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July 31, 2025 • 69 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
D number one Tuck Show in the Ohio Alley. This
is the bloom Daddy Experience. Your host, bloom Daddy. His
goal in form, entertain, and tick people off. The bloom
Daddy Experience on news Radio eleven seventy. WWVA starts now.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
The bloom Daddy Experience. It's seven oh six on news
Radio eleven seventy. I think one of the most underreported
stories by the mainstream media, and it's because they were
complicit in it is the Justice Department forming a strikeforce
to assess the evidence publicized by Director of National Intelligence
Tulci Gabbard relating to former President Barack Obama's top national

(00:42):
security and intelligence officials alleged involvement in the origins of
the Trump Russia collusion narrative spring on Pennsylvania Republican Congressman
Guy Ressenthaler, who's the Republican Chief Deputy Whip in the
one hundred and nineteenth Congress and also a Navy veteran.

Speaker 3 (00:57):
How you been, stranger, good, bloom Daddy.

Speaker 4 (01:00):
Good to be back on a mishue.

Speaker 3 (01:04):
I heard, so I'll take it.

Speaker 4 (01:07):
Well, you can always hear it from me.

Speaker 5 (01:09):
I just look, this is this story. Bloom Daddy, It's
bigger than Watergate, it really is. You had, going back
to twenty sixteen, you had the entire Intel apparatus, the SBI,
the DNI, the CIA alluding with Obama, Clinton and Biden
to take the Steele dossier, which was derived from information

(01:33):
that Hillary Clinton was paying for for opposition research, and
they were manufacturing information to get dirt on Trump. You
had them take that information, put it in an Intel
report that they knew was faulty and was biased and
was from the Clinton campaign, and then push out this
narrative to feed the media that Russia was actively helping

(01:57):
Hillary Clinton I'm sorry, actively helping President Trump.

Speaker 4 (02:00):
Win the election. It was utterly false.

Speaker 5 (02:02):
And what's worse about it is they you know, like
I'm a former defense attorney.

Speaker 4 (02:06):
As the defense attorney in the Navy, you have you
as a prosecutor.

Speaker 5 (02:09):
You can't add exculpatory evidence things that help the other
the defendant.

Speaker 4 (02:14):
You've got to turn that over.

Speaker 5 (02:15):
The CIA had information that that that that the Russians
had dirt on Hillary Clinton. They expected her to win
the election, and they didn't push that dirt out because
they wanted to blackmail and put pressure on Hillary Clinton.
When she became president. If they actually wanted to help Trump,
they would have just released the dirt on Hillary Clinton
to help Trump, and they didn't, but they withheld that

(02:38):
information and the report. So this is an explosive story.
And what's worse if you look at what Ratcliffe at
the CIA now, my good friend John Radcliffe, what he
just put out yesterday was information that not only did
the deep state or the intel community, however you want
to describe them, not only did they can cost this
false narrative, they then cooperated with the mainstream media to

(03:00):
push it out there and get it out there to
one tall pillary Clinton win the election, and then two
to subvert President Trump and his agenda by saying that
he was a pawn of Russia. He was only in
there because Putin put.

Speaker 4 (03:13):
Interfered in the election, knowing that was utterly false.

Speaker 3 (03:17):
Yeah, I mean, you know where's the mainstream media? Now?

Speaker 2 (03:19):
Well, I know where they are, But there should be
a microphone in Adam Schiff's face constantly saying, so where's
this Russian collusion evidence? Because the guy to this day
still says he has it.

Speaker 6 (03:31):
It's like, what are you doing?

Speaker 4 (03:32):
Right?

Speaker 5 (03:33):
Why have people coming up to me just on the
street saying, coming up and thinking, seeing that Russia is
interfering in our elections to this day, I mean, they
did so much damage to President Trump and the Republican
brand in general, thinking that we're all a bunch of
Russian sympathizers or we're working with the Russians and he's crazy.

(03:54):
I remember before this, it was the Democrat that wanted
to play footsi's with the Soviets and the Russians was
Hllary Clinton who had the great reset button, remember when she.

Speaker 4 (04:02):
Went over to Russia.

Speaker 5 (04:03):
And so they were the ones that wanted to saw
relations with the Russians, and historically during the Cold War,
they were always viewed as more sympathetic to the Russians
than the Republicans.

Speaker 4 (04:13):
And in twenty sixteen that slipped.

Speaker 5 (04:15):
And why did this slip Because Hillary Clinton had a
private email server and she was getting a.

Speaker 4 (04:20):
Lot of blowback.

Speaker 5 (04:21):
So they needed to have a story to hide the
media attention from her private server and put dirt on Trump.
So enters of Steele dossier, they gin all this up
and then when Trump wins, they now need something to
delegitimize the president and they use this story to do
it and boom Daddy, it worked.

Speaker 4 (04:40):
We should be Brennan Clapper, Pomone.

Speaker 5 (04:43):
They should be arrested, there should be purp walks, and
they should face criminal charges for what they did. And
what's really rich here is that you have people, you
have the Democrats going after Matt.

Speaker 4 (04:55):
At Ford and Roger Stone.

Speaker 5 (04:58):
And others, Navarro, Have the Republicans arrested one single Democrat? No, no,
we haven't, and they committed crimes that are much graver
than anything that they alleged that the Republicans committed.

Speaker 4 (05:10):
So where are the purp walks?

Speaker 5 (05:12):
Now?

Speaker 4 (05:12):
Why are we not going after them? There needs to
get people that face jail time for what they did.

Speaker 5 (05:16):
And the rich part of this, bloom Daddy is that
all we hear from Democrats and liberals is that we're
the threat to democracy.

Speaker 4 (05:23):
Everything we do is the threat to democracy.

Speaker 5 (05:25):
The threat to democracy is them. They subvert They lied
in an intelligence reports to subvert a bad news story
of Hillary Clinton and then use it to sabotage Trump
in his first term and completely and then worked with
the media to.

Speaker 4 (05:39):
Get it out there. That's the threat to democracy.

Speaker 3 (05:43):
One hundred percent.

Speaker 2 (05:44):
Talking to Republican Congressman Guy Russian thaller out of Pennsylvania
Republican Chief Deputy Whip in the one hundred nineteenth Congress.
I see similarities between this and COVID. In this situation, Congressman,
you had people within the intelligence community saying, no, we
can't run with it's unverified, it's no good. Yet they
were kicked to the curb. They were made fun of,

(06:04):
they were vilified. Same thing with COVID, right, any doctor,
anybody who stood up against Fauci or the regime, they
were threatened with a cut and funding, or they were made.

Speaker 3 (06:15):
A joke of. The similarities are very striking here.

Speaker 5 (06:20):
Well, he goes bunde, he goes back even further. I mean,
look at look at the Second Gulf War. Raft being
told that there was weapons of mass destruction in Iraq,
where if the.

Speaker 4 (06:30):
Intel community knew there was no w ND, but it.

Speaker 5 (06:33):
Pulled really well in focused groups. So they came up
with his narrative and they got us involved in the
Iraq War. And then it goes further. I mean, remember,
the intel community is the same ones that told us
that the hunter Biden laptop was a Russian player, who
is basically a false story. Again trying to interfere in
the twenty twenty election. So there's a long pattern here

(06:55):
of the Intel community giving false information to elected officials
and elected officials that are working with the Intel community
running with that, and then also coordinating with the mainstream
media to suppress whatever narrative they want.

Speaker 4 (07:09):
And this has real life consequences.

Speaker 5 (07:10):
I mean, going back to Iraq, it put us in
the Iraq War, going back to twenty sixteen. In this
false information, it clouded trump one presidency for at least
twenty two months at least. Okay, Then during COVID, I
was remember I was shadow band from social media because
I was saying that the virus originated in the biolab

(07:32):
and we won and I made it compell which it did,
and I was called a conspiracy theorist. I think Tom
Cloughton was the was pushing the same narrative. He was
called a conspiracy theoriest. We were the ones that were correct.
And the conspiracy theory was that originated in a bat
and flew a thousand miles and just started to happen,
having to infect humans at a thousand rate lethality rate,
that it's found in a state of nature. I could

(07:53):
go on about that, but that false narrative crushed our economy.
Bad decisions were made during lockdowns, kids health, mental health suffered.
You had kids committing suicide, you had a whole bunch
of You have seniors dying alone in hospitals without family
members because everybody, So it had real life consequences. And
then you had twenty Then you had twenty twenty where

(08:14):
because that the deep state didn't come out and say
that hunter Biden's laptop was actually his laptop, that actually
we can prove through rastus and pulling and that through
the election to Biden instead of Trump.

Speaker 4 (08:25):
So there it is.

Speaker 5 (08:26):
Then then you fast forward to where we are now
you can question everything else that's going on.

Speaker 3 (08:30):
These are the same.

Speaker 4 (08:31):
These are the same.

Speaker 5 (08:32):
Clowns form Daddy that told Congress. The told Congress that
Kiev was going to fall in seventy two hours and
that Kobble was going to stand for six months. Uh
when we were pulling out of Afghanistan and said, don't worry,
they got it, the Afghanists, the Afghani military is going
to be able to withstand everything that fell within a
matter of hours.

Speaker 4 (08:52):
And then they also.

Speaker 5 (08:52):
Told us that Russia was going to roll through Kiev,
and clearly the Ukraine's are still fighting. So it just
keeps going on and on on with this nonsense narratives.
And as soon as we stand out and pull them
out on it, Uh, we're the ones that are called
conspiracy theorists.

Speaker 6 (09:06):
But with the.

Speaker 5 (09:07):
Good news boom Daddy is is the Deep States, the
intel community, that the corporate media, however you want to
describe them. They have less and less authority, less and
less credibility. And that's why more people are going to
conservative talk radio, That's why more Republicans are winning elections,
and they can't get away with this stuff anymore.

Speaker 4 (09:25):
They're going to continue to do.

Speaker 5 (09:26):
It, but we have a lot more we have a
lot more legitimacy when we say no, you are peddling
the conspiracy theory.

Speaker 4 (09:33):
Let's look at the actual evidence.

Speaker 2 (09:35):
You mentioned. Republicans haven't made or pushed for one arrest.
Why how you know? You and others in the Republican Party.
Are you going to let this go or are you
going to try to hold people accountable?

Speaker 4 (09:48):
No, I'm not.

Speaker 5 (09:49):
I'm going to be I'm going to be pushing to
have the administration go after these individuals.

Speaker 4 (09:54):
I mean I'm going to do that from behind the scenes.
But we also people don't believe in our institutions anymore.
And when when you.

Speaker 5 (10:05):
Have stuff like COVID and the deep State lying about stuff,
you wonder why what restores that is seeing somebody actually
get arrested and doing jail time and there were crimes
that were committed here, some people need to go to jail.
And look, I remember Navarro getting put in leg irons
and hauled off to prison. I remember Steve Bannon going
to prison. I remember Roger Stone and Mataphord. So why

(10:28):
is it that when our guys break the law, And
I'm not saying what they did was right or not.

Speaker 4 (10:33):
I still think some of the charges are a little suspect.
But why is it that if we if we do anything,
we're the ones that arrested.

Speaker 5 (10:41):
And it isn't amazing how whenever there's an arrest, SDNN
or the media get tipped off and there's always cameras
right outside the Republican's house to capture them coming out
in cuffs. Why aren't we doing that to them? That's unacceptable.
So to restore faith in the American people, there needs
to be purp rocks arrests in jail.

Speaker 2 (10:58):
Time real quick before I let you go. And I'm
talking to Pennsylvania Congressman Guy Russenthaler. Trump's trade war with
the world not been popular, but it's working. I mean,
the European Union, Japan, probably China next the guys on
a roll he is.

Speaker 5 (11:15):
And the thing with the tariffs is, we've got to
remember these this will take a long time to level out.
But the most important thing is is that Trump is
bringing investment back in the United States.

Speaker 4 (11:24):
If you look at that.

Speaker 5 (11:25):
EU deal, he got the Europeans that commit like another
six hundred billion dollars of investment, getting them to buy
American energy.

Speaker 4 (11:32):
So that's going to that's gonna pay off.

Speaker 5 (11:34):
But also it's just that we can stay competitive. I mean,
thank god that he put a fifty percent tariff on steel.
That's really good for Pennsylvania, Ohio basically all the way
down the Ohio River Valley popper aluminum.

Speaker 4 (11:46):
That's going to save us.

Speaker 5 (11:47):
And then making the Europeans pay a fifteen percent tariff
on everything else is going to make us more competitive.

Speaker 4 (11:52):
You know, It's quite amazing how.

Speaker 5 (11:53):
We don't care if anything coming from these countries and
they care for everything we produce, we just can't maintain Trump.

Speaker 4 (12:00):
President Trump is making this about fair trade, not about
free trade.

Speaker 3 (12:05):
Congressman, thanks for jumping on the show.

Speaker 4 (12:07):
Here.

Speaker 2 (12:08):
The oldest son lives right outside Washington. Next time I
go visit, maybe we could get together.

Speaker 4 (12:13):
And I know exactly where we're going. Boom Daddy, I'll
see you then.

Speaker 5 (12:16):
I'm in.

Speaker 3 (12:17):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (12:17):
That's Pennsylvania Republican cashman guy, Russian dollar.

Speaker 4 (12:26):
We made.

Speaker 7 (12:26):
It's Wednesday, folks, the bloom Daddy Experience. Sam and otis
News Radio eleven seventy WWVA. Of course it is a Wednesday,
so coming up, we're gonna have Politics Unleashed with Elgie mccardal.
So that's coming up.

Speaker 4 (12:39):
Yay.

Speaker 7 (12:42):
A little bit of housekeeping. It is Wednesday, so of
course you're we're going to be doing our Winner for
free lunch delivered on Friday, all from our friends at
River City. There's still plenty of time to register Sam
at iHeartMedia dot com, name phone number and business, or
you can text us seven zero four seven zero. Start

(13:04):
the message off with bloom Daddy and then same information,
name phone number and company. And along with that we're
gonna have chances for you to win this morning from
our friends from McCormick's autop to.

Speaker 6 (13:19):
Twenty five dollars gift certificates. So fifty dollars to put
towards an oil change, date, inspection, new tires, just to
tune up, whatever.

Speaker 7 (13:27):
You need, windshield wash, your fluid, whatever you need.

Speaker 6 (13:30):
Turn signal fluid?

Speaker 7 (13:32):
Is that a thing?

Speaker 6 (13:32):
No, I was just seeing if you were paying.

Speaker 7 (13:35):
Okay, I'm all right. I'm like, listen, I don't know
a lot about cars, but I don't think there are
turn signal fluid.

Speaker 6 (13:42):
Yeah. I have a friend of mine that I found
out yesterday doesn't know a lot about cars either. Well,
when I get a phone call that says, hey, do
I have enough gas to get there?

Speaker 7 (13:54):
See my car tells me where I'm at.

Speaker 6 (13:56):
The light came on. That's what made this person nervous.

Speaker 7 (13:58):
Oh, mine does the number.

Speaker 6 (14:01):
I'm sure this one does too, But sometimes, like so
am my jeep when it tells me lo fuel. It
won't tell me how many miles I have left, but
I know I know that it kicks on somewhere between
like thirty and thirty five miles to go.

Speaker 7 (14:13):
I noticed something yesterday, and this is really weird. You
know how on your side mirrors. Yeah, mine are little
triangles that alerts that a cars you know, you can't
go over mine just stop working.

Speaker 6 (14:26):
So you probably have a censor that went.

Speaker 7 (14:27):
Out the little alerts.

Speaker 6 (14:28):
Yeah, it were a fused blue or.

Speaker 7 (14:30):
I hit a button? Who knows?

Speaker 6 (14:31):
Possibly?

Speaker 7 (14:32):
I mean cars at this point are like rolling computers.
I bet more than anything, I probably hit a button
that I shouldn't have. So that's gonna be fun to
figure out.

Speaker 6 (14:41):
I just but it was funny. I get this phone
call and I'm like, this person, Why is this person
calling me? And I answer the phone. I said, hello, Hey,
do I have enough guess to get there from this point?
And I'm thinking, oh my gosh, yes you.

Speaker 7 (14:55):
Do, maybe possibly hopefully.

Speaker 6 (14:57):
And I said, if not, we'll get you somewhere. Just
call call back if you don't make it.

Speaker 7 (15:04):
Hey, So at least they thought to ask, and.

Speaker 6 (15:07):
I was willing to go help if they needed it.

Speaker 7 (15:09):
There you go. So, but yeah, it wasn't me, because.

Speaker 4 (15:12):
It was me.

Speaker 6 (15:12):
He would not and I would. I would tell everybody
that it was you. I would. I wouldn't keep it
in anonymous, that's.

Speaker 7 (15:18):
True, And you wouldn't be willing to come help me.

Speaker 6 (15:20):
If I ran, I probably would you think, Yeah, I know,
I would, you know, i'd help you.

Speaker 7 (15:24):
See, I think he does actually like me.

Speaker 6 (15:25):
I don't, but I have to like you for two
hours a day.

Speaker 7 (15:32):
Well you know, hey, that's longer than some people. I'll
give you that. I'll give you that. I just wanted
to remind everybody or let everybody know we'll bring this.
We'll kind of remind everybody through the week. West Virginia's
annual sales tax holiday runs from midnight this Friday through
which is August first, through Monday, August fourth. That's here

(15:55):
on the West Virginia side of the river. Ohio tax
free begins August first, which again is this Friday, but
Ohio runs through Thursday, August fourteenth. So this is your
opportunity tax free, tax free weekend, back to school shopping,
all of that. So now is the time to take advantage.

Speaker 6 (16:15):
And there's some limits on the West Virginia side, So
like clothing that's under one hundred and twenty five bucks,
and like you can buy a laptop, but as long
as it's under five hundred then you don't pay sales tax.
And any school supplies under fifty bucks so.

Speaker 7 (16:27):
It's not a free for all where you get everything.

Speaker 6 (16:29):
No, But but what you could do is you can
you know, you can buy a little bit here on Friday,
a little bit on Saturday, a little bit on Sunday,
and then boom, you got you got your rear end covered.

Speaker 7 (16:39):
So yeah, so take advantage of that again. West Virginia
goes through Monday, August fourth, Ohio goes through August.

Speaker 6 (16:47):
Fort which is nice. Two weeks. That way, you're not
pressed into one weekend. So like if you were on
vacation this week.

Speaker 7 (16:54):
Well that or if you're on yeah, if you're on vacation,
or you're not fighting the crowds and and all of that,
because god, I hate fighting crowds. A twenty eight okay,
I'll moving his head at seven to twenty eight. You're
listening to the bloom Daddy Experience. Do you want to
do your first chance or want to wait?

Speaker 6 (17:13):
Wait?

Speaker 7 (17:14):
Okay, we'll wait the Bloomdaddy Experience. Samon Otis News Radio
eleven seventy WWVA.

Speaker 2 (17:23):
Just saw where killer Nathan Brooks is up for parole
after thirty years in prison. It's hard to believe, number one,
that that much time has passed by since he killed
his parents back in bel Air in which was one
of the most heinous crimes I've ever heard of. Stabbed
his mother to death, cut his father's head off, put
it in a punch bowl as part of a satanic ritual,

(17:45):
and now he's up for parole. I would never let
Nathan Brooks out of jail. He should die in jail.
What he did thirty years ago is incomprehensible, and the
level to which it rose, as far as from a
purely evil standard, means in my mind, he never gets

(18:07):
out of prison. There's gonna be people out there who say, well,
he was young, then he was under the influence of
this or that.

Speaker 3 (18:15):
I don't care what the reasons were.

Speaker 2 (18:17):
If you can do that to your parents, you should
never see the light of day. Nobody's going to make
me think for a second, this guy's been rehabbed while
in prison for thirty years, that all of a sudden
you release him and he's magically healed.

Speaker 3 (18:32):
You don't do what.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
He did, and ever get the quote unquote normal tag
placed over your head in my mind, and let's not
forget he was also going to kill his brother. If
you know anything about the story, after he killed his parents,
he was waiting on his brother to come back to
the house to kill him too. Luckily, his brother, I believe,

(18:54):
stayed at a friend's house that night and then came
back the next morning to discover what Nathan had done.
I mean, the details of what he did, the way
that it disturbed everybody in the Ohio Valley thirty years ago,
the black cloud it put over bel Air, Ohio, nobody

(19:18):
will ever forget. And I don't think anybody on that
parole board when he stands before them, should ever forget
what he did. I mean, that's just unforgivable in my book.
And who's to say he doesn't get out and go
back to.

Speaker 6 (19:33):
His old ways.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
I mean, when you worship Satan, when you commit an
act that just I mean, I can't even put it
into words right now. I'm having trouble relating to you
how I feel about what he did. So if it
were up to me, I would never let that piece

(19:56):
of trash ever walk out of jail. Sam Otis, what
do you think about this?

Speaker 7 (20:03):
These are the types of crimes that there shouldn't even
be an option for parole. This shouldn't even be a
conversation when it comes to these types of crimes. Now,
he was seventeen years old when this happened. His brother
Ryan was sixteen at the time. Again, the acts happened
on September thirtieth, nineteen ninety five. I semi remember this.

(20:31):
I at the time was either a sophomore or junior
in high school, and I remember a big deal happened
in bel Air. I at the time did not know
the ins and outs, the satanic angle, the absolute heinous

(20:55):
crimes that were committed. So as this has come up,
I have read more and more on what happened, and
it's it's shocking. One thing that's shocking to me is
the fact that there isn't a podcast or something about
this story. With the way true crime has become a
form of entertainment in our society, but I would be

(21:18):
interested to know his brother Ryan's feelings on this. I'm
actually working on a couple interviews to discuss the case
from people who were part of everything that went on
during that time period. I'm hoping to have that for
you tomorrow or early next week. But I am working

(21:38):
on a couple interviews to discuss what went on during
that time period. People that were there first hand, otis,
are you do you remember this?

Speaker 6 (21:51):
Vaguely?

Speaker 7 (21:52):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (21:54):
You know.

Speaker 6 (21:55):
I mean I would have been twenty eight years old
when this happened, and the prosecuting attorney's daughter was playing
basketball for me, maybe not for me at that time,
but was at the school where I was coaching, and
I knew who she was and knew who he was,
and you know, I mean, you're twenty eight years old.

(22:19):
It doesn't affect you. You know. You you kind of
see the headlines, you read the stories, and then it's
just one ear not the others.

Speaker 7 (22:25):
Kind of well, kind of the same for me. When
you're fifteen sixteen years old, you're living in your high
school world bubble.

Speaker 6 (22:30):
And then you know, then you're trying to remember what
you remember from thirty years ago.

Speaker 7 (22:34):
I mean, yeah, you put that into it.

Speaker 6 (22:37):
You throw the time difference in there. You know, I
kind of compare it, you know, I don't compare it,
but listening to it, are like the three women that
were involved in the Manson murders. I think it's Leslie
and Trouton's squeaky or squeaky squeaky from she was something.
She was a Manson discipled but she wasn't.

Speaker 7 (22:58):
A part of the oh, the actual crime, okay.

Speaker 6 (23:01):
The Manson murders, and they could. They would come up
for parole all the time, and you kind of listen
to him, you know, as as they've aged and you know,
now they're in their sixties and seventies and whatever. Not
to say that they're rehabilitated, but you do dumb stuff

(23:21):
when you're when you're young, and you get into something
like a Satan worshiping type of a thing here because
you're young and you're dumb and you're experimenting or you know,
you're you think you know what you're doing, and you.

Speaker 7 (23:34):
Do well, and you're so malleable. We're easily influenced.

Speaker 6 (23:39):
And not to say that that this kid couldn't have
been rehabilitated. But he's not going to get paroled, no,
at least not yet. You know, he's he's in he's
going to be in his forties, you know, late forties, forties,
mid forties, I guess you would say forty seven seven, Okay,
So you know, if he would ever get parode is

(24:00):
not going to be until later in life when basically
mother nature is not going to allow him to do
right things. I just I don't think, you know, I
don't think thirty years is enough for a double homicide
first off, and you know the nature of what happened
makes it even worse.

Speaker 7 (24:19):
Well, yeah, there's a lot of disturbing elements to this
along with having his brother's name on the list. Who
was there was a list? His brother was to be
the first victim. His brother was not at the house
according to the information that I have read. But there
was planning behind this, and that's where you have to

(24:41):
take into consideration. Is a person like this who can
sit down and create a list and put next to
certain names what he planned to do to them, whether
it was dismember, evesceerate, molest skin a victim. Is that

(25:01):
person even remotely Again, he was seventeen years old. I
understand all of that, but well, you.

Speaker 6 (25:10):
Know, when you're a sociopath, it doesn't matter how old
you are, you're a sociopath. You know, he's the He's
the Ted Bundy, He's the what Jeffrey Dahmer. You know,
the only thing he didn't do is eat somebody. I mean,
you know, for what his plans were, ye.

Speaker 7 (25:27):
Where could this? Where could he have gone?

Speaker 6 (25:29):
And it's just you know, I mean, he is definitely
you know, he can't. I don't think he's going to
be able to function in society ever. And so I
mean for him to get out. And if you're if
you're sitting on that parole board, there's no app there's
absolutely no way that you can say, man, I could
consider this, you know, I mean, you know, and he

(25:51):
can find religion, he can do all this stuff, you know,
but you know, just the severity of everything and how
everything was planned and noted and what he wanted to do.
You know, that's that's tough. That's tough to overlook.

Speaker 7 (26:12):
Well in the long term effects that it probably had
that I'm sure it has had on his brother, the
law enforcement that had to witness and see what was
what was left the.

Speaker 6 (26:21):
Scene, Any family members, Oh yeah, any neighbors.

Speaker 7 (26:26):
Yeah, I mean, and and I will say this though,
at that point in time, we were not talking about
mental illness the way we do today. And I'm not
saying that is an excuse, but we got to also
put into context the time period where it happened. Did
we take you know, at that point in time, people
were talking about satanism, but people weren't really taking it truthfully.

(26:50):
You know, it's a teenager, young dumb teenager trying to
express themselves the oddball. But look what it eventually led to.
But no, will he get out, No, he will not
get Now if they do, then the parole board need
to maybe be mentally evaluated. Seven forty five. Let's do
our first chance to win this morning the bloom Daddy

(27:11):
Experience Listie one eight hundred sixty two for eleven seventy.
This is for your chance to win McCormick's auto a
pair of twenty five dollars gift certificates. Let's do caller
number ten one eight hundred six two four eleven seventy
caller number ten seven forty six on your Wednesday. The
Bloomdaddy Experience salmon Otis News Radio, eleven seventy WWVA seven

(27:42):
fifty one. Welcome back The bloom Daddy Experience, salmon Otis
News Radio, eleven seventy WWVA. So Otis explains sort of
what happened.

Speaker 6 (27:51):
This was. So some days you fall into it, it's good.
Some days you fall into it that's bad.

Speaker 7 (27:56):
That's a perfect way of putting it.

Speaker 6 (27:57):
And we fell into something here. Obviously we were talking
about the trial from thirty years ago and the conviction
and parole and everything else, and our winner for the
McCormick certificates informed me while I was getting his information
that he was on the jury of that trial. So

(28:19):
joining us live right now is Dave from Bethesda. Good morning, Dave,
good morning. So give us give us some you know,
tell what was the trial? Like, I mean, kind of
share what you shared with me here is just a
few minutes ago.

Speaker 9 (28:32):
Well it was. I was twenty eight when I was
on that jury. It was a very cob and obviously
for the what happened the days of testimony trying to
understand was presented to is why somebody would do that?
What what a lot of folks still know is he

(28:54):
had the mental actual physical brain damage from gasoline. So
we were teetering around was in his the same state
of mind when this happened. Everything was premeditated with the
list his ultimate goal at the end, but a lot

(29:16):
of we were focusing on it as the jury pool
is we went to our deliberations. Was what she's saying,
was he having his mental faculties? It was the defense
that didn't ask the question that we needed. We needed
to hear, and we couldn't rule on the case because

(29:38):
that question was never asked. That question was when they
were talking to the doctors. Was his brain damage with
display a role in determining if.

Speaker 6 (29:51):
He knew what he was doing?

Speaker 7 (29:53):
When? And Dave again, thank you for talking with us
this morning. When you were sitting in that courtroom with him,
What was he like visually in person? Did he show
any emotions? Did he show remorse anything? Yeah?

Speaker 9 (30:11):
No, he was at the time smiling. His one brother,
I think it was his older brother was sitting in
the gallery behind him, and he would look over. He
wasn't remorseful. He was more done. I would say, like

(30:32):
like a smile, that's like, what am I doing here?
He kind of knew what he was, what he did.

Speaker 7 (30:39):
He couldn't like, couldn't grasp the severity of everything.

Speaker 2 (30:44):
I don't.

Speaker 4 (30:44):
I don't believe.

Speaker 9 (30:45):
So he he didn't speak at the trial.

Speaker 4 (30:50):
It was.

Speaker 9 (30:52):
It was odd because I went home every night and
I followed the judge's orders and I did not here
media read the newspaper. And when it was all said
and done, when we went in and we did our
first round of voting, we we had some that couldn't
couldn't convict him because he was too young, and you know,
it looks like my grandson. And we had to look

(31:16):
at all the evidence, and then the judge made the instruction.

Speaker 4 (31:22):
You have to go buy all.

Speaker 9 (31:24):
The evidence that's presented, make your make your decision based
on that. Leave the emotional part out of it, which
was which was hard. But once you well, once we
all looked at what was presented to us, it was
that's what we got our unanimous decisions.

Speaker 6 (31:44):
Dave, let me ask you a question. You said you
were twenty eight when you were on the jury, which
is about the same. So you and I are about
the same age. Were you the were you one of
the youngest or the youngest person on the jury, and
you know, did you do you? I mean, obviously at
twenty eight, you know, you feel that you're confident enough
to handle this. But as you look back at your
age now, at what you were at twenty eight, I mean,

(32:05):
are you comfortable with everything that happened?

Speaker 9 (32:09):
Oh, at the time. Yes, it was after the fact
that I if they went back to retrial and would
delve deeper into the mental defect, the physical brain damage
from huff and chemicals it might, it might bring out
a different phallic conviction because either he was in his

(32:34):
white friend of mine or god, it's the crime is
still heinous.

Speaker 7 (32:37):
But well, and Dave, with him being up for parole
in August, what are your thoughts on that? I mean,
you got first hand, you were the jury, you were
a jury person, You got to see the evidence firsthand.
What are your thoughts on parole?

Speaker 5 (32:53):
Huh?

Speaker 9 (32:54):
I think that he will be listening to that without
him going back for a second trial. They'll probably deny it.
But then he get out on where he's at, you know,
I don't right, where is he at mentally now after
thirty years and is there still brain damage or any

(33:17):
other question is does he want the role?

Speaker 6 (33:20):
That's a good question.

Speaker 2 (33:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (33:21):
I never thought about of people. You know, they adapted
that lifestyle.

Speaker 9 (33:24):
So David was young, and his whole premise was, you know,
he really thought states and would enter his body after
he performed this ritual. But his father's portion in the
bowl to Yeah, and then he was had a hit

(33:44):
list and time frames and.

Speaker 6 (33:49):
Yeah, yeah, it's definitely heinous. They really appreciate you joining us.
We got to get to a break. I mean thanks,
I mean totally unexpected. They truly appreciate it. Yeah yeah,
all right, right, my man, thank you.

Speaker 7 (34:02):
Wow.

Speaker 6 (34:03):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (34:03):
What are the chances?

Speaker 6 (34:05):
Sometimes you follow into it, come and smell it, come
out smell the lake a rose. And sometimes you come
out smell the lake kalmanor we came out smelling the
liaku rose right there.

Speaker 7 (34:13):
This time this time seven fifty.

Speaker 6 (34:17):
Eight, once once out of but two hundred.

Speaker 7 (34:19):
Yeah, you know, sometimes you what is it, blind squirrel
finds a nut. Bloom Daddy Experience samon otis where the squirrels.
News Radio eleven seventy wwvad.

Speaker 1 (34:33):
Number one talk show in the Ohio Valley. This is
the bloom Daddy Experience. Your host, bloom Daddy. His goal inform, entertain,
and tick people off. The bloom Daddy Experience on news
radio eleven seventy WWVA starts now.

Speaker 2 (34:53):
News Radio eleven seventy It's the bloom Daddy Experience. Hey,
it's eight six, let's get this hour rolling. I think
one of most underreported stories by the mainstream media, and
it's because they were complicit in it is the Justice
Department forming a strike force to assess the evidence publicized
by Director of National Intelligence Tulci Gabbard, relating to former

(35:14):
President Barack Obama's top national security and intelligence officials, alleged
involvement in the origins of the Trump Russia collusion narrative.
Spring on Pennsylvania Republican Congressman Guy Russenthaler, who's the Republican
Chief Deputy Whip in the one hundred nineteenth Congress and
also a Navy veteran.

Speaker 3 (35:31):
How you been, stranger, he should boom daddy. Good to
be backed on a issue. I heard that often, so
I'll take it well.

Speaker 4 (35:41):
You can always hear it from me. I just look,
this is this story, bloom Daddy. It's bigger than Watergate.
It really is.

Speaker 5 (35:48):
You had, going back to twenty sixteen, you had the
entire Intel apparatus, the SBI, the DNI, the CIA alluding
with Obama, Clinton, and Biden to take the Steele dossier,
which was derived from information that Hillary Clinton was paying

(36:08):
for for opposition research, and they were manufacturing information to
get dirt on Trump. You had them take that information,
put it in an Intel report that they knew was
faulty and was biased and was from the Clinton campaign,
and then push out this narrative to feed the media
that Russia was actively helping Hillary Clinton pro I'm sorry,

(36:32):
actively helping President Trump.

Speaker 4 (36:34):
Win the election. It was utterly false.

Speaker 5 (36:36):
And what's worse about it is they, you know, like
I'm a former defense attorney of the defense attorney.

Speaker 4 (36:40):
In the Navy.

Speaker 5 (36:41):
You have you as a prosecutor. You can't add exculpatory
evidence things that helped the other that the defendant. You've
got to turn that over. The CIA had information.

Speaker 4 (36:51):
That that that that that.

Speaker 5 (36:53):
The Russians had dirt on Hillary Clinton they expected her
to win the election, and they didn't push that dirt
out because they wanted to blackmail and put pressure on
Hillary Clinton when she became president. If they actually wanted
to help Trump, they would have just released the dirt
on Hillary Clinton to help Trump, and they did it,
but they withheld that information in the report.

Speaker 4 (37:13):
So this is an explosive story.

Speaker 5 (37:15):
And what's worse if you look at what Ratcliffe at
the CIA, now, my good friend John Radcliffe, what he
just put out yesterday was information that not only did
the deep state, the intel community, however you want to
describe them, not only did they concoct this false narrative,
they then cooperated with the mainstream media to.

Speaker 4 (37:34):
Push it out there and get it out there to one.

Speaker 5 (37:37):
Help Hillary Clinton win the election, and then two to
subvert President Trump and his agenda by saying that he
was a pawn of Russia. He was only in there
because Putin interfered in the election, knowing that was utterly false.

Speaker 2 (37:50):
Yeah, I mean, you know, where's the mainstream media now? Well,
I know where they are, but there should be a
microphone in Adam Schiff's face constantly saying, so where's this
Russian collusion evidence? Because the guy to this day still
sessy has it.

Speaker 6 (38:04):
It's like, what are you doing?

Speaker 4 (38:05):
Right?

Speaker 5 (38:07):
Why are people coming up to me just on the
street saying coming up and thinking seeing that Russia is
interfering in our elections? To this day, I mean, they
did so much damage to President Trump and the Republican
brand in general, thinking that we're all a bunch of
Russian sympathizers or we're working with the Russians.

Speaker 4 (38:27):
And he's crazy.

Speaker 5 (38:28):
I remember before this, it was the Democrats that wanted
to play foot sees with the Soviets and the Russians.
It was Hillary Clinton who had the great reset button.
Remember when she went over to Russia and so they
were the ones that wanted to saw relations with the Russians,
and historically during the Cold War, they were always viewed
as more sympathetic to the Russians than the Republicans.

Speaker 4 (38:47):
And in twenty sixteen that slipped. And why did this slip?

Speaker 5 (38:50):
Because Hillary Clinton had a private email server and she
was getting a lot of blowback.

Speaker 4 (38:55):
So they needed to have.

Speaker 5 (38:56):
A story to hide the media ten from her private
server and put dirt on Trump.

Speaker 4 (39:03):
So enters the Steele dossier.

Speaker 5 (39:05):
They gin all this up and then when Trump wins,
they now need something to delegitimize the president and they
use this story to do it and boom daddy, it worked.
We should be Brennan Clapper COMI they should be arrested,
There should be purp walks, and they should face criminal
charges for what they did. And what's really rich here

(39:25):
is that you have people, you have the Democrats going
after Matti Ford and Roger Stone and others Navarrow. Have
the Republicans arrested one single Democrat? No, no, we haven't.
And they committed crimes that are much graver than anything
that they alleged that the Republicans committed. So where are
the purp walks now? Why are we not going after them?

(39:48):
There needs to be people that face jail time for
what they did. And the rich part of this bloom
Daddy is that all we hear from Democrats and liberals
is that we're the threat to democracy. Everything we do
is the threat to democracy. The threat to democracy is them.

Speaker 4 (40:01):
They subvert.

Speaker 5 (40:02):
They lied in an intelligence reports to subvert a bad
news story to Hillary.

Speaker 4 (40:07):
Clinton and then use it to sabotage Trump in his
first term.

Speaker 5 (40:11):
And completely, and then worked with the media to get
it out there. That's the threat to democracy, one hundred percent.

Speaker 2 (40:18):
Talking to Republican Congressman Guy Russian Thaller out of Pennsylvania,
Republican Chief Deputy Whip in the one hundred nineteenth Congress,
I see similarities between this and COVID. In this situation, Congressman,
you had people within the intelligence community saying, no, we
can't run with this, it's unverified, it's no good. Yet
they were kicked to the curb. They were made fun of,

(40:39):
they were vilified. Same thing with COVID. Any doctor, anybody
who stood up against Fauci or the regime, they were
threatened with a cut and funding, or they were made
a joke of the similarities are very striking here.

Speaker 5 (40:54):
Well he goes bloom that, he goes back even further.
I mean, look at look at the second golf work
rast being that there was weapons a mass destruction in Iraq, where.

Speaker 4 (41:03):
If the Intel community knew there was no w MD,
but it plled really well in focused groups.

Speaker 5 (41:09):
So they came up with this narrative and they got
us involved in the Iraq War. And then it goes further.
I mean, remember, the Intel community is the same ones
that told us that the Hunter Biden laptop was a
Russian player who is basically a false story again trying
to interfere in the twenty twenty election. So there's a
long pattern here of the Intel community giving false information

(41:32):
to elected officials, then elected officials that are working with
the Intel community running with that, and then also coordinating
with the mainstream media to suppress whatever narrative they want.

Speaker 4 (41:43):
And this has real life consequences.

Speaker 5 (41:44):
I mean, going back to Iraq, it put us in
the Iraq War, going back to twenty sixteen, and this
false information it clouded Trump won presidency for at least
twenty two months at least. Okay, then during COVID, I
remember I was shadow a band from social media because
I was saying that the virus originated in the in

(42:05):
the biolab and won and I made it compel, which
it did, and I was called a conspiracy theorist. I
think Tom Cloughton was in the same was pushing the
same narrative. He was called a conspiracy theory.

Speaker 4 (42:15):
We were the ones that were correct.

Speaker 5 (42:17):
And the conspiracy theory was that originated in a bat
and flew a thousand miles and just started to happen,
having to infect humans at a thousand rate lethality rate,
then it's found in a state of nature. I could
go on about that, but that false narrative brushed our economy.

Speaker 4 (42:33):
Bad decisions were made during lockdowns.

Speaker 5 (42:35):
Kids mental health suffered, You had kids committing suicide, you
had a whole bunch of You have seniors dying alone
in hospitals without family members because everybody, so it had
real life consequences. And then you had twenty Then you
had twenty twenty where because that the deep state didn't
come out and say that Hunter Biden's laptop was actually
his laptop, that actually we can prove through rastus and polling,

(42:55):
and that through the election to Biden instead of Trump.

Speaker 4 (42:59):
So there it is. Then then you fast forward to
where we are.

Speaker 5 (43:02):
Now you can question everything else that's going on. These
are the same, These are the same clowns. Bloom Daddy
that told Congress, the told Congress that Kiev was going
to fall in seventy two hours and that KOPPL was
going to stand for six months. Uh, when we were
pulling out of Afghanistan and said, don't worry, they got it.

Speaker 4 (43:20):
The Afghanist the Afghani.

Speaker 5 (43:22):
Military is going to be able to withstand everything that
fell within a matter of hours. And then they also
told us that Russia was going to roll through Kiev,
and clearly the Ukraine's are still fighting. So it just
keeps going on and on and on with this nonsense narratives.
And as soon as we stand out and call them
out on it, Uh, we're the ones that are called
conspiracy theorists. But with the good news, boom Daddy is

(43:42):
is the Deep States, the intel community, that the corporate media,
however you want to describe them, they have less and
less authority, less and less credibility. And that's why more
people were going to conservative talk radio, That's why more
Republicans are winning elections and they can't get away with
this stuff anymore.

Speaker 4 (43:59):
They're going to continue to do it.

Speaker 5 (44:00):
But we have a lot more we have a lot
more legitimacy when we say no, you were peddling the
conspiracy theory.

Speaker 2 (44:07):
Let's look at the actual evidence you mentioned. Republicans haven't
made or pushed for one arrest. Why you know, you
and others in the Republican Party, are you going to
let this go? Or are you going to try to
hold people accountable?

Speaker 4 (44:22):
No, I'm not.

Speaker 5 (44:23):
I'm going to be I'm going to be pushing to
have the administration go after these individuals.

Speaker 4 (44:28):
I mean, I'm going to do that from behind the scenes.

Speaker 5 (44:34):
Well, also, people don't believe in our institutions anymore. And
when when you have stuff like COVID and the deep
state lying about stuff, you wonder why what restores that
is seeing somebody actually get arrested and doing jail time. Uh,
and there were crimes that were committed here. Some people
need to go to jail. And look, I remember Navarro
getting put in leg irons and hauled off to prison.

Speaker 4 (44:56):
I remember Steve Bannon going to prison.

Speaker 5 (44:58):
I remember Roger Stone and out of four So why
is it that when our guys break the law. And
I'm not saying what they did was right or not.
I still think some of the charges are a little suspect.

Speaker 4 (45:09):
But why is it that if we if we do anything,
we're the ones that arrested.

Speaker 5 (45:14):
And it isn't amazing how whenever there's an arrest, CNN
or the media get tipped off and there's always cameras
right outside, we get the Republican's house to capture them
coming out in cuffs. Why aren't we doing that to them?
That's unacceptable. So to restore faith in the American people,
there needs to be perp walks, arrests in jail time.

Speaker 3 (45:33):
Real quick before I let you go.

Speaker 2 (45:34):
And I'm talking to Pennsylvania Congressman Guy Russenthaler. Trump's trade
war with the world not been popular, but it's working.
I mean, the European Union, Japan, probably China next the
guys on a roll.

Speaker 4 (45:48):
He is.

Speaker 5 (45:49):
And the thing with it tarriffs is we've got to
remember these This will take a long time to level out.
But the most important thing is is that Trump is
bringing investment back in the United States. If you look
at that EU deal he got the Europeans that commit
like another six hundred billion dollars of investment.

Speaker 4 (46:03):
Getting them to buy American energy. So that's gonna that's
gonna pay off.

Speaker 5 (46:07):
But also it's just so we can stay competitive. I mean,
thank god that he put a fifty percent tariff on
steel that's really good for Pennsylvania, Ohio basically all the
way down the Ohio River Valley popper aluminum.

Speaker 4 (46:19):
That's gonna save us.

Speaker 5 (46:20):
And then making the Europeans pay a fifteen percent tariff
on everything else is gonna make us more competitive.

Speaker 4 (46:25):
You know, it's quite amazing how.

Speaker 5 (46:27):
We don't care if anything coming from these countries and
they care for everything we produce. We just can't maintain
this Trump. President Trump is making this about.

Speaker 4 (46:36):
Fair trade, not about free trade.

Speaker 3 (46:38):
Congressman, thanks for jumping on the show.

Speaker 4 (46:41):
Here.

Speaker 2 (46:41):
The oldest son lives right outside Washington. Next time I
go visit, maybe we could get together.

Speaker 4 (46:47):
And I know exactly where we're going Moundaddy, I'll see
you then. I'm in.

Speaker 3 (46:50):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (46:51):
That's Pennsylvania Republican dishman Guy Rushen Dollar.

Speaker 7 (46:58):
Welcome back eight twenty four. When Daddy experienced samon Otis
News Radio eleven seventy WWVA that interview leads us perfectly
into politics Unleashed with Elgin McCarter. Good morning, Elgin, good morning.
How are you good? Good, good, good? Staying cool as
of right now here in the air conditioning, it's going
to be a scorcher.

Speaker 6 (47:18):
By the way, it's Wednesday.

Speaker 8 (47:22):
Thanks for the tip.

Speaker 7 (47:23):
It happens to the best of us.

Speaker 6 (47:25):
I probably should have told you that two hours ago.

Speaker 7 (47:28):
Yeah, yeah, but there was a little bit confusion on
what day it was. But you know, we'll move on,
all right. I have a headline for you. Are you
ready for this?

Speaker 8 (47:39):
Sure?

Speaker 7 (47:39):
The Democratic Party is a raging dumpster fire. That's the
headline it is.

Speaker 8 (47:49):
It is a raging dumpster fire. They can't get any
lower in the polls. And we've always talked about polls.

Speaker 7 (48:00):
Yep.

Speaker 8 (48:00):
Seriously, it is bizarre. It is bizarre. I don't know
what country they believe they live in, but it's not
the United States.

Speaker 7 (48:09):
Well, and that's where that's what that headline is referencing
is which is the most recent poll done by the
Wall Street Journal, which shows sixty three percent view the
Democratic the Democrat Party unfavorably. This is the worst rating
since nineteen ninety only eight percent eight think about that

(48:30):
single digit hold a favorable view of the party. Those
numbers are shocking.

Speaker 8 (48:38):
They are shocking in why they don't take note of
that and realize that it is their policies and their
positions and beliefs, or at least the far left that
are resonating in these polls. There is no question, no
question that the United States and the American election or

(49:00):
it clearly sent a statement that we are not going
to put up with this dei philosophy, anti Israel, anti freedoms,
anti government, anti United States.

Speaker 2 (49:15):
It is.

Speaker 8 (49:16):
It is just it's reprehensible and they're not going to
be able to resonate with that. Now, you know there
are there's the problem is there's a squeaky wheel. The
problem is they they they have the attention of the
mainstream media and although they're losing that too. I mean,
you know the amount of folks that are whose shows

(49:37):
are getting canceled, who looking you know, fired from their
positions because of their beliefs. I mean, it's just they're
not going to they can't sustain it, not in a
capitalistic country.

Speaker 7 (49:48):
Well, on the other side of this conversation is even
among the voters who disapprove of the Trump approach to
certain policies i e. You know, integration, tariffs, all of that.
The GOP is still favorable in the eyes of those
that were pulled in this. So they may not like Trump,

(50:09):
but they like his policies and the direction he wants
to take the country, even though they're more favorable towards
the Democrats. I mean, that's so backwards in my thinking.
You know, it doesn't make any sense to me, but
it does make sense at the same time.

Speaker 5 (50:26):
Yes, it does.

Speaker 8 (50:27):
I mean they are backwards in their thinking. They're I
don't know whether they have rose colored classes on whether
there is a I just don't know. I can't explain it.
I cannot explain it in the hypocrisy and how they
think that Folks see them saying one thing and then

(50:48):
a catastrophe like what happened in Manhattan occurs, and then
all of a sudden, they're like, oh, well, we were
really sorry about the.

Speaker 4 (50:55):
Police that got killed.

Speaker 9 (50:57):
You are the ones that are touting.

Speaker 8 (50:59):
Kill the police, hold the police or whatever.

Speaker 7 (51:01):
Yeah, hold up, y, yeah, hold that thought, because we
are going to talk about defunded police and Corey Booker
who lost his mind yesterday. It's eight twenty eight. You're
listening to the Bloomdaddy Experience, samon Otis. Were right in
the middle of politics, unleashed with Elgin mccardal. We'll be back,

(51:31):
Welcome back, eight thirty six, The bloom Daddy Experience, salmon
Otis News Radio eleven seventy WWVA. Of course, we're right
in the middle of politics, unleased with the one and
only Miss Elgin mccartal. She is with us via high technology,
the phones.

Speaker 8 (51:50):
It's underrated, it really is.

Speaker 7 (51:52):
So we were talking before the break about the Democrats,
the pull that just came out earlier this week, how
they are sinking worse than the Titanic. I don't think
it's too soon to make a joke about the Titanic,
but gott a gaunt an email from a listener that
says liberal Democrats aren't ideological. They are often well meaning

(52:16):
people who are also lazy, brained and self serving. Liberals
repeat the approved narratives to gain social acceptance in a
self perceived moral superiority. What do you think of that.

Speaker 8 (52:32):
That's a lot to unpack, but I would agree. I mean,
you know, I think that the comment that the thought
that I would draw from that comment is that not
only liberals. There are a lot of people and I'm
going to call fifty percent out that don't vote, who

(52:52):
live in a bubble and as long as it doesn't
affect their world, they don't concern themselves with it, and
that would be the problem. And if their world is
a world in which DEI and friends and family, co workers, close,
you know, close acquaintances, are all of that persuasion, then

(53:17):
they become the victim and they victimize themselves in their
own little bubble. And when they do that, they can't
see past the line of their bubble to see what
the rest of the world is doing or how policies
from the government affect them.

Speaker 4 (53:37):
You know.

Speaker 8 (53:37):
One of the things that you the most recent things.

Speaker 4 (53:40):
That had happened was the Big Beautiful.

Speaker 8 (53:42):
Bill and the passage of it, and that it helps
the middle class. They refuse to acknowledge that that bill
does that. They refuse to acknowledge that or give credit
to President Trump that no tax on tips, no time
on overtime, no tax on social security hits the greater

(54:04):
majority of the United States. So they are in a minority.
The far left DEI folks that are characterized as liberal
because they victimize themselves, and so the comment that was
made is accurate because they can't see past their nose.

Speaker 7 (54:29):
Well, and I'm glad you brought up the folks that
sort of like you said, stay in there in bubble.
They don't they don't vote. I've had conversations with folks
like that, and the majority of people that say they
don't vote. Number one is there's not a good candidate.

(54:49):
And then the second comment always is they avoid political talk.
They avoid watching the news, they avoid having a conversation
about the country, you know, politics, policies, any of that
kind of stuff because number one, they don't feel like
they know enough about it. Well, that's their fault. And

(55:10):
number two, they say it makes them so angry and
depressed that they avoid it. They would rather not expose
themselves to the point where it makes them depressed.

Speaker 8 (55:23):
Oh you know, and again, what is it about the
policies that are making America great again that cause you
to be depressed that that I don't there's a disconnect there.
And I think that you're right those folks that don't
choose to research that don't choose I would one hundred

(55:46):
percent agree that there are oftentimes not a good candidate,
and a no vote is a vote because it allows
the individual who will get the majority of the votes
to prevail despite the fact that you did not like them.

(56:06):
So you know, it's a lesser of two evils sometimes,
but you really need to research policies and how it
affects not only your life, but the future of your
kids' lives, your grandchildren's lives, because you know, as Reagan said,
freedom is only one generation from extinction.

Speaker 7 (56:25):
Well, and the one thing I always tell people, because
the other side of that conversation that I hear from
a lot of folks is they don't trust the media.
They don't trust that the information they're going to get,
whether it is from CNN or Fox News or you know,
rattle off any of the other national media outlets that
we have, they don't feel that they're going to get
the honest delivery of the news. They always feel there's

(56:48):
going to be some sort of spin, and nine times
out of ten there is. People turn to the news
because they just want the facts. They don't want the opinions,
they just want the facts. They don't trust our media,
and I do not blame them. I always tell people
to take the time to look at media outlets across
the world and how they cover our politics.

Speaker 8 (57:09):
Yes, so, I mean it's it's not only media across
the world, it's different medias. You need to listen to
the media stations that don't align with your thought process
and be open to in the quiet of your own home,
in the privacy of your own car, to listen to
the other side. You can get angry, you can get press,

(57:31):
you can do whatever, but you need to keep an
open mind. And to your point on media, the problem
I think that we have as well is that people
get their news from social media.

Speaker 7 (57:42):
Yeah, yeah, a good point.

Speaker 9 (57:43):
And when it is.

Speaker 8 (57:44):
From social media, it is not necessarily vetted. I mean,
just just watching the events that were unfolding in Manhattan
the other night, you know, people were posting videos. Instead
of helping individuals, they're posting videos, and they post videos
that are not grounded in fact, and I mean not

(58:06):
in necessarily what's going on, but the story behind it.
And so whoever is posting it is posting their story
or their interpretation of it without vetting the facts. As journalism,
you know, outlets should do so that there's that extra
line or extra layer of social media that compounds the

(58:27):
issue well.

Speaker 7 (58:28):
And then you also bring into the conversation the direction
and how quickly AI is evolving, yes, and how it
can fake people's voices and their faces. At this point
where somebody was telling me about a conversation they had
with somebody about a video they saw on social media.
I forget what platform of President Trump. And they had

(58:52):
to point out to this woman that's not President Trump,
like pointed out what to look for, like on the
edge of the head you could tell it was a
AI video. But this person who saw it and believed
it is not as verse in technology and thought one
hundred percent it was the President. And we are the

(59:12):
we are in the infancy of what AI can do.

Speaker 8 (59:17):
We are And and there's also you know, there's fraud.
There's fraud that happens on a daily basis where they
take your voice and superimpose it onto you know, whether
asking for money or you know, saying that you love
one of yours needs help. There's just a lot of
different things that AI and the the ability technology has

(59:41):
given unfortunately the evil of the world, the ability to
you know, manipulate and and it's it's it's not good.
So you do need to do your own vetting, not
only listen to the media outlets across the world, but
so media outlets across the aisle real quick.

Speaker 7 (01:00:04):
I want to hit on this before we wrap it
up with you this morning yesterday saw the video Senator
Corey Booker yesterday losing his mind on the Senate floor.
I want to read you some of the quotes from
the video. When the President of the United States violates
the Constitution, trashes our norms and our tradition, what does

(01:00:24):
the Democratic Party do? Comply? Beg for scraps? No, I
demand justice. This is a call, folks, for the Democratic Party.
A needs a wake up call. I see law firms
bending the knee to the president, not caring about our
larger principles. He lost it yesterday, he.

Speaker 8 (01:00:43):
Did, he didn't. You know what he's losing it about
is the defunding YEP of certain blue states for a
sanctuary policies and be DEI policies. So he's not defunding
the states with grants related to law enforcement. And that
I think was the bill that was being introduced, and

(01:01:05):
that was that I think a Democrat was asking for
the entire Senate to pass. And you know, by acclamation
because it was funding for police officers. That should be
something that we as a country want to support. It
is certainly the executive order. It's also the policy of
the Trump administration to support police officers. And Corey Booker

(01:01:31):
was was saying, you can't do that because and he
just leaves out that little fact that the reason the
areas that you're being defunded is not across the board,
but rather specific to THEI, specific to sanctuary cities, and
those are contrary to what where the Trump's Trump administration
policies are going. Well, so he did lose it and

(01:01:53):
looks create fraction.

Speaker 7 (01:01:54):
And looked like a toddler stomp in his feet. All right,
we're going to let you out early this morning, Elgin.
Well go enjoy that sunshine.

Speaker 8 (01:02:02):
Oh yeah, it's that work that has gotten me buried
into a little h.

Speaker 7 (01:02:08):
I know, work sucks, doesn't it?

Speaker 8 (01:02:11):
Absolutely?

Speaker 7 (01:02:12):
All right? All right, thank you, we'll talk to you
next week. All right, bye bye, eight forty six when
we get back. It's been fifty years. Where is he
the bloom Daddy experience, samon otiss.

Speaker 6 (01:02:23):
Last call for free lunch.

Speaker 7 (01:02:25):
Free lunch, that's right, Sam at iHeartMedia dot Com Free
lunch thanks to our friends at River City, delivered on Friday,
name phone number and company Sam at iHeartMedia dot com.
That's your entry A forty seven. Now we'll be back

(01:02:46):
height fifty one the bloom Daddy Experience. We are back.
News Radio eleven seventy w w VA. It's National Cheesecake Day,
so have a cheat day. Enjoy a slice of cheesecake.
I will say when one of the best cheese cakes
piece pie slice gosh I ever had is at the
pike forty FYI, so enjoy yourself a piece of cheesecake.

Speaker 6 (01:03:08):
It's also our friend of show Buddy Guy. His birthday
is eighty nine.

Speaker 7 (01:03:13):
The Arnold's birthday too. Arnold he is seventy eight. That
Arnold is seventy eight. We're gonna have your last chance
to win this morning, coming up to give certificates to
our friends at McCormick's Auto down in Glendale, So stay
tuned for that. We're gonna have one last chance, and
then of course we will do our lunch winner here shortly.

(01:03:35):
So I talked about it's been fifty years. Today's the
fiftieth anniversary of the disappearance of who.

Speaker 6 (01:03:44):
Fifty years Jimmy Hoffer.

Speaker 7 (01:03:46):
You are correct, You are correct. He disappeared on this
day fifty years ago. In nineteen seventy five.

Speaker 6 (01:03:55):
We had a Jimmy Hoffe story here not too long.

Speaker 7 (01:03:57):
You have it, I have it, You got it. Get okay,
I'll read it. So Teamster's union boss Jimmy Hoffa disappeared
fifty years ago in Metro Detroit. A panel of people
with insights into the mob in Detroit say they know
what happened to him. Okay, all right, panel, give it
to us. Questions about Hoffa's disappearance have been asked for decades,

(01:04:20):
and former federal prosecutor Richard Convertino, crime writer Scott Bernstein,
and former mob soldier Nove Toko say he was killed
by Detroit Detroit mobster Tony Palazzo. The three spoke at
Michigan's Macomb Community College the other night. Palazzo allegedly bragged

(01:04:43):
about killing Haffa on an FBI wire, and Convertino says
the monster claimed he put Hoffa's body Heraldo didn't find
him because he went through a meat grinder. Oh yes, yikes, yikes,

(01:05:04):
I think it's true. I mean, I would have to
hear the wire. You can claim there's a wire out
there of a recording of this statement, but you got
to hear the wire.

Speaker 6 (01:05:16):
Well, I mean I think that.

Speaker 9 (01:05:19):
Right.

Speaker 7 (01:05:19):
It was heralda that tried to the big vault thing.
Wasn't that?

Speaker 6 (01:05:24):
That was a cap oh?

Speaker 7 (01:05:25):
Okay, all right? Mobster? A mobster? B sorry, not up on.

Speaker 6 (01:05:32):
Well, Jimmy Hoffer wasn't a mobster. He was the union
president but was affiliated with the mob Okay, So a
capone was a mobster, okay, one way or the like.
He was the kingpin. They got him on tax evasion.

(01:05:52):
It's kind of like it's kind of like the Manson thing. Again.
You know, Manson didn't kill anybody.

Speaker 7 (01:05:57):
We've had some dark stories today. Decapit Haitian meet meat grinder.

Speaker 6 (01:06:03):
It's getting close. Well, you know, if you go to
the store, Halloween stuffs out, So you might as well
talk about the macab today. And Friday's August first, so
you know Christmas decoration will be out.

Speaker 7 (01:06:13):
Oh, I take advantage of tax free shopping, get a
discount on.

Speaker 6 (01:06:17):
Your It's kind of hard to buy your your Christmas
items and say that it's school supplies. But if you
go buy a Christmas tree, Hey, I'm buying this from
my room.

Speaker 7 (01:06:28):
Yeah, you're a teacher and you have to decorate your
your room for the holiday season. Or no, you don't
think that that's gonna fly.

Speaker 6 (01:06:38):
You're better off going to Amazon on that one.

Speaker 7 (01:06:40):
Well, you know, hey, you got to give it a try,
got to give it a try. I don't know, I
don't know who that was going to fall out of
my was gonna fall out of my chair?

Speaker 6 (01:06:50):
That would have been funny.

Speaker 7 (01:06:51):
It would have been funny. No, it wouldn't have. I
probably would have broke a hip. I'm at that point
in life, breaking.

Speaker 6 (01:06:57):
Easy, cow girl, Been there, done that?

Speaker 7 (01:07:01):
Oh, that's right, you did bring sorry to sche to Shay,
you know what, you know what it's like, you know,
I love weird stories. Jimmy hoffa meat grinder. How about
this one? There's a twenty seven year old Mumbai businessman.
His name's raf Rafael Samuel. He intends to sue his parents.

(01:07:26):
But do you know why we should have asked Elgin
about this one?

Speaker 6 (01:07:31):
Yes, since I prenated it off.

Speaker 7 (01:07:32):
For he sue. He plans to sue them for bringing
him into the world without his consent.

Speaker 6 (01:07:43):
That's always good. And how do you get so it's gonna.

Speaker 7 (01:07:47):
Say no, wait a second here, how do you ask
for that his consent?

Speaker 6 (01:07:52):
Yeah, I mean you can't because you haven't been conceived yet.
You go in there and stick a microphone into the
you know, like when you do the sonogram, you jam
a microphone. Hey, do you consent to this birth? And
ask the baby?

Speaker 7 (01:08:11):
But does it even mean at that point or does
he mean before the act is even done?

Speaker 6 (01:08:16):
And the guy, the guy is one of these people
that thinks that that the that the planet would be
better off without people, no, people.

Speaker 7 (01:08:26):
Like him, the planet would be better off without.

Speaker 6 (01:08:28):
True true dad.

Speaker 7 (01:08:29):
I mean, let's let's let's put it into perspective. Gosh, oh,
so you want to do do you want to do lunch?
Let's do lunch first? You want to do the lunch?

Speaker 6 (01:08:39):
Yeah, we can do lunch first. How many entries do
we have?

Speaker 7 (01:08:42):
One through? Twenty two?

Speaker 6 (01:08:44):
A second, I've gotta get my phone here.

Speaker 7 (01:08:46):
Sorry, that's okay, I always bring that to you.

Speaker 6 (01:08:48):
Well, I actually know it's coming all right, twenty two
and we have number eleven, number.

Speaker 10 (01:08:54):
Eleven, okay, that is ed ed ed ed, mister ed,
mister ed, mister ed be coming to visit you on Friday.

Speaker 7 (01:09:09):
I'll call you after the show to give you all
the details of how it works.

Speaker 6 (01:09:13):
Okay, of how it works. We bring you line that's
how it works.

Speaker 7 (01:09:17):
Well, No, there's a lot of times I have to
find out if there's like a gate that I have
to go through, or you know, like when I went
to the Cardinal Plant. Can't just drive up to the
front door of the Cardinal Plant and say, hey, I'm
that radio person here with some food for it. Hey, hey, hey,
all right, let's give away the mccorny call one hundred
sixty for eleven seventy fifty dollars worth a gift certificates

(01:09:39):
to our friends at McCormick's Auto down in Glendale. One
one hundred sixty to for eleven seventy You do the
number I did, the last number, thirteen, number lucky number thirteen. Everybody,
enjoy your day. It's going to be a scorcher.
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