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November 5, 2024 • 34 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:22):
All right, here we are, final hour of the show
this time tomorrow. What do you think will we know
if there is an a winner? We know who the
winner is a great question. How we don't really I've
got people that have said they believe I know Capitalist,
and I think I don't think this will linger on forever.

Speaker 2 (00:40):
I am not. I don't think this is I could
be wrong. I'm just my gut says I. I think
it will be. I will know.

Speaker 1 (00:49):
I think we'll know soon enough. And it's going to
be interesting that what we know when we know what
we know tonight before midnight, I don't know. I know Capitalists.
Somebody send me a message at Capitalist said in his
afternoon show that he thinks it would be we may
not have a winner, but he thinks we'll have a
good feeling. By the times, the first round of poles
start closing on the East coast. Once you start seeing

(01:10):
Georgia and North Carolina and Pennsylvania give their early counsel,
we'll see the first round of vote. Votes always counted
come to are usually the early votes, and those usually
favor the other side, the Democrats side, and that point
if that's my other side for me, but maybe not
the other side for you, and then it picks up
the pace and we'll see how the gap closes. All right,

(01:31):
we'll cut to all that. More to come on this program.
Election Day. I want to welcome and distinguished Professor John
m Ellis. He has a new book out called A
Short History of Relations between People and probably in this
election cycle, well, everybody at odds with each other and
calling each other names and doing a lot of things
to destroy the reputation of other people. There's nothing new

(01:53):
under the sun. Let's bring in Professor John m Ellis
and talk about the Short History of Relations between People's.

Speaker 2 (01:59):
Professor Ellis us talking on the.

Speaker 3 (02:00):
Show, Well, thank you for having me.

Speaker 1 (02:04):
We have in this world are kind of a tribal breakdown.
Now we have the Republicans versus the Democrat, the Conservatives
versus the Liberals. You got the Maga Republicans versus the
non Maga Republicans. You got the everybody's kind of broken
into their own tribes. And sometimes we say this is
as bad as it's ever been. It's actually nothing new

(02:25):
under the sun. We're all, I believe, God's children, but
we like to break ourselves into different subgroups.

Speaker 2 (02:31):
And you've kind of written a book about the history
of this.

Speaker 3 (02:35):
Yeah. Well, basically my book sets out the way in
which the war was completely tribal, I'll say fifty up
to the year about fifteen hundred. I mean, everybody sought tribally.
Everybody sought safety in the company of people like themselves
because it's a dangerous world. I mean, you know, you

(02:57):
have to remember when you go back a few hundred years,
but the world is a very very different place. You
have you have no cars, you have no railways, so
you don't you know, you get about by foot or
if you're wealthy, by horse, which means you don't get
very far. You don't see other countries, you don't see
other tribes, and you don't have sources of information like

(03:20):
we have right now. So you know, you go back
to fifteen hundred, no newspapers, no TV, no radio, no internet,
no films, you know, so there's a complete ignorance of
other people. For most people, they don't know what the
hell is going on in the world twenty thirty miles
beyond their own home. Well, the one thing they do

(03:43):
know is that occasionally you get invaded by somebody else's army.
So in other words, all strangers are likely to be
a danger to you. So that's a very different world
to the world now, where we all think of ourselves
as one family. At least we're to think that way.
Anybody who mouths off about you know, other people's, people

(04:06):
who speak different languages, people who look different, is going
to be called a racist. So there's an official sort
of viewpoint, so to speak, underlying everything we do. The
official viewpoint is all the same about of the same family,
and we all ought to respect members of other groups. Well.

(04:27):
So what my book is about is charting how the
situation of four or five hundred years ago developed into
the modern world. And the part of the reason for
it is simply that at the moment, we're taught to
see our country, at least by many people who are

(04:48):
taught to see our country as racist to the core,
and we should be ashamed of our past, our racist past.
Should be pulling down statues of famous people in the
past because they were racists. And anyway, my book demonstrates
that the people who think that way have things completely backwards,

(05:10):
because the people who originated the anti racist idea that
we were all one family were in fact the English
speaking members of the English speaking world. That was where
the first the first propounding of this modern outlook on

(05:32):
relations with people began. So in otherwise we don't have
our country doesn't have a history of racism. Our country
has the history of anti racism and it was the
first country to have that.

Speaker 1 (05:45):
The voice of Professor Ellis. Professor John Elise has a
book out and it's called A Short History of Relations
between Peoples. Now, in your book, you go back to
the British Enlightenment thinkers of the eighteenth century and talking
about how things started to change with them. You also
talk about the early spread of literacy, kind of talk
about those things and how they began to change what

(06:07):
was happening in the tribal world that they lived in.

Speaker 3 (06:11):
Well, but the really crucial thing was the development of
political freedom in England. I mean, when you have the Magnicarto,
the Magnekarta says, all the way back in the thirteenth century,
the Magnicarta says, the government can't proceed against anyone unless
it can prove to people like of his rank, people

(06:34):
like him, that what they're doing is reasonable. Now, that's
the foundation of a modern attitude of limited government. The
government's got to be got to proceed by rules, and
the rules have to make sense to ordinary people. But government,
you know, tyrants can't just impose their will. Well bad
attitudes which developed in England very early. And then one

(06:58):
of the fruits of that was a part which is
you know, thereby about thirteen hundred and slow increase in
political freedom meant prosperity, because the freer people are, the
freer they are to develop their own lives and to

(07:18):
develop prosperity. So what you have is that the British
are the first nation that is prosperous enough to develop literacy.
So by about seventeen hundred, half the British people were literate,
which was a huge number for those days. I mean,
everywhere else on the globe very few people were literate.

(07:41):
While literate people can think for itself. And so by
about sixteen sixty you get the development of newspapers, those
of them, you know, within a few years were founded
all over Britain, and the people started to exchange ideas
about how life should they lived, and what the governments

(08:01):
should do and shouldn't do, and what our attitude should
be to our fellow man. And you know, it's literacy
provides the possibility of public opinion, and our public opinion
that's really vibrant and that can you know, really make waves,
and that public opinion, which developers say, through this increase

(08:24):
of literacy in Britain and nowhere else, that public opinion
soon produced the anti racist idea, the idea that all
God's children, everyone is the same until they're changed by
the circumstances of you know that there were surroundings, the
social setup that accounts for the differences in peoples, but

(08:46):
they're all underneath, they're the same, they all have the
same dignity. Now that attitude, as I say, begins only
in Britain, and it's so powerful that the idea that
within the first hundred years of this kind of situation
where we have a lot of newspapers, there's a tremendous

(09:08):
movement to end slavery, and it starts to bear fruit immediately.
I mean, people are countries all over the place are
stilled to the banned slavery. So in other words, the
radicals all have it backwards. I mean they think the
white supremacy is an evil thing in the world, and

(09:29):
in fact it's in the English speaking world where the
idea first developed that they were all one family, and
that soon spread to the rest of the world, but
only because the English speaking world was so influential.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
The voice of Professor John Ellis and again his book
is called A Short History of Relations between Peoples, putting
a historic perspective on the world that we live in
and the thoughts that we're all one people compared to
a critical race theory that you have today. John, you
come back into American history because we oftentimes view the
world based on our generation or a generation one or

(10:09):
two behind us. As we look at I look at
doctor Martin Luther King junior. He said, I dream of
a day and which will judge people by the content
of their character, not by the color of their skin.
Definitely an anti racist thought. And yet somehow, with all
the access to literacy and all the access to the Internet,
and all the access to media and communication, we have

(10:32):
actually moved away from his thought of anti racism and
the content of the character, not the color of the skin.

Speaker 2 (10:38):
We're going the wrong direction.

Speaker 1 (10:39):
And yet we have more access to information than any
generation prior to us.

Speaker 3 (10:44):
Well, you put that so well, I got much I
can add to it. You put your finger exactly on
the point. I mean, there's no excuse for going backwards.
But you know, radicals in modern America have managed to
push us backwards with a critical race theory and DEI

(11:04):
we've got to stop that. And I mean, basically, race
relations have improved enormously in the last seventy eighty years.
I've seen it myself over that that time time frame,
and at the moment, what's happening is that there's a
smallest group of people, but they managed to get a
great deal of influence, and they're trying to push us

(11:26):
backwards into a you know, a position where different races
are angry with each other again, and there's no point
in that. I mean, you know, we're in a situation
where we're easily beyond that, where everyone has a chance
to develop his own life according to how he wants

(11:50):
to live it, and those radicals are just making making
it more difficult that at harmonious society to exist.

Speaker 2 (12:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (12:01):
I remember a couple of years ago, in its election
season and when he was the vice president and running
for office, President Biden preaching to a black church one time, said,
if you vote Republican quote, they going to put you
back in chains, and I'm like, there's no Republican out
there wanting to put anybody in change. But it's that
type of rhetoric that we have to get beyond and
recognize that sometimes that we sit down with people that

(12:24):
maybe vote differently than us or have different religious viewpoints,
we have a heck of a lot in common, and
you just kind of get the sense that there's somewhere
out there, there's power brokers or somewhere that don't want
us to find that threat of commonality.

Speaker 3 (12:38):
Absolutely, you're right, they don't want us to find it.
And the reason they don't want was to find it
is politically it's kind of useful for them to divide people.
The other thing they do is they make capitalists of
the villain. So, in other words, there's a group of
radicals that say basically that you can't be anti racist

(12:59):
and as you're anti capitalists. Well, in other words, this
is really Marxists using racial division to advance their own
political agenda. And what they're doing, but you know, in
order to advance their own political leg they're dividing people.
They're trying to stir up antagonism between peoples.

Speaker 1 (13:21):
Professor John Ellis is my guest. Okay, the old adage
that we've heard is that those who don't learn from
history are doomed to repeat it. And so you've written
a book, it's called A Short History of Relations between People.
What is the takeaway for people that read the book.
We've got to learn from history. You've written a book
about history and we need to learn something. What is

(13:43):
it that you hope the readers will take away about
what has happened since the fifteen hundredths and how we
should implement that and super impose that over our lives today.

Speaker 3 (13:55):
Well, the takeaway is I think this the English speaking
world in this respect of the anti racist idea, but
also with its industrial revolution and development of you know,
the whole modern way of life based on technology and science,
the English speaking world gave us a tremendous advantage the
whole world, and that it created a universal modern culture

(14:18):
that spread across the world. Now, the fact that one
group started it off is not something we should worry about,
and you can point to the way Asians have dealt
with this to see what works. I mean, the average
Asian Americans simply says, I don't care who's started off

(14:39):
this development of modernity I'm going to have. I'm going
to grab hold of it and use it and get
the best of it. And so you now find, for
example that you know, Asian Americans do better on test
scores than anyone else. In other words, they've they've stopped
the business of worrying about who developed science and technology.

(15:02):
They're mastering it. They see the whole point is it exists.
Someone developed it, Okay, but it doesn't matter who developed it.
We're going to grab it and we're going to monster
it and we're going to go on to a better
life in the process. And that's true of Asia, it's
generally out in this country. So for example, I mean
that the firm LG, which I think is what is

(15:27):
I think South Korean. I may be wrong in that,
but anyway, certainly an Asian firm that leads in American
appliances for Americans consumers, that leads in consumer satisfaction. So,
in other words, is an example where an Asian firm
has decided to embrace them the modern world, modern technology,

(15:52):
and it does so so well that it beats everybody
else at it. Now, that's the way forward, and that's
the forward for every group in America, and what radicals
are doing are holding back blacks in particular by by
making them more focused on grievance and more focused on

(16:15):
sort of, you know, on ideas about racism and who's
who's responsible for the position they're in, you know, it
was radicals are directing bigue attention to the wrong things,
and what they really ought to be doing is telling look,
just never mind who invented would orderly enjoy it and

(16:38):
make progress with it.

Speaker 1 (16:40):
The name of the book, A Short History of Relations
between People, Distinguished Professor John m LS. Professor Professor Ellis.
I'm honored to have you on the show. I've enjoyed
what I've been able to catch the book so far.
Short History of Relations between People. I'm guessing Amazon, Barnes
and Noble Books a million, all the places that find
books are sold. They can find the book right.

Speaker 3 (17:00):
Yes, No, it's available pretty well anywhere. I thinks, but
I'm the professors.

Speaker 1 (17:05):
Yeah, yeah, Professor Ellis, it's an honor. Thanks for coming
on the program. A Short History of Relations between People.
How the World Began to move beyond Tribalism by Professor
John M.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
Ellis.

Speaker 1 (17:17):
Listen, when they tried to divide you by race, when
they tried to divide us up into different tribes, forcing
it the Fox News tribe, the MSNBC tribe, the Republican tribe.
I ain't trying to see Kumbai yah, but be careful
that you don't let your masters out there divide us
up when we don't need to be divided up. Remember

(17:37):
that election day in America, Laky six hundred k cool.

Speaker 4 (18:08):
Thanks for calling the Undecided Voter Hotline. If you're still
unsure on who to vote for, press one. Wait, actually
press two if that feels right, or maybe three? No,
go with four? Wait where was number one? Again? Hold on?
Maybe just call back after you decide. Thanks for calling

(18:29):
the Undecided Voter Hotline.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
All right.

Speaker 1 (18:33):
If you're undecided now, my friends, I don't know if
there's much hope for you, and God bless you them
figure it out how you go through life if you're
still undecided but everything, there's some still undecided people out there.
Good to have you here. Jimmy Lakey is my name.
It's election day in America, pas. If you don't know
how to say, you're l's and you've turned those into ours,

(18:54):
It's erection day in Colorado. So either way, Hero, it's
erection day, and I hope you enjoy it. I hope
it's a very enjoyable erection day for you. Bill Walton
is AKA known as the Unwoke CEO's the host of
the Bill Walton Show and also chairs the Resolute Protector Foundation,

(19:14):
a media production company that creates and produces original, educational
and entertainment content. And we're honored to have Bill Walton
on the hotline. Bill, Welcome into the program. The Jimmy
Lakey Show meets the Bill Walton's Show.

Speaker 5 (19:26):
Good to have you, Great to be here, Great to
be here.

Speaker 2 (19:30):
Love you, Thank you, sir.

Speaker 1 (19:32):
I appreciate you hopping on the program. We're Election day
and I've been called I guess, deplorable in years past, irredeemable,
and now I've been called garbage. And I think you're
trying to call us Nazis as well. Give me your
take on this, I guess defining of the opposition that
we've seen in the last couple of days of this

(19:53):
election cycle.

Speaker 5 (19:55):
Well, I think they've run out of words to describe us.
But the thing is they do believe it. I mean,
this is not just an euphemism for something else. They
have complete content for the other side of this. And
of course, you know the Democrats with Biden and Harris
have really ensconced themselves. And I live in the Washington

(20:16):
area at Virginia, Maryland, and you know, this is a
money machine and it's a power machine, and the deep
state is real, and the deep state does not want
to give up a single bit of their privileges. And
so that you know, what's really going on here is
the Trump thretons everything that they have and if he
comes in, it's going to change their life a lot,

(20:38):
and they're fighting tooth and nail to make that not happen.
But you know it's name calling is absolutely the last
resort of somebody that doesn't know what to do. And
my view is in the history is going to prove
me right in the next twenty four hours. Is the
Trump wins, and Trump Trump wins pretty big, and Trump's

(20:59):
going to win by margin that's too big a steel
But you know, talking about the steel thing that's happening,
I mean there they've already filed two hundred lawsuits. There
are all sorts of you know, I'm also on the
board of Seaback and we monitor polling places, and we've
already seen ballots come in that are that are that
are fraudulents. And so it's happening as we speak, and

(21:19):
Trump's just going to have to win by a margin
that's greater than the amount they can steal.

Speaker 1 (21:25):
You'res in the voice of Bill Walton, and again his
biography I mentioned part of it. He's also I've been
a board member for organizations like the Heritage Foundation, Seapack,
and American Enterprise Institute. Bill Walton as my guest, Bill
is is this just the future of our election cycle
in America? That it's all going to be litigated, It's
all going to be held up in court.

Speaker 2 (21:45):
We're no longer ever going to be able to find.

Speaker 1 (21:46):
Out who wins the presidential race, you know, except three
or four days, five days, six days later. Is this
the future or is there any kind of Does the
pendulum ever swing back here?

Speaker 5 (21:57):
I think it. I think it can swing back and
going back hard. I mean Trump thinks that we ought
to be able to vote as effectively as the French
or the Italian. I mean they go in, they have
their vote, they do it in one day, they have
a paper ballot, and they know what the results are
by nine o'clock that night. There's no reason America can't
do that. You just need to set up a will

(22:19):
to make that happen. And of course, the Democrat that
is from the system benefited mightily in twenty twenty. But
it could change, and it could change pretty radically. The problem,
of course, is a lot of the state, a lot
of election mechanics are at the state level, and there's
a lot I'm not going to get into all the details,

(22:40):
but it's hard to do a mandate nationwide for every
type of voting. But I think there's a consensus. I
think people are really set up with this system and
all the angst that it causes. Even the Democrats here
hate it.

Speaker 1 (22:54):
We even had county clerks on this program. And we
even have conservative counties in Colorado that say, oh yeah,
if we get inundated on the day of the early
voting is easier we get in the day of the day,
if it could be a day or so or hours
before we get our vote. And I'm like, why don't
we look at Florida. They change their ways after the
two thousand election. They figured it out, and Florida will
figure out how to count twenty six million population vote.

(23:17):
I believe twenty six million something like that, and don't
have it done within a few hours of the polls closing.
I don't understand why we don't just say, hey, what's
Florida doing, and why can't my state or my county
do that?

Speaker 2 (23:28):
Why there's not the will to do that.

Speaker 5 (23:30):
Well, if we put a twenty the elon Musk and
put a twenty two story booster rocket back in its
cradle after going thousands of miles in the space, we
can fix the election. And the thing I like about
the team that's trunk surrounded them with and so with
now is I think we got some change agents and
it's doable. It's not rocket science, and if people can't

(23:54):
get the vote counted, we would have a mechanism to
get rid of them, bringing people who.

Speaker 1 (23:58):
Can't ultimate My guest of a couple more moments, he's
known as the Unwoke CEO. I'll tell you how to
connect with his show and his websites here. In just
a moment, we ended up the final question though, it's
we've seen kind of a revolution of the Republican Party.
We used to be the party of the Country Club
of Leeds. Now we seem to be the working man party,
grassroots union members, that rank and file union members support Trump.

(24:21):
You've got Democrats like Robert F. Kennedy, Junior Tulca Gabbard,
We're now the anti war party.

Speaker 2 (24:27):
It's we've really just seen a reversal.

Speaker 1 (24:29):
Did you ever think you'd see this type of reversal
in your lifetime of kind of the core belief for
the core identity of a political party.

Speaker 5 (24:36):
No, But here's what changed the Democrats change. The Democrats
has become beyond radical. You know, it's flat out Marxists.
And when that happens, and people who are normal people
who want to be liberal and you know, have some
of those old Democrat policies, but that's all. That's all changed.

(24:56):
When you've got the aggressive affirmative action dep you've got
the economy getting shut down by a climate change agenda
that is not even slightly sensible, you got to change.
And then and he's and then also just there's a
fact that Trump guys, people made money, they made a
better living. Their real standard of living raised significantly under Trump,

(25:19):
and it's fallen significantly under Harris Biden. And so all
those constituencies which used to think that Democrats would deliver.
Democrats have and then they're changing side. I think this
could be a This could be a kind of realignment
that we saw with Reagan where he reset the deck

(25:41):
chairs and also with FDR in nineteen thirty two. So
this could be historic if all these votes come in
the way I think they're going to.

Speaker 1 (25:50):
Bill Walton hosted The Bill Walton Show, also known as
the as the Non Woke CEO and the Chairs the
Resolute Protector Foundation.

Speaker 2 (25:58):
Bill Walton.

Speaker 1 (25:58):
If folks want to listen to your show, follow you
on the on the Internet, where do they go?

Speaker 5 (26:03):
The Bill waltonshow dot Com gets you to everyplace else?
But we're on YouTube, Rumble, all the majors podcast platforms.
We're also on seapak Now, which is the streaming channel
we have with Seapack, and we're also on Substack, where
I also do a bit of writing to go along
with the show. So I hope you, I hope your

(26:24):
listeners tune in. And because there's a there's a whole
abundance of people we've talked to over time that are
kindred spirits and you go on, we go deep in
the conversation, deepen the topics with really smart people.

Speaker 1 (26:36):
The Bill Waltonshow dot com. That's his place to start,
or just kind of google around. You'll find him on
the substack. You'll find him on the YouTube, the Facebook,
the podcast. Is that again to Bill Waltonshow dot com. Bill,
let's hope we have something to celebrate tonight. I'll be
at the Laky Parlor, the Laky Estate, my cigar room,
fully ventilated professionally, and I'll be hoping, hoping to light

(26:57):
up a celebratory cigar tonight.

Speaker 2 (26:58):
We shall see Bill Walton pleasure. Thanks hopping on the program.

Speaker 5 (27:02):
Yeah, great talking with you, great talking.

Speaker 2 (27:04):
You got it.

Speaker 1 (27:05):
The Bill Waltonshow dot com. You check out his podcast
and follow him on the intro googles if you want to.
All right, Jimmy Lakey is my name. Nice to have
you here. It's election day. We have one final segment
to go of today's radio broadcast. Some of you have
been messaging me with the email. Some of you have
been messaging me with the Twitter page and the Facebook

(27:25):
page Jimmy Lakey at iHeartMedia dot com, Facebook dot com,
slast Jimmy Leaky fan page, Twitter is just my name.
Take this break we'll come back and I'll share some
of your thoughts that you've sent to me. Jimmy Lakey
six hundred kco l. Everybody asked me for my predictions,

(28:04):
and I'm cautiously optimistic.

Speaker 2 (28:11):
That's all I'm gonna tell you.

Speaker 1 (28:12):
I have a gut, a gut feeling, and I'm just
not going to oversell my gut feeling. But dog gone it,
I'm feeling good. I got a message from a buddy,
Robert Blaha this morning. Nervous but confident, go Trump, cautiously optimistic.
I was messaging with Alicia Lewis last night Laman Lewis,

(28:32):
and we were just messaging and she wanted to know
my predictions and how I was feeling as well. So anyway,
good to have you here. Everybody, just remember it's all
of all works out. We'll figure it out tonight. And
one of the things somebody sent me up that let's
see what did it say? I gotta find it tonight

(28:54):
is America's gender review Party. I hope it's a boy.
That's funny. There's a couple of memes out there circulating.
I'm gonna watch it from a house of Lakey tonight
and I will have a cigar, and I will have
a couple of televisions going. I will have my computer going,
my tablet, my iPad. I'll just got to be trying

(29:15):
to soak into the information I will. People always ask me,
are you going to live? Facebook is not really a
method that you Because Facebook is on your computer, it's
easy to send messages out, but the algorithm squelched that
out the X machine. If I do send out anything,
will be on the X And I'm not going to
say I'm live broadcasting from there, but I will try
to keep updated on the X as time goes on.

(29:39):
So if you do want to send me a message,
I would say, do it on the X and see
what we put out there, and I'll be I'm definitely
retweeting off the X or reaxing or whatever you call that.

Speaker 2 (29:47):
Now.

Speaker 1 (29:47):
So there's just a lot going on during election cycle,
and I don't multitask well, to be quite honest, I
get the add and I'm trying to type, and you know,
I oftentimes wonder how Trump will sometimes or some of
these guys will be live tweeting. Well, I've seen I
saw behind the scenes image and like Trump, and I'm
sure all the other guys do it as well.

Speaker 2 (30:07):
They're dictating to someone.

Speaker 1 (30:08):
They say, hey, put this out there, and they're typing
it up for you, as opposed to watching it, creating
it typing it.

Speaker 2 (30:13):
That's where it gets distracting.

Speaker 1 (30:14):
But I'm just a small chi wahwa out there, my friend,
not a big dog in radio, and so I don't
have the help to do that that I can.

Speaker 2 (30:21):
Just dictate stuff.

Speaker 1 (30:22):
So anyway, follow online and tomorrow morning we shall reconvene
and see how it all pans out here this evening,
so it should be a very good time. Let me
play again this audio. This is I started the show
with it. It's an eighty nine year old lift driver
explaining to everybody why voting is so important and if
you thought about not voting, you thought about your vote
not counting. This is an eighty nine year old man

(30:43):
who's black, talking about why he always takes time to
go out and vote. I hope this will maybe inspire
you to get out and vote if you weren't intending to.

Speaker 6 (30:53):
I was thirty years old before I could vote. I
was born in nineteen thirty five. Civil rights movement was
high when I was about thirty three to five years old.
I had seen so many young men and women die
because of a right to vote, and I said, I've
got a vote. The people have to realize the price
that was paid for them to vote. I've been driving
lived for nine years. Even when I drive locals, I

(31:14):
ask them, man, they registered to vote. A lot of
them said, my vote doesn't count. Oh yes, said one
voat can change a conversation. One vote can change a
whole society.

Speaker 1 (31:25):
One vote, my friend, get out there and do it.
I feel like Willard Scott and I might have missed
this opportunity here. I want to give a shout out.
She may not be listening right now. She's turning eighty
five years old today today. Her name is Doreen Grossi
Grassy Grassel, Dreene Grassel. She is a regular listener of
my program. She's a retired nurse. She grew up in

(31:46):
a farm in South Dakota. And the person that tipped
me this is I met her at City Park in
for Colin. She walks every morning for the past ten years.
Doreen will walk around the lake with her little dog, Sadie,
and they pick up trash and garbage together and fishing
line and Doreen has also looked out after the wildlife
and she has actually rescued several geese that were tangled

(32:08):
up in fishing line there at the city Park in
Fort Colins. So, Doreen, I know you listened earlier than
this hour, but I got distracted with some technical issues
we were having behind the scene. Doreen Grassol, happy birthday
eighty five years young today, and I appreciate it. I
hope I didn't miss it. If you know Doreen, tell
her thank you for all the service he does in
for Collins, and to thank her for listening to the

(32:29):
program as well. All right, what are you going to
be watching tonight for election season? Just remember you're probably
reading a script reader.

Speaker 7 (32:37):
Tonight Election Central as you covered with all the election results.
I'm the no nonsense news anchor with a full head
of hair, ready to bounce the conversation around the studio.

Speaker 1 (32:48):
I'm the bleach blonde in a tight dress that will
stand most of the time so you can see my
legs in high yields.

Speaker 2 (32:55):
I'll also read things that are already on the screen.

Speaker 7 (32:58):
And me, I'm the wild eye guy with my sleeves
rolled up.

Speaker 2 (33:01):
We'll point at a touchscreen map.

Speaker 1 (33:03):
And say this could happen, or this could happen, or
maybe this will happen.

Speaker 7 (33:09):
So join us tonight for Election Central, because one thing's
for sure, we won't know who actually wins.

Speaker 2 (33:17):
I haven't Election Central.

Speaker 1 (33:18):
That sounds like almost every network out there tonight, everybody,
enjoy your Election night festivities. If you want to check
out of election Night, go check out what I do
in charity. Check out our workout there. In about a
week from about a week and a half, I'll be
heading to Rwanda and I'm gonna do Christmas shopping for
the kids over there, because we got to start buying
hundreds of gifts and I'm gonna help my guys out.
I'm taking off on an airplane a couple of week

(33:38):
and a half or so away. If you want to
donate a get away from the election cycle, feel free
to do so. I got a leady named Rose we're
building a house for That was four thousand dollars. I'll
tell you who did that later. But at Riverspromise dot
org if you want to check out from the election stuff,
go to my charity Riverspromise dot org. I'll get all
the interviews posted up on the website. I'll be back
here tomorrow morning and again. Doreen Grossel, Happy birthday, dear,

(33:59):
eighty five years young. I feel like Willard Scott now
in my career, if only it was respected as much
as Willard Scott. Hey, God bless you, God bless America.
See you tomorrow morning, Good Lord willing. The creeks don't rise,
and they let me back in the building. Happy election Day.
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