Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Rain, rain, go away, come back another day, give me
one good day. I like the rain, but it's out
of control. May third, twenty twenty five. Life flies when
you're an adult, when you're in school as a kid,
it takes forever. But on break I was talking about
Lubum James.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
This guy. I don't know how many of you.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
Guys have TikTok er blah blah blah or facy book
or he flops terrible. Now, my fearless producer says, they
all do it. But this guy barely gets hit and
he rolls around on the court for minutes, and the
guys were like, oh boy, here we go. The guy's
a billionaire. Suck it up, Buttercup, you'll never be Michael Jordan.
(00:42):
You never never never, never, never never never. I will
never be Randy gratischar Versus, Chris Pielman never never, never
never never. So le Bum, get over yourself, take your
billions and go on. Let's go back to phone lines.
Let's have a positive call. I love calls like this.
Alan is promoting a veteran's event. What do you got
for me?
Speaker 2 (01:01):
Allen?
Speaker 3 (01:03):
Hey, good morning, Hey, I love that rock profile is intro.
Speaker 1 (01:07):
Be there forever since since Bob Connors did it back
in the day.
Speaker 3 (01:13):
Awesome. Hey, yeah, we Westerville Doutter's Fortiboars American Legion. We're
teaming up for our annual golf outing. All the proceeds
go to charity. Uh. The we have two organizations that
we contribute to every year. One is the VFW National
Home for Children, which is where spouses and children of
(01:36):
fallen military members can go to kind of get back
on their feet. And then we also do the Mash
Pantry in Franklin and Delaware County, which is a veteran's
food pantry.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
Cool.
Speaker 3 (01:48):
Uh, that one's the Grove City won a Whitehall one
up in Delaware and then the others vary. The other
contributions varying. Last year we did K nine Companions, which
is in New Albany, does service dogs awesome and uh,
and it's some others. So so basically June the second Monday.
Speaker 2 (02:08):
Perfect day. That's my birthday.
Speaker 3 (02:10):
Awesome and yeah eight am at the it's the Wine
Dot golf Course in Centerberg. Really nice course. Uh, not
that far away, just up Route three from Westerville and Sunbury,
just a few minutes.
Speaker 4 (02:26):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (02:26):
They've been really good to us up there. We've got
a lot of really nice bore prizes we've already got.
We've got some red tickets for door prizes. We've got
some uh, we've got a wine tasting at Cooper Hawk. Uh.
We got golfing to other real nice golf courses around,
some really high end golf courses. Gave us some free
(02:48):
rounds for door prizes too.
Speaker 1 (02:50):
Hey for you Allen, after this phone call, I'll put
you back on hold and get Vella an address. I
will mail you some rooster coupons from the shows, and
I'll mail you an oil change from Westroll Automotive, and
I'll mail you some movie car washes. They're twenty two
bucks apiece. Because we love yeah anything.
Speaker 3 (03:13):
Yeah yeah. Our contact and the easiest way or to
reach us is probably email.
Speaker 2 (03:19):
And if you can't's west I can't mail that way.
Speaker 3 (03:22):
Yeah, Westerville.
Speaker 5 (03:24):
No.
Speaker 3 (03:24):
But as far as people that want to get old of, okay,
I understand to come golf Westville VFW at gmail dot com,
Westernville vs W at gmail dot com or look for
Westervill VSW on Facebook and send us a PM and
we'll get back with you. Interested in either golfing or
if they want to be a sponsor, you know, lunch
sponsor or something like that. Yeah, it'd be great.
Speaker 2 (03:47):
Where you guys located in Westerville at.
Speaker 3 (03:50):
We're at three ninety three East College Avenue, Okay, between
Westville and Hoover Reservoir, the Legion and the and the
f W in the same building. We're kind of unique.
We're kind of unique. You know, Westernville was dry in
nineteen eighty five when our post was founded. They said,
we went in the last two years. We're just a
(04:13):
we're a service organization. We really focus on taking care
of our vets. We're in the schools all the time
talking to students about you know, the history of our
country and challenges that our nation has had. In fact,
we're going in UH in May and they specifically asked
for some vets who were drafted. Have you had Beth
(04:34):
to go in and talk to social study?
Speaker 2 (04:37):
Do you have Beth Johnson then from Honor Flight?
Speaker 3 (04:41):
Yeah, yeah, we know about Yeah, that's.
Speaker 2 (04:43):
Best, best one of my BFFs.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
We had a meeting the other night about the golf
cart and we're getting a golf cart for Honor Flight
this year.
Speaker 2 (04:50):
So anything we do to help our vets.
Speaker 3 (04:52):
So we're yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Beth is amazing.
She's We've had a couple of birthdays for one hundred
year old vets. That is always there when when they
when those World War two that's turn a hundred. She's
always there.
Speaker 2 (05:05):
Yeah, she's she's one of the best.
Speaker 1 (05:07):
I'm telling you when they I do a lot for
On her flight, when the promotion came up, I went
to the board basically and said, listen, I'm going to
put my foot down on something. If you don't make
Beth the main cat here, I will not help anymore.
I was bluffing, but they went ahead and gave her
the drop. Not because of me, but I was. I
was one of the maybe that stepped up.
Speaker 3 (05:28):
If you've never been a guardian, if you're if you're
a VET, if you're a bit on VET, your career
at I think most of the World War two vents
that could go have gone. But if you're a War
two that you're still to go to fight. Columbus dot Org.
Get signed up. I've been a guardian a number of times.
Speaker 2 (05:44):
On the on her flight, Oh, I know exactly who
you are.
Speaker 1 (05:47):
Now you're talking. I've greeted you many times there. I
didn't know it was the Allen. Hey, Alan, I appreciate you, buddy,
anything you can do to help them. But we're going
to take a break, right, take care of brother. Yeah,
hold on, and then I'm going to send you a
bunch of goodies. This is the Saturday Morning the phones on.
Damn Boots, brought to you by the Metal Roof Company.
(06:08):
Always protected body, undefeated, American made tattletale and they're in
Westernville too, like the VFW, and they've never been beat
from the Hartlem Bank Studios on news radio six to
ten WTVN. So, like I said last segment, please go
to Honor Flight Columbus. At the bottom of the homepage,
it says win register to win the golf cart.
Speaker 2 (06:28):
You type it, you put your info in there.
Speaker 1 (06:30):
It's twenty dollars, twenty dollars, fifteen thousand dollars street legal
golf cart.
Speaker 2 (06:36):
You name it. It has it.
Speaker 1 (06:37):
Rumor is it'll go thirty mini hour ride power sports.
Our friends up in Delaware or big parts of this.
So they sell some pad to the bone golf carts.
But again, go to Columbus Honor Flight and click on
win the golf cart on to the bottom of the homepage.
It's kind of like a blue background with some orange
rating peachy colors, and go down, click on it, put
your information in. It goes to a great cause. One
(06:57):
hundred percent of the money the golf carts are already
paid for it because of our great sponsors. And you
go there see the sponsors and please please when you
need your Columbus pest control, or you need your tattletale,
or you need your classic car, they're all listed there
in Columbus Garage floor coding. I made about six or
seven phone calls with him. Fifteen minutes, I had fifteen
(07:20):
thousand dollars to pay for the golf cart. So thank
you for everybody helping out, especially the Moose up on
Shock Road. Every week we gain ten ten at least
new Moose members. It's a great place. Everybody's cool there.
There's no drama, and if it is drama, we kick
you to the curb. It's pretty simple, fun place, no fighting,
(07:41):
no arguing, a little bit of politics. Most of us
are probably Trumpsters, but we respect those who aren't. You know,
at the end of the day, we're all humans and
we have our opinions, and it's have a good time
and have a drink and smile and not a huge
bar tap.
Speaker 2 (07:54):
That being said, let's go to the phone lines. Go
to David. What you got for me?
Speaker 6 (07:57):
David, Hey, good morning. I want to talk about unindicted
crimes that were committed on January sixth of twenty twenty
one that everybody's forgetting about because your program starts with
the rock from files and then involved a detective investigating crimes.
Speaker 2 (08:19):
Correct, pretty much, Yeah, drove an orange firebird?
Speaker 6 (08:23):
Yes, Well, what happened on January sixth is that governors
they counted the votes, counted the votes passed a federal
election date. Now, that's illegal to do, and they were
never held accountable. And on top of that, governors also
(08:44):
counted illegal aliens who cast votes and counted those votes
as valid. That's a crime also. So both those crimes
have never been talked about except for today, and no
one's like going to make sure it doesn't happen again.
Yet today there's over fifteen governors that are violating their
(09:05):
oath of office. That's eight USC Code. They're violating Statues
thirteen twenty four by harboring, aiding, and abetting illegal aliens
and as a direct result of the Attorney General in Washington,
DC and the state attorney general not doing their duty
(09:26):
to indict these governors. You're having close to two thousand,
five hundred honest, good Americans being murdered, killed, and raped
by illegal aliens in their states that are not detained,
not arrested, and not supported. This is happening every year
(09:48):
for the last fifteen years. So we're talking sixty two
thousand Americans murdered and killed because governors are violating their
o of office. They're not doing their legal duty to enforce
the law against no lawbreakers. I had a neighbor killed
(10:09):
by a Hispanic person who's driving drunk. And I had
four neighbors in Colorado directly killed by illegal aliens that
should have been detained and arrested by the sheriffs with
the police officers in that state.
Speaker 1 (10:24):
Wait, wait, wait, wait, you said, don't say Hispanic. You're
saying that the guy that killed your neighbor was an
illegal immigrant. Correct, legally, he.
Speaker 6 (10:31):
Was a drunk Hispanic person that drove right into a
mother of two children.
Speaker 2 (10:36):
Right, that's bad, but.
Speaker 1 (10:39):
He's just if he's an American, you know, just be
careful on that that's all. I mean, a drunk driver
pos killed.
Speaker 6 (10:45):
But the bottom liner, everyone's forgetting the fact that governors
cannot do what they want to do. They have to
do what they're permitted to do under the constitution, including
the president. And you know what's wrong, People don't understand
the constitution that begins with we the people, not we
(11:08):
the people of Israel, not we the people of Ukraine.
So any congress member or in the even the President
that wants to give money or resources or weapons to
other governments, that in itself is an oath of office violation.
And I know Trump was against the war over Ukraine,
and I find out in the last six months he
(11:31):
shifts over more weapons. He shifted over rocket propelled a
launchers that killed over twenty five thousand Russians. You know
what Trump's not thinking about. He's not thinking about what
Lindsey Graham did and said. Whether he was in Ukraine
in twenty nineteen. You know what, he said, it's good
(11:51):
to kill Russians. On what basis did Lindsey Graham have
to say that when he was in Ukraine other than
he was financed by defense contractors to go over there
to inside a war and he did his job great,
but if he's an elected senator, he's suposed to represent
American people, not defense contractors, and not to start an
(12:13):
illegal war. And on top of that, do you remember
the thirteen thousand don Bass residents that were murdered by
a militia that was financed by the CIA and the
installed president of Ukraine in twenty fourteen, thirteen thousand people
were murdered by a militia financed by the new government
(12:36):
that was installed by the CIA and Victoria new One.
Speaker 1 (12:40):
All right, David, Hey, I gotta go, buddy, heey, I
appreciate you. We'll talk to you next Saturday. Let's go
to Carl. We got for me, Carl.
Speaker 2 (12:48):
Boots, Yes, sir, or Roots.
Speaker 7 (12:53):
You know the gymman you had on Earth talking there
to Chuck. I forgot what you said his name was.
There's some interesting things that he talked about there. But
I know I spent time talking with Luke Rooy out Washington, DC.
He's one of supposedly eight people breaking all these laws
involved with trucking stuff. And what's interesting is they say
they received information from Sea High Control. They get set
(13:16):
to him as a study or they decide to make.
Speaker 8 (13:19):
It into the law.
Speaker 3 (13:20):
But there's so many laws.
Speaker 7 (13:21):
We wondered why we have some of these laws when
they're not even being enforced. Like, for a fact, he
mentioned the thing about teaching the driver English. According to
federal law, if you cannot speak English, write English, none
of that, you're not allowed to be in a commercial
bigle to start with in the United States because the
federal law says you're not allowed to. But it seemed
(13:44):
like the governments don't do anything about it. And it's
the same way with another federal law that's written in
the nineteen fifties about the proper shoeses after you're supposed
to be wearing them. But today's little wannabes weve got
they're after house slippers, flipflops, crocs, sandals, stuff like gat
that are not even proper attired bewaring or operating a
commercial vehicle because it has to do with the matter
(14:06):
of the safety of operating the vehicle to control the pedals,
like for example, you're come up on a stop sign
or red light or something like that, Technically you're supposed
to be having a shoe as a heel and to
keep your foot from sliding off the pedals because everywhere
you go, especially like truck stop, you're walking in oil
fuel and stuff like that, and it becomes a slick
situation where you're feeking slide well you know what, you're
(14:28):
bringing it into your vehicle and your pedal has become
very slick. So now you're having trouble operating your pedals
and stuff too. But man, there's so many lulls out
there that seem like it. It makes you wonder is
law enforcement put in the same situation as some of
these wannabes we have. They're not being taught everything about
all the lulls with these vehicles, and that's why they're
not all getting busted behind it.
Speaker 9 (14:50):
Will these trucks.
Speaker 1 (14:51):
Well, here's something sad, Carl. If you talk to officers
and they won't admit it to me, won't admit to
a lot of people. But I've heard officers say if
they're of another country descent, sometimes they just don't want
to deal with it and they won't ever admit it
on air.
Speaker 2 (15:06):
And I don't expect them to because they lose your job.
Speaker 1 (15:08):
But what I can tell you is they look a
lot the other direction, whether it be city cops or federal,
state High patrol or whatever. Because number one, you pull
over an illegal and you cause a bigger issue if
the truck needs toad.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
You got backups, You've got this, You've got that.
Speaker 1 (15:27):
You could lose your job as a police officer because
you could be considered racist or or picking on them.
So the officers have blinders on right now. Across the board.
If you go down one sixty one in Cleveland Avenue
and you pull up the light, there's usually at least one,
maybe five taggs are expired, which that tells me they
(15:48):
have no insurance, no driver's license. The police can't do anything.
Their hands are tied. And that's one thing Trump has
me mad about a little bit, because yeah, he's backing
the police, but we need to get the police back
to illegal window tip tags expired, et cetera. I'm tired
of it. I'm tired of looking over and seeing a
car completely blacked out because in nighttime he runs into
(16:10):
me because he can't see because your speed omer becomes
a flashlight at that point reflects through the illegally tended windows.
You can't see where you're driving. Plus the safety of
the officer. So Carl, great call, we're going to go
to break We've got Ransom Ron and Mark next.
Speaker 2 (16:23):
And then we're going to go to Auto Smarts. Is
Saturday morning on phones.
Speaker 1 (16:26):
Always brought to by the Metal Roof Company, protected by
the ndefeated American Mantalitale from d Heartland Banks Studios on
news Radio six to ten WTV. Barb's got a positive
one that's bringing home, Barb.
Speaker 2 (16:38):
I love positive callers. How you doing, Barb good?
Speaker 7 (16:41):
How are you too?
Speaker 2 (16:43):
I'm great good.
Speaker 10 (16:45):
I want to advertise a huge church rummage sale in
Dublin at then Community Church at eighty one West of
Bridge Street. I'm right in downtown historic double incident nine
am to two p m. You can get in at
a ten dollars and get first DIBs on everything that's here.
(17:07):
So we already have a little line. So we are
open today from till two o'clock.
Speaker 2 (17:14):
Okay, awesome, say one more time. Address in time, Yes.
Speaker 10 (17:18):
Dublin Community Church, eighty one West Ridge Street, nine am
to two pm and you can get in at eight
am by paying ten dollars and get first dips on everything.
Speaker 4 (17:28):
We have.
Speaker 10 (17:28):
Everything. Every room of the church is filled with rummage
A good, fine good Yeah.
Speaker 2 (17:36):
By all right, thank you for the call.
Speaker 5 (17:40):
Even though it's today.
Speaker 10 (17:41):
Thank you so much.
Speaker 1 (17:42):
All right, thank you. Why does say Ray on the hotline?
It's good a Ransom, Good.
Speaker 2 (17:48):
Morning, Ransom boots.
Speaker 8 (17:51):
Are you buddy?
Speaker 2 (17:52):
I'm good?
Speaker 8 (17:53):
How are you, buddy? I'm doing great, man, I'm out
in the rain. So oh it's all good. It could
be what was that one song? It's five o'clock somewhere
and uh, it's always you know, it can always be
worse somewhere else. So uh, I decided today my call
was going to be a positive one.
Speaker 7 (18:15):
I hope.
Speaker 8 (18:15):
I try to be positive every time I call. And
I wanted to tell you and Ella how much I
appreciate you. We probably should give you a therapy pay
or when we call. Yeah, that's because so frustrated, you know.
Speaker 2 (18:36):
Huge spot on Ransom.
Speaker 8 (18:38):
Yeah but but I but I wanted to, Uh, well,
you know, I know that a lot of the callers
they get frustrated, and and you know, maybe you and
La don't realize that how important your job is. Because
people people, what they're doing is they're reaching out to
you because they don't feel like the powers that be,
(18:58):
whether it be on the local, state or national level.
They really care about what you and I the average
man and woman that works hard and pays taxes and gotches.
Our taxes get spent and with no accountability. And you know,
I love David because he's got so many facts when
he when he calls in, and I know he's frustrated,
(19:21):
and uh A lot of people would not even study
that stuff, but he, you know, he he comes up
with some Uh. I mean, I've learned a lot from him.
Just listen to him on the radio, you know. And uh,
so you know, my my call is about being thankful.
And the other thing was choices. We have people that
(19:42):
are making choices. And until someone's heart, including the president,
including someone you know, everyone's heart has to change. Until
there's a moral heart change, then the frustrations that we
have in our local areas are state areas and our
(20:03):
federal areas, it's going to stay on. So, but we
do have a we have a couple of choices. I've
been to Russia before, smuggling and bibles, I think I've
talked to you about before, and I would not trade
I've been all over the world with the airlines, and
I would not trade the United States for anything in
(20:27):
the world. This is even with all of our problems,
we have the greatest nation in the world and even
our even our homeless people live better than most people
around the world. So we need to be thankful for that.
But I want to leave with two things. One, if
you're frustrated about your government, locally or statewide or federally,
(20:54):
you gotta let them know. You gotta make you you
know they They may not respond to you the way
they want you weren't, but you let him know. And
there's one that you know. Hoseah for six says, my
people perish for lack of knowledge, and when people get information,
they're responsible for that. And the second thing that always works,
and that's what I want to encourage today, is that
(21:16):
there's a there's a god in heaven that knows every
person on this planet because he created all of us,
whether we're making good choices or bad, and he is
keeping track of everything that's happening on this planet. And
we may not see what we call justice or the
right thing happening in our lifetime, but ultimately those people
(21:39):
that have made long choices that affect millions of people
unless they come to Christ like the thief on the
cross and say, you know, I repent. They're going to
have to stand in judgment with God on that. And
with that, I want to wish you and Alla a
great day and all your listeners and thank you for
having this form. And I want to do something about
(22:00):
giving you some uh some social worker pay or something.
Speaker 2 (22:04):
There you go, let's go back phone. It's got a
run we got from I run.
Speaker 4 (22:11):
I was watching the news earlier this week at the
Pirates Cubs game and a player made a big play
and a fan fell from the second deck. Yeah, it
looked like he tried to grab the railing and then
he flipped over and hit the ground and he laid there, motionless,
(22:36):
and that thought occurred to me. You know, how delicate
is life. Anything could happen at any time. The players
knelt down and started praying, and that whole it seemed
like that whole stadium went silent praying for the man.
(22:56):
And then they they rushed over there and uh gave
him made and then drove off. But I know he
had a serious injury there, and I hope he's okay.
Speaker 1 (23:11):
I haven't earning updates. I hope he has too. You
know what, Hopefully there was power and prayer.
Speaker 4 (23:16):
I hope it worked out okay. On another comment, Trump
has done very well with the border. I looked at
the US Customs website. In December twenty four, there was
forty eight thousand illegal crossings reported, and then in February
(23:40):
twenty five there were eight thousand crossings. So he's getting
that under control very well. But on the other hand,
the cariffs seemed to be causing a lot of have
(24:01):
and I looked at the Constitution. It says the Congress
shall have power to collect taxes, duties, imposts, and exercises,
that's TIFFs, to pay the debts and provide for the
common general welfare of the United States. Congress all also
(24:25):
has the power to regulate commerce with foreign nations. So
the Supreme all of the Land says that it's up
to Congress to do that. Trumps use some kind of
emergency power, but it may be kind of an overreach.
(24:45):
But anyway, maybe there'll be some type of legal challenge
to But this is thing. It's Congress's duty to do
the tariffs.
Speaker 1 (24:57):
So I appreciate you, buddy. We'll talk to you next Saturday.
We're going to take a break and we get back.
We'll have Ray, and then Mark will finish out the
day with a poem. This is Saturday Morning on phones,
I'm Damn Boots, brought to you by the metal of
the Company I always prected by the unfeated America Madeattle
Tale from hartlet Bank Studios. Who's Radio six ten the
god phone lines? Good Ray, Good morning Ray.
Speaker 9 (25:18):
I just wanted to say how our leadership locally and
worldwide treat Americans as dumb and dumber, and I must
say we aren't.
Speaker 3 (25:29):
You know.
Speaker 9 (25:30):
I was a professor taught at three major universities or
a period of fIF piers and I can tell you
there's an awful lot of smart people out there. And
what it really is is, I've been trying to figure
it out, is that they're distracted and they have emotional response.
I think what we're lacking is critical thought. That isn't
(25:51):
taught anymore. When I was in high school, we were
taught that.
Speaker 2 (25:57):
Ray.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
Let me ask you a question. You rob a good point.
What do you what makes a person smart? And let
me ask this two ways. Is it book smart or
common sense? I think it's all the above. Be able
to read something, comprehend it, and then follow through with it.
But common sense, what do you because you're a professional guy.
I remember you said you're ninety or something.
Speaker 9 (26:20):
Yeah, okay, you're older, ninety years old, so you've seen
it all.
Speaker 1 (26:25):
You've seen everything from the greats like Martin, Luther King,
Ronald Reagan. Uh, I'm trying to are the great people
one life anyway.
Speaker 9 (26:34):
But I mean mean, yeah, Hitler, but also Roosevelt Roosevelt.
They say, wish Roosevelt.
Speaker 1 (26:46):
I mean, but but but but you know, even tyrants
like I hate say the word Hitler, but he must
have had something going on where he can get that
many people to follow his ignorance, you know what I mean?
Speaker 2 (26:58):
But what makes a person?
Speaker 9 (27:00):
Yeah, we're doing that now.
Speaker 2 (27:02):
Do you think Trump's that bad?
Speaker 9 (27:05):
No, we're doing it now. It what it is. It
isn't a matter of intelligence, It's a matter of.
Speaker 3 (27:13):
Drive.
Speaker 9 (27:13):
I'd usually find people that are close to the earth,
like farmers. They are more practical, common sense people. But
now we're almost in the cloud. We're in an electronic
world where there's no reality anywhere. I mean money, what
is money? Money's value is what we.
Speaker 2 (27:28):
All agree is money is evil? Yeah, yeah, but what
makes a person smart? Though?
Speaker 1 (27:33):
In your opinion, with your knowledge and background and history.
What makes a person smart?
Speaker 9 (27:39):
Well, I'm afraid it starts with the genetics. The genetics
is the basis of everything. And I've done DNA testing
and all that stuff, and the genetics is the basis.
But within the Jane pool, Well, let me use an
example in New York City when I taught of Saint
John's University. I have a mixture of students there, and
if I had a a gentile and ordinary American and
(28:02):
his ability was about six out of ten, he would
perform out of ten. But either it was a Jewish
student or some other and they had a fourth level,
they may perform at six or eight because of their energy,
their interests, their attention, their personal desire to do things
(28:26):
to in a positive way. And so if that isn't
in the gene pool, why then you sort of lumber along.
But I think it's it's really genetics from the final.
Speaker 2 (28:42):
So so let me ask you.
Speaker 1 (28:43):
Yes that they say, you know, there's stereotypical types in
every race, but some would argue that the Asians are
the smartest people on the planet. In the people from
India are super smart were compared to average Americans. Do
you believe those statements or is that just an old
old series.
Speaker 9 (28:58):
No, No, it's just like no, it's a selective groups.
For example, they tell how smart the Chinese are, well
they got about eight hundred million, you know, dumber and dumber.
You know, the ones we see over here, the only
ones that let out of the country and they might
only get permission to go to school and advance, and
they go through special training before they leave the country,
(29:20):
and they're told to stay in contact with the military.
And India, you know, India is a disaster from the
top to bottom. And uh, but but it is the
the original vikings vikings but Titans, which if you look
at the history of the white people, uh, they started
very near a section of India, So that particular element
(29:44):
is in there. And keep in mind we talk about intelligence,
but we have an awful lot of criminal intelligence people.
And what we really should be looking at people is
their core core values that are concern or interests, their
effort to do positive things for other people. As being
(30:07):
super smart can make them super evil. So we just
don't want to say what we call smart, which is
technology is the ultimate of smart, you know, like you
would say, I would say a common sense person.
Speaker 7 (30:23):
All ray everything.
Speaker 1 (30:26):
You're always a breath fresh air. I love talking to
smart guys that's been there and done that. I envy
you guys. You made it to ninety years old. You're
my hero. He probably drove a fifty seven Chevy.
Speaker 2 (30:34):
Let's go. Let's go to Mark. He's got a poem.
Speaker 1 (30:36):
He always ends the Saturday morning on phones with the happiness.
We got about three minutes Mark, bring it home, brother.
Speaker 5 (30:44):
All Right, Well, the poem is short, so but first
I want to say that thank you for sending me
the rooster bucks. I'm going to treat that as as
earned income rather than a gift, because it's a status symbol.
Anytime anyone can receive money for their pot, this might
be the first time that that's ever happened. So thank
you very much. Okay. Today's poem is dedicated to everyone
(31:08):
who has ever had a disagreement with a romantic partner,
or a relative or a friend. The poem, which is
fifty five seconds long, is entitled you have fair warning.
I do not mind constructive tips. If I don't find
(31:29):
hands on your hips, I do not mind constructive thoughts
if not combined with pans and pots. I do not
mind instructive cues if not designed to bring the blues.
But when words cut like Zorro's blade, they injure, but
(31:52):
do not persuade. When words are vile, they disembowel. They
turn a small into a scowl. When comments singe and
sting and skewer, you had better cringe. I will fling manure.
Speaker 6 (32:12):
The end.
Speaker 2 (32:14):
You awesome brother.
Speaker 1 (32:15):
So you go to roosters and you make sure you'd
just be tip those waitresses.
Speaker 2 (32:19):
Okay, there might be a waiter, now appreciate it.
Speaker 5 (32:23):
We'll do boots. Thanks, have a great thanks.
Speaker 1 (32:25):
For always being positive, and you have an awesome day. Man,
and take your bride out and give her some roosters.
Speaker 2 (32:30):
Mark Scott McClure in the house. I got Mark on
the brain. He can turn your Michael.
Speaker 1 (32:36):
So, so we got a big announcement number one, Bet Johnson.
We're going to cover something that she just got a
big lunch in down a grove city a breakfast. I'd say, oh,
we'll cover that here, and well we got we go
about forty minutes. Let's talk about she's so we got
forty minutes forty seconds. Wow, So we're out fifty seven
to forty. So Beth Johnson just sent this to us
and we'd love Beth. She's like the sister from a
different mister today on her flight Columbus Breakfast fundraiser this
(33:00):
morning eight to ten at the Grove City, Maissont Masonic Lodge,
thirty five fifty eight Park Street in Grove City. Breakfast
is done by all donate Jack, all donations, hunerve percent. Yeah,
just donation, Just donate and then while you're there by
the golf cart ticket. We got a badge to the
bone golf cart and a golf cart is on display
at the Moose in Worthington off Strock Road, Moose fourteen
twenty seven.
Speaker 2 (33:21):
So Auto Smarts is next. My buddy Scott's in the house.
Speaker 1 (33:25):
We're at here Saturday writing phones brought to you by
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Bank Studios on News Radio six ten wtv N