Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
News Talk eleven ten ninety nine to three WBT Brett
Waterbows Show. Great to be with you and great to
be with Pete Callender as we uh we have the
hangover and it's great to have you here in person
in the flesh, you know, really really fired up about
all the big stories from today. Indeed, I like that.
I like that. I like that's a that's a very
indeed declarative phrase. Yes, I like that. It makes me
(00:39):
feel very confident in the things we're going to talk about.
Speaker 2 (00:42):
It's like bully bully, woolly bully bully blo oh oh
bully blo.
Speaker 1 (00:46):
I like bull bully bully. Very good, very good. I
want to pay something off here.
Speaker 2 (00:51):
This could be cut number forty two, Uncle Hershall, Yes, Walker, no,
no forty two, please go hello.
Speaker 3 (01:00):
I'm the Cracker from Cracker Barrel, and y'all know I
said on that damn logo for forty eight damn years,
longer than the snake deep throwing the giraffe neck. Then
overnight you got this diverse, evil, ignorant or DEI group
of people taking over our marketing talking about we need
a rebrand. How you gonna rebrand without dbrand? I'm reading
(01:24):
people come to cracker barrel. How you gonna have to
play called cracker barrel without a cracker leaning on a barrel?
I mean, what's the next America?
Speaker 2 (01:33):
That's not Uncle Herschel.
Speaker 1 (01:35):
How do you know?
Speaker 2 (01:36):
I didn't I mean that because that guy, Uncle Herschel
had no idea what dee?
Speaker 1 (01:40):
I was excuse me?
Speaker 4 (01:43):
Oh he did it.
Speaker 2 (01:44):
The guy was from like a century ago.
Speaker 1 (01:46):
He lives now, he doesn't.
Speaker 2 (01:48):
I mean maybe in our hearts and on the old logos,
but no, yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:54):
No, they're not exactly.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
I said that. I said this at the start, at
the beginning of the of my last hour, and I
started talking about this, was that the new low like
the cracker barrel logo, does not have the cracker or
the barrel anymore, right, they're both gone.
Speaker 1 (02:07):
What's in the what is going into the barrels? Then storage?
Speaker 2 (02:12):
Nothing is You don't even see a barrel the barrel.
They claim that the logo, it's the new logo. It
has a barrel shape, but it's on its side.
Speaker 1 (02:24):
Oh yes, I saw that, right.
Speaker 2 (02:25):
So it's sort of like bull it's like a it's
like a like a rectangle, smooth edges and corners and stuff.
Of that kind of bulges at the time, like nobody.
Speaker 1 (02:33):
There there are no more those anyways, Like those don't
exist anymore, Like nobody uses those kinds of barrels like that.
Speaker 2 (02:39):
Really no, Yeah, because maybe casks for like beer, like eggs,
that kind of thing. But those are those are perfectly
cylindrical exactly. They don't have the bulging sides whatever. But yeah,
I mean, like again, you can you know, it reminds
me of what is I call it art by explanation.
Speaker 1 (02:58):
Oh that's good. I like that. So these are the.
Speaker 2 (03:00):
Pieces that you see generally around town, usually at a
GOV Code building, and you don't recognize it as art.
You only you only see it as art once you
see the placard and you're like, oh, this thing has
a name, right, And then you read the name and
(03:23):
then usually it'll say the artist, and sometimes it'll have
a description to tell you what the hell this thing is?
Speaker 4 (03:29):
What is right?
Speaker 1 (03:31):
Right?
Speaker 2 (03:31):
Because your human mind responds to beauty, right, because I
think it is divine.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
I think that I agree with that. Yes, that's right.
Speaker 2 (03:40):
Like you see something beautiful, it speaks to us, It
speaks to our soul. It elevates us, and it gets
us closer to the divine. This is beauty and to
recognize it as such. But instead we get these commis
that are like, Hey, we're going to put our trash
welded together. Yes, and we're going to plant it on
the front of your build things.
Speaker 1 (04:00):
Yes.
Speaker 2 (04:00):
And we're going to rob you of these sort of
micro dose experiences of beauty around town.
Speaker 1 (04:07):
Yes, that that is. That's like the Impay buildings and
all those where it's like, we're going to put all
of the guts on the outside of the building, right,
and only in the inside will there be plants. Right.
And you're like, why are you doing this man right? Well,
because he's probably not in his right mind.
Speaker 2 (04:27):
Well, it is a demoralization campaign, big demoralization right here.
And so that's why I've been calling it this for
fifteen years. Art by explanation, because if you didn't have
the explanation, you wouldn't even recognize it as art. And
real quick, I got the classic story here, hit from Charlotte.
Speaker 5 (04:42):
Hit me.
Speaker 2 (04:42):
They built the police academy, Okay, and you've seen the
police badge. The logo looks like a hornet's nest because
of Charlotte in the Revolutionary War and they kicked off
the hornet's nest all that. So their badges have always
kind of represented that hornet's nest kind of logo thing. Well,
they hired somebody to do the public art installation and
(05:03):
they constructed this what was supposed to represent that hornet's
nest badge looking thing. But they made it all out
of chicken wire.
Speaker 1 (05:13):
So we're really chicken wire as a hornet's.
Speaker 2 (05:16):
Nest, right, And they wrapped it and they made like
a hornet's nest kind of make it look like a badge.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
So sexy, so great.
Speaker 2 (05:22):
Yeah, and so they and then they plopped it down
in the lobby. Oh my gosh, and the janitor threw
it away. Good judgment because he thought it was trash.
Speaker 1 (05:32):
There's good judgment right there. That guy he knew what
he knew what he saw, right.
Speaker 4 (05:36):
So that's what I mean.
Speaker 2 (05:37):
Like, if you don't recognize the thing of beauty for
what it is immediately when you see it, it's not art.
Speaker 1 (05:44):
What is So if you think about beauty, or we
think about beauty, what would we be without beautiful things
like and I'm talking about it doesn't have finesssarily be nature,
it could be Amborghini, you know, right, some incredible car,
some incredible planes. Like we would be so sad.
Speaker 2 (06:06):
Without any of that stuff, right, demoralized, depressed? Right, I mean,
like why you talked about the Lamborghini, Like why does
a certain car inspire you and come across as a
beautiful looking car, right versus another car that does not?
Speaker 5 (06:26):
Think?
Speaker 2 (06:26):
That's right, Like you know, sixty eight Corvette versus a
nineteen eighty five k car.
Speaker 1 (06:32):
There you go, right, that's true.
Speaker 2 (06:34):
Why does one of those vehicles evoke something in you?
Speaker 1 (06:37):
And you know it's incredible. The Italians are are so
creative that if you go to buy a Lamborghini in Italy,
you have to tell them that you want the car,
not the tractors they have. Oh, Lamborghini tractors that they
use in Italy.
Speaker 2 (06:57):
Are those as expensive?
Speaker 1 (06:58):
They're expensive, but they're not. I mean they don't have
the engine.
Speaker 2 (07:02):
How fast did they go?
Speaker 4 (07:03):
They don't know?
Speaker 1 (07:04):
It's a regular kind of you know, it's it's ill
droh Okay, it's like that Calvan. I don't I don't
know if it's.
Speaker 2 (07:10):
Good to know if I'm ever needing a tractor for
farming in Italy?
Speaker 1 (07:14):
Yeah, because I was when we were over there, there
was a there was a Lamborghini dealer tractor and the
guy goes, do you like that Lamborghini? And I go, ha,
really funny. That's a tractor. He goes, look at the
low look at the logo and it was there it is.
Speaker 2 (07:27):
Man, Well, it's like the it's like the Mercedes vans.
Speaker 1 (07:32):
Yes.
Speaker 2 (07:32):
I remember like the first time I saw like a
Mercedes work van, right kind of deal and I was like,
like that's super pretentious, Like why would somebody have a
Mercedes work Van? Sure, and then you find out, oh, well,
over in you know, Europe, there's all they have.
Speaker 1 (07:51):
That's what they use.
Speaker 4 (07:52):
That's what they use.
Speaker 2 (07:53):
Because they're not imports. They're domestic vehicle because you're on
the autoban. Yeah, and yeah, it's just the easier to
make them there, and they are very stylish.
Speaker 1 (08:02):
They also have there are nowadays there are very very
high end Mercedes vans that are r VS vans.
Speaker 2 (08:11):
Oh yes, yes, our HOA just had to prove those.
Speaker 1 (08:15):
Yeah you've got the high end.
Speaker 2 (08:17):
It's a class B yeah, Class B right, So those
are now permitted to park in your.
Speaker 1 (08:22):
Driveway and wow, that's very focused.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
They're the size of the van. Yes, it is, and
that's it's not like I mean, if you can park
a conversion van in your driveway under the rules, then
like why can't you park this other?
Speaker 1 (08:35):
That's a good point.
Speaker 4 (08:36):
It's a size thing.
Speaker 1 (08:37):
Please do not drain the gray water into the sewers. No,
don't want to let them do that. That is that's
only that's a no, no.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
Right, that's only a randy thing.
Speaker 4 (08:49):
Randy Quaid.
Speaker 1 (08:50):
Wow, I like that circle of life. Yes, very good,
Pete Calender. Yes, sir, you are free to go.
Speaker 4 (08:56):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
I appreciate you.
Speaker 2 (08:58):
I have a wonderful weekend and safe travels to you.
Speaker 4 (09:01):
By the way.
Speaker 2 (09:02):
Programming news, oh.
Speaker 1 (09:03):
Yes, yes, we have to do a program ahead.
Speaker 2 (09:05):
Brett won't be here on Monday.
Speaker 1 (09:07):
Not on Monday. I will be correct.
Speaker 2 (09:09):
Here in Brett's stead, and I will not be on
my show Monday. Nick Craig will be in my.
Speaker 1 (09:18):
Stead, in your stead, and then you will be in
my stead, and then I'll be back Tuesday after where
I'm going in your stead, in my stead, you'll be
back in your stead, back in my stead.
Speaker 4 (09:29):
There you go, all right, all right, all.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
Right, So we have gotten a big dump coming out
right now. This is breaking news where Maxwell and her
DOJ transcript said she never heard Epstein or anybody else
say Trump had done anything inappropriate. That is one of
(10:07):
the things that has come out. They have dumped out
all of the interviews between the folks who came in
there to talk to her, and this is now his
lawyer or her lawyer was okay with it, Blanche was
okay with it. Maxwell was okay with it. So we
(10:27):
now have the DOJ releasing Blanche Maxwell interview transcript and audio,
which tells me that coming up next is going to
be another dump of documents, the stuff that everybody's clamoring for.
And this, I think is going to be a very
interesting weekend because we are getting fast and furiously a
(10:52):
lot of stuff that's happening. The main part of the day.
People have been looking very strongly at the John Bolton raid,
the raid on John Bolton's house and office, and we
do not know what the underlying reality is for John Bolton.
(11:13):
Did he take documents to his home when he was
putting together his memoir, the book that he wrote that
was released in twenty twenty, We don't know. We don't
know what it is it might be something that is
happening in real time right now, by the way, And
what I mean by that is, is John Bolton possibly
(11:38):
implicated in something like a Logan Act thing. Remember when
they were trying to get the general and lock him
up with the Logan Act and all that sort of stuff.
I mean, we don't know what's going on, but it
is very interesting to see that John Bolton has been rated.
And now this afternoon, Maxwell and the DOJ transcript never
(11:59):
heard Epstein anybody else say Trump had done anything inappropriate.
The DOJ re released Gallaine Maxwell's audio and transcript, and
that's what people are looking at right now. So obviously
we don't have I don't have that transcript. I don't
know what is in that transcript. I don't know how
that is going to come to pass. But we are
(12:22):
going to be seeing a lot of developments over the
next hours and days moving into next week. So your thoughts,
I mean more than welcome to be a part of
the conversation. Seven o four five seven zero eleven ten.
Seven oh four five seven zero eleven ten give me
cut number forty three. I want to go back to Washington,
d C. And the dangers in Washington, d C. And
(12:45):
how things are happening. This is cut number forty three.
President Trump wishes or wished that he would get more
ability to help the people in Washington, d C. Cut
number forty three.
Speaker 6 (12:58):
They needed help. They don't like to say it. I
wish they'd say I need help. I wish the mayor
of DC would say, you know, we're overridden with crime
and we need help instead of saying the stats are down.
I mean they're under investigation now for fake numbers where
they fudge their numbers, and they did. There's no question
about it. If they said, oh, we're on a down
trend for twenty years. No, they're in an up trend
(13:20):
for twenty years. We are going to make DC totally safe.
When people come from Iowa, Indiana, all of the beautiful
places and they're not going to go home in a
body bag, They're not going home in a coffin.
Speaker 1 (13:34):
That is a very powerful image because we have seen
just in the last few months people go home in
a body bag. An intern, an intern who lost his
life because he went out to go get a hamburger.
How about the two Jewish folks who lost their lives
(13:56):
at the hands of us of an absolute, walking, talking
demon who murdered those two. But I guess that they
would just have to say, that's just that's a one
time thing. Don't really, it's not that big of a deal.
Don't pay any attention to that. And it's interesting because
President Trump is saying, listen, I want to give you
guys more help. I want more help coming your way.
(14:20):
What I want to do is give you more help.
Make the city safer, make the city better. And you know,
I see these people, right, the governor of the governor
of Maryland, right, the Maryland governors, like, oh, you shouldn't
be doing that kind of stuff. You shouldn't you shouldn't
be be engaged in those sorts of things or any
(14:43):
of that. Well, no, we should be. We should all
be engaged. That is, that's not their city, that's not
anybody's city. It's our city. It's America. And why should
our capital city be a place that's dangerous and murderous.
I mean, heck, we could have just moved it to
you know, some some other place. I guess. But I'm watching,
(15:04):
you know, Wes Moore say he doesn't know what he's
talking about. The Mayor of Baltimore is trying to pretend
like there's there's not that much crime going on here.
I mean, it's not that big of a deal, and
it's just come on, stop stop making us look bad.
So the president, by trying to help people, is making
the mayor and the governors looking bad. How why what
(15:27):
do you mean isn't safety important? How do you know
when you go someplace? Just answer this in your head.
When you go someplace and you get out of the
car or your uber or whatever, how do you know
when you're in a safe place? How do you say, Oh, Okay,
(15:50):
this place seems pretty safe. I think we're gonna be okay.
Where where does that come from? Where does that belief
emanate from? I can tell you right now. And it's
interesting because it's a double sided event here. You go
to Washington, DC. You know what you hear twenty four
to seven, three sixty five. I mean, it's never ending sirens,
(16:13):
your sirens. But there's a purpose in that because you
have a lot of dignitaries and people transitting across the
city of Washington, d C. And they're going at high
rates of speed with motorcades with them. So that is
a little bit of an odd thing. But if you
are walking around and you're hearing a lot of sirens
(16:35):
twenty four to seven, you're gonna be thinking about that, saying, oh, okay,
this might be a dangerous place. Well, it depends, it depends.
I do think it's important for us to give credit
where credit is due. When cities are doing better jobs.
I don't think it's worth pummeling them for any particular
reason other than poor performance. And I think that's got
(16:57):
to be handled. News Talk eleven ten out of nine to three.
WBT Brett whatever show. The Epstein records have now been
sent to the House Oversight Committee, so they're gonna go
(17:19):
through that. They're at a session right now. They're at
a session right now. But you know, I mean, here's
here's what we got. Eventually, this stuff is all gonna
come and we'll figure out what's going on in all
the different storylines. I want to I want to go
back to this whole Bolton thing. Everything is fair game,
(17:39):
by the way, today, if if you want to opine
on something, you want to pick up the pieces. It's
a Friday in the summer, that's totally fine. That's cool
with me. But when you look at this Bolton story,
What was the big story that was moving overnight before
Bolton got raided? And does anybody know? Anybody know what? Like,
(18:01):
what was the big story last night before Bolton got
got raided. I do that because I'm trying to, you know,
I'm trying to think very deeply about Okay, what was
going on last night? What was the big story last night?
How did how did the news outlets you know tell
(18:23):
us all the different sort of things that were going
on here? This is what the press does. The press
likes to do these sorts of things. They like to
push through on a variety of things at the exact
same time. And what they want to try to do
is that they want to try to conquer the news cycle.
(18:43):
This is what you know, ABC, NBCCBS, They all want
to conquer the news cycle. But they have never had
the phenomenon that exists today, which is a person sitting
in the White House who can create the phenomenon. So
people were complaining yesterday. You had people complaining yesterday about
(19:08):
why do we have all these people in Washington, d C.
We're a safe city. It's fine, it's great. And then
what did you have happen? Donald Trump went down on
the streets and started handing out cheeseburgers and sandwiches and
all sorts of things to the folks that are working
(19:30):
to keep the city safe. And what did we find
out that happened as a result of this? What ended
up happening as a result of this is is there
were no murders. There were no murders yesterday, and that
has not happened in a really long time. But you
have people who are trying to tell you crazy stuff.
(19:53):
Who is the who do you believe, just off the
top of your head, who do you believe is the
most vulnerable in Washington DC? Right now? Which group of
people is most vulnerable in Washington DC? Which community is
(20:13):
feeling the heat the worst because they have no ability
to feel safe in a particular neighborhood or a particular
part of town, or any of that sort of stuff.
So let me go back to forty I'm gonna go
back to forty three. Donald Trump wishes, wishes that they
(20:34):
would ask for more help. Cut number forty three? Do
we have it? Okay? Ready? Go ahead?
Speaker 6 (20:40):
They needed help. They don't like to say it. I
wish they'd say I need help. I wish the mayor
of DC would say, you know, we're overridden with crime
and we need help. Instead of saying the stats are down,
I mean they're under investigation now for fake numbers where
they fudge their numbers, and they did. There's no question
about it. If they said, oh, we're on a downtrend
for two one, No, they're in an up trip trend
(21:02):
for twenty years. We are going to make DC totally safe.
When people come from Iowa, Indiana, all of the beautiful places,
and they're not going to go home in a body bag.
They're not going home in a coffin.
Speaker 1 (21:14):
So remember a couple of days ago, President Trump was
talking about the tragedy, the horrible tragedy of all of
these young people who have been gunned down. The majority
of them are African American people who have been lost
their lives. These are young people who have been harmed
by the epidemic of violence. And all you would have
(21:36):
to do is go and talk to the parents or
people in the community, and they would tell you this
is dangerous, it's horrible. We don't want to see any
more people getting murdered on the streets of the city
that is the capital. And then they had a rally.
Did you know they had a rally? This is cut
number forty. Listen to what this rally. This is a
(21:58):
rally in Washington, DC, and listen, listen closely goes. Thank
you so much for soona for your That was a
(22:18):
protest against law enforcement and the the the armed forces
that are helping the law enforcement UH components in the community.
Why why, why would why wouldn't you invite Donald Trump
to come and hear that chant? Because Donald Trump is
(22:40):
saying black lives matter, He's trying to save lives. He's
trying to stop cities from coming apart from being destroyed.
You know, it's it's a it's a it's a terrible thing.
By the way, the big story yesterday before we get
too far afield from that, was the return of the
(23:03):
Indian driver who wrecked the freeway in Florida and killed
three people. They extradited him lickety split back to Florida.
(23:23):
He was in California. You want to find out about
people who don't care about people's lives, Illegals that came
into the country that decided they were coming in to
commit crimes and murdered a lot of people. Gangs traffickers
all of that, and what does what does the mainstream
(23:46):
media talk about? It's just terrible there are it's like occupation.
It's like an occupied city. It's not an occupied city.
It's a freely open city right now because you have
the appropriate amount of protection for the people so they
can go out and they can walk around without getting killed.
(24:07):
I'm going to DC in the next couple of days
and I'm gonna take a good look around and I'm
gonna get it. I'm gonna get a good idea of
what's what and how's it? How's it? And that's what
I want to see. I want to understand what this
looks like because I have been there in beautiful times,
I have been there in terrible times, and I have
(24:27):
going back now, uh, in the next couple of days,
and I'm gonna take a good look around. I'm doing
a fact finding tour in addition to other things. And
so this is this is an important, important matter. And
when you have people getting together trying to you know,
glom Onto, Michelle wou up in up in Boston, or
(24:49):
or the people that that don't want to acknowledge that
there is violence in our communities and they need to
be stopped. It's foolishness. It's absolutely foolishness. News Talk eleven
(25:20):
three WBT. It's the Brett Winerbow Show, all right. It's
that segment of the hour that I like to freak
people out with. So I'm gonna do it early, a
little bit early here. I gonna really I mean, it
won't necessarily impact you, but it is something that I
think you should know about. This comes to us from
the Sun Tiga k Sun Lake Wiley, a slithery surprise.
(25:48):
Lake Wiley ranked among South Carolina's most snake infested lakes. See,
this is what I'm gonna I'm gonna level with you guys,
and I'm sincerely telling you the truth. I only I only.
I only swim in water that is salted. I don't
(26:12):
like fresh water. I don't like going in fresh water.
I don't like swimming in fresh water. It's not my thing.
It's not my jam. I like going into the sea
water because I feel like, if if it gets bad,
there's not gonna be that many snakes out in the
middle of the ocean. I may have an eel, all right,
(26:33):
it could be something like that. I could jump on
a tortoise's back, and you know, float float across the
bay or whatever it is. But a recent report has
given Lake Wildly a new and unsettling reputation, ranking it
among the most snake infested lakes in South Carolina. While
the lake is a popular spot for recreation, the findings
(27:00):
from a national report have brought new attention to its
less than charming reptilian residents. Okay, but hold on a second.
Snakes and all that stuff. They were there first, they
were there before you were there. It's just that's their habitat, right,
It's the habitat that they have. The report highlights that
(27:21):
the vast majority of snake encounters on Lake Wiley involved
non venomous species isaac like common water snakes. They're not
gonna hurt you. They're not gonna they just they just
wrap around your little finger. Eastern garter snakes, those are fine.
These snakes are a natural and important part of the
(27:43):
lake's ecosystem, helping to control populations of rodents and other pests. However,
wildlife officials have noted reports of the venomous copperhead being
seen along the lake's edge, a detail that serves as
(28:06):
a reminder for visitors to remain vigilant. The ranking places
Lake Wiley in a group with other large South Carolina
lakes known for their snake populations, including Lake Marion, which
was cited as having the most snakes in the state. So,
(28:31):
if you feel like getting down and dirty at eleven
thirty with the snakes, that's probably where you'd want to go.
I wouldn't. I'm not doing it. I've got even worse
stuff coming up later in this next hour. Remember yesterday
we talked about the bubonic plague. Oh, that's that's nothing
(28:54):
compared to what I'm going to deploy for you folks.
You got some other crazy stuff going on here as well.
And we will check in with the with the space thing,
with that thing that's coming at us. Jim, welcome to
the program. What's on your mind, Jim?
Speaker 7 (29:10):
Yes, thank you for having me on again.
Speaker 1 (29:12):
Yes, and I.
Speaker 8 (29:13):
Wanted to wish you a good three day weekend.
Speaker 1 (29:18):
Oh, thank yes, thank you. It's actually it's actually I'm
technically I'm working, but yes, thank you very much for that.
Speaker 2 (29:26):
Uh huh okay, Well, so, yeah, you got water moccasins out.
Speaker 3 (29:30):
There, don't you.
Speaker 1 (29:31):
I I don't, I don't go and I don't swim
in lakes so that they could. Maybe, I don't know.
I go, I go to the I go to this
to the seashore. Yeah, okay, Jim, thanks, I appreciate that.
I don't know. I don't know it just he went
away taking me home. Well played, well played, seriously, well played.
(29:57):
Seven oh four five seven zero eleven ten. All right.
I am going to give you guys something that I
think is really particularly very interesting, and I'm going to play.
I'm not going to play the entirety of it, but
this is a really good piece. This is cut number
thirty nine to set us up for this next hour,
Steve Bannon on what the Europeans are not doing and
(30:18):
are doing. This is going to make you a little
bit frustrated. They're trying to sandbag us. Cut thirty nine Polase.
Speaker 9 (30:25):
Immediately upon their return to Europe, the Germans said, we
don't have the resources to put anybody on the line
of contact of really have anything to do with security guarantees.
Maybe we can put up some money or maybe some weapons,
and gosh, one of the reasons we don't have manpowers
cause we have a whole battalion that we put up
(30:46):
in I think Latvia, right, we put a whole battalion
of people up there and we're really strapped. Of course,
this is the country's got is trying to get manpower
and they can't get people to serve. Why because only
nine percent of German I think it's men want to
defend their country.
Speaker 1 (31:01):
So that's Germany.
Speaker 10 (31:03):
UK.
Speaker 9 (31:03):
Starmer gets off the plane and the head of the
journey head and this was on report on the Guardian.
I put it up another article. They report right away
Starmer doesn't have the resource of the military sitting there,
going we cannot be in the line of contact. Maybe
we can take a port and maybe we can, you know,
defend Odessa, maybe put some people in the port or
maybe in the air. And now this is the same
(31:23):
navy that's not giving us virtually no help, while the
United States Navy keeps the Suez Canal open, so that
ninety seven percent of the goods and services that go
through there, the goods that serve Europe and keep Europe
connected to Asia and also to the to the Middle East,
so England zone.
Speaker 1 (31:41):
That's just a taste of what you're going to hear.
And it's really it's really annoying because again, the United
States of America has to carry all the weight for
the Euroweenees. The Euroweenees are not pulling their their their weight,
and it's despicable and it's disgusting and it's not any weight,
shape or form how it should be. They should be
(32:02):
pulling the wagon equally with us. That's what they have
to do. Bill, Welcome to the program. What's on your mind?
Speaker 7 (32:09):
Bill?
Speaker 8 (32:11):
Hey, Brett Tony Klescreener, you would have the question before
the bottom of the eyeur break, how we know if
we were in a safe situation. Yes, I've got two
answers to that question, go ahead. Common sense is the
first one, not putting yourself in a situation right. The
second is the Second Amendment and being able to train
(32:34):
and practice through the point that if I am in
that situation, I can take care of myself and my family.
Speaker 1 (32:41):
Very important point. I appreciate that, Bill, that's a really
good take. And thank you for calling in on the
show today. I mean, that was great. That's exactly right,
rabbing a little we'rabbing some weird difficulties. Don't tell anybody
it's okay. The soldier on. Pay no attention to the
(33:02):
man behind the curtain seven four five seven, eleven ten.
I'll let you hear the rest of that with with
mister Bannon News Talk eleven ten on a nine straight
(33:28):
WBT Brett. Whatever'll show good to be with you picking
up the pieces from the last hour. By the way,
you can reach out to us WBT text line driven
by Liberty Buick GMC. Awesomeness abounds in this these different
sort of takes that are coming our way. So let's
let's type in here right now. Ready, here we go,
(33:48):
all right on the Lamborghini. On the Lamborghini. Lamborghini first
built tractors long before the exotic cars. Yes that is true,
but that doesn't mean that Lamborghini's are are not like
unbelievably cool cars. It's just it's incredible. Once upon a
time the model t looked like it looked, and in
(34:11):
the modern era you see a whole lot of power
coming in in that regard. I think that's I think
that's fantastic. Richard Queen says, no water moccasins in Wiley
or the surrounding area. The only venomous snake we have
is the copper head that you mentioned. Yes, yes, that's
what I was reading. That out of the article there
(34:32):
so very nicely, nicely stitched together. I appreciate that. And
we'll continue with other commentary as well. Let's jump over,
and I want to set the thing because I let
it go too quickly. Yesterday, in the last hour, Steve
Bannon sitting in his studio breaking down what all the
(34:57):
European countries did when they got back home after sort
of committing to helping Donald Trump to be the peacemaker
between Ukraine and of course the Russians. So Steve Bannon
breaks it down this way, and I think this is
a very telling reality that we're going to have to
(35:18):
deal with very quickly. Cut thirty nine please.
Speaker 9 (35:21):
Immediately upon their return to Europe, the Germans said, we
don't have the resources to put anybody on the line
of contact of really have anything to do with security guarantees.
Maybe we can put up some money or maybe some weapons,
and gosh, one of the reasons we don't have manpowers
because we have a whole battalion that we put up
(35:42):
in I think Latvia, right, we put a whole battalion
of people up there, and we're really strapped. Of course,
this is the country is trying to get manpower and
they can't get people to serve. Why because only nine
percent of German I think it's men want to defend
their country.
Speaker 1 (35:58):
So that's Germany.
Speaker 10 (35:59):
UK.
Speaker 9 (36:00):
Starmer gets off the plane and the head of the
journal head and this was on report on the Guardian.
I put it up another article. They report right away
Starmer doesn't have the resource of the military sitting there,
going we cannot be in the line of contact. Maybe
we can take a port and maybe we can you know,
defend Odessa, maybe put some people of the port or
maybe in the air. And now this is the same
(36:20):
navy that's not giving us virtually no help, while the
United States Navy keeps the Suez Canal open so that
ninety seven percent of the goods and services that go through,
they're the goods that serve Europe and keep Europe connected
to Asia and also to the to the Middle East.
So England's out and they're also financially a debacle, and
as you know, they're going to need their own troops
(36:42):
for the coming civil war in England, which is going
to happen. McCrone goes up and he's talking big talk.
He's big talking Macrone. He's Napoleon, you know, the fifth
or whatever it is. He's talking big talk. He's the
embodiment of de gaul and the Politico does an amazing
he's political Europe. They got a good team over there,
and they eviscerate all of them. And remember Politico is
(37:05):
not exactly war room, right. They viscerate all of them
and say, hey, these guys don't have the finances. They've
got massive economic problems, they don't have enough military for
their own and plus you know, France has got its
own issues what they've done to allow these radical jihadists
into their country.
Speaker 1 (37:22):
So that's out.
Speaker 9 (37:23):
Poland didn't even get on the plane. You know why
pauland didn't get on the plane. They didn't want to
embarrass President Trump by putting some phony front up. Now,
what got revealed, and this is coming from different Russian sources,
but it's been kind of verified, and maybe the number
is not totally accurate, but they're saying Russian cyber hackers
have released information that show that Ukraine has one point
(37:44):
seven million casualties. Did and wanted Now the reason this
kind of at least directionally makes sense. President Trump keeps
talking about classified information that he's seen that shows you
the killing is much worse, and that's what he wants
to stop, is a killing.
Speaker 1 (37:56):
What this reinforces, particularly.
Speaker 9 (37:58):
When you look at the scale, it's not twenty twenty
two and twenty twenty three and twenty twenty five according
to these hackers, and they supposedly back it up. And
there's a lot of these podcasts now that are going
through some of the details. Six hundred and twenty five
thousand dead in one of the Ukrainians since the beginning
of this year. This kind of makes sense because this
(38:19):
is why it's been a massive fight in their parliament
by parents saying you're not taking my young sons and daughters.
It's not going to happen, and they've stopped that. But
what they've done is open it up that people over
sixty years old can go serve in the military. Here's
the brutal facts, and this is why the Russians won't
agree to a ceasefire. It's just the ironclad logical war.
(38:39):
The Europeans don't have the money, the resources to defend themselves.
This whole thing with Zelenski sitting there, well, I'm going
to dig in here, and I'm a dude. If we
don't put up the money and don't put up the arms.
And I think now the fact is, the more money
we put up in, the more arms, you're just going
to have more dead Ukrainians. I think Jack Posobic, Ben Harny, Well,
(39:00):
Stephen K. Bannon and others on this show back at
the beginning days of the war back in twenty two
mentioned Professor Meersheimer. You know they're going to the EU
elites are going to fight until the last Ukrainian is
dead with that's what they're doing.
Speaker 1 (39:15):
This is pretty logical. I mean, this is this is
an ugly scenario. I thought I thought the Europeans all
wanted to be strong. I thought they all wanted to
be strapped up. I thought they all wanted all all
this sort of stuff that's going on there. Nine percent
of the people in Germany are are volunteering to serve
(39:36):
in the military. Poland, a country that we helped deliberate
in the aftermath of the of the of the Berlin
will coming down. I mean, this is this is a
disgraceful reality. And listening to those numbers, like if the
(39:56):
Europeans don't have money for weapons, if they don't have
money for weapons, who's gonna rebuild all of this, all
of the infrastructure that's gonna be necessary. There Is it
gonna be the United States? I can't imagine that we're
gonna send in platoons or army sized groups to go
(40:19):
and rebuild Ukraine. Ukraine's got to be able to figure
that out. Where are they gonna get their money? This
is something that I think is a very serious eye opener.
And you can kind of understand now if Donald Trump
has seen those numbers, and he has seen the stuff
that's going on, and he's a numbers guy and he's
(40:41):
a builder guy and all that sort of stuff. I mean,
for goodness sakes, Trump should just go should just go
sit there and cut the deal with Putin and say, listen,
this is what the line of connect is gonna be.
All this sort of stuff's gonna happen. And just to
Zolenski's gonna be a titular head. He's gonna be a
(41:02):
guy that's just gonna sit there and he's gonna proclaim
things and nobody's gonna pay any attention to him because
what's what's he doing? What's Silenski doing? Selenski's not doing
ten percent of what Trump is doing. You may as
well just cut the deal that way. You may as
well just go to Putin and say, listen, here's how
it's gonna be. We're gonna we're gonna have a massive
(41:23):
number of nuclear weapons in stationed in a particular place,
and if you decide you want to come and try
to attack the West, we're gonna just level you. Sorry,
too bad, how sad? Call your dad. You're you're not
in great health. We don't have time for this. And
the fact of the matter is we are. We're tired
of yet another European war because it's all we ever
(41:46):
really get involved in now, right European wars, or or
we go do the heavy lifting so that the Europeans
don't have to be part of the war. And they
just sit around and you know, they drink wine and
they and they abuse, you know, under people. It's horrible.
We're the last hope of the world.
Speaker 2 (42:07):
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Speaker 12 (42:49):
Cloudy isolated thunderstorms possible tonight. The high this afternoon should
reach eighty to. We're past that right now. Isolated evening
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for the weekend. Currently we're looking at eighty in Huntersville,
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Speaker 15 (44:38):
Hi, everybody, It's Beth Trautman with Madison Levine from Levine
Hearing and I just learned that some people are actually
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can't hear clearly.
Speaker 16 (44:50):
I have seen that so many times, when the family
assumes that a person is having a cognitive problem when
actually it's hearing. But hearing actually does affect cognition. Two
they are connected.
Speaker 15 (45:01):
Explain how that works.
Speaker 16 (45:03):
You actually are working your brain and overdrive trying to
understand the sounds around you, and it's pulling attention away
from your frontal lobe. But it corrects. Once we put
hearing aids on that person, that strain is not there anymore.
You don't have that increased risk anymore. It's actually an
eight percent increase risk of dementia with an untreated hearing loss.
Speaker 15 (45:24):
That's huge.
Speaker 16 (45:25):
It's the largest of all modifiable risk factors is addressing
a hearing loss.
Speaker 15 (45:30):
This is serious stuff, folks, and the prevention starts with
a complimentary hearing evaluation at Levine Hearing. Don't wait call
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Speaker 17 (45:44):
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Speaker 1 (46:05):
And what he's on?
Speaker 4 (46:06):
A service where the shows you got a friend in.
Speaker 2 (46:13):
Pete calendar show, Oh here we go, one of my favorites.
Speaker 4 (46:17):
Hi, Pete.
Speaker 2 (46:17):
Sorry to say, but you are starting to sound unhinged
regarding Sheriff McFadden. The staff resignations are likely just disgruntled employees,
all hearsay and no evidence. Gary, is this you? Are
you texting me?
Speaker 5 (46:32):
Gary?
Speaker 3 (46:33):
Pete?
Speaker 17 (46:33):
Calendar Monday New to three.
Speaker 1 (46:39):
Your emergency situation station, your.
Speaker 18 (46:42):
Jewel CNN is just they're just going wall to wall
with the DOJ releasing the Maxwell docs.
Speaker 1 (46:59):
Uh, and the I this is just this is like,
this is what passes for news. I know. Look, I
understand if you guys are excited about it and you
want to opine about it, you're totally welcome to come
on the program and tell us you know what you
think about about all this sort of stuff. Washington Post
celebrating Kilmar Abrago Garcia set free after illegal deportation smuggling charges.
(47:23):
So he's out, Uh, he's out walking about and I'm
wondering if if I think that Chris van Holland should
hire him as an outreach guy. I'm not I'm not
being a I'm not being a jerk. I'm not being
a wise guy. I really think that he should. He
should do outreach to the communities who are affected by
(47:48):
illegal immigration and crime and stuff like that. I really
do think he should. He should get get that job
while he can, and then maybe at some point he
can run for centate because Chris van Holland is not
going to run again. He was one of the guys
who obliterated and decided he wasn't gonna come, you know,
go back to that job. So Kilmar Abrego Garcia released
(48:10):
from criminal custody in Tennessee. They ought to bring them
right to the to the Senator's office and put them
to work. He can do constituency outreach. What why should
we just let him sit around and not work. That's
that what's what needs to happen. National Guard on d
C streets will soon be what's the word? Anybody know
(48:35):
what the word is? National Guard on d C streets
will soon be armed. They're gonna have weapons. Who didn't
who didn't want them to have weapons? These are military
type people. Okay, let's look at this here. Secretary of
Defense Pete Heseth has ordered National Guard troops to start
(48:58):
carrying firearms while patrolling the streets of Washington for President
Donald Trump's law enforcement crackdown, the Pentagon announced on Friday.
The Defense Department did not offer any other details about
the new development or why it was needed. Heseth referred
to it as quote common sense on social media. No
(49:20):
troops have been spotted yet with firearms around the city
in the hours after the announcement. The decision is an
escalation in the Republican administration's intervention. So we're supposed to
believe that Donald Trump is the president of everybody, but
(49:40):
except not the city of DC. He can't do anything
in DC, I guess. Okay. The Republican's intervention in the
nation's capital comes as nearly two thousand National Guard members
have been stationed in the heavily democratic city. I would
say most top of the list of Democrat cities. I mean,
(50:04):
there's no doubt about that. That has got to be
the highest number right there. It's why they tried to
keep putting Trump in jail there In DC, some local
officials were harshly critical, with DC Council Member Charles Allen
saying Trump's actions are not of a president but of
(50:27):
someone on the march to an authoritarian takeover. Okay, see,
there's ways that there's ways that you can handle these
things in a much more diplomatic way. Like, for example,
President Trump could come in and say, listen, I don't
want anybody patrolling the DC Council Member Charles Allen's district.
(50:51):
If he doesn't want if he doesn't want help, then
you know what, he can figure out a better answer
for stopping crime. I mean, he could you could do
that if I mean honestly, if he's coming out and
saying that he is somebody on the march to an
authoritarian takeover. Maybe you just don't want maybe you just
(51:16):
don't patrol that area, the area of that town. But
you see, that's what a big D Democrat would do.
They would be like, hey, we're gonna teach you a lesson.
We're not gonna let you be safe. The President is
gonna just roll his eyes and say, listen, I want
everybody to be alive. I want everybody to be safe.
I don't want people getting killed in the streets. I
(51:36):
don't want to see any of that happening, because these
are all Americans who are losing their lives. Trump initially
called up eight hundred members of the District of Columbia
National Guard to assist with law enforcement in his bid
to crack down on crime, homelessness, and illegal immigration. Since then,
(51:57):
six Republican led states have sent troops to the city
to help them. It's unclear how long the deployment will last.
Didn't they say it was going to be thirty days?
Is it thirty days? And then they'll make a decision.
I think it's thirty days. Why would the AP news
not know that? Like they're right there in DC. They
(52:18):
actually could go ring a doorbell and ask the folks,
how long is this going to be happenings? I think
it's a thirty day declaration. He suggested that he could
take a similar approach in other cities, such as such
as Chicago and maybe New York. New York unfortunately had
(52:40):
a law enforcement officers shot today in a carjacking incident.
He was on duty and he was answering the call
and he unfortunately lost his He didn't die, but he
got injured very seriously. Chicago, you don't see a lot
of coverage of Chicagoans. You're not seeing much of that.
(53:01):
You're seeing way more in d C. And d C
is much smaller than Chicago by leaps and bounds. So
who knows. It's very possible that the governor, the guy
who wants to be president next up. It's very possible.
Maybe he's he's kind of hiding the stats so it
(53:21):
looks like things are actually better than they are in Chicago.
I don't know. There were no signs that the National
Guard's role in d C would be changing. The troops
have not taken part in law enforcement and largely have
been protecting landmarks, including the National mall and Union station
(53:43):
and helping with crowd control. So why does everybody hate seriously,
why do the activists all hate the national Guard like
they hate they hate the national Guard? Why do they
hate the national Guard? What is that? Why would why
would anybody be sitting back saying I don't like these
(54:05):
National Guard people. They're they're guarding us far too nationalistically.
They're not armed, They're just standing there. You know what,
here's here here, here's what you could think of it
as okay, they're just on the watch. They're just standing
there and they're like, hey, that that person is getting
(54:25):
beaten up, right there? Can somebody? Can we get a
cop over here to help them out? Boom? That's all
they're doing. But for some reason, I guess it's because
the progressives always regress to the mean. It goes back
to Vietnam, and you know, we know a whole lot
of people how to take a whole lot of flak
from a whole lot of hippies. My gosh, it's practically
(54:50):
seventy years ago. Get a get a get a new outrage.
I respect the people who are citizens and who are
detecting our nation. I don't know what's gotten into you
guys now wonder why you're voting for Newsome Newstock eleven
ten nine nine three WBT Anda ericson with the upde Hey,
(55:12):
thanks Brett.
Speaker 19 (55:13):
The Republican National Committee has a new chair as the
old one leaves to run for Senate in North Carolina.
The rn C in Atlanta today voting to elect longtime
Trump associate Joe Gruters as their next chairman. Grouterers thanking
his GOP colleagues for electing him and giving special things
to both President Trump and former chairman Michael Wattley.
Speaker 20 (55:32):
Together, we will expand our Republican majority and deliver sweeping
victories that will shape America for generations to come. So
let's get to work, let's win, and let's save America.
Thank you and God bless to every single one of you.
Speaker 19 (55:46):
Grouders previously served as the Florida GOP chair from twenty
nineteen to twenty twenty three and is RNC treasurer since January.
Waltley is stepping down from his role to run for
North Carolina Senate seat being vacated by Tom Tillis inter
seeing an illegal immigrant now back in Florida custody to
be trying for killing three people when he made an
(56:07):
illegal U turn in a big rig. Saint louis A
county sheriff Richard del Toro, speaking about the accident, which
was caught on video.
Speaker 21 (56:13):
You know he did make an illegal U turn, had
absolutely no remorse. You watch that video and you watch
that minivan crash into the back of that trailer. I
mean it almost seemed like it was on purpose.
Speaker 19 (56:26):
To be honest with you, the Singh's brother, who was
in the big rig with him, is facing deportation. In
the Middle East, Israel's defense minister says his country will
destroy Gaza City unless Hamas surrenders. Israeli troops planning a
new military attack who sees the city hoping to put
the terrorist organization out of business. This comes as a
un now, says the people of Gaza City are starving
(56:47):
and then it's officially a famine there. Meantime, NATO Secretary
General Mark Ruda and Ukrainian President of Vladimir Zelenski speaking
about the Russian Ukraine War today. The Secretary General says,
the alliance will continue you to ensure Ukraine has what
it needs to defend itself from Russia, and they're working
with European allies and President Trump to bring about peace.
Speaker 1 (57:07):
Talk News Talk eleven ten. I'm three WBT Brettwaterble Show.
(57:36):
Good to be with you. I gotta do it, I gotta,
I gotta do it. Isaac's telling me not to do it,
but I have to do this. I have to I
have to have to do this. I mean, this is
really quite something, all right. So we've got yesterday we
talked about the bubonic plague because that's now back. It
(57:56):
is south South Tahoe, right South Tahoe out there and
right next to California. It's not in California, but it's
right over there by California. So we have you got
you got the you got the ick, right, you got
the bad stuff going on out there. So we talked
about that yesterday. But there's other stuff that's going around
(58:19):
our our country. Here's the headline from the New York
from the New York Times, what to know about plague
after new case in California. Millions died from the plague
in the fourteenth century. Here's how it just reappeared in California. See,
I mean this is this is a big headline story. Okay.
(58:41):
Then here we go getting COVID shot. This fall could
be a lot more complicated. That's pretty big sort of
RFK Junior's halt on mr NA vaccine research risks progress
on tackling dangerous illnesses like the plague. Can we do
(59:05):
something about the plague? Now we've got in New York
City a sixth person has died as a result of
Legionnaire's disease because that stuff gets up in that stuff
gets up in the in the tracts. You know, when
when you've got like an air conditioning system, which most
(59:27):
buildings do, uh that that stuff harbors in the system.
So five deaths have been reported amid bacterial infection outbreak
in New York City. I mean, this is now what
(59:50):
else have we got? Well, we've got a brand new
this is positive. This is a good thing. We have
a brand new drug that blocks pain without addiction. There's
a new drug that has that has come to be
(01:00:12):
s LC forty five A four. It's a pain gene
encoding neuronal polymene transporter. But what this thing is supposed
to do is you can take it, but you don't
get addicted to it. You know, it's interesting because this
(01:00:33):
thing is called SLC four five a four. I read
that as Salt Lake City voted for forty five at four.
That's how I read that. But they're they're they're now
working on this kind of stuff. That's that's really amazing.
Measl cases expected after regional wide exposure that included, uh,
(01:00:54):
this is this is Pennsylvania. I want to be clear
about this. Lancaster County in Pennsylvania, not not where we are.
So you've got all these different things that are that
are going on here. Idaho man. I'm used to saying
Florida man, not used to saying Idaho man. I had
to think about that for a quick second. Idaho man
(01:01:16):
concern confirmed third measles case in an unvaccinated child. Look,
I got I got all the shots as a kid.
Like as a kid, I got all the shots, and
and I feel like I'm kind of like, okay, but
better for the war, I guess. But there is so
(01:01:37):
much stuff now coming into our country that we don't
know what's who's coming from, where, bringing what doing how
any of that sort of stuff. And so this is
why I wanted to tell Isaac about this, because I
know he likes to swim in lakes. I'm not a
lake guy. I'm an ocean guy. This is a bad story. This, this,
(01:02:00):
this is the one that I've been kind of holding
out to do. Yeah. This, I think this is worse
than the plaguew bad? Does it have to be?
Speaker 7 (01:02:10):
Well?
Speaker 1 (01:02:10):
You like to swim in those in those lakes and ponds, hollers.
I've been known to swim in a cracker too. This
is a terrible story. Missouri resident dies from brain eating
amba Missouri or I gotta do it right Missouri or
(01:02:31):
Missouri resident dies from brain eating amba after water skiing
in the Lake of the Ozarks. There's typically, by the way,
fewer than ten cases of brain eating amiba reported in
the US each year. That they just have that right
in the headline. It's it's there's just typically ten cases
(01:02:54):
of brain eating amba. I don't like that. This w
we got it. We have to pour all of the
chemicals into these lakes. Okay, we have to light them up.
We have to light them up and cook them down. Okay,
that's what we're gonna do. We're gonna we're gonna cook
them down because I don't need amibas. Light them up,
(01:03:16):
cook them down. This is terrible. He died August the nineteenth,
just a couple of days ago in Saint Louis. The
Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services said on Wednesday
he had contracted Naglia Vouluri. Yeah, Naglaria fell worry, a
(01:03:44):
microscopic amiba that can cause primary amobic Manning emphasis, Oh
my gosh, this is this is so terrible, the meningo
encephalitis known as brain eating infection. Lakes are not for swimming,
(01:04:05):
except unless like way up in Alaska where it's like
eleven degrees. Yes, because there's nothing in there but delicious
salmon and bears. But this thing is, this is terrible.
But remember this happened here just a few what a
(01:04:26):
month ago in Lake Watery? Was it Lake Watery? So
this happens, this is happening in a number of different places.
They've got to get an idea and figure out how
do you fix this. I don't know how you fix this,
But of course the people always go running right to this.
Are you ready for this? Global warming is the gift
(01:04:48):
that just keeps on giving, keep rolling that coal. Well,
I say we just put the coal in the right
in the lake. Just fill that coal up with lake
and and at some point it'll be kept fresh and
we can burn it. We just burn that whole thing. Man,
just light it up, light it up, and shut it down.
(01:05:11):
That's what we gotta do. I know, I know he's
(01:05:34):
talk eleven ten, not nine to three. WBT Brett Wearable show.
Good to be with you. You know, I feel like a
lot of people are you know, in the same boat here.
So we have this question, and I think it's a
fair question. How much is it costing for the military
to be in DC? If you put enough police on
(01:05:56):
the streets, crime would go down, help the cities with
their budget instead of making the city a military zone. Well,
I think this is a thirty day deployment. It's coming
out of the budget in the Defense Department, and I'll
(01:06:17):
have to try to effort the number of what it
is that they've spent so far. But at the same time,
we live in a place where there are now, you know,
challenges that are here right We have a fifth column
that is in the country right now, and that's something
(01:06:37):
that we ought to pay close attention to. We have
people that are staging to attack and do things like that.
And if people don't believe that, I mean, I think
it's I think it's foolish to ignore that possibility. We
have a challenge in this country because what we have
to do is we have to keep people safe. You know,
(01:07:00):
the safety issue is a big issue. And at the
same time, when when we look at what the priorities are,
I mean any given day of the week. Right, So
let's see CNN FBI searches home and office of ex
(01:07:21):
Trump aid John Bolton. Yes, that that is that is true,
that that has happened. We have another channel over here
that's going pretty much wall to wall with the stuff
involving the protection of the folks in Washington, d C. Right,
So we've got we've got another channel that's doing that.
(01:07:42):
Then we've got another channel that's doing the Epstein story.
So now like where is where is this going when
it comes to dealing with the issues like Ukraine, the border,
any of these sorts of things. Now, the border is small,
(01:08:03):
I mean, there's there are very few incursions now happening
because they've taken control of the territory. Right, And that's
that's how you defend American sovereignty. You could make the argument,
or you could make the analogy that that's what's happening
in Washington, DC, that you have enough presence right where
(01:08:24):
people are standing uh and and they're and they're looking,
and they're being aware of things. That is a deterrent.
That means you're not going to have contact with a
person who may be deciding that they want to do
bad things, horrible things, terrible things. So when we when
we look at all this kind of stuff, I think
(01:08:47):
it's not an it's not a negative to save lives.
If we go back and I bet you I can
get these numbers, it is inredibly expensive to do try.
I'm a medicine So, like, let's say you have like
five six people. They get involved in a shootout or
(01:09:08):
somebody shoots into a crowd or whatever that's going to be.
So you have to get all these people to the hospital.
You have to try to save their lives. You're spending
a ton of money. Some of these people may be
indigen some of these people may be homeless, some of
these people may not have any money at all. So
what happens goes onto the system, right, it goes onto
(01:09:29):
the hospital system in Washington, in Charlotte, in wherever it's
going to be. And there's a cost for that those
surgeons that are trying to save people's lives because they
decided to get in a gunfight, or we're victims of
a gunfight. This is a big problem. We should think
about the costs of violence. In fact, what I'm going
(01:09:53):
I'm going to suggest, I'm going to suggest to somebody
who who was inside that place, and I'm gonna say,
quantify the cost of violence in American cities. I'll bet
you it's I'll bet you it's ten billion dollars easy
(01:10:16):
over the course of a year. I mean, you have
got with the biggest cities, right with the biggest cities.
But those violence, those violent acts also happen in small places.
It's not there's no place that's safe from danger. Right,
(01:10:37):
just go back to the beginning of the year, right
the beginning, the beginning of this year, when we saw
the maniac mow people down because he was a jihadist
and he wanted to just kill innocent people. That's New Orleans.
Everybody was ready for the for the Championship Games and
stuff like that, and everything's gonna everbody's gonna have a
(01:10:58):
good time. Everything's great, and then boom, he comes barreling
through and what did they have to do. They had
they had a you know up armor the set up
there so that now vehicles can't get through that area.
But what does that then do? That then says to you,
you can't go there the way you used to go there.
(01:11:19):
You can't park your car there like you used to
park your car there. Criminals steal from everybody. They steal
people's lives, they steal people's dreams, they steal actual property,
and they're the people that actually end up getting rewarded
because they get three hots and a cot for the
(01:11:40):
rest of their life that we're paying for because they
didn't want to behave themselves. See how this works. You know,
you sit back and you say, Okay, that's crime. That's
just a bad neighborhood. Okay, it's a bad neighborhood. Is
everybody there in the bad neighborhood supposed to be in
(01:12:03):
a bad neighborhood? Or you're gonna do work for it?
Are you gonna help them? Well, maybe you just don't.
Just don't go over there. Well, maybe these people don't
have any other place to go. Maybe they've lived there
for fifty years, maybe they're elderly, Maybe they're taking care
of of somebody else's issue or whatever that is. I mean,
this is this is this is bad, you know, I
(01:12:29):
think it Ultimately it comes down to people just you
just got to drink more water. I'm getting a look,
we need you got to drink more water. Common mistake
increases risk of weight gain, diabetes, heart disease, and weak
What are you you're laughing about drinking water diabetes? I said,
(01:12:54):
I was very clear. Common drink mistake increases risk of
weight gain, diabetes, heart disease, and weak immunity. Are you
guilty of it? Are you guilty of it either? I'm
guilty of zip. Sip, Sip sip. The only water I
(01:13:16):
drink every day is the bottle you give me.
Speaker 4 (01:13:19):
That.
Speaker 1 (01:13:22):
That is a darn lie. What sip? Sip? Common drink
mistake increases risk of weight gain, diabetes, heart disease, and
weak immunity. Well, I've seen I see a lot of
weak community people walking around by the way. I see
him vaping. I see him, you know, doing a lot
(01:13:43):
of things they shouldn't be doing. Don't do that, do
healthy things. We're told that drinking water is vital for
keeping our bodies working properly. You know why it lubricates
your joints, improves your circulation and gives you an energy
and prevents kidney damage and keeps your skin looking healthy.
(01:14:05):
It also regulates your body temperature, aids a digestion and
wards off constipation. Drink more, Be Happier. News Talk eleven
(01:14:48):
nine three WBT Brett Water will show great to be
with you. This is the final segment of the broadcast.
Not the final segment of the broadcast. It's the final
broadcast of the week for me. At whatever. I don't
want you guys getting all panicked. Jay Stan sent me
a very, very thoughtful bit of analysis. I asked about
(01:15:08):
the cost of violence. Two hundred and ninety nine dollars
two hundred and ninety nine billion dollars annually is the
cost for the United States of America. The economic costs
of violence in America is staggering. And so that is why, Okay,
(01:15:30):
are you willing to pay two hundred and ninety nine
billion dollars annually every single year? Or do you want
to see a new approach to certain things? And I
think what President Trump is trying to do is improve
the situation on the ground. You know, we have like
(01:15:53):
the we have the greatest country in the world, and
I believe between now and the end of time, we
will remain a great country, the greatest, the light to
the world. You think about the miracle that is America,
warts and all, you think about the miracle that is America,
you have to be you have to be awed by this.
(01:16:18):
And I think so many people just want to look away.
And I think so many people want to look away
and not really push for what is needing to be done.
We live, We know this. We live in a world
that trembles. That's the word, trembles, under the weight of uncertainty,
(01:16:41):
of violence, of division. And yet God does not call
us to tremble. He calls us to stand, be strong
and courage. Do not be afraid or terrified. For the
Lord your God goes with you. He never leaves nor
(01:17:03):
forsakes you. That's not a suggestion, that's a command. God
commands courage not because danger is absent, but because he's present.
Because fear is contagious, but so is courage. I would
(01:17:23):
argue that because of every act of bravery becomes a beacon,
a signal fire for those who are still trapped in
the shadows of doubt. Because the world needs people who
will walk into the storm, not because they're fearless, but
because they're faithful. Do not be afraid, for the Lord,
(01:17:45):
your God, whether you believe in it or not, will
be with you wherever you go. And what of the weak,
What of those who feel too broken, too small, too tired.
God gave us a spirit, not a fear. The weak
will be brave because bravery is not the absence of weakness.
(01:18:06):
It's the triumph of faith over fear. The widow, the orphan,
the outcast, they're not forgotten. They are the very ones
God lives up to show his strength. What I'm afraid,
I put my trust in you. So let us not
(01:18:27):
wait for perfect conditions. Let us not wait until we
feel ready. Let us be brave now because God's already
with us. Let Us speak truth where lies are louder,
Love boldly when hate is easier, walk forward when the
(01:18:48):
world says retreat. Because courage is not just a virtue,
it's an obedience. And in our obedience we find strength
that sometimes we don't even know we had. And so
when people come out and they say we can't, well,
this cannot be done, this cannot be completed. Sometimes what
(01:19:13):
it takes is going over and knocking on the door
of your neighbor and saying, how are you, what are
you doing, how are things going, do you feel safe?
Whatever it is, any of that sort of stuff. It's
about talking to people. It's about spending time in connection
with people. This is why, in my opinion, talk radio
(01:19:35):
is the most important medium there is. You can listen
to music all day long, and I listen to tons of music.
I consume so much media stuff and all things like that.
I listen to music, tons of music, tons of music.
But the connection that's made here, the connection that's made
(01:19:56):
here is special because there are people right now who
are uncertain or scared, or they're worried about something that's
going to come to pass or whatever it's going to be,
and in an extended way, we are all connected in
that regard. That's what's incredible. See Marconi and Tesla and
(01:20:23):
the people that we're working on all of these ways
to kind of communicate with each other. What they understood
was you could put very amazing technology of that time
and you can do incredible things with it. But it
is the human voice. It is the person's voice, It
(01:20:45):
is the smiles, it is the sadness. It is all
of those things that are the things that keep us company,
driving home late at night, driving to work very early
in the morning, to hear the voices of people on
(01:21:06):
this station, to hear the voices of the people who
are with you, even though we may never meet you,
but we are with you, and we are all in
this together at the same time. And I'm not trying
to sound like Kamala Harris, but here's what I'm saying.
(01:21:29):
This country will endure as long as we pursue the conversation,
as long as we pursue goodwill and the understanding of
the faith that our forefathers left for us, warts and all.
(01:21:50):
But they gave us the opportunity to express ourselves and
most importantly, to amend the things that needed to be fixed.
They left us with that skill. News Talk eleven ten,
(01:22:17):
nine and nine to three WBT Brett Warterable show Good
to be with You seven oh four five seven oh
eleven ten stand with a take speaking of how we
all need relationships with each other. When we meet someone,
a question that always comes up is what do you do?
The reason we ask that is because we want to
(01:22:38):
know what connects the rest of us to them, we
should all provide a good or service that benefits society
in exchange for society collectively providing us all the goods
and the services we need. After all, even Jesus was
a carpenter. Yes, I agree. Okay, that's a very good take.
(01:23:00):
I like that a lot. That that's that's a phenomenal take.
Robert Amen Brett, thank you and all the other voices
that you are on with the w BT airwaves. That
is a very nice, very nice message. I appreciate that.
So coming into the coming into this next week, we've
(01:23:20):
got a couple of issues that are that are that
are gonna be happening now right now. This is President
Trump is live on CNN. There's something really weird about
what's going on. This is just my observation, something really
weird that's going on because I don't see Fox cutting
away to the President as often as they used to. Now,
(01:23:44):
you know, I don't I don't know what that all
is comporting. But you know, we're looking at a number
of different things that are that are happening here, all
all in real time. The d o J released our
audio earlier today. If people didn't know about that, transcript
of the Maxwell prison interview. That that's the stuff that
was going on what two weeks ago? I think that
(01:24:05):
was all. Yeah, that was all two weeks ago. We
got that information and we found out that there had
been that conversation between Todd Blanche and the rest of
the folks there. That that is, that's that's an important thing.
By the way, San Francisco. I'm going to nominate San
Francisco to be the next place that we go in
(01:24:25):
the United States with the security personnel that are necessary.
San Francisco mob assaults ICE agents. One of those guys
that wear the caffea has been charged for threatening to
stab a federal officer. A mob of rioters ambushed Immigration
(01:24:51):
and Customs enforcement agents in San Francisco, with a one
of them being a knife wielding coffea plaid agitator threatening
to stab one of the Feds and go after his family.
See that's the magic word right there. That's gonna get
you in some serious trouble when you do that, when
(01:25:13):
you play that call. Adrian Guerrero was charged with assaulting
an officer and destruction of property over the alleged Wednesday
attack on ICE officers in the Enforcement Removal Operations Division.
So this guy's a real charmer. This, this guy's a
(01:25:34):
real charmer. He said, I'm going to you up. Guerrero
seethed while allegedly wielding a black knife and wearing what
appeared to be one of those black and white checkered
cafea headscarfs that you see all the high school kids
and the college kids, you know, trying to be cool with,
(01:25:56):
and orange tented goggles, orange tinted goggles, according to photos
in the complaint. Oh yeah, this guy, this guy's a
bad ombre. This guy's a bad dude. He's he's clad
in all black, and he's got like a very like
a k bar knife in his hand. Basically that's kind
(01:26:18):
of where he's lunging. He also screamed that he was
going to go after your family and was going to
stab you during the melee on Montgomery Street in San Francisco.
Earlier that morning, Guerrero also slashed a tire on a
white Chevrolet with DHS and official government markings. He was
(01:26:42):
later arrested. Yeah, this is like, this is a serious
This is a real this is a real knife. This
is that that's a pretty serious knife right there. You're
gonna be able to lop somebody's handoff with that. The
(01:27:02):
acts of violence are fueled by sanctuary politicians rhetoric vilifying
our law enforcement officers. We will not and have not
let this violence stop us. You know, you saw what
happened with Christinome. Christy home can't live in her house anymore.
She can't live in her house, and she can't live
in the apartment that she had rented because they doxed her.
(01:27:26):
And this doxing thing is just horrible. The charges for
the anti ICE rioter came amid a spate of similar
armed assaults on the feds enforcing President Trump's immigration crackdown.
In July, at least ten armed assailants descended on the
(01:27:46):
ICE detention center near Dallas, wearing military style gear and
tactical vests, and open fire on the federal agents and
a local cop. All the suspects were later charged with
attempted murder. I think you got to ring them up.
I really I think you have to absolutely ring them up.
I've argued for a long time, all the way back
(01:28:07):
since twenty since the two thousand and one, we need
a terrorist circuit. It's a circuit where you're gonna take
terrorism charges and put them there because a terrorist attack
like what this guy just tried to do, especially with
the imaging that he had on his head and all
that sort of stuff, that is obviously a terrorist. That
(01:28:28):
is obviously somebody who has been indoctrinated into the ideology
of lopping people's heads off. And there's really only one
specific group of people who do that, and that's the
people who are terrorists. So I think what we need
is a new terrorism circuit. Right, So you have bankruptcy courts,
you've got federal courts, you've got we need terror courts
(01:28:53):
so that you're gonna have experts that understand exactly what
the issues are and you're gonna have the ability to
put them away for a very very, very long time.
You cannot run the risk of having Khalead Sheik Mohammad,
you know, getting to walk freely like Biden and Obama
(01:29:13):
wanted for a long period of time with with a
with a side of Eric Holder. They were all about
letting him go. And so unfortunately, I think this is
the only way we can approach this New's Talk eleven
(01:29:41):
ten nine three WBC Brettwaterble Show. So some of the
stuff that people are wondering about is obviously this situation
with John Bolton. John Bolton is somebody who has been
around in Washington, d C. For a very very long time.
He's also a very very smart lawyer. That's something that
(01:30:04):
needs to be understood. So when federal agents searched the
home of the former National Security Advisor John Bolton on Friday,
targeting one of President Donald Trump's most outspoken critics, the
FBI confirmed that there was a court authorized law enforcement
activity going on in the area of Bolton's Maryland home.
(01:30:27):
The search for what they were looking for was reportedly
related to Bolton's handling of classified information. That's pretty vague.
We don't know what that means. We don't know what
it's attached to. Many people are speculating that this may
go back to the book that he published back in
(01:30:49):
twenty twenty. The move marked an escalation in Trump's feud
with Bolton and set it off the alarms for critics
of the president, who viewed it as a potential act
of retribution and of course against a vocal critic. So
this is some of the stuff that the Hill has
(01:31:09):
been able to kind of look at and take a
side The probe builds on longstanding accusations by Trump that
Bolton may have mishandled classified records, including as he wrote
a tell all book about his time in the first
(01:31:29):
Trump administration. Trump, upon taking office for the second time,
revoked Bolton's security clearance. It's a crime, even for those
who have authorized access to remove many sensitive documents and
records from their proper setting, something that could run a
(01:31:50):
foul of the Espionage Act. Okay, but here's the thing.
This book details a lot of stuff from that first
term we're talking about, you know, years ago, I mean
years years ago, and I understand that there's going to
be a problem if you take documents, no doubt about it.
(01:32:15):
Whether it was Sandy Berger, whether it was people taking
things home in their private lives, all that sort of stuff.
You need to be ready to not take those things
to your house. You know, one point that they raised,
and I thought, I think it was Jonathan Turley who
(01:32:38):
said that when the documents were taken in these other cases,
you know, there are penalties that come along with that.
But if you think about some of the other stuff
that we now know that has come to light, meaning
(01:33:03):
John Bolton being connected to the deep state type stuff narrative. Right,
he's the deep state guy. He's that guy. Well, that's
just called the company business in terms of the city
of Washington, DC and environs. Right, people are always doing deals,
they're trying to put stuff together, they're trying to do
(01:33:24):
this and do that. But when you've got classified documents,
when you've got that sensitive stuff that is in your hands,
you can't share it. And and as I went around
the bush here for a real quick second, one of
the things that we heard about was the idea that
(01:33:45):
that classified material when you're looking at that classified material, Okay,
if you're just sitting there looking at the material and
then you take a piece of paper out and you
start making a note or two on a piece of
paper that belongs to the federal government, that piece of paper,
(01:34:08):
whatever it was, like you were, you're right down nineteen
seventy seven or whatever, that has to go in with
the file that has to be produced to that period.
In fact, that was one of the things that happened
with komy Right, komy Komi was taking notes off of
(01:34:28):
the files when he was trying to, you know, get
the cavalry coming out for him. And so what ended
up happening was he made notes, and he took the
notes from his facility, right his office or wherever he
was keeping them. But those documents, those notes that he took,
(01:34:54):
like you know, President Bush said that we should knock
off Saddam who saying whatever it was right, and he
writes that down on a piece of paper that is classified.
So it's not just the document itself is classified. If
there are other things that are appened to it, those
are classified. And that's why you see sometimes like when
(01:35:15):
they go to get the papers, like what you saw
with mar Lago, you know, they've got all these things
stuffed in boxes and they're just kind of sitting there
in this pile by the bathroom and all that sort
of stuff. It's because people keep if you make a
notation or you add to that file, you're adding to
the file, and it just gets bigger and bigger and bigger.
(01:35:36):
The DOJ dropped a previous probe into John Bolton's book.
The former National Security advisor who served in multiple other
Republican administrations, published that memoir in twenty twenty. The Room
Where It Happened, a White House memoir that offered a
damning portrait of Trump as stunningly uninformed and on how
(01:36:01):
to run the government, foreign policy matters, and geopolitics. Bolton
faced criticism in the lead up to the release of
the book. Judge Royce Lambert It's a very big name guy,
declined to block its publication, but said that the former
(01:36:21):
ambassador quote likely published classified material. With the sped up
release of the memoir, Defendant Bolton gambled with national security
of the United States. He has exposed his country to
harm and himself to civil and potentially criminal liability, the
(01:36:47):
judge wrote in twenty twenty. So we don't know what
all is going to be coming out, but at some
point we will find out. And it's impossible to ignore
the fact that this looks a whole lot like mar
Lago looked, except for the fact that John Bolton's not
a president or a former president. I actually thought, for
(01:37:12):
a period of time you could almost see John Bolton
wanting to run for the presidency. But I don't, I don't.
There was not going to be any appetite for that.
(01:37:33):
News Talk eleven ten, not a nine to three WBT
final segment of the hour and of the program. Yes,
let's let's jump out and check in with faith. Faith,
welcome to the program. What's on your mind? Hello? All right,
thank you faith? We have no faith? Seven four or
(01:37:58):
five seven zero eleven ten? Are are you folks actually
angry about the cracker barrel thing? I just I just
want to know. I just want to I will I
will take two and a half calls on this. Are
you really upset about the cracker barrel thing? In all seriousness,
(01:38:20):
I I don't get emotional about restaurants like that. It's
one of those things that I have. I have certain
restaurants that I really like. I love going to all
that sort of stuff. But the fact is, I'm not
going to go crazy because they've got different stuff that
are out there in the in the parking lot or
(01:38:40):
in the restaurant. I go to restaurants to eat food.
Now I know that's it's a very controversial position to take,
but I go to restaurants to eat the food and
maybe drink, drink the drink. But I don't I don't
get emotional about a higher and appointments and things like
(01:39:03):
that that are in a restaurant. Like I couldn't tell
you what's in a Denny's, No idea, couldn't tell you.
I know that they sell food and I've eaten it.
Cracker barrel I've I've eaten cracker barrel food, to my knowledge,
to my belief, I think I've eat I've eaten cracker
barrel food. Do they actually and I'm not trying to
(01:39:25):
be a wise guy, do they actually bring you crackers
to the table? I mean, this is this is the stuff.
I don't know because I just go in and I
just order, you know, I order linguini with a clam sauce.
I order arugola. Oh no, wait, no, I'm sorry. That's
that's not That's not right at all. I you know,
(01:39:46):
I I see all these people who are angry about
this this change. Do they still have like good food?
Do you like the food? Then? Then I think you
just go in there, you eat the food, and you
go home. Like there's a lot of emotional input here.
I know, I don't get faith. Welcome to the program, Faith,
(01:40:08):
Hi hi loo.
Speaker 5 (01:40:11):
I just wanted to make a comment regarding the whole
business about Bolton and the raid and all that, and
about security documents. I'm in a previous career. I did
have acute clearance, and so handling any kind of secured
documents or anything. There were very stringent and strict guidelines
(01:40:33):
on how to handle on it. It's not like it
was just pieces of paper. Every paper in a package
was stamped as classified. You know. And aside from that,
even when you left the job, it wasn't like you
would quit. You would have to be debriefed, and anything
that you knew when you left the job remained classified forever.
Speaker 1 (01:40:58):
Oh that's cool. I didn't know that. That's really cool. Wow,
I like that. I'm glad that they're doing I'm glad
they do that. That's awesome. Thank thank you very much
for that faith That was It was insightful, Bob. Welcome
to the program, Bob.
Speaker 13 (01:41:12):
I agree with you. I really don't. I think I
agree with you. I really don't, you know, are about
this Cracker Barrel deal. I've never really liked gimmicky restaurants anyway. Sure,
you know, yeah, you know, Cracker Barrel does good. They
make you know, they make breakfast, you know. Uh, you know,
(01:41:34):
the little general store is kind of fun to shop in.
But everything, but everything's overpriced, including the food.
Speaker 5 (01:41:41):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:41:43):
Yeah, that's true, that's true.
Speaker 13 (01:41:45):
Yeah, so you know, I you know, but now if
they're changing it for some stupid blow up reason, then yeah,
that kind of I don't really like that, but you know,
the the of my argument is just that it's breakfast.
I'm not gonna miss it.
Speaker 1 (01:42:06):
You're my kind of guy. You're my kind of guy, Bob.
That's right. I like that. That's that's a good. That's
a good. That's a very adult take. I mean, you
go to Walmart? Do you get sentimental at Walmart?
Speaker 5 (01:42:24):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (01:42:24):
I can't believe that they changed the tile on the
floor at the Walmart. This is terrible. How dare you
compare cracker barrel? What cracker barrel was such a great? Okay, Isaac? Yes?
Very quick?
Speaker 4 (01:42:39):
All right?
Speaker 1 (01:42:39):
Chicken and dumplings, yes or no? Absolutely, country fried steak
yes please, meat loaf need it, pancakes love it? Hash
brown cast casse role? How about other meats like bacon, sausage,
countrysides such a fried apples, mac and cheese, biscuits and
(01:43:04):
seasonal dishes? How about the season What seasonal is your
favorite seasonal dish? Pumpkin pa is that's really yep? How
about buttermilk flapjacks? I don't know about that one. How
about biscuits and gravy, Yes, with mac and cheese on
top of it. Even better, I just invented we make
ome to my restaurant today, not today, not today, Pal,
(01:43:28):
not today, not now, not Eva, not ever. Kirk. Welcome
to the program, Kirk, I'm great, thanks for calling in.
Speaker 13 (01:43:41):
What is it that people are here?
Speaker 7 (01:43:43):
I've been out of shape.
Speaker 3 (01:43:44):
To that cracker barrel?
Speaker 5 (01:43:45):
I mean, you go in, you order your food.
Speaker 1 (01:43:48):
Yep, it's good or it's bad, and you're you're done.
I'm with you. This is he's he's one of us.
That's a good that's a good call there. I appreciate that, Kirk.
I should have asked him what his favorite food was there.
I didn't ask. They don't make anything bad anything. That's
if that's impossible. That that's impossible. It's impossible to eat
(01:44:09):
at a place that nothing is bad. Have you tried
it the barrel? He's get spot, dude, it's a great spot.
Hold on a minute, all right, here's I want biscuits
and gravy with mac and cheese on top, smeared with
apple butter. Dude, I need it right now. Well listen,
(01:44:32):
that's Isaac. Please send all your comments to Isaac. You
can you can reach him at seven O four five
seven zero eleven ten. I'm ready to take on all comers.
That's it, he's ready to go, all right. Thanks so
much for being a part of the program here today.
Thank you to Isaac and Lonnie and Nick and Pete
(01:44:53):
and Mike Doan and of course Anna Ericsson. I'm Brett Witterble.
I'll be out on Monday, but I'll be back on Tuesday,
going to a very special place, News Talk eleven ten
that nineteen years