Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
Listen all day, Get the app now at ninety four
to three WSC dot Com Back to Kelly and Blaze and.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Former New York Governor and GIW. Puomo saying Trump wants
socialism in New York City.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
The former governor says it's belooney that President Trump wants
Eric Adams to drop out of the New York City
mayoral race. At Manhattan's Labor Day Parade on Saturday, Cuomo
said Trump wants the ultraliberal Zoran Mam Donnie to win,
as he would be Trump's perfect stooge. The New York
Daily News reports that Cuomo added, if Mam Donnie is elected,
(00:38):
Trump could then take control of the city and destroy
the Democratic Party. Adams, Mondani and Republican candidate Curtis Siwa
also marched in that parade. There's been speculation that Trump
wants Adams to drop out to give Cuomo a better
chance of winning, but Adams has said he's staying in
and expects to be re elected.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
I caught handity. I think it was on Friday. He
touched on this talking about the owner of some of
the large it's a large Shaine grocery store. He wasn't
specific at least with the bit that I caught he said,
it's you know, this person said it's time to step
in here. I don't know exactly what that means if
he was referring to Trump or whomever. But you can
imagine you in the grocery stores. You obviously don't want
(01:17):
to Marxist mom DOMI taking over your livelihood, much less,
you know, controlling the grocery store government run grocery stores.
Speaker 1 (01:28):
Well, you know I've said, if New York wants a
socialist mayor, give it to them, let them live with
the with the results of what they chose.
Speaker 2 (01:38):
Well, if it drives the conversation, especially for younger people
to hear who seem to continue to drink this kool aid,
I mean, Marxist Mondami is a threat to any freedom
loving American that lives in New York City. Sadly, we've
got many voting age young people who are brainwashing up
at this point to continue electing these commie class from
(02:00):
town to town all over America.
Speaker 1 (02:03):
Well, you know it is American. We have free elections,
and if the voters want to elect a socialist, then
have at it, and go ahead and destroy your city
and the people that make things happen will move out
and you can live in your cesspool and show the
world what a bad decision you made.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
Makes me think of California and the people you know
who are suffering because of these decisions. I caught Glenn
Beck actually on Saturday night. I was driving home from
the pool, and it was a young mother, she was
in her late twenties, I think maybe early thirties, and
she says, I'm a Trump supporter. I'm a you know,
Christian love and conservative. She was battling making ends meet.
(02:48):
She was contemplating though, the idea of a universal income, saying, well,
maybe this is the answer, because nothing else is fitting
my life. It's not working. And so it was interesting
to you know, hear Glenn Beck go down the rabbit
hole of no universal income. You know, you're going to
have to do your life differently to get through, whether
(03:10):
it's a reset or what. But universal income, whether it's
a government run grocery store, government run income, makes you
a slave basically.
Speaker 1 (03:20):
But it shows you why he's resonating with people.
Speaker 2 (03:24):
Mon Donnie, Well, I don't disagree with you, I mean,
but it's it's just really concerning to me that now
you even have you know, supposed you know, this gal
seems very genuine, you know, Christian conservative, Trump loving, you know,
young mother who's like I with Ai. You know, I'm
losing jobs, I'm having a hard time being able to
(03:44):
make ends meet. And it's you know, that concerns me
to hear because you think, oh, well, this is just
you know, a small minority of the population and they're
only concentrated in blue cities.
Speaker 1 (03:57):
It's like, hmm, well, I mean you can't but you
can't tell people, just like you can't tell kids, right,
And your expectation sometimes is, you know what, I made
all these mistakes in my life that I wish I
wouldn't have made, and I'm going to teach my kids
about that, and they're going to have a better life
than me. Unfortunately, it doesn't work that way most of
the time. They have to learn on their own. And
(04:21):
so I look at it the same way with somebody
that's contemplating socialist policies or electing a socialist, where well,
this could be a viable solution for me. Let them
find out that it's not and learn the hard way.
That's how things work a lot of times, unfortunately. But otherwise,
(04:42):
they'll continue to think that that is some sort of
solution for them because it hasn't been proven otherwise. So
if that's what they choose, then let them be proven otherwise.
Speaker 2 (04:54):
So apparently some countries are supporting a legal immigration Here
in America.
Speaker 1 (05:00):
More than three hundred Korean workers who were detained last
week and an immigration raid are being released. The workers
who are arrested Thursday at a Hyundai battery plant in
Georgia in what was the largest single immigration raid so
far under the Trump administration's deportation drive. The chief of
staff to South Korea's president said yesterday that negotiations to
(05:20):
release the workers have been concluded and that after the
administration procedures are completed, they will be flown home to
South Korea.
Speaker 2 (05:30):
So Trump said, I think it was yesterday to reporters
on this whole South Koreans in the deportation. He said,
Ice was doing right, but we need to work out
how to bring experts in to train Americans so they
can do it themselves. And this highlights what you and
I have talked about, with the concern of this potential,
(05:53):
well potentially painful reset of decades of doing it differently.
Speaker 1 (05:59):
Well, I mean it shows me, and I've said this
all along, that some of these companies are complicit in
the immigration problem because they're looking for cheap labor. And
I don't know in this case if these are specialized workers,
you know, or why there's three hundred of them in
this Georgia plant. It seems to me like not all
(06:20):
of them would be specialized workers. I could be wrong,
but you know, it's interesting because there's actually a documentary
that the Obamas did that is not half bad, and
it explores the Japanese takeover of one of these factories
(06:41):
in the culture clash that proceeds to happen between the
American workers, and they're Japanese managers who expect different behavior
from their workers than what Americans are used to.
Speaker 2 (06:55):
Well, I mean, to me, this is if you drone
view it. I mean, look at this is the outcome
of us allowing whether it's our jobs to be shipped
overseas for decades, you know, our schools to be dumbed down.
We've a lot of other countries to produce our goods,
get smarter at doing that, then we import them back here,
you know, instead of manufacturing. And to Trump's point, learning
(07:19):
to do it ourselves. And you know, I don't disagree
with you with the fact that they're importing workers. I mean,
my gosh, think about when you know, it might be
a controversial thing to say, but when Bowing first came here,
there are a lot of people in the Low Country
that are like, we we want those jobs. And they're
importing you know, their people from Washington State. And you know,
(07:40):
over the years that panned out to be you know,
better for Low Country workers. But guess what, we had
to educate people in our communities across South Carolina, in
our region to be able to do those jobs that
Boeing was looking for. They wanted to hire here locally,
they said so very publicly, and we create did a
trade school program through uh you know, like try to
(08:03):
tech for example.
Speaker 1 (08:05):
Well it goes beyond that. It's the culture. So you know,
I grew up in Michigan and I'm not any union,
but I'll tell you what. There's a lot of people
in that state or go ask them to do anything
above and beyond their job, and they'll be like, union says,
I don't have to do that. I mean, and that's
how they talk to you.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
By the way, jeez, we're gonna get called.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
There we go. I'm serious, and so you know, and
and these other companies, especially the Japanese, they're not like
you can't look says I don't have to do that.
It's like, hey, go and do your job. And we're
trying to run a successful company here and you're you're
(08:50):
sitting there refusing to do anything because union says I
don't have to do that. I'm serious, like over and
over and over again with these people. And it's a
whole different way culture than what you would imagine.
Speaker 2 (09:02):
So I wasn't picking on Boeing. I'll even throw the
port in on this example to your point, Blaze, because
if you talk to anybody who works at the port,
depending on where some and maybe the majority might agree
with what you're saying, because different people who unload the
ships and different people who drive the containers away versus
(09:24):
you've got people who are unionized in the middle running
the computers. So you know, we have our own examples
here in the Low Country of the pushing and fighting
with regards to unionized workers and apparently Trump's Golden Bible.
Seven thirty Welcome into a Monday edition of the show.
Speaker 1 (09:42):
Well, I was just wondering if he was going to
take his gold edition Bible with him Today. President Trump
is set to speak at the Museum of the Bible
in Washington, d C. Later today. His appearance coincigns with
a public meeting held by the Department of Justices Religious
Liberty Commission to gather information and testimony on issues related
to religious free in America. Trump created the commission earlier
(10:02):
this year through an executive order as part of his
new White House Faith Office. Parents and students are expected
to testify about their experiences of expressing their faith in
public schools at the hearing today.
Speaker 2 (10:15):
Wow. This will be a very interesting hearing.
Speaker 1 (10:18):
It'll be very telling.
Speaker 2 (10:19):
Wow. I mean seriously, religious freedom is under attack in
the United States of America.
Speaker 1 (10:25):
Well, it's all under the myth of the separation of
church and state, because it's become the Left is lobbed
onto this and brainwashed everybody into thinking that the state
can't mention religion, that you're not allowed to display any
of your religious beliefs in public places, including schools, and
(10:47):
including prayers and all of this, when all the separation
of religion and state means is that religion does not
get to run the state like it did in England,
and that there was a separation here. We had a government.
You're free to practice, that's what religious freedom is. You're
free to practice your religion, but the government is not
(11:09):
going to be an official function of any one religion.
That's what the separation of church and state is. It
doesn't mean that you can't pray. It doesn't mean that
you can't display across or a Star of David or
whatever it is you choose.
Speaker 2 (11:25):
It actually makes me think, was it Texas Center Ted
Cruz last week blasted one of his fellow senators at
one of the Commission hearings that might have been the
RFK junior hearing where they were talking about where our
rights come from and they was pushing back on the
idea that our rights come from God under our constitution
and how it's written in the Declaration of Independence, and
(11:48):
quite literally the Democrat I can't remember if it was
Shifty Shift or which one. I was trying to look
it up here quickly, but and if I can find
the audio, it's worth listening to. But where you know,
our rights, you know, come from God versus the government
kind of thing.
Speaker 1 (12:04):
It just made it officially says. So it says your creator.
Speaker 2 (12:08):
Yeah, it was so. I also I'd like to actually
visit this. I didn't realize that there was a Museum
of the Bible in Washington, d C. Did you know
that I did not realize this.
Speaker 1 (12:21):
I can't say that I did.
Speaker 2 (12:23):
Yeah, I'm actually glad that this is happening, just for
the fact that we're talking about the Museum of the
Bible in Washington, d C. Now makes me wonder, you know,
what it looks like, because he's been on a mission.
Man on a mission when it comes to these museums
to be historically accurate and otherwise where it's been you know,
(12:43):
DEI woke, twisted, turned around, reimagined, revisionist history. Yes, so
I wonder if the Museum of the Bible in DC
has been untouched. I highly doubt it.
Speaker 1 (12:59):
Well, the President is going to be speaking there, so
I can't believe that they have been so overcome by
let's hope not right. Otherwise he would have never been
invited in the first place, and they wouldn't be allowing
him to speak, right, And we see that in a
lot of cases. So, you know, I don't think it's
probably gone too far left, if that's your concern. But
(13:22):
I still wonder if he'll be touting his Golden Bible.
Speaker 2 (13:26):
You know where the Golden Bible came from, right, I
was looking to see if it's actually golden. It's Lee
Greenwood actually was the one who put out the King
James version of this Bible, and it's got some of
the US you know, our founding documents inside of it
as well. So I was looking like, how much does
this thing cost? Sixty bucks at least that's the latest
(13:47):
price I could find.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
Well, Donald Trump released the gold Edition Bible, and it's
a custom in Boss to commemorate the forty fifth and
forty seventh President of the United States, Donald J. Trump.
My reference is his Trump's literal Golden Bible.
Speaker 2 (14:02):
Oh, I see when I come from Lee greenwork, when
I imaged googled and it came up with a twenty
twenty version that he held up and apparently it was
interesting a golden Bible.
Speaker 1 (14:13):
So a grown woman is safe after having to be
rescued from a YouTube challenge gone wrong. Official set of
Michigan State Police helicopter crew found a woman who got
lost in a state forest during a YouTube challenge troopers
were at the Pidgin River State Forest in northern Michigan
to help the Otsego County Sheriff's Office find a missing
(14:33):
thirty six year old California woman. Police said she was
a contestant in a YouTube survival challenge and had become
lost on Friday evening. State police canine searched the forest
before the helicopter called Trooper six was called to the area.
Officials said the crew operating Trooper six located the woman
using the aircraft's camera at around ten forty am Saturday morning.
Speaker 2 (14:56):
So does she get sent the bill for the amount
of money and time I'm in all that it costs
to go and rescue her.
Speaker 1 (15:04):
I don't know. And I tried to get some more
details on the story, and I was amazed at how
many YouTube challenges are out there, and I didn't get
the exact I could because I couldn't tell they didn't
designate which challenge this was, So all I could find
in further details was that she wandered away from base camp,
(15:26):
so somebody organized this apparently, unless it was her base
camp looking for water and then got lost in the woods,
but somebody reported her missing, so it sounds like this
was a group of people doing a challenge.
Speaker 2 (15:40):
Well, in these challenges, I mean this is about clicks, hits, money,
I mean, follow the trail. This is about money, be
getting clicks, becoming famous, getting paid.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
Well, they have a whole series of these, so it
mimics you know, Survivor and things like that.
Speaker 2 (15:56):
Again, I ask, is somebody going to get a bill
for the amount of money that it costs to rescue
this gal?
Speaker 1 (16:03):
I wouldn't be able to answer. We'd have to ask
the Michigan State Police and Trooper six.
Speaker 2 (16:07):
I mean, I wonder what that bill would be. I mean,
it's expensive to put up helicopters and oh my gosh.
Speaker 1 (16:14):
Well, they're searching the woods with canines. They had, you know,
plenty of local police along with the State Police and
then the helicopters searching for this woman. And thankfully they
found her unharmed. She was able to walk out of
the woods on her own.
Speaker 2 (16:30):
Wonder she learned anything from this that.
Speaker 1 (16:33):
You shouldn't be in a Survivor challenge if you get
that easily lost in the woods.
Speaker 2 (16:39):
I'm glad she's Okay, we can't I.
Speaker 1 (16:42):
Mean, really you but she's from California.
Speaker 2 (16:47):
I know, I get ready to say that says it all.
As soon as she said she was from California, I'm like, okay.
Speaker 1 (16:51):
So that explains a lot.
Speaker 2 (16:53):
Oh boy, it looks like ultra process foods maybe worse
for you than you think.
Speaker 1 (16:58):
A new study report said ultra processed foods may be
linked to a decline in male reproductive health, including sperm quality.
The research, published in Cell Metabolism, states that regular consumption
of ultraprocessed foods has several effects on health. The researchers
said that sperm quality trended toward impairment when participants were
(17:18):
on an ultraprocessed diet. The research has reported that these
health effects occurred even when a person on an ultraprocessed
food diet consume the same number of calories as a
person on any other type of diet. The study also
notes that participants on the ultraprocessed diet experienced an increase
in a substance found in plastics that can disrupt hormones.
(17:40):
And you know how you make a hormone, she could he,
I can't help myself. You mention hormones. I have to
say that. Ja.
Speaker 2 (17:50):
Oh okay, have you ever tried to go one day
without using drinking from whatever it may be plastic.
Speaker 1 (17:59):
We tried to do that all the time.
Speaker 2 (18:01):
It's almost impossible, though, to go through an entire day
and not either drink from something plastic, eat from it,
carry your food in it. And then we're talking about
these forever chemicals with plastics inside of our water, our food.
I mean, it is it feels like we cannot get
away from these toxic, awful you know, plastics chemicals.
Speaker 1 (18:27):
Well, a good start would be giving up ultra processed food.
Speaker 2 (18:30):
Well yeah, I mean, but then, I mean I have
mentioned water for goodness sakes. And look, I think it
was the Fox actually reporting at the top of the
five o'clock hour this morning, had an SoundBite from RFK
Junior where he's talking about even Thailand all is bad
for pregnant women. My god, what it's just, I feel
(18:51):
like we are just being invaded and for some time now,
I mean, look, look how far this has gone to
where it's actually affecting men's reproductive health in their sperm
quality awful.
Speaker 1 (19:03):
Well yeah, but I mean it's cheap food. So we
live in a land of plenty. And if we did
away with all of the ultra processed food and all
of these other things. Food costs would become even more expensive,
and then maybe you would be facing starvation in certain
sectors of society. I don't know, but it seems to
(19:28):
me it's not so easy just to give this stuff up.
And sometimes it's not a choice of choosing to be healthier,
not healthier, choosing to eat unhealthier food. It's a financial decision.
Speaker 2 (19:42):
Well, I hear you, and I know that this is
a separate topic and argument, but it came up last
week where junk food, some certain sectors of the aisle,
when it comes to junk food will no longer be
available to people who get government assistance with regards to food.
You want to talk about.
Speaker 1 (20:01):
The snap benefits.
Speaker 2 (20:03):
Yeah, And the pushback on that with some parents who
I thought was an interesting take. I mean, some of
the parents saying, you know, crying a foul, saying, oh
my gosh, you know, my kid just wants to be
a kid and have some candy, Like now, this is
you know, going to be I don't want to say
weirder at odds, but basically that was their point, and
(20:25):
all I could think is, there are plenty of times
when my mom said absolutely no, to candy because not
only was it not good for me, but she couldn't
afford the tooth decay that was going to come with
it and the dentistry bills, and you know, well.
Speaker 1 (20:38):
It should be my rotting teeth. Well, it should be
a treat, you know, not something that you rely upon
for your sustenance. But you know, interestingly, snack food didn't
exist prior to the Great Depression, and a lot of
what we now know as snack food was developed during
the Great Depression as a cheap way to give you
(20:59):
some calory and a cheap way to survive during the depression.
And then after the Depression was over, it became more
of a you know, a snack and a treat. And
then as we evolve and it's been marketed and everything else,
now it's an everyday way of life for a lot
of people when it shouldn't be. Thanks for listening to
(21:23):
the Charleston Morning News podcast. Catch Kelly and Blaze weekday
mornings from six to nine