Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Let's go now to Republican Senator Mark Waynemullen of Oklahoma,
who's on the Armed Services Committee. Senator, we were going
to have you on to talk about something completely different,
and now we are caught in the middle of this
breaking and he was praying for two National Guard members
and we don't know how badly they've been injured. They've
been shot here in DC, just about a mile away
(00:21):
from the White House. It's an incredible moment, an incredible
scene because this is supposed to be one of the
safest places in the district. There are supposed to be
so many officers all across this area. This is just
a little bit north of Lafayette Square. I know you've
been there quite a few times.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Just give me.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
Your first thoughts. As we watched the sea unfold again,
we don't know what the motive is here. We don't
know what this guy was up to, whether he was
targeting these troops or maybe they just got caught up
in something.
Speaker 3 (00:49):
Well, I should first of all, it breaks our hearts
because we were running up to Thanksgiving.
Speaker 4 (00:53):
We know these men and women, they're willing to.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
Protect one hundred percent of our freedom by a sacrifice
in their own life, but you never want to see
this happen on our own streets right here in our nation,
much less in the nation's capital, literally within eyeshot of
the White House.
Speaker 4 (01:13):
Some of the pictures that are circulating.
Speaker 3 (01:15):
Online, I'm able to verify if they're true or not,
but you know, they're very disturbing. They look like they're
pretty serious injuries. It's I agree with Chris, it's too
hard to know right now if they were actually targeted
or not.
Speaker 4 (01:34):
They may have been intervening. I know that.
Speaker 3 (01:36):
Anyone walking around that in the uniform and they would
see someone in distress, they would be running towards the threat,
because that's what our men and women do in uniform.
They run towards the threat. And it's right now I
think I believe that Secretary Christy Nomes said it best.
We need to be prayed for them. We also need
(01:58):
to be praying for their you know, for their families
as well.
Speaker 4 (02:02):
I'm sure they're.
Speaker 3 (02:02):
Not quite informed yet, and so every family member that
has their loved ones deployed in our nation's capital right
now with the National Guard, I know they're glued to
your TV and they are concerned. They're probably calling their
loved ones want to know if they were the ones
that were targeted or if they were the ones that
was part of this incident, and all we can do
(02:24):
is stand by and wait for answers.
Speaker 4 (02:25):
I will say, though, Issha, it's.
Speaker 3 (02:26):
Telling If Secretary Christy Nome, who I was visited with
last night, and I know she's with her family for
Thanksgiving as well, if she put out the statement that
said we need to be praying for them, that'll probably
tell you the seriousness of the injuries.
Speaker 2 (02:42):
Republican Senator Mark Wayne mullin Oklahoma on with Aisha Hasni
for Fox News as we are reporting in the story
in real time today on Ryan Schuling Live this Wednesday
before Thanksgiving. Zack Seegers alongside the two National Guards members
who were shot earlier reports to be deceased by the
governor of West Virginia, and they are both the National
(03:04):
Guard's troops from West Virginia. They are alive, they are
in critical condition, and we continue to ask you to
send your prayers to them. Pete Hegsath's Secretary of War
now stating that President Trump is called in five hundred
more National Guard troops to Washington, d C. In response.
(03:27):
To this shooting. They have the shooter, the suspect in custody.
He is not being cooperative. I did see a photo
of the alleged shooter online. Appears to be a male.
And there was a press conference at the top of
the hour would have been about three pm, slightly thereabouts,
slightly before Mountain times, so about five pm Eastern time
(03:51):
in Washington, d C. With Mayor Muriel Bowser and Cash Betel,
the FBI director, more law enforcement on site and on
the seen commenting on the shooting. And we'll have much
more as the day progresses on the Dan Kaplis show
as well. So keep it locked in right here on
six point thirty k how if you're listening live on
(04:11):
the radio, your text at five seven, seven, three nine,
Let's get to more of those. This one says, I
don't have any proof, but I suspect that Penya Boulevard
was run through property owned by Roy Romer and his
friends and family. Was a roamer. I mean, I've heard
stories along these lines too, about why it was designated,
(04:33):
where it was, the political financial motives behind it, all
of that. Wellington web Vederic Opina Roy Romer. There's another
name there. It should be three lanes in either direction.
That's that's my postulate, and it should have been from
the very beginning. You just had that one lane and traffic,
(04:54):
the volume is handled a lot better than the choke
point that you have. Anything happens in one of those lanes,
and now you're down to one lane. And even then,
like on a daylight today, you're treading it right if
you're if you're heading the DIA and I am, yeah,
you're like this traffic and this that little jog. I
just want to you go from two twenty five and
(05:17):
then I seventy for not even a mile right, and
then there's this other accents, there's another road like what
and then then payin yourble, Lord almighty, that's ridiculous, Crandy says,
not traveling but working all day at the grocery store.
The store will be filled with husbands sent to get
(05:39):
things wives forgot. That seems to be a little bit
on the sexist side. Maybe you say the way around
and we'll be on the phone the whole time while
wife tells them what's needed. And by the way, while
you're there, get this or that will not be slow
or quiet by any means. Lol. All right, Frandy, I'm
gonna take your word for it. You're the I'm not.
(06:01):
And then thanks stuff Randy. On the front lines and
the grocery stores that you know what, be kind, be
nice to those that are working on the holiday here,
especially then this lead up to the holiday. There's stress,
there's anxiety, folks. The holidays are supposed to be fun.
Let's try to keep that in mind. I know they
can be stressful, I get it, but don't take that
(06:22):
out on us waitress or a grocery store worker or
an air airline attendant flight attendant. You know that they're
working and well along those lines, you know, what is
the proper kind of decorum as you're flying. I'm seeing
(06:43):
a lot about this, I guess I'm watching Fox News
and they're talking about it. But when you're flying, what
kind of clothing do you wear? It used to be
when you watch like mad Men, or you dress up
to go on a flight, you dress up like men
in a suit and tie with a fedor hey, I'm
flying on an airplane. Eighties would be all nicely attired
as well. And now you know, yeah, people stumbling out
(07:06):
of bed barely in pajamas, slippers in some cases. Well,
Sean Duffy, Secretary of Transportation, has some tips.
Speaker 5 (07:14):
Most sides are pretty dark, good and people do behave
really well with one another.
Speaker 2 (07:18):
It is just a few of.
Speaker 5 (07:19):
Those times where again, don't take your shoes off and
put your feet on the you know, the chair ahead
of you. That's just or maybe don't play your movie
without headphones on. There's some simple things that can annoy
the folks around you that you know, I mean, if
we don't have to do that, and so just be
cognizant and courteous.
Speaker 2 (07:37):
That's the ask a few things here in Zach. Feel
free to chime in on your flight experiences. But yeah,
keep your shoes on, okay, rule number one, especially if
you don't have socks on, no bare feet. Was just
watching planes, trains and automobiles last night. One of the
opening scenes there, Del Griffith played by John Candy, takes
off his shoes and then takes off his socks and
(07:58):
then waves the sock in Neil Page's face. Steve Martin,
Now that's a comedy, right, but not far from actual
happenings on an airplane that I've seen people taking off sacks, shoes,
putting their feet up your feet, stink and don't want
them in near me. I think that's yeah, shouldn't have
(08:19):
to be said, should not have to be requested, and
especially going to say the ladies here, you know, make
sure you're wearing clothing that covers the necessary areas you
know that need to be covered. I'm gonna leave it
at that. And men, this is all men. What do
you do? And I've seen I've heard this more on
like international flights or maybe not domestic. I haven't seen it,
(08:43):
but I've heard about it. Don't watch porn on your laptop?
What do you do it?
Speaker 6 (08:48):
Like?
Speaker 2 (08:48):
You're not the only one that could see that stuff?
Do you have to watch it on the plane? That
has to be a crime. That has to be a crime.
You could be exposing kids to it on a plane.
It's horrible. You heard about that though.
Speaker 7 (09:01):
No, but that's insane, it's happening. That's got to be criminal. Legitimately,
you got to end up on a sex offender list
for that.
Speaker 2 (09:08):
It's it's terrible. Don't do that. What are some violations
of codes of conduct that you've seen on an airplane?
Behavior wise?
Speaker 7 (09:16):
There's the man, I definitely had someone watching a movie
without headphones airbuds. It was an entire uh movie too,
like an entire flight, like they're just going And I
was like, is no one, no flight attendant or anyone's
gonna say or do anything about this. I mean, I
wasn't that I had my headphones, so I was in
(09:37):
that bohood.
Speaker 2 (09:38):
But yeah, everybody should have their own headphones, earbuds, airbuds,
whatever you want to call them. But nobody else wants
to watch your movie. Pal Okay, the the worst I've had.
Speaker 7 (09:48):
Yeah, I was coming back from Lapause in Mexico, and
some tourists and American tourists had a little bit too
much fun in the in the airport, right, you know,
probably drinking some margaritas, and we're very loud and drunk
and disorderly, you know. As the plane was taxing, every
taxiing and everything, they stopped, they got out of line,
(10:12):
you know the line you get into take off, and
then threw them off the plane and we all got
delayed by like two hours as they dealt with this.
Speaker 2 (10:21):
Situation with the drunk passengers along those lines. That's been
similar to my experience in terms of the worst one.
It's always somebody that's had way too much to drink.
I'm not just saying I do this. You go to
the airport, you got time to kill. You're at the bar,
you have a couple of beers. That's fine. Else we
sleep on the plane whatever. But when they're just loaded plastered,
(10:43):
you know, blank face drunk, you know what I'm talking,
and they're belligerent and they're incorrigible, and they're making a
scene and they're starting to fight. I was on Spirit Airlines.
I know the story should stop there. Why were you
on Spirit Airlines? Why am I flying on Spirit in front?
Because I want to save money? That's it, Okay, I
plead guilty anyway, Spirit Airlines mistake one mistake, two Spirit
(11:08):
Airlines out of Vegas. So you can see where this
is going. And this guy was drunk and he's fighting
with the flight crew. He doesn't want to get off
the plane. He had started a fight. Then he tried
to pretend that he didn't. Buddy did and we all
saw it. And just like Zach saying, you said, you
guys were taxing on the runway to take off and
(11:29):
they had to kick people off the plane. Is that
what you just said?
Speaker 7 (11:32):
Yeah, they they were like it was way in the
back of the plane, and I didn't know exactly what
was happening. Uh huh, but I guess they we heard
after the fact that they were maybe not getting in
a fight, but but a verbal fight, an argument with
the white attendance to shut.
Speaker 2 (11:48):
Up, shut up, sit in your seat, look out the window,
play solitaire or spades on your computer or phone, wear
air buds. I mean, this be all the presentation. When
they do the you know, the safety and uh, the
mask will descend in front of you and it will
not necessarily be infleeting, and we'll have oxygen flowing through it,
(12:09):
and then you can use this as a flotation device.
All that. Okay, go through some proper protocols for decorum
of behavior on the plane. Again, shouldn't need to be said,
but here we are, and yeah, we need to talk
about it. So need to incorporate that, I think into
the presentation. And then I think people might pay more
attention because by now, you know, I fly so much,
(12:30):
it's just white noise. Yeah, I sit there. I try
to be polite. I'm not like, you know, talking while
they're trying to talk, or if I'm in an exit
row and that's always nice. Yeah. Are you capable and
willing to assist in the event of an emergency? Well, yeah,
I can do that, Jared log cabin back OMG. Frontier Jesus,
(12:50):
there's a frontier, Jesus. I wish there were. I could
really use them today. Flying frontier it's not great. I
hope you know a good chiropractor in Michigan. Lol, I
know a good masseuse at DA You and I both
it's the same guy. Well, Valdemar Art you Letta. He's
(13:11):
the best, but he's in concourse. B I believe sad
face emoji by me, Jared, Yeah, Veil's a good dude here.
Now these are more serious texts. No, okay, I gotta
address this one. Ryan Joe Oltman is right. We need hangings.
Get Joe on spread the word. I don't want to
(13:32):
do that. I don't want to distract from the horribleness
of their message of the seditious six. I think there
should hopefully be some kind of repercussions ramification for them,
but I don't want to add fuel to this fire.
I don't want to do the total eclipse of the heart.
You know, we're living in a powder keg. We are
giving off sparks, Botty Tyler, cue it up. But that's
(13:54):
what these six were doing. They know we're in a
powder keg. Look what happened today, Look what happened in DC.
Two National Guards members shot in critical condition. Because these morons.
And that would be the kind explanation. The unkind explanation
would be, they know exactly what they're doing, and they're
not morons, and they did this intentionally for political purposes,
(14:18):
and I know that they did. But whatever the explanation,
they are giving off sparks when they know we're living
in a powder keg. They know it. They started this
whole shebang, and people, Oh, President Trump called, they said
that this is punishable by death. He wouldn't have said that.
He wouldn't have had to say that if they didn't
(14:39):
put out that insane video in the first place. But
no hangings, no hangings. I'm not gonna get behind that Ryan.
Just to point out the silliness of his comments, someone
should have asked Senator Kelly if he asked Gabby Giffords
if she looked both ways before she was shot. Oh geez,
that's that one. From zero to sixty in a Hurry,
(15:01):
absolutely terrified at what happened to Gabby Gifford's I remember
they tried to pin that on Sarah Palin at the time,
but she put out these flyers or advertisements that had targets.
There was targets on various I think it was congressional districts,
and Gifford's one of them to flip to flip red
not to shoot. But they try to blame Sarah Palin
(15:23):
for that, and I think that's ridiculous. Gary says, the
National Guard and other branches of the military are given
such strict rules of engagement, they're not going to be
shooting civilians for that, Hag. To even suggest such a
thing really pisses me off. This is what I'm talking about, Gary,
You're exactly right, alyssa slock and senator served. Our country
should know better, does know better. And these were comments
(15:46):
made within the last twenty four to forty eight hours
before National Guard troops were shot, two of them.
Speaker 8 (15:51):
Today, look at these videos coming out of places like Chicago.
It makes me incredibly nervous that we're about to see
people in law enforce, people in uniform military get nervous,
get stressed, shoot at American civilians. It is very a
very very stressful situation for these law enforcement and for
the communities on the ground. So it was basically a
(16:14):
warning to say, like, if you're asked to do something,
particularly against American citizens.
Speaker 2 (16:18):
This ridiculous and sickening, sickening that she's going there, but
for political reasons. She has to because the Democrats are flailing,
looking to grasp its straws and grab onto control wherever
they can and flip the script on the Trump administration,
on the DOJ, on the FBI, on our armed services,
on Congress, on the Supreme Court. They're losing power in
(16:41):
all these fronts, and this is the result of that,
and the consequences of those comments may be playing out
in real time today in DC. Well, Thanksgiving round the table.
Not sure how Zach's going to handle this or if
he has to, or if I have to. Now Dan
suggests that I'm not going to be able to avoid
politics at the Thanksgiving dinner table tomorrow. And every single
(17:03):
one of my nuclear family members that I originally grew
up with, so my father, my mother's no longer with us,
but my sisters and my brother, that all of them
except for my mother miss rest in Peace. She was
my only ally politically. She was a Trump supporter like me.
But I'm the only one left that they're going to
turn on me, and I'm going to be forced to
defend the Orange man. I don't think I'm gonna have
(17:24):
to have that conversation. I think they know better, Like
they're not going to change my mind. I hope they
have that level of respect for me at this point,
and I definitely know I'm not going to change theirs.
They don't listen to this the show. They my family
doesn't listen to my own show. Let us go to
this woman and she's going to give you some tips.
Speaker 9 (17:41):
Here's how to respond to the stupid things that your
liberal family members say. This Thanksgiving, we really shouldn't celebrate
a holiday rooted in colonial violence. Well, Thanksgiving isn't a
celebration of violence. It's a celebration of gratitude, which has
been twisted by activists who need outrage in order to
stay relevant. We're not going to rewrite American traditions because
a handful of chronically affected people are running out of
(18:03):
ways to play the victim. No human being is illegal.
We shouldn't even have ice it's cruel. Now, what's cruel
is pretending that a country can survive without enforcing its
own laws. Every single nation on Earth has borders and
immigration rules.
Speaker 2 (18:16):
The US is no exception.
Speaker 9 (18:18):
The cost of Thanksgiving dinner this year is so much
higher thanks to Trump, you should probably fact check before
repeating whatever CNN fed you. Wells Fargo's own analysis shows
that the cost of a ten person Thanksgiving meal is
down like three percent from last year, and Walmart's numbers
back it up. So yeah, go ahead and thank President
Trump for this year's crisis.
Speaker 2 (18:40):
Well, I have nothing to be thankful.
Speaker 9 (18:41):
For this year because women have fewer rights now than
they did a decade ago. Opportunity, education, and economic freedom
have never been higher for women in America. Women aren't
losing rights. You're just angry that the left can't use
abortion as a shield for every political argument anymore.
Speaker 2 (18:56):
This is why we need socialism.
Speaker 4 (18:58):
I mean, I wish that so much. On mom, Donnie were.
Speaker 6 (19:00):
Mayor of my town.
Speaker 9 (19:02):
No, you don't, Becky, I doubt that you could name
your current mayor, let alone three members of your city council.
Socialism destroys every place that.
Speaker 4 (19:10):
It touches, without exception.
Speaker 9 (19:11):
It doesn't create fairness, it creates equal misery.
Speaker 2 (19:15):
And the funny part about that is my sister in
law her name Becky, like that woman just stated remembering
rush on Thanksgiving.
Speaker 6 (19:23):
Next, the true story of Thanksgiving, the story of the Pilgrims,
begins in the early part of the seventeenth century. The
Church of England, under King James the First was persecuting
anyone and everyone who did not recognize its absolute civil
(19:44):
and spiritual authority. Those who challenged ecclesiastical authority and those
who believe strongly in freedom of worship were hunted down, imprisoned,
and sometimes executed.
Speaker 2 (19:56):
For their beliefs.
Speaker 6 (19:57):
A group of separatists first fled to Holland and established
a community. After eleven years, about forty of them agreed
to make a perilous journey to the New World, where
they would certainly face hardships, but could live and worship
God according to the dictates.
Speaker 2 (20:13):
Of their own consciences.
Speaker 6 (20:15):
On August first, sixteen to twenty, the Mayflowers set sail.
It carried a total of one hundred two passengers, including
forty Pilgrims, led by William Bradford. On the journey, Bradford
set up an agreement, a contract to established just and
equal laws for all members of the new community, irrespective
(20:36):
of their religious beliefs. Where did the revolutionary ideas expressed
in a Mayflower Compact come from?
Speaker 2 (20:42):
They came from the Bible.
Speaker 6 (20:44):
The Pilgrims were a people completely steeped in the lessons
of the Old and New Testaments. They looked to the
ancient Israelites for their example, and because of the biblical
precedent set forth in scripture, they never doubted that their
experiment would work.
Speaker 2 (21:02):
But it was no pleasure cruise.
Speaker 6 (21:04):
The journey to the New World was a long and
arduous one, and when the Pilgrims landed in New England
in November, they found, according to Bradford's detailed journal, a cold, barren,
desolate wilderness.
Speaker 2 (21:17):
There were no friends to greet them, he.
Speaker 6 (21:18):
Wrote, There were no houses to shelter them, there were
no inns where they could refresh themselves, and the sacrifice
that they had made for freedom was just beginning. During
the first winter, half the Pilgrims, including Bradford's own wife,
died later starvation, sickness, or exposure. When spring finally came,
(21:39):
Indians taught the settlers how to plant corn fish for
cod and skin beavers for coats. Life improved for the Pilgrims,
but they did not yet prosper, and this is important
to understand because this is where modern American history lessons
often end. Thanksgiving is actually explained in some textbooks as
(21:59):
a for which the Pilgrims gave thanks to the Indians
for saving their lives, rather than as a devout expression
of gratitude grounded in the tradition of both the Old
and New Testaments.
Speaker 2 (22:11):
Here's the part that's been omitted.
Speaker 6 (22:13):
The original contract the Pilgrims had entered into with their
merchant sponsors in London called for everything they produced to
go into a common store, and each member of the
community was entitled to one common share. All of the
land that they cleared and the houses they built belonged
to the community as well, and they were going to
distribute it equally. All the land they cleared, the houses
(22:36):
they built belonged to the community. Nobody owned anything, they
just had a share in it. It was a commune.
It was the forerunner to the communes we saw in
the sixties and seventies out in California. And it was
a complete with organic vegetables, even just like the communes
of today are.
Speaker 2 (22:57):
God. There's no question it was organic stables.
Speaker 6 (23:02):
Bradford, who had become a new governor of the colony,
recognized that this form of collectivism was as costly and
destructive to the Pilgrims as that first harsh winter which
had taken so many lives.
Speaker 2 (23:16):
He decided to take bold action.
Speaker 6 (23:17):
Bradford assigned a plot of land to each family to
work and manage, thus turning loose to power in the marketplace.
Long before Carl Marx was even born, the Pilgrims had
discovered and experimented with what could only be described as socialism,
and what happened.
Speaker 2 (23:34):
It didn't work, but nearly starved never has worked.
Speaker 6 (23:40):
What Bradford and his community found was that the most
creative and industrious people had no incentive to work any
harder than anybody else unless they could utilize the power
of personal motivation.
Speaker 2 (23:51):
But while most of the rest of the world.
Speaker 6 (23:53):
Has been experimenting with socialism for well over one hundred years,
trying to refine it, perfect it, and reinvent it, the
Pilgrims decided early on to scrap it permanently. What Bradford
wrote about this social experiment should be in every school
child's history lesson. If it were, we might prevent such
needless suffering in the future, such as that we are
(24:15):
enduring now. The experience that we had in this common
course and condition. This is Bradford, the experience we had
in this common course and condition. Tired or tried some
to years that by taking away property and bringing community
into a commonwealth would make them happy and flourishing, as
(24:37):
if they were wiser than God. Bradford wrote for this community,
so far as it was was found to breed much
confusion and discontent, and retard much employment that would have
been to their benefit and comfort. For young men that
were most able and fit for labor and service, did
repine that they should spend their time and strength that
(24:57):
worked for other men's wives and children without being aid
for it. That was thought injustice. Why should you work
for other people when you can't work for yourself?
Speaker 2 (25:06):
What's the point, That's what he was saying. The Pilgrims found.
Speaker 6 (25:10):
That people could not be expected to do their best
work without incentive. So what did Bradford's community try next?
They unharnished the power of good old free enterprise by
invoking the undergirding capitalistic principle of private property. Every family
(25:33):
was assigned its own plot of land to work, and
permitted to market its own crops and products. What was
the result, Bradford wrote, this had very good success, for
it made all hands industrious, so as much more corn
was planted than otherwise would have been.
Speaker 2 (25:53):
Is it possible that supply side economics could have existed
before the nineteen eighties. Yes.
Speaker 6 (25:59):
Read the story of Joe's and Pharaoh in Genesis forty one.
Following Joseph's suggestion, Pharaoh reduced the tax on Egyptians of
twenty percent during the seven years of plenty, and the.
Speaker 2 (26:08):
Earth brought forth in heaps well.
Speaker 6 (26:11):
At no time the pilgrims found that they had more
food than they could eat themselves.
Speaker 2 (26:17):
Now this this is where it gets really good.
Speaker 6 (26:21):
If you're laboring under the misconception that I was because
I was taught in school. They set up trading posts,
they exchanged goods with the Indians. The prophets allowed them
to pay off their debts to the merchants in London,
and the success and the prosperity of the Plymouth settlement
(26:43):
attracted more Europeans and began what came to be known as.
Speaker 2 (26:47):
The Great Puritan Migration.
Speaker 6 (26:50):
But this story stops when the Indians taught the newly arrived,
suffering in socialism pilgrims how to plant corn and fish
for cod. That's where the original Thanksgiving story stops. The
story basically doesn't even begin there. The real story of
Thanksgiving is William Bradford giving thanks to God for the
guidance and the inspiration to set up a thriving colony.
(27:14):
The socialism caused near starvation. The bounty was shared with
the Indians. They did sit down, they did have free
range turkey and organic vegetables. But it wasn't the Indians
(27:35):
who saved the day. It was capitalism and scripture which
saved the day, as acknowledged by George Washington in his
first Thanksgiving Proclamation in seventeen eighty nine.
Speaker 2 (27:50):
The true story of Thanksgiving are recounted by the one
and only Rush Limbaugh. We'll take this time out. We'll
close out with your tax and have no fear the
Thanksgiving Song by Adam Sandler. We'll be closing out today's
program on Ryan Shuling Live at all hour, Dan kaplis today,
(28:12):
I'll be with you for that journey beginning at four pm.
I want to thank Dasha for driving me to the
airport as well a lot of people coming together on
this Thanksgiving to help make it happen for years, truly
going to Detroit the Lions, and in fact, that's what
this Texter begins with at five seven, seven thirty nine.
(28:32):
Just do what I do, Ryan, smile say it's great
to see. If please pass the potatoes, I might want
to cut down on the carbs, though, followed by how
about those lions, typically followed I remember that time. I'm
just going to bring up the twice baked potatoes that
my uncle aren't always made. I miss those. He's still around,
but not in cooking mode, and I don't know if
I'm gonna be able to see him. He lives up
(28:54):
there in northern Lower Michigan. Yes, that's a place, Ryan.
That Rush intro music always lifts my mood, and the
Thanksgiving story is always a plus. I loved it. I
love hearing Russia's voice. I love hearing that music. He
is truly not only a legend, but the master of
this craft. Then now forever, Ryan, thank you for playing
(29:14):
the Rush Limbaugh Thanksgiving Day segment. Everybody needs to listen
to this because many of us didn't know that. Thank
you Ryan for playing what Jim Verdi also played. I'm
not real familiar with Jim. I think he's a good
dude though. I think he's friends with Dan bon Gino. Okain,
Happy Thanksgiving, Well, Happy Thanksgiving to you as well. We
need another rush lim Ba and I'm just doing my
(29:37):
part a little by little, you know, carrying pebble by pebble.
I mean, he was an icon. He cannot be replaced.
He just can't. Ryan, are representative Jason nothing to crow about.
I would prefer Jason eating crow. You know, you want
it short, snappy, to the point it sticks. I'm not
as good at this as President Trump admittedly, but j
(30:00):
eating crow because he's always eating crow. He says things
and then he has to take them back. I think
that's what we're going to go with from now on.
Like Comrade Kyle Patty says, FYI demn Rep from California,
Brad Sherman accused of watching porn on a flight. Check
your DMS. I did, Petty, Patty, and that's not even petty.
(30:22):
That is quite an accusation. And if he's doing. What
are you doing? I mean, even if you're not a
democratic rep whatever, just keep that to yourself in your
private moments. You don't watch that on a plane. What
is wrong with you? There should also be a dress code,
says Jason on an airline. Uh, define it though, What
would be that dress code? People with dogs walking around
(30:46):
the concourse? Dog takes a dump. It's like, come on, lady,
jeez Luise, have you seen this? Wow? Okay? And then
this one Ryan? Regarding paynya boulevard, you could have six
lanes in each direction, wouldn't make a difference. It's a
point of used road. It's always gonna be backed up
because I cannot do anything to the internal infrastructure of DA.
(31:09):
You may have a point there and that makes me sad.
Time for the Thanksgiving song.