birth canal, or even when babies are delivered via C section, babies will have micro tears on their body. Like, even if I go like this, I'm gonna have micro tears on my body. And it's not. They're not, you know, horrible, but you're gonna have micro tears on your body. And certainly if you've seen a newborn baby or you've given birth yourself or you have a baby, you know that when they come out of the birth canal, they're a little banged up, they're a little bruised, there's cuts, right? So the baby's body will start healing those micro tears naturally. The baby will create stem cells, white blood cells, and. And it'll start healing those micro tears on its own. The vitamin K shot can actually slow down that process. And the baby creating stem cells and white blood cells is completely natural. And then you're giving them a vitamin K shot to stop a potential brain bleed. But that vitamin K shot can actually slow down the natural processes in the baby's body. And that's the baby's immune system trying to work for the first time, you know, outside of the womb. So vitamin K is also given to baby boys before circumcision to prevent bleeding. But if that's something that you're not looking to do, which a lot of parents are now are opting not to circumcise, this shot is probably unnecessary. And there's also an oral vitamin K drop that, according to Dr. Sherry Tenpenny, is just as effective as the shot. So you can still get this vitamin K into your baby's body without having it in the vaccine form. And vaccine hesitancy or just questioning doesn't mean anti vax completely. Some parents may choose to vaccinate their kids all the way, but just delay the shots so they're not getting 70 shots within, you know, the first two years of their life. And to each their own. Everyone has to make decisions for their own families, and these decisions are not always easy to make. And I think a lot of mothers struggle with the guilt of, what if I don't vaccinate? And then what if my baby ends up contracting something? And what if it's fatal? There's always a risk, and then there's a risk if you vaccinate as well. That's why I'm never going to judge someone for doing what they think is best for their family in the moment. But I have friends who are mothers, and they are dealing with this issue where pediatricians will require your child to be vaccinated, to be a part of the. The clinic, and you, they won't treat your child, you won't be able to go and get your checkups if you're not on this vaccine schedule. So a lot of vaccine hesitant moms, and I'm not even saying anti vax, just moms that are like, hey, could we delay this? Hey, I don't want to give my baby 70 shots in the first year of their life. Doctors are, they're being met with resistance from doctors because doctors are told that this is the way that we're doing it. And, you know, RFK Jr. Has recommended that we drop this down from about 17 vaccines to 11. And he's getting fought in court like there are. The American Medical association is suing RFK Jr. And suing the Trump administration for making these changes. So a lot of doctor's offices, they go based on the American Medical association and what their recommendations are. And then this is conflicting with the Trump administration and what HHS is doing. So it's like a lot of this is up in the air. And I think a lot of doctors are probably rightfully confused because they've been doing this one way forever, and now they have to do it a different way. And I can, I have empathy for that. But moms who were confused, you know, moms who didn't go to medical school, but they're hearing all of this and they're confused. You know, now they're being shamed because they're asking doctors questions, and now they're being threatened to be kicked out of pediatrician offices. And I have one of my friends, and this is in red states too, by the way. I have a friend that I'm thinking of in Florida, and I have a friend that I'm thinking of in Tennessee, and they tell me about these struggles of finding doctors who will at least work with them. And I have my one friend, she's looking to vaccinate certain vaccines, but not others. Like, she wants to turn down some, and she's okay with like chickenpox and things like that, but she doesn't want to do, you know, the COVID vaccine, for example, and the doctors. She's had to find doctors who are willing to work with her on that schedule, either a delayed schedule. And my friend in Florida, she has now found a doctor who said, if you don't want to vaccinate your child, I'm not going to kick you out of my, my practice, but your baby will just have to come in for an extra checkup visit. So if you're not going to vaccinate, you just have to come in and we're going to make sure that everything is fine or whatever. And my friend is like, absolutely. I would much rather, instead of taking. Taking the risk of vaccinating, I would much rather bring in my child for an extra, well, visit to make sure that everything is fine and then we can reassess together. And she was saying that the doctor was not judgmental at all. And I think that's what really people are more so looking for is to have a patient doctor relationship where you can discuss your fears and not be met with dismissal. I think that's not too much to ask. And unfortunately a lot of young parents are having to deal with the doctors that are interviewed in this story, the cut story, where it's like, you know, I usually. I spent 20 minutes on a baby patient and normally they just let me vacs them up and they don't ask any questions. And now they're asking me questions that I don't know the answers to. This is a very scary place. But we may have more unvaccinated people in the future. And unvaccinated singles like myself would like to meet and date people who also didn't get the COVID 19 vaccine. Of course, I've gotten most of my shots and I've explained on this show before that I used to get the flu shot every year because I thought it was what you do. I just thought it was like, oh, it's, it's flu season, you get your flu shot. And ever since COVID I was like, well, shoot, I'm never getting a flu shot ever again. Because I was afraid that they were going to put. But you know, they mix the vaccines together. I was so afraid that they were going to put the COVID vaccine in the flu vaccine and then I was going to get back Then I said no. So I've never gotten a shot ever again after Covid, and I never will.
Co-host or Guest
I did the same thing with the flu shot. I used to get it every year and I would always get significantly sick after. Like, I just didn't take it very well. And then one year I was just like, I'm not going to get it. And my parents were just like, yeah, that was always an option.
Haley Carania
I was like, oh, so the thing. That's crazy. And I know that. So the flu shot is predictive.
Co-host or Guest
Correct.
Haley Carania
They take the flu shot from last year, they make a flu vaccine, hoping that it's gonna work next year. And then the flu virus, of course, mutates as it does, and then the flu shot ends up being like 30% effective. Why the fuck is Anyone taking it.
Co-host or Guest
I'm not a gambling man, but I gamble on the flu every year. I'm willing to take a chance to not get the shot, you know?
Haley Carania
And honestly, ever since I stopped getting the flu shot in 20, 20 and beyond, I have not been sick.
Co-host or Guest
I got yelled at by.
Haley Carania
I have not been sick once.
Co-host or Guest
Who said, if the flu shot's so great, why are they giving it out for free? And I was like, you know what, homeless man? You got me. Yeah, there you go. You heard it here first from a homeless man. And in Philly.
Haley Carania
Yeah. And it's. Honestly, it's like, even natural antibodies to the flu aren't going to help you because the flu mutates. So it's like, why would last year's flu help me at all? It's just dumb. Like, the more that you think about it is dumb. And that's the thing. Like, doctors are pissed off because people are now, like, questioning, like, wait a second. That doesn't actually make sense. And, yeah, I. Aside from maybe like, a sniffle or runny nose, maybe a little bit of a sore throat, like, I just take. Because I don't take any medications anymore. I'm completely off medications. It took me like, a year and a half, but I'm. I don't take anything. Nothing prescription. And the only thing that I take are supplements. So I take vitamin C, vitamin D3, because I'm low in that. Zinc. That's it. Magnesium. I take a probiotic.
Co-host or Guest
Zinc is a sleeper. I take zinc. And I. I have, like, a naturally not great immune system. Like, if somebody's gonna get sick, it's usually me. I've been doing zinc for, like, a year and a half, and pretty. Pretty solid results.
Haley Carania
Yeah, I'm gonna get so sick now, because I know now it's like, not everyone, knock on wood. I have no wood by me, but knock on wood for me. But, yeah, if you take certain supplements, you're fine. You don't need. And then any time I remember, even during COVID because this is when, like, no one even knew what Covid was. And in the beginning, it's like, oh, I don't want to get this. Like, I was in New York City, and I was working every day, I was going into the office, and there were 9, 000 people dying a day. In the beginning, like, it wasn't. You know, that's very scary. Like, before we knew what it was, like, it was taking out the elderly. It was taking out people with comorbidities. But in the beginning, we didn't really know. And I was like dang, like 9000 people are dying a day and I'm going to the office every day and dang. So I got into the habit of taking those emergency packets and I would just dump two of them into a glass of water and I would, I would just take it as a shot and I would be like loading up on vitamin C and zinc and all that stuff. And yeah, I really again knock someone knock on wood for me. But I haven't been sick sense Tony
Co-host or Guest
250 takes vitamin beer and shouts out to that guy. That's a 10 out of 10 vitamin beer.
Haley Carania
Yeah, that's good, that's good. I've heard that's good for you every once in a while in moderation. But I am, you know, when I am dating I would also like to. I would prefer to date someone who didn't get the COVID 19 vaccine. I didn't fall for the propaganda. Why would I want to procreate with someone who did? Just saying. So Unjected is a dating site for people who didn't get the COVID 19 vaccine. And I believe it popped up around Covid and I believe it's open to other people who are completely unvaxxed as well. And I think maybe people who are completely unvaxed might find me disgusting, you know because I've had, I've had the flu shot but certain there's levels to this stuff. So anyway I, during COVID I was on Injected, I had an account and let me just say this is not sponsored, I am not affiliated with them at all. This is the least user friendly website on planet Earth.
Co-host or Guest
Like that was not where I was expecting that to go.
Haley Carania
Genuinely horrible. Like I just didn't want people to think that I'm like talking about this because I was on it. Like I'm being upfront with you all that I was on this platform and I'm covering it and it was not a good experience. I would say that I, I don't even think they have an app. I think it's a website and I made an account and I don't even know how people were communicating with me because I wasn't checking the account or the website. So I think people somehow got my email cuz my email was attached to it. The people that were communicating with me were weird. Like really really weird. I'm just being honest. If one thing about me, I'm gonna be brutally honest that people were weird. So did I have luck on Injected? No, but I Am happy for these people. And they are, they are coming up with meetup events where singles events where other unvaccinated people can go meet. It's sort of like a speed dating, you know, thing. And they wanted to make an event or have an event at a beer garden in Denver. So here's the Denver Gazette. Unbacked singles event in Colorado canceled by venue due to safety concerns. An event aimed at bringing together like minded Denver singles has been canceled by the venue. But the organizer said the show will go on elsewhere. Spoiler alert. So this was supposed to happen on May 29. It was supposed to happen at Recess Beer Garden in Denver. And then because Unjected was promoting this on their socials, local news and podcasts started talking about it, creating controversy. And then the beer hall essentially caved a public pressure to cancel the event. So this is what the company had to say. They posted this on TikTok. We realize there has been a lot of conversation regarding an event that was advertised to take place at Recess Beer Garden. And we want to clarify a few important points. Recess did not organize, sponsor, authorize or book this event. We learned about it through social media where our venue was promoted. We without our knowledge or involvement. Okay. Over the past 24 hours, we have seen increasingly hostile rhetoric surrounding this situation. From who you think, from who, from which side? Including hateful language, online attacks, threats towards our business, and harassment directed at our staff who had no involvement in this event. Again, ask yourself who would be complaining and hurling violent threats? Probably not the injected people. But our priority has always been to provide a welcoming environment for our employees and guests. Well, I guess not. We maintain a strict non discrimination policy. I guess not. For our staff and our guests. We do not condone hate speech, harassment, bullying or violence of any kind. Okay. So as a business, you know, they're saying that they, they welcome everyone, like all kinds of people, and, and all this stuff. But they didn't cancel this event because of the unvaccinated people planning on meeting up there. This statement proves that they canceled this event because of the reaction, the violent reaction to them having the event there. And they put out the disclaimer about, you know, not discriminating. Okay, but the cancel culture mob is discriminating against unvaccinated people. And then this restaurant is taking cues from them. So that's their loophole. They're. They get to say that they're canceling the event because of online hate, not because they don't want unvaccinated people to gather. But that's exactly what the backlash is about. So unjected. The dating site, they put out this response. They tried to cancel us. So we collaborated with the largest country dance hall west of the Mississippi. The Freedom Mixer is on at the Grizzly Rose. And they said yes when everyone else said no. And we will never forget it. Deplatformed, silence, canceled, and still standing. Because that is what this community does. We believe in three simple things. The freedom to choose what goes in your body, the right to exist without apology, and the right to gather with people who get it. That has not changed. That will never changed. So the event is on. If you are an unvaccinated single and you are in the Denver area on May 29 at 6pm I mean, I would be there if I was in the area.
Co-host or Guest
Yee haw.
Haley Carania
Yee haw. And they, they had an event in Nashville. If I was to live again. Nashville, you bet your ass I would be there. Mingle with a bunch of other unvaxxed. Love it. The movement lives on. I'm glad for them. So we have to talk about this teen takeover thing that's going on because just months after President Trump sent in the National Guard to clean up the nation's capital, it seems the teens have taken over. And I. I covered this a few times on the show. But during spring break, teens were out of control. They were running amok. And Mayor Muriel Bowser wanted to put curfews in place to deter these kinds of meetups, if you can call them meetups. That's like a really light way to put it. To really meet up.
Co-host or Guest
Feels relative. They're meeting up for something.
Haley Carania
You'll see. You'll see this meetup. This is like how the media would describe a meetup. This is like if people were, I
Co-host or Guest
don't know, like a West side Story type meetup.
Haley Carania
Yeah. So I don't think these kids care too much about breaking the rules. This is why I don't think that a curfew would do much, but an official curfew would allow for law enforcement to swoop in. But this is the most recent teen meetup at Chipotle in Washington's Navy Yard. Nothing like getting hit in the head with a chair, a high chair at that. People wailing on each other, throwing chairs at each other, throwing punches, making a mess of the joint. And of course, you see a baby, a baby in the corner with their father. Father's trying to shield the baby. Not doing a very good job, but shield the baby from what's going on next door. And it Is a sight to behold. This meetup, this teen takeover. Someone in the chat said, put the kids to work hard labor. Garbage pickup. They do like throwing, so maybe they would like throwing. They're already getting their practice in. They could throw garbage into the garbage truck. I think that would be a good transferable skill for these hooligans.
Co-host or Guest
Somebody said they thought it was fake. What about that Felt fake.
Haley Carania
Like people, I feel like nowadays it's like, oh, that was AI. Like, people just say, oh, that's AI. No believe it. These teen takeovers are happening. I covered them on the show like a few weeks ago. They're all over the place. I covered the Orange Crush in Savannah, Georgia. There were all these teen takeovers also in D.C. that's why Merle Bowser wanted to put in that curfew. But in Chicago as well. I mean, people just brutally wailing on each other, really, in the streets. Just disgusting violence. I don't know what would possess someone to do this. And we were kind of joking before the show started, but I said, I have never gone to Chipotle and felt violent after I go into Chipotle and I feel really good.
Co-host or Guest
There was one time where they didn't fill my bowl all the way up, and deep down, that was the reaction.
Haley Carania
Wanted to just like hurl a baby high chair at them.
Co-host or Guest
Yeah, but I didn't, you know, but
Haley Carania
you didn't because you're not a Social norms. Yeah, exactly. And you probably have a little fear deep down of law enforcement and. And getting in trouble and doing the wrong thing because you're a normal person.
Co-host or Guest
Prison is terrifying.
Haley Carania
These people have no concept of. Of right and wrong. They just know wrong. That is all they know. And unfortunately, I think a lot of these kids, they are just brought up in this culture where they have zero respect for authority, certainly law enforcement. So they just push the envelope all the time. And I. I think a lot of these kids don't care too much about their futures. And I don't know if that has to do with their parents. Is it the schools? Is it both? I think it's a lot of just the way that they are raised. But certainly these kids are dressed in all black, they're wearing masks. These kids know exactly what they're doing. And in the end of that video, they see the lights and sirens and they get spooked and they start running. And they are out here purposefully committing crimes because they've been raised to not follow the rule of Law. And U.S. attorney Judge Jeanine Pirro, she blames the parents, as do I. Listen to this.
Jeanine Pirro
What happened in the chat this past Saturday night at Chipotle in the Navy yard and what we're seeing increasingly across the district is not only unacceptable, it is violent, it is dangerous and it is illegal. And I am here to tell you it is going to stop. And parents, I'm talking about you. Now, this is a different scenario than any other time in the history of the district because we are looking beyond those individuals who are committing the crimes, irrespective of how old they are. And we're looking at the parents to make sure that they understand that they are responsible for the upheaval that is going on in this district that is impacting everyone who lives here. I was at a doctor's appointment at 8 o' clock this morning and the doctor was concerned about what's going on in the District. This is across the board. This is something that we should all be interested in, making sure ends. And trust me, I'm going to do my part. This kind of thing is destroying the quality of life in the District. The residents are finding it extremely difficult to enjoy public spirit parks and spaces as well as waterfront areas. And the residents are starting to feel like these out of control teens are taking away their happiness and their quiet.
Haley Carania
They are. I would not be happy if I went into my local Chipotle with my child and I had to shield them from flying projectiles. I would not be happy. Like, this is. It's really disturbing. And I don't know too much about D.C. i've been obviously multiple times for work, but I was under the impression that the Navy Yard was a good area, relatively.
Co-host or Guest
Yeah.
Haley Carania
So it's like even in the nicer areas, it's like this. You're not safe. You're not safe. So Pirro has said that essentially they are going to find these kids and they are going to charge them. And if you are a parent and you drop your kid off somewhere and then this is what they get up to, you are susceptible to facing fines and court ordered classes and possible jail time. I agree wholeheartedly that the parents also need to learn because the parents don't know any better. And again, this is a cultural thing where the parents hate law enforcement and then they teach their kids to hate law enforcement and not have respect for authority. And then this is how this becomes this just unbreakable cycle. It's horrible. Yeah.
Co-host or Guest
My parents put the fear of God in me when I would go out like as a teenager by myself, like after I could kind of Start driving and whatnot. Like, the idea of misbehaving in public.
Haley Carania
This is not even. Like, my parents never had to say, like, hey, don't steal. You could go to jail. Like, I already knew that.
Co-host or Guest
Yeah, the basics.
Haley Carania
You know what I mean? Like, it's kind of like I'm thinking back to my childhood, and I think that my parents did a great job with me. I mean, I'm biased, but I think I'm great. And I've never been to jail, but I. I don't remember learning, hey, when you go to the movies with your friends, like, don't commit crimes also. Or, like, hey, we're gonna drop you off the mall. Like, don't steal something. Like, they never had to tell me not to do things like that. I just inherently knew not to do that for sure. I don't know why. Like, I'm thinking back, I'm like, maybe my parents did teach me that, but I don't think so.
Co-host or Guest
I mean, probably. I mean, I. I know, like, as a. A lot of my friends have young kids, and that's, like, very foundational lessons that they teach. You know, like, don't hit, don't write things, don't break things. You know, respect other people's property.
Haley Carania
Right.
Co-host or Guest
And, like, you know, once.
Haley Carania
But then when does it get to, like, hey, if you do these things, you can go to jail? Like, I don't remember learning that. I just remember knowing that. It just seems like you don't even have to teach kids these things. But clearly, like, some kids do need to be taught very, very soon. They need to be taught. Like, they needed to learn yesterday.
Co-host or Guest
100. And it does ruin the quality of life for everybody there. And then people leave, and then the town goes to crap. And, you know, it's just this vicious cycle of.
Haley Carania
Yep, bad. Someone in the chat says 10 Commandments. Absolutely. And I grew up going to church. I grew up going to, like, Sunday school and, you know, ccd, because I went to public school for a little bit until I went to Catholic school. But yeah, I mean, we. I. I just. Maybe that's where I learned that stuff. I don't know. I don't think we. They even taught us, like, you'll go to jail, though. I just knew to respect law enforcement. I don't know. It just. Was I born respecting law enforcement? I don't know.
Co-host or Guest
It was a different time. I mean, I remember police officers coming to school and, like, explaining not going to jail, but just, like, we're friends and we're here to help the Public.
Haley Carania
Right.
Co-host or Guest
And I feel like that sentiment is definitely not mirrored nowadays, especially in, you know, different regions of the country.
Haley Carania
Yeah, yeah. No, it's. It's very sad to think about just like, the state of the next generation, because even if they go to school, I feel like they're not getting a good education at all. Like, kids these days after Covid, but certainly just. I don't know what's going on in schools these days. I want to do a whole episode on the schools and exposing what's going on just educationally. Like, I feel like I expose a lot of, like, sick teachers, but the. The lack of proficiency in kids in these schools. It's in public schools and not just public schools, but all across. I mean, I think the stat is that only 40% of kids are proficient in, like, math and English. It's like, what.
Co-host or Guest
That's a lot of time spent somewhere to not.
Haley Carania
To not have any reward on that. Yeah, yeah. And I. I saw another thing too. There were all these. And I. I do have to do a full episode on it, because I'm going to go on a tangent now, but I saw a lot of testimonies from teachers saying, I teach something, the kid just doesn't do it. And then you ask, well, why aren't you doing this? I don't get it. I don't understand. Okay, what don't you understand? It's like, well, I don't really wanna learn. I don't really wanna do it. So it's really just. I. And I think a lot of it is phone addiction. So we can get into that as well. But I do wanna do two little stories here before the end. In New York City, there is a homeless man named Tiger because he wears a striped tail, and he has turned part of the sidewalk in Greenwich Village into his home. This is what happens in Democrat cities. Okay, so this is Tiger, and he has turned Sullivan street into his personal little enclave here. And he has done a very good job of collecting a lot of items off of the street, which, if. If you live in New York City, you know that you can do this. People leave their couches on the side of the street. They're moving, couch doesn't fit in their new apartment. They le the street. Buyers beware, takers beware. I would not take something off of the street for obvious reasons. There's cockroaches and rats. And if there are cockroaches and rats inside apartments, I certainly wouldn't want to take a piece of furniture that was out on the street for Any extended period of time. And also, you don't know who had it or what they were doing on it or whatever. But this guy, you could see he's smoking from a glass pipe. Uh, if we could just scroll up here. I mean, hold on. Before we get to this. So he's got a couch. He's got what looks like to be a beanbag chair, maybe a second couch even. He's got a chair with a desk and a side table with some flowers. It looks like fresh cut flowers. He's got a bulletin board. He's got maybe a. A lamp of some sort or a. A book that's on what looks like a music stand. Someone in the chat said he's. Dude is living his best life. What the fuck?
Co-host or Guest
This is how I picture that home with all the girls you lived in. Just a bunch of furniture.
Haley Carania
Okay, hold on, hold on. We. We live. We lived a little better than this, don't, you know? Don't underestimate me. We lived in squalor, but it was not, know, homeless squalor. Okay. But he has quite the little station going on here. It's like an outdoor apartment. He's got a lot of accumulated items, and for that reason alone, I have to give him props for this. This is. This is quite the job that he's done here. He's. He's got a flare for interior design. But, yes, this man named Tiger, he. If you could scroll down here, he wears this furry tail, and it's a striped tail. And apparently he does twerk for unsuspecting bystanders. So if you are walking by Tiger's home on Sullivan street, you may be. You might get a show as well. And he twerks for people. And people have complained about Tiger just because, you know, he's twerking and he's smoking and he's drinking, and he's. He's been seen to drink champagne and also some whiskey. So he's.
Co-host or Guest
I feel like he's with that home set up. That's not surprising. In another man of elegance.
Haley Carania
In another life, I feel like he is a gentleman, you know?
Co-host or Guest
Another life, he is a gentleman.
Haley Carania
Well, I don't know. The. The furry twerking is throwing me off a little bit.
Co-host or Guest
But he's perfect.
Haley Carania
He has refined taste, I think he has refined taste, and I think, you know, I say that a lot of times people can't be rehabilitated, but I think he could. I think he has, like. He likes the nicer things in life, and he's just in this situation. And I think someone in the chat said he looks exactly the way I
Co-host or Guest
picture a lot of untapped potential. A HomeGoods would hate to see this man.
Haley Carania
Yeah, I think he has, you know, he certainly has a flair for interior design. And I. I don't hate this guy. I think he's. Not that I hate homeless people, but you know what I mean? It's like I. Like, I have a soft spot for this one. But there have been 24 complaints to the cities. People are not as. They don't have as soft a spot as I do, especially because I'm not dealing with it. I live in Florida, and. And I get to read an article about him twerking. And I'm like, oh, this is cute. And he's got a nice little outdoor apartment. But I'm not the one dealing with it. So 24 complaints just this year since February. So just in the last few months, quite a few complaints about Tiger. But despite the complaints, his outdoor enclave is still there. So is anyone doing anything about it? No. There are other homeless people in New York City that need attention. Before I would give Tiger any issues, I'm going to be honest. And I'm just saying that as someone who used to live there, I've told this story on the show before, but my friend told the story about. She came into work, she's. Her face is green, and we're like, are you okay? You look sick. And she said, well, I just saw something on the subway that I. I'll never unsee. And it was a homeless woman defecating into her hand and then throwing it at people on the subway platform. Like, people like that need to be taken out.
Co-host or Guest
I didn't take the subway last time I was in New York. Cause it was snowing. And I assumed those. Those people were down there to avoid the snow. And that's like my biggest fear.
Haley Carania
I'll be. I'll be in New York. Not this weekend, but next weekend. And I'm sure I'll take the subway. And if I see anything, I'll. I'll document it for sure.
Co-host or Guest
Breaking, Breaking live from the New York subway.
Haley Carania
Things I will do. Take the New York City subway. Things I won't do get into a Waymo. Make it make sense. But I don't know. There's something. I feel like I just. I used to live there. So it's just. You're used to this kind of stuff. If you don't live there, you just wouldn't get it.
Co-host or Guest
New Yorkers are built different. They really Are.
Haley Carania
I have a tolerance for these things that. I don't know. I just. I guess I'm used to it. But here's a. Another homeless man. And in the chat, I'd like you guys to. Who's your favorite? Do you like. Do you like Tiger or do you like Peepee Poo Poo Man? Because Peepee Poo Poo Pooh man is who we're going to get into right now. Justin just walked in at the. Justin just walked in as I said that. He's like, what are you guys covering today?
Co-host or Guest
I sent this article to Justin.
Haley Carania
He was hard hitting news.
Co-host or Guest
He was like, whatever.
Haley Carania
Hard hitting news. To end the show today, Mr. Peepee Poo Poo man and twerking Tiger on the streets of Greenwich Village. Okay, so, notorious vagrant known as Peepee Poo Poo man arrested on horrifying new charges. And this is in Toronto. And he got this name, Peepee Poo Poo man, after a string of attacks in 2019. Essentially, you know, it's about lunchtime for a lot of people. I'm just going to try to say this as nicely as I can. He would dump buckets of waste on people. And based on his name, you know what the buckets were full of. So. So Mr. Peepee Poo Poo man would take a bucket of his namesake and throw it on people. Not unlike the woman in the New York City subway who would throw her poop at people. Anyway, one of these attacks happened at the University of Toronto. He went into the library and dumped a bucket of, you know, liquid on this woman. And then later he went to another library at the school and dumped another book. Bucket of. Of, you know, excrement on someone. And then this was a string of five attacks over four days. So this was. He was like really hot and heavy on this kind of attack in one week. I mean, he attacked five also. That's a lot of excrement to build up in five days to have a bucket full.
Co-host or Guest
You're leaving out a very crucial part of this whole story.
Haley Carania
What is that?
Co-host or Guest
He wears disguises.
Haley Carania
He does. I didn't read that.
Co-host or Guest
They have this man on film and he dresses up to sneak into these places to carry said bucket.
Haley Carania
That is diabolical. I didn't realize that. So I guess he's got to get into the. Oh, what is that disguise? I see. I didn't think that that was a disguise. He just looks like he's wearing a sweatpants.
Co-host or Guest
He's hidden his bucket inside of a bag.
Haley Carania
Well, yeah, I think if you walk around with a bucket of poop, people are gonna look at you funny. So, yeah, anyway, unfortunately, unfortunately, after these bucket attacks, he did start sexually assaulting people. So he assaulted multiple women. And that was after he was arrested, let out of jail. Now he's sexually assaulting people. And, you know, maybe we learn our lesson and up the bail money and keep people like this in jail for good or get them the serious mental health help that they need. Because I mean, really,
Co-host or Guest
it's, it's like a caricature of what's going on in America.
Haley Carania
Like, well, this is in Toronto.
Co-host or Guest
Correct.
Haley Carania
But yes, we have our own peepee poo poo men in. In our country. We have our own peepee poo poo men Stateside. Someone in the chat said he needs a lobotomy. Like, this is what I mean. I don't think tiger, I think, can be rehabilitated. Peepee poo poo man. No, peepee poo poo man has got it. Someone in the chat said lock him up forever. Agreed. Just gotta be locked up forever. And I know we're over time here, but just because we're on the topic of poop, which I'm sure you're thrilled of, at lunchtime, we're just gonna keep it going. And this is a septic tank exploding after getting hit by a train. This was on May 14th in Chesapeake, Virginia. Of course, this is a Norfolk Southern freight train. Everyone remember Norfolk Southern freight train. That was the one that made everyone sick in Ohio after the oil spill or the toxic spill. Anyway, Norfolk Southern and just absolutely spews septic garbage all over. And yeah, it's a very unsettling color of green. If you are listening and not watching, I am sure if you're listening today, you've made the right decision. And you probably won't want to go to rumble and watch it, but if you still. Someone in the chat said, I'm skipping lunch today. Sorry. Unfortunately, the man who is driving the the septic tank was seriously injured, but he is in stable condition in the hospital. The train crew unharmed. And they did find that the spill was non hazardous. It was just sewage and they did clean it up. But just ending on some good news today. Thank you for scrolling along with me today. I will certainly get to scrolling time tomorrow. I've got it planned. I've got two scrolling times planned. I'm like, do we do a midweek super scroll?
Co-host or Guest
That's, that's a very valid option. We're, we're gonna, we're gonna hit the labs.
Haley Carania
We're gonna work on this. We're gonna. We're gonna have a post show meeting and decide what we're gonna do. But whatever you do, tune in tomorrow to find out. You can follow me on social media and I'll see you right back here tomorrow. Have a nice night. Bye.
Host: Hayley Caronia
Date: May 19, 2026
This episode of "Scrolling with Hayley" dives into several hot-button cultural and political topics through Hayley Caronia’s sharp conservative lens. Central themes include the controversy around pediatric vaccination debates, a canceled singles event for the unvaccinated, worsening social disorder in Democrat-led cities, and some headline-grabbing stories about homelessness and public disorder. Hayley delivers candid, often humorous takes, aiming to critique current attitudes and policies around these issues.
Key segment: 00:00 – 43:53
Key segment: 39:36 – 43:53
Key segment: 43:53 – 54:15
Key segment: 54:15 – 66:06
Various points throughout
Hayley’s commentary is direct, irreverent, and full of sarcasm, with pop-culture references and a willingness to poke fun at herself and her own past choices, especially regarding health and dating. She freely mixes primary source excerpts, personal anecdotes, and listener chat feedback for a lively, unpredictable atmosphere.
If you haven’t heard the episode, this summary provides an in-depth look at the day's hottest cultural discussions, Hayley’s strong arguments for independent thinking, and the colorful stories that fuel her brand of conservative talk. The show’s blend of indignation, humor, and reader interaction makes for an engaging—and at times provocative—listen.