Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
March first, twenty twenty five. The other day I wrote
a check. I wrote two twenty five twenty five. I
don't know why I think it's cool to write those
type dates down. I just think it's just nifty.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (00:12):
I'm weird like that, but I still write checks. You
know why I still write checks because I can't stand
how we're so back to me complaining. I'm so the phones.
When I retire, I'm getting a flip phone. I made
fun of all my retired friends at the car shows
with flip phones ten years ago. Now they all have
facy book and iPhones. Even my buddy Dicky especially, he's
(00:36):
evolved and it's so funny. I think maybe I was
better off with my Star tech and the backup battery.
I get like four hours a day. I didn't get
on there for the Internet. I didn't get on I
don't know. I just don't know. I'm tired, guys, I'm
just tired. So it's go back to phonins, go to Dave.
Wake me up. Dave.
Speaker 3 (00:58):
Well, you know I can always wake you up, boots.
I've been telling you for how long now, since before Christmas?
When my head is down, south down, here, you know,
come on down to Mago Country. You know, I got
a bunch of connections developed. You know, I could get
your hell of a good job. You could be a
ballet guy.
Speaker 1 (01:13):
You could be detailed guy.
Speaker 3 (01:16):
A Yes, you could be all doing all kinds of stuff.
There's funny the sights to see and and if you
want to talk about fun I mean we got bike
We got bike Weeks starting up here in Daytona Beach.
Now you know what that means. You know, you got
babes and bob.
Speaker 1 (01:35):
You got people that were way too tight a leather
and their crap hanging out in every corner.
Speaker 3 (01:40):
No, that's something you just got no where to look.
You gottah.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
I've been I've been a bike Week many times and
they're kind like, oh to put that on that person?
Speaker 3 (01:53):
Well, you see, listen, you're talking about something as a
glass half full or half empty. That's the way you
go this one.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
How about your dentist buddy or your accountant that quits
all is Hardy Garbon and he's Johnny Badass. Now he's
at the light looking around like I'm going to cut somebody.
The only person you're cutting is their gums. When you're
doing a root canal. You're not a bad ass. But
the boy they get on their Harley's, man, they're gonna
whoop some butt. Man, I've had Hardy's. I've had fourteen
of them. So I remember one time sitting a light
(02:22):
with twelve of my closest friends, and out of twelve
of us, ten were professional and everybody was a badass.
I'm like, you guys need to grow up. Anyway, I'm sorry.
Speaker 3 (02:31):
I guess, Hey, what's the number one holiday nowadays? Anyhow?
You tell me number one holiday is they start celebrating
it really about and decorating about at least a month before.
Now listen, I'm gonna give you a little clue. Look
at the leftiest and talk about a preak squad. Now,
(02:51):
you tell me what holiday is the most popular holiday nowadays?
Speaker 1 (02:55):
For the lefties?
Speaker 3 (02:57):
No, for everybody.
Speaker 1 (02:58):
Oh, I'd hope it was Christmas, but I want to
guess Halloween.
Speaker 3 (03:02):
Yeah, yeah, you know, you're exactly right. So it's all
about dress up and pretend you're this and look like
and this and that. So, I mean, that's a little
bit of a bikeer nation. What it's all about. It's,
you know, putting on their outfits and going out having
a good time. But the bottom line is it's a
big party because down here in Florida you're in Maga
(03:22):
country and we're heading into the Golden Age. So you know,
cheer up. If you can't have fun doing talk radio,
you tell me, especially open phones, what can you have
fun doing well?
Speaker 1 (03:33):
I want people to could just sometime. We're talking the
other day with some friends of mine and I get this,
here's the thing I always get about open phones. How
do you do that? And I was like, you know,
I try to keep an open mind about it, but
most people call in and just complain. It's complaining for
two hours. And when Connor started this, it was more
(03:56):
of a you know, dog fares, book fairs, and that
is the other extreme. But there has to be a
happy medium. And I understand what I said earlier. I'm
gonna give you the whole segment, by the way, but
I said Kennedy was we know it was an inside job.
There's so many inside jobs now that with technology, everything exposed.
(04:16):
But then we talk about it, but nothing's ever going
to change. Nothing. No one will ever get prosecuted for
nine to eleven, No one ever comes for Kennedy. I mean,
think about Pearl Harbor. My father and we watch a
lot of history channels back in those days with documentaries
whatever the channel was called back in the seventies and eighties.
(04:36):
But they saw the planes coming towards Pearl Harbor, and
my dad would always say the good modernized. At that time,
aircraft carriers were out on tactical missions and all the
boats that we lost were all outdated battleships. So maybe
the liberal president we had at that time wanted to
be an war, but he couldn't come forward because his
(04:58):
people be against him, and maybe they let them attack
pel Herbert. That's what I'm saying. And there's not a
dagone thing you or me or Michael or anyone can
do about it. Nothing where hands are tied.
Speaker 3 (05:12):
Well, we can't do anything about it, except we can
kind of you rehash a history when it has some
real meetings. Something you're talking about. Of course, my dad
was in World War Two, and you hear his stories,
although they really didn't like to talk about it, but
you know his brothers were in there, you know some
of his sisters, thees. Yeah, and the country really came
together at that time to beat evil. But I think
(05:35):
the biggest bottom line is, you know, we got to
learn from our past to try to avoid things here
in the future. But you know, we're living in the
historic times right now. I mean, and you know the
cry babies are out there. You know, I heard Kasik,
he just came out from under his rock and you know,
to run his mouth about Trump and stuff. Trump made
perfect sense. He had to put a little bit of
a beat down. I mean, I know, he's not the
(05:57):
type of guy that wants to do it on Zelensky stuff.
But it's all because of Biden and Dumbo ears. They're
the ones that got that mess going over there in
Ukraine with Putin and just like Trump talked about, you know,
Putin and stuff. You know, all this stuff as it
was going on, because you know, for two or three years,
you know, the FBI, the CIA, every single looney tune, Democrat,
(06:20):
Russia hoax and Trumps and Putin that Trump's an agent
for Poutin and this it must all pack of lines
they fed to the American people over and over again
because the Left had to create a boogeyman. Putin was
the perfect puppet and little rocketman. It was number two
but you know, be thankful that Trump's in there, and
(06:42):
look at the all star team that he is putting together.
Dan Bongino's come on board to be the number two
guy at the FBI and clean up that whole corrupt mess.
I mean, we got a good lot, a lot of
good positive things. I mean, I know people right now,
I've got a lot to complain about. You know, the
price of eggs. You can't even go to waffle House
for less than twenty thirty bucks. You know, a couple
(07:04):
of people and get a decent meal. The prices are skyrockings.
Speaker 1 (07:08):
Did you ever have a waffle house or you just
ate there because you're hungry and had too many beers?
Speaker 3 (07:13):
Well it was the cheapest place.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
I mean, I've never walked out of waffle house. McDonald's said, Man,
that was so delicious, I gotta come back.
Speaker 3 (07:21):
Yeah, well, do you do what I mean? And besides that,
what joint's going to be opened in one or two o'clock?
Speaker 2 (07:28):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (07:28):
You know the bars and.
Speaker 1 (07:30):
I wait tip those waitresses. You know why because every
guy in there is usually hammer and there's always a
few jerks, and there's a security guy over in a
corner looking at pornat.
Speaker 3 (07:43):
But well, you know it's like a three, but you
get free entertainment, so you can't complain about that. But
well here's but let me go go ahead and we'll
hit on a couple of things, because I think the
people want to hear about some real deals. And one
of the things really bugging me right now is because
the fake news is added full steam ahead with all
the village idiots in the Congress. You know, the squad,
(08:05):
those a bunch of village idiots, And of course I
love the village people, but the village idiots, they're a
whole different thing. And then they're in the Senate. You
want to talk about some old prehistoric dinosaurs, you know,
like little little tiny Dick, Durbin and Schumer, the sellout
of the jew people, and you know, I could go on.
(08:27):
They're all trying to get in front of the microphone
and whining and belly aching about COUMP come come, come dad,
he cutting people. And now Elon Musk has turned into
the big boogeyman and they're trying to whoop up some
assassin to go after him. They say that his security
is probably even heavier right now than Trump. But the
(08:48):
whole bottom line is that the people are awake. We
now got a fighting chance to get our country back
because Boosie like Elon must even send we won't have
a country with the village idiots what they've done with
Dumbo Ears and Biden and Pelosi and Schumer scamming the
American people running prices up sky high. I mean, you
(09:10):
can still afford things. I can still afford things. But
how many people are having a you know, a heck
of a time card, you know, going going to make
you know, ends meet? If they didn't have you know,
five and six credit cards, they wouldn't be able to
do it.
Speaker 1 (09:23):
Hey, before I let you go on to read something
to you to buddy mine posted John Turpak, old time
friend of the family in a small town in front.
He said, Ukraine, you don't fund a lost war for
the same reason you don't feed a dead dog.
Speaker 3 (09:39):
Well that's deep, that makes a lot of But the
whole bottom line is Trump's got a chance to end
the whole thing and keep you know, other wars from expanding.
And people can't figure that out. No wonder he's pot
about Zelenski. He should take any kind of deal to
end the killing to end the carnage et cetera center
(10:00):
and that's all Trump Advance is trying to do and stuff.
So people gotta wake up and smell the coffee. Brother,
But I'll let you go ahead of Always a pleasure,
all right.
Speaker 1 (10:09):
A two one nine eighty six is magic number six
one four eight two one nine eight eight six. Michael Mark,
We got you guys. Next. There's about two or three
lines open and call us. This is Saturday Morning on
phones on Damn Boots, brought to you by the Metal
Roof Company, Always protected by the Unfeated of America. May
never been beat. Tattletale arm System from the Harlem Bank
Studios on News Radio six ten WTVM. A few phone
(10:31):
lines open eight two one nine eight eight six eight
two one nine eight eight six Audust Smart's coming up
next that or mister Wilson after that, and then l
EPD after that. So I got an action pack in
morning for you. Let's go backphone lines. Let's go to Michael.
Good morning, Michael.
Speaker 4 (10:46):
Hey Boots, good morning, good morning, great show. But you know,
I know what you mean. I know what you mean
about you know, the negative, the negative negativity and the
Debbie Downers and the day, the doom and gloom daves
and the negative Nelly and all that stuff. I get that, man,
nobody likes negativity. It's it's just not pleasant to hear.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
It's Mike, I'll want to ask you something because because
I touched on you a little bit ago, that sounded bad.
But uh, I understand nine to eleven. I understand nine
to eleven was an inside job. And I hear all
this stuff, and I understand like my dad said about
Pearl Harbor and all the stuff. But what there's not
a thing that what makes me the most mad. I'll
(11:33):
agree with everybody on this. There's nothing we can do
about it. Nothing. They're going to get us in wars there,
and I don't know what we can do. I mean, Ider,
you work so hard trying to expose all this, but
you know you're it's been twenty three years now, the
wait twenty four years.
Speaker 4 (11:49):
Well, let me you know, you make a valid concern.
I don't agree with your point, but you bring a
valid concern. Many people think there's nothing you can do
about it. And let me just give you a few
examples of what down here in Florida. I'm a refugee
from the communist state of Ohio. I had to flee
(12:11):
to the South Florida region because it was just getting
too difficult up there. Forming down here in Florida, we
have a huge community of freedom loving people, patriots, strong
Republican Christian people, and we were able to do something.
Clear Back in April of twenty two, we created a
(12:35):
team down here all over the state to petition the
governor to convene four grand juries, you know, to investigate
the election steal, the COVID crime, the LGBTQ curriculum being
forced on our communities, and the border impact that it
was having upon Florida, all the crime, the drugs, text trafficking.
(12:59):
So we began this statewide effort to ask Governor DeSantis
to convene four statewide grand juries. Well, within ninety days
he convened the first of the four we requested. That
was to investigate the illegal border and the impact it
was having on the state of Florida. We had a
(13:21):
great success with that. Three hundred and fifty pages of
documented evidence was created. We even got Tom Holman to
meet with us and he endorsed our project. You know,
the ICE director, Tom Homan. Everybody knows him, he's a
great guy. So we got that accomplished, and with that evidence,
(13:42):
the state legislature in Florida has already changed some law
and is in the process of drafting new legislation the
Miami Dade County area in Miami before the grand jury
was even finished. It lasted eighteen months. Okay, Miami County.
(14:02):
Dade County changed law to enforce removing illegals that were
getting led out of jail. So that was a huge
fact that we were able to accomplish. Now, what has
just happened is one of our congress members in Florida
in the Tampa Saint Pete area, her name is Congresswoman
(14:23):
Luna She has been appointed to be the chairwoman of
the new task force to reinvestigate the three assassinations, the
COVID origins, and finally nine to eleven is getting re
examined and reinvestigated, which will explode once the evidence is
(14:44):
let out.
Speaker 1 (14:45):
Do you think do you think the guys will still
be alive that they can get that did it or
behind it? Or because our everything you say is true,
our government knew it was going on, Bill Clinton or
yes news.
Speaker 4 (15:00):
Yeah, you're talking about nine to eleven yeah, the assassinations.
Speaker 1 (15:03):
Okay, well, I mean the candy are still Yeah. I
can't even bring on Kennedy. They never did figure that out,
you know what I mean. It's so and that's been
fifty what sixty years?
Speaker 4 (15:14):
Yeah, here, here's what's happening. March twenty six is going
to be the first public hearing for the JFK assassination
and that is going to be televised. It'll be available
on c Span of course, but also probably you know,
other networks. But everybody needs to tune into this and
hear what takes place, because once this evidence is out,
(15:38):
they're going to have several witnesses that were at either
the hospital emergency room that are still alive and autopsy witnesses.
And it's the wound of the head and the body
of JFK, the multiple wounds that are going to demonstrate
there were two directions of bullets definitely from you know,
(16:00):
the grassy knoll, which was the frontel wound that blew
his head open and pushed his body backward, you know,
and his skull went flying onto the trunk of the
limo and his wife reached back to get it. So
that proves a frontel wound which the government s died and.
Speaker 1 (16:22):
No, that's okay. I'm gonna go to the rest of
the segment. If we prove that we did kill Kennedy,
the CIA, FBI, LBJ, whoever took him out, what do
you what are they going to do? What's it going
to That's what I'm saying. I agree with everything you're saying.
I think it's horrible, but we know everybody's dad that
did it. So what do we do?
Speaker 4 (16:40):
Yeah, yeah, it's not it's not about convicting the perpetrators
that did it. It's about exposing the fact that there
it was an inside job that our government was complicit
with mafia perpetrators. That's the other thing.
Speaker 1 (16:55):
You know.
Speaker 4 (16:56):
Jack Ruby was a big mafioso from Louisiana. His original
name was Reuben Steen, and he was connected with, you know,
the Jewish mob, which is really more powerful than the
Italian mob. A lot of people just don't know that.
But this is what it's going to do. It's going
to ignite a spark within the government to create oversight
(17:20):
and to inform the American people that yes, we finally
do know that inside of our government it was a
conspiracy to eliminate Kennedy. And there were multiple reasons for it. Okay.
The main reason he was creating a United States currency,
not you know, based upon the private federal reserve system.
(17:44):
That's the enemy of the people. This is what people
need to understand. And this crime of the assassinations being
exposed will reveal motive. Okay, it'll also reveal that the
conspiracy and this is what we need to waste it.
Speaker 1 (18:02):
All right, Michael, I gotta go, buddy, heartbreak, but I
gave you a whole segment. Thanks brother, Mark, Jeff. We'll
be back with you almost. Save Mark for last because
Mark's my poem writer. And that's the positive, positive, Positive
Saturday Morning on phones on Damn Boots, brought to you
by the Metal of Company, Always protected by the Undefeated
America made Tattletale Alarm System never gonna be from the
Hartlem Bank Studios on News Radio six to ten WTV
in well Mark, Please be patient with me because I
(18:28):
want you to end this show. Everybody's being a little
positive to day, and I guess I'm just a little burnout.
I'm tired of the back and forth and no matter
what Trump does. I said last week he could save
every puppy on the planet, Feed every hand, feed them,
help the mother give birth to puppies, and they say,
(18:49):
what about the kittens? No matter what he does, they
find something wrong. And the fact that the liberals are
mad at him about him saying that we need to
end a war because people are dying. That should be
liberal one oh one. They don't believe in the death penalty.
Why do they believe in war? So if you're a
(19:10):
liberal friend and your accident listening to this show, which
I wish more liberals did, please folks, we want to
end wars. There's Honor Flight's coming up best joining me
on auto smarts from Honor Flight and the thing that
tears me up the most about doing Honor Flight and
it's positive in a way, but also a big negative
(19:30):
that I've got seventy year old plus men and some
women getting off that plane so emotional because we put
them in a war they shouldn't. We should have never
been in Vietnam. It was all politics. Michael's spot on.
A lot of the callers are spot on. There's so
much corruption in the world and they just feed us
(19:51):
like I feel like you know that benefici she had
as a kid, and every time you walked up to
the tank and it would swim over towards you because
it's its main goal in life was eat and living
and maybe going potty other than that. That's what they
want us to be. That's what government thinks. And here's
what I think about mayors and governors and congressmen and
all these people. Once they get in office, they're going
(20:12):
to do this, and they're going to do that, and
they're going to do this, and they get caught up
in the swamp and they do what everybody else does
and they don't fix anything. We have homeless veterans, We
have little kids that don't have coaches going to school.
We have kids that get made fun of because they
have crappy shoes, and one kid is rich and has
the good shoes. I'm tired of it. And Trump comes
(20:35):
in and tries to fix everything. All you guys hate
him just because he's abrasive. Well, you know what Trump is.
Everyone knows what Trump is. He's going to say what's
on his mind, whether you like it or not. Where
every other politician ever since I've been born, except for
maybe Reagan, but he was a little bit more smooth
about slamming the way the system's corrupt. Trump is slamming it.
(20:58):
Don't mean I like the guy. I probably meet him
and probably be overwhelmed with a stardom thing. You know.
Maybe he's a like I am around Randy Gradish, already
old linebacker. But all I'm trying to say is people,
if you don't want to be in war, then don't
fund it. That Ukraine war. There's always going to be
wars overseas. Ever since I can remember, there was some
(21:21):
crazy guy overseas starting a war and our politician going, wait,
my nephew builds tanks, so if we get in a war,
I get a kickback. If you don't think all the
money they sent over with the transgender comic books and stuff,
or one of Obama's kids writing notes to sad kids
or whatever it was, all that money they waste. We
(21:44):
should do housing for veterans that are mentally ill from
the war that we put him in wrongfully. House those veterans,
give him three hots and a cot, help them get
back on their feet. Maybe get him a regular old
box store job. I don't know. I don't think a
homeless veteran and freezing his butt off in a tenth
the last few months is excited about his life. He
(22:08):
may not understand it, he may have some mental illnesses,
but as America, we should fix him before we fix
anything else. I hit one more pothole. You guys know
how I get on potholes. How do we have a
single pothole and don't sit here and say, well, the
pile trucks knocks them up. As soon as that pothole
gets exposed, it should be fixed in twenty four hours.
I don't know. Let's go to the phone lines. Go
(22:29):
to Jeff. Good morning, Jeff. I'm fired up today.
Speaker 5 (22:33):
You're hey, but you're all fired up this morning.
Speaker 1 (22:36):
I am tired of it.
Speaker 5 (22:38):
Hey, I just I'm gonna change gears on you a
little bit.
Speaker 3 (22:40):
And I want.
Speaker 5 (22:41):
To invite you down because it's, buddy, it's almost cruise season.
Cars are coming out, it's almost the wedding.
Speaker 1 (22:47):
That's all.
Speaker 5 (22:47):
Smile on your faith. Down in a circleville. I don't
know if you've heard of us down there, way down there,
but we do a little thing called take Back the Strip.
It's the first Saturday of every month from five to nine,
and we get our cars out. Whether it's a classic atooner.
Speaker 4 (23:02):
You think it's cool. We think it's cool.
Speaker 5 (23:04):
And we cruise up and down Court Street from five
to nine and uh we usually tie it to like
a local charity, and uh we do donations and stuff
while we're out there. And it's a good community, family
friendly event.
Speaker 1 (23:15):
So what time is it? Every Saturday?
Speaker 5 (23:19):
It's the first Saturday of every month, April to October
from five to nine pm.
Speaker 1 (23:25):
That's awesome, all right.
Speaker 5 (23:27):
Yeah, we get we get somewhere between three to four
hundred cars out there, and I mean you get people
that will park on the side of the road and
hang out with their buddies and then they'll do a laugh,
and then they'll go park somewhere else, and then you'll
know they'll do eleve of it. It reminds you of
back in the eighties when you know you used to
get out and just cruise and have a good time
with all your friends.
Speaker 1 (23:44):
That's cool, like a small woodward.
Speaker 3 (23:47):
Yes, exactly cool, exactly like that.
Speaker 1 (23:50):
Yeah, with it you start.
Speaker 5 (23:52):
We started out on the rebel side of things, and
now the city's kind of embraced us and we're on
the we're on the thing to do in Pickaway County
website now, so you know, we're You're always going to
have a few hooligans in the group, but for the
most part, it's a real tame just a good time.
Speaker 1 (24:07):
Yeah, that's that's I didn't know. I'm glad you called.
Man could remind me on Auto Smarts every month, calling
on Auto Smart calling wherever, because I love stuff like that.
You know, there was a place where I grew up
called the Loop in Shady Side, Ohio. It's a little
town of maybe two thousand people in eastern Ohio, just
south of Martins Ferry and across the river from Wheeling,
(24:30):
and it was called the Loop and a new mayor
came in because one little old Karen was complaining about
the loud cars and they started. So I was home
visiting with the fifty seven back in ninety eighties. I
had big blower motor back end. I'm going along and
next thing I know, I get pulled over. I was like,
WHOA what I did? I did? It was cruising and
he tried to write me a ticket for my blower
(24:52):
sticking out of the hood too far, and I said,
I said, dude, I'm from Columbus. I'm just trying to
relive my you know high school with my car I
always dreamed of. He was, I'm not going to raid
you a ticket, but iver see you again, and I
want tom pound your car. I was like chiem and e.
So I got into town, did a big hair bow.
Speaker 5 (25:07):
Now, and that's kind of what happened down there in Circlevillae.
Speaker 3 (25:10):
So they used to cruise back in the.
Speaker 5 (25:12):
Day from like from the fifties on up until the
early two thousands, and then a new amer came in
and people started, you know, complaining, and it died off
and they ran everybody out of town. Well, so during MOVID,
I fired this thing back up and I called a
take back the strip because we were taking it back
and and uh, it's it's been. It's been gangbusters ever since.
Speaker 1 (25:32):
Wow. Wow, as long as you're not breaking the law,
there's nothing they can do to you. Brother. Hey, thanks
for that updated.
Speaker 5 (25:38):
That's what we preach, you know, if you see something
called the police. We don't want people out there acting
a pool. So I have a good time with your friends,
you take your family, gets on the eat, support the
local economy, you know, head home, all.
Speaker 1 (25:50):
Right, he thanks keep us updated. Hey, when we get back,
I'll start with Paul, and we'll finish up with Jeff.
It's the Saturday Morning your phones on Dan Boots, brought
to you by the Metal Roof Company. I always protect
to buy the undefeated American made tattletale arm system never
been beat. From the Harlem Bank Studios on News Radio
six to en WTVN Andrew Hestin in house. We'll talk
to him briefly next hour. Because he bought a Honda,
(26:11):
a certified used Honda for Jermaine Honda. I tell you what,
it's like a kid in a candy store. Man. He
came to me last week, He's pacing in my office.
I was like, what's wrong with you? Besides the norm?
He says, I gotta get a new car. Mine's about
ready to die. And I said, well, I got a connection,
so I took care of you. Let's go back to
phone lines. Let's go to Mark. Well you got for me, Marky, Mark, Well,
(26:33):
you saved him for this long? Didn't you want to
close with Mark?
Speaker 2 (26:36):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (26:36):
I'm Paul. Paul, My goodness, I want to close with Paul. Shoot.
I'm sorry, sorry, Sorry, I got backwards, Paul. Mark. It
all sounds to all four letter words. Paul Morning morning.
Speaker 6 (26:47):
Hey, real quick, I just wanted to point out I.
Speaker 1 (26:49):
Only got two callers left. I'm going to the Good Show.
Speaker 6 (26:52):
Okay. You said something about homeless that I think I've
mentioned it before out now, for these were for just
the homeless. But they spent one hundred and sixty five
million dollars to build a nineteen story building and it
had two hundred and twenty eight studio apartments. Now that
(27:13):
might be over the top or whatever, but in each state,
you could at least have a structure that is like
a two story nursing home, let's say. And beside that structure,
you could have a couple of pole buildings with different
jobs that they could do, like assembly like Mr Emails
have to be put together and packaged like assembly job
(27:37):
like like something foreign to do. Maybe even have a
pond there. But let's say costa ten million dollars building
building all together, Really that's not a bad thing to do.
Like you said, to get people a place, you know,
they'd have a bathroom, a shower, a bedroom. They'd have
a common area like cafeteria where they can get fed
(27:59):
and take care of. They could have somebody give them,
you know, if they are on any kind of medications.
There'd be somebody there to you know, hand medications out,
but to like take care of them, like you said,
but it's not a big deal. It's I mean, yeah,
well then good.
Speaker 1 (28:16):
I'm sorry, No, I just I just don't understand how
now I get. I guarantee you that the people would say, well,
they don't want help. We know that, but you could really,
you know, work on them a little bit and sell
them as they just come with me and hang out
for a few days. If you don't like it, you
can come back to the freezing tent. I don't think
that's that they're mental mentally challenged and we need to
(28:37):
fix it. And you know, I always said, you know,
you know anytimes we've talked, we know when you think
back in third, fourth, fifth grade, the goofy kid, the
three or four that I know, most of them are
dead and two are in prison. So it's you can
pretty much you don't have to be an expert to
(28:58):
look at people and go that guy's goofy. Don't need
to be I don't need to read a book about it.
I can tell you when someone's goofy.
Speaker 6 (29:05):
Well, if you can, and if you can send billions
of dollars, like you said, overseas to fight wars. And
you know, like what, uh, I think they have thirty
five's around one hundred million dollars a piece.
Speaker 4 (29:16):
Now the plane.
Speaker 6 (29:17):
You know, when you stop and think about that, I mean,
how how many do you need? You know, I think,
like you said, I'd rather take care of people here
that need help. Well, look at the people you know
that's struck by the fires or and what's in North Carolina. Anyway,
you got to get the mark for the poem.
Speaker 1 (29:36):
But that's fine. You know, mark's always about two minutes.
But yeah, we need to help make America great again.
In other words, you know in the fifties when you
had every mom out on the porch during walk to
school time, sweeping their porch so the one pervert doesn't
hurt you. Okay, we all knew who he was. Unfortunately,
(29:58):
now you have one old lady sweeping a board to
nine perverts watching the kids. That's what we need to
fix all the garbage and and then go back to
the good old days. I grew up.
Speaker 6 (30:10):
I grew up in the city, so we had bus
stops where you just had a bunch of kids on
a corner and bus up with a bunch of kids
to get them.
Speaker 1 (30:17):
Sure. All, hey, we'll talk to you next week. All right, Mark,
you got three minutes my brother. Sorry about keeping you,
but you are my happy ending to every show.
Speaker 2 (30:29):
Well, I hope I continue that trend. Okay, First, three
quick remarks before I read my two minute poem? First,
can you hear me?
Speaker 1 (30:38):
I hear you?
Speaker 2 (30:38):
Great, per perfect, Okay, I like, I like. I like
going last because that I can eat breakfast while I'm
on hold, So I'm perfectly fine with that. Secondly, the
reason I don't like to talk after I read the
poem is as soon as the call is over, I
(30:59):
turned the radio on on my phone, and then I
turned the video on on my phone, and because of
the delay, I end up recording her.
Speaker 1 (31:08):
You go go two minutes.
Speaker 2 (31:10):
Go Okay love poem the thousand Dollars Kiss. I had
a crush in high school, but struggled with self doubt.
I was too shy and average, so I never asked
her out. Ten years went by, my buddy called. He said,
(31:31):
don't hesitate, your high school crush just got divorced. Go
ask her for a date. Would she still remember me?
There was no way to guess. I asked her out
to my delight, she answered with a yes. The complication
was she lived twelve hundred miles away. But the cost
(31:52):
of urgent yearning is a cost one has to pay.
I paid for a hotel, room, a flight, and rental car.
My charm would get us going. I soon would see
how far. When our eyes met, I felt the spark
of my infatuation. She was as sweet and lovely as
(32:12):
at high school graduation. First dinner, then a movie. To me,
the night was bliss. It ended with a dreamed of hug,
a brief but pleasant kiss. She did not want to
meet again. Mid May became December. I spent one thousand
on a kiss. I always will remember. Why do we
(32:37):
pay so much to love? It strikes me now as funny.
I look back now and see it as a total
waste of money.
Speaker 1 (32:48):
The end, All right, take care, brother, We'll talk to
you next week. How much of the hooker anyway smarts?
Next we got an action packed show Scott McLaurin house
from US through Automotive. This seven's Saturday Morning Open Phones
brought to you by the Matter Roof Company, protected by
(33:08):
the Ndefeated American made tattletale never been beat from the
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