Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:17):
News Talk eleven, ten ninety nine to three WBT Brett
Winterbule Show, It is good to be with you. Special
commentary coming up momentarily. I want to welcome to our
to our our amazing state. Uh. The the greatest uh. And
I do think I think he is the greatest vice
(00:39):
president in my lifetime in jd Vance. You want to
know why he's patriot, He's a leader. He is somebody
who understands speaking plainly to the people who want to
try to take shots at him. I saw John Favreau.
Jon Favreau was trying to take shots at him, and
(01:03):
I don't know if you knew this or not, but
jd Vance responded with the dip word. Hey, dip word.
Do you know what I'm talking about?
Speaker 2 (01:15):
You know?
Speaker 1 (01:15):
Come on, you know the phrase, you know the phrase?
Speaker 2 (01:19):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:20):
I just told him, I told him with the mic off,
don't worry about it. But yeah, he came in. He
came in and just he is an amazing vice president. Wait,
he's way, way, way better than Mike Pence was. Mike
Pence was okay back in the day. He was serviceable.
But jd Vance's next level because he knows how to
(01:43):
relate to actual regular people, normal people, people who are
sick and tired of seeing another attack on law enforcement,
another attack in Dallas in law enforcement. And I gotta
tell you, this is a despicable, despicable thing that has happened.
(02:04):
This guy's clearly a racist. He murdered three people who
were getting repatriated back to their country. I believe that
this sky was clearly a racist. Now people are going
to try to come out and say, oh, well, how
do you know that, how do you see it? Well,
excuse me, the evidence is right in front of you.
(02:26):
I will give you the breakdown of that straight ahead.
We are taking your phone calls. By the way, I
have a couple of lines open for yet seven four
five seven eleven ten seven four five seven zero eleven ten. Well,
a nice guest come by in the third hour of
the program. Really good stuff all happening in real time.
(02:47):
But I've been listening to all the coverage of these
debates that are going on in Raleigh and the direction
of the state of North Carolina, and it's dismaying in
some ways when you go out and you can't quite
understand why people are angry about the murder of Arena Zaruska.
(03:14):
The evidence is abundant, it is clear, and we have
got to get the lunatics off the streets. Now. Everybody
I saw this morning was just tiptoeing and happy and
frolicking in the clover and all that sort of stuff.
Because Jimmy Kimmel's back. Did you know Jimmy Kimmel's back. Oh,
Jimmy Kimmel, Big, Jimmy Kimmel's back. You're not gonna hear
(03:37):
a single word from him on this program. This is
a Jimmy Kimmel free location. I don't care what that
guy does. I don't care what he says. I don't
care what he claims. I saw what he said, I
heard what he said, and I'm telling you right now,
forget it, forget about it. I don't care. I don't care.
(03:59):
Any thing that this guy's got in his bag of
tricks doesn't matter, doesn't matter. Why am I feeling this way, because,
ladies and gentlemen, we are living in an age of unseriousness.
This is the problem in our country. People do not
want to put away criminals. People do not want to
(04:20):
fire people who slander the dead. People do not want
to do any of that sort of stuff. It's incredible.
I love this country. I would die for this country.
But I fear that we've become unserious, fatally unserrious, not
because we lack talent or treasure, but because we have
traded virtue for vanity and meaning for memes. When did
(04:44):
this happen? Maybe it was when politics became performance, when
the presidency became a TikTok backdrop, when the vice president
could deliver word salads with a smile and still be
(05:06):
treated as profound. Maybe it was when we stopped asking
what's true and started asking what trends. Popular culture now
defines our politics, not the other way around. We used
to elevate leaders, now we elevate influencers. We used to
(05:31):
debate ideas, now we debate identities. We used to ask
what builds a nation? Now we ask what builds a brand?
And the results nonsense, institutional rot, cultural drift. We are
mired in it. Take the rise of the furries, not
(05:55):
just as fringe subculture, but as a protected identity. In
some schools, children dressing as animals, demanding litter boxes in
the bathrooms. Are you kidding me? Is this compassion or confusion?
Is this tolerance or is it surrender? Or Look at
(06:16):
the normalization of drag shows for Toddler's the redefinition of motherhood,
the erasure of fatherhood, the idea that truth is oppressive
and discipline is violence. These aren't just poorly thought out shifts.
They're symptoms of a deeper problem, the loss of seriousness.
(06:40):
Serious nations build, unserious nations entertain. Serious nations sacrifice. Un
serious nations self indulge. Serious nations raise children. Un serious
nations raise followers. So how do we get the train
back on the rails. We start by rejecting the lie
(07:02):
that feelings are facts. We start by restoring the sacred,
the faith, the family, and our country. We start by
elevating leaders who speak in paragraphs, not hashtags. We start
by teaching history, not ideology. We start by remembering that
(07:23):
freedom isn't the absence of restraint, it is the presence
of virtue. Are we finished, No, But we're flirting with collapse.
And collapse doesn't come with a bang. It comes with
a shrug. It comes when good men stop speaking, when
(07:47):
truth becomes taboo, when courage becomes cringe. But I believe
in this country. I believe in its soul, and I
believe that if we speak boldly, if we live rightly,
if we love fiercely, we can still turn this around
(08:09):
because on seriousness is a choice. And you know what else,
so's a revival Oliver News Talk eleven ten, nine nine
(08:29):
to three WBT. It's the Brettwinnable Show. Good to be
with you. Seven oh four five seven zero eleven ten.
Lots of good stuff out there going on. If you'd
like to reach out to us, you can send us
a note. Can send us a note over at the
WBT text line driven by Libertybeck GMC, or you can
call us up. Our phone lines are available for you.
(08:49):
Seven o four five seven zero eleven ten seven four
five seven zero eleven ten. That's how you can send
us a message, or you can call and be on
the air with us. So thanks so much for being
here and doing the stuff that you guys are all
doing right now. Very interesting thing internationally that took place
(09:11):
over the over the couple of days ago, and it
was President Trump saying now he believes that with the
weaponry and the stuff that's being provided, that the Russians
can be knocked back out of Ukraine. And it brings
to my memory, something that is very worthwhile thinking about
(09:38):
two invasions, two invasions, but the same lesson, one lesson. So,
if you go back forty six years ago, the Soviet
Union rolled tanks into Afghanistan, what was the goal? They
were trying to prop up a faltering regime and crush
(09:59):
the resistance stance before it could spread. But what they
found in those mountains wasn't just terrain, It actually was defiance.
The Moujahadeen, armed with little more than faith and Kalishnikov's
turned caves into fortresses and valleys into graveyards. The United States,
(10:23):
watching from Afar, chose a covert action, stinger missiles, training camps,
and a proxy war that bled the Soviets dry. Now
we all understand what happened next, and you had Osama
bin Laden and all of those people being a part
of this. But in the beginning of this we were
actually taking it to the Soviets. We were actively smacking
(10:46):
them right in the teeth, letting those folks on the
ground to push the fight. Now, if you fast forward
to twenty twenty two, Vladimir Putin, cloaked in the Imperial
Nestufalgia invades Ukraine. He calls it a special military operation,
but the world knows better. They know what is coming.
(11:09):
It's an invasion, brazen, brutal, and steeped in lies. This time,
the resistance isn't hiding in caves, it's actually marching through cities,
flying drones and broadcasting courage in real time. And the
United States no longer covert billions in aid, satellite intelligence,
(11:33):
and a moral line drawn in the sand. Both invasions
relied on irregular forces. In Afghanistan back in seventy nine,
it was the Mujahadeen, a tribal, decentralized and fierce fighters.
The Ukraine, it's partisans, hackers, farmers, malotov cocktails. It is
(11:56):
Russia deploying mercenaries, disinformation, cyber sabotage. But the spirit of
the resistance itself, well, that's the constant here. Whether in
Kandahar back in nineteen seventy nine or Kiev, people fight
not just for land, but they fight for dignity. And
(12:17):
so here's the question that echoes across the decades. Will
Ukraine do what Afghanistan did? Will they force a retreat,
humiliate an empire and rewrite the map? The answer, I
think is yes. I think it's yes, not because of
(12:42):
weapons alone, but because of will. Ukraine has already retaken
shattered illusions and expose the rot in the Russian war machine.
The timeline will not be swift attrition. In diplomacy reconstruction.
(13:02):
It's going to take years. But the arc bends towards sovereignty.
So what's our role. In nineteen seventy nine we armed shadows.
In twenty twenty five we stand with a nation. Let
that be a lesson that when tyranny marches, freedom must
(13:23):
not whisper. It has to roar. And that's what's happening.
Because history doesn't just repeat, it rhymes, and this time, well,
the rhyme is resistance. One of the things that I
think happened when JD. Vance and Donald Trump got up
(13:45):
in Zelensky's grill. I think they they showed something to
him that said, Okay, you want something, We're not going
to take our troops and put them in there. We're
not going to do any of that. This has got
to be a NATO supported operation. And that's the important
thing that goes on here, the NATO supported operation, because
(14:09):
what you have right now is a situation where the Soviets.
I'm always gonna call them the Soviets because that's who
they are, to their marrow of their bones. They they're
they're flying over Estonia, they're trying to bully other other countries,
and the Italians ran them off, The NATO forces ran
(14:29):
them off. That's a fundamentally good move. You have to
respect that sort of effort. And so when when people go, eh,
you know, it's not gonna work, it's not gonna happen,
I don't know. This has been pretty it's been pretty effective.
Speaker 2 (14:45):
Now.
Speaker 1 (14:46):
Admittedly, admittedly we had we had stuff that we gave
them and other people supplied them, and they they kind
of figured out pretty quickly. These drones are real, the effective.
And when you start taking the fight into Moscow, well
(15:06):
that just says something too, doesn't it. Think about how
the Israelis hammered in the in the Twelve Day War
over in Iran. They were they were taken out these
Iranian generals by the bushel barrel. Same sort of thing
is happening, Same sort of thing is happening there with
(15:28):
the with the Ukrainians taking the fight to Vlad News
(15:49):
Talk eleven ten A nine three WVT Brettwaable show good
to be with you seven oh four five, seven, zero
eleven ten, And you know, look, there's a lot of
good stuff that we can break down. We can look
at all these different and angles from all these different things.
But the fact of the matter is we are We're winning,
(16:09):
we're succeeding. I know it feels like we're not, and
that's what they want to have happen, right, But all
you have to do is to go back. Chuck Schumer
cut number seven. Chuck. Chuck Schumer is pathetic. He's an
(16:30):
actually an actual pathetic person. He's begging for Trump to
help him get out of the shutdown that Chuck Schumer wants. Chuck, cause, yeah,
call seven, go.
Speaker 3 (16:45):
This is going to be Donald Trumps shutdown. Democrats are
ready to work with the president. We're willing to sit
down with him today, tomorrow. We'll even come to the
golf course and sit down with him wherever he wants
to go. That's okay.
Speaker 1 (17:01):
So when he said the golf course thing, it fell
so flat. It was so flat because Chuck is not
a serious person. Chuck is about to lose his seat.
Chuck is not going to get re elected. Chuck is
going to get defeated, and he's going to end up.
You know who he's gonna end up with. You're gonna
(17:22):
end up with AOC getting Chuck's seat, or maybe perhaps
maybe he'll get replaced by Mundami. How about Mundami inside
the Senate. There's a possibility of that as well. But
the problem is this, this party is not serious about
the threats to this country, the internal threats of this country,
(17:46):
the external threats in this country. They do not understand,
they do not understand why we are standing on the precipice.
Let me give you an example. There's a person called
Melanie Stansbury. Melanie Stansbury is not ready for prime time.
(18:06):
She hails from the Democrat seat in New Mexico, in
New Mexico, and she is somebody you don't want to
have a conversation with because you're not able to understand
what she's actually really saying. This is cut number four
Congresswoman Melanie Stansbury, for.
Speaker 4 (18:28):
I think it's impossible to listen to Donald Trump appearing
on the international stage and not think this man is
literally unhidd literally irresponsible, bizarre, bonkers Ludacris. I don't even
know why his staff are allowing him to stand in
front of a mic. At this point, it was completely incoherent.
(18:50):
And you know, I have many other, let's say, less
polite even responses. But he's completely undermining US authority on
the global stage. He's undermining global peace foot he's calling
into question the purpose of the UN. He canceled US
UN funding, and here he is lobbying to get a
peace prize. And the man is literally literally coozing up
(19:12):
to our foreign adversaries. I mean, it's wildly irresponse.
Speaker 1 (19:16):
Just stop it, just stop it, just stop stop. He
stood in the in the chamber and he looked at
the Iranians and said, how do you like that? You
want more of that? How do you like that? What
did he say to the people coming in from Venezuela
with the drugs? He said, We're gonna keep sinking your boats.
(19:38):
You are not ready for you are the perfect person
to replace Chuck Schumer. Melanie Stansbury should get the job.
Just give her the job. Ah, he's literally he's literally
not the president. All that sort of stuff. I love
when people come with this way. I love this because
(20:00):
I'm going to teach her something. I'm going to show
her something. And I'm going to make I'm a maker.
She would not even understand. She probably couldn't even conceive
of this argument. So go ahead and give me cut
number eleven. This is the President of the United States.
This is the President of the United States of America
(20:20):
warning about the death of Europe yesterday. Cut number eleven.
Speaker 5 (20:25):
Fire go I look at London, where you have a
terrible mayor, terrible, terrible mayor, and it's been so changed,
so changed. Now they want to go to sharia law,
but you're in a different country.
Speaker 1 (20:40):
You can't do that.
Speaker 5 (20:41):
Both the immigration and their suicidal energy ideas will be
the death of Western Europe. If something is not done immediately,
they cannot This cannot be sustained. What makes the world
so beautiful is that each country is unique. But to
stay this way, every sovereign must have the right to
control their own borders.
Speaker 1 (21:02):
You have the right to control your borders as.
Speaker 5 (21:05):
We do now, and to limit the sheer numbers of
migrants entering their countries and paid for by the people
of that nation that were there and that built that
particular nation at the time.
Speaker 1 (21:18):
They put their blood.
Speaker 5 (21:19):
Sweat, tears, money into that country, and now they're being ruined.
Proud nations must be allowed to protect their communities and
prevent their societies from being overwhelmed by people they have
never seen before, with different customs, religions, with different everything.
Where migrants have violated laws, large false asylum claims, or
(21:42):
claimed refugee status for illegitimate reasons, they should in many
cases be immediately sent home. And while we will always
have a big heart for places and people that are struggling,
and truly compassionate answers will be given, we have to
solve the problem, and we have to solve it in
(22:04):
their countries, not create new problems in our countries.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
That's it. It's clear as day. She said, he doesn't
know what he's talking about. Sovereignty. Sovereignty is pretty a
pretty important thing, right. It means that you actually get
to determine how your country is going to function. It
actually allows you to put up a barriers or take
(22:29):
down barriers to come into the United States of America,
all that sort of stuff. Every country, even North Korea,
has the right to their sovereignty. Russia has rights to
their sovereignty, but Swana has rights to their sovereignty. You
just go down the list. Every country is sovereign. Every
country is sovereign, you know, and so he's he's crazy
(22:53):
for wanting to protect the country. That's crazy time, that's
looney Kazuni from Parts unknown? What is that? That's the resistance?
It's not working. I'm gonna give you the numbers. It
ain't working. And I'm sad to see a once great
(23:14):
party fall into disrepute. There's talk eleven to ten, not
(23:34):
nine to three, WBT. But at whatever show, good to
be with you. Let's dive into some other stuff that's
maybe not anything that you're looking at. I am going
to talk a lot about the need to get safety
and security in this next hour. Okay, that's one of
the things that I wanted to hold on to. But
(23:54):
let me let me give you something here that I,
for the life of me, I can't understand. And it's
not me shaking my fist and yelling at the old
like an old person, like well, what are you doing?
That's just nuts. This is such a terrible story, but
(24:15):
it feeds right into the issues of the day of
people not thinking before they take actions. Teens have been charged.
Two teens have been charged after TikTok stunts killed friends
leaves another with permanent injuries. So let's let's dive into
(24:40):
this here for a second. Let's just like think about this.
So this is a date line in Pennsylvania. Okay, it's Pennsylvania.
Two Pennsylvania teens are facing charges after prosecutors said that
they drove their friends on dangerous TikTok inspired stunts, killing
(25:04):
one and causing what are expected to be life long
injuries to another. The incidents were unrelated to one another
and involved different stunts, but both of them happened in
(25:24):
Northampton County, eighty five miles west of New York City
and eighty miles north of Philadelphia. In one case, a
seventeen year old died on June the first while riding
on top of a folding table tied to the back
(25:46):
of a friend's car, according to the Northampton District Attorney,
Stephen Barta. Prosecutors said that the friend recklessly drove too
fast and whipped the rider sitting on the table into
(26:08):
another parked vehicle, resulting in his death. Okay, go back
to I have a guy who took a shot at
me in the text in the text thing here, and
he says that I'm unserious. A homicide is murder, is killings.
That is deadly serious and why should that be happening.
(26:33):
The victim in the case was identified as David Nagy,
seventeen years old. He's dead. In the other case, a
nineteen year old woman allegedly drove through a parking lot
(26:53):
with her friends surfing on the trunk of her car.
The woman on the trunk fell off and suffered catastrophic
head injuries that will be permanent in nature. Neither teen
is accused of criminal genic thinking all right, meaning they
(27:18):
were not accused of planning to hurt their friends. However,
Barata said they are allegedly criminally culpable because the incidents
were so grossly negligent and reckless. The families did have
(27:39):
a closeness and a trust with these close friends. I mean,
they knew them well, Barrata told reporters at a news
briefing attended by Fox twenty nine. Barrata added that neither
driver has a criminal record, and neither victim's family is
calling for incarceration. As a result, he said his office
(28:04):
will not seek jail time for either of them if
they plea to the deals. Look, okay, you could say
it's an accident. Is it an accident? It sounds to
me like you have a person who's doing something that's
incredibly reckless. It sounds to me like this is something
(28:24):
that should not happen. It's terrible, it's the worst possible thing.
The families are seeking accountability and hope that these changes
will result in deterrence for other youth. The dangerous stunts
are not just limited to Pennsylvania. A similar car surfing
stunt in Utah left a fifteen year old girl with
(28:46):
a severe brain injury last year. So you're supposed to
tell your kid every single possible danger thing that you
look at on TikTok. I think I'm in I think
I'm in the camp of a bandit man. I really
I think that this is I think these are people
who are just malformed in their thinking. And it's because
(29:08):
they're teenagers. You don't you don't get full, you know,
full usage of your brain until you're like twenty six,
twenty seven years old. And I see plenty of twenty six,
twenty seven year olds that are idiots, plenty of them,
A number of them, A specific one I'm thinking about.
(29:28):
I just what everybody did crazy stuff as a kid.
Speaker 2 (29:33):
Right.
Speaker 1 (29:34):
I mean everybody did crazy stuff as a kid, and
you would you would like, I'm gonna go jump off
I'm gonna go jump off a bridge and go in
the water. Do you know how deep the water is?
Speaker 2 (29:46):
No?
Speaker 1 (29:46):
Okay, well that's probably not a choice move. But so
this person put a person on a table and they
dragged it down the road so it was like table surfing.
Then the other one fell off the back of the
(30:08):
car and slammed into another car, and now they have
brain damage. I just this is crazy. This is not
right now.
Speaker 2 (30:24):
I mean.
Speaker 1 (30:26):
It's cold, it's very cold. You know, to sit back
and say, well, at least they're not suing each other.
At least they're not doing this or that or the
other thing. Yeah, but my gosh, you raise a kid
and then suddenly they decide they're gonna go do something
so recklessly stupid that you almost can't fathom it. Start fathoming.
(31:10):
News Talk eleven ten nine three w b T. It's
the Brett Winterbole Show. Good to be with you. As
we look at all the stuff that is happening out there,
A lot of a lot of good stuff is happening
out there. It's not all bad stuff. It's not. It's
not all terrible stuff.
Speaker 6 (31:23):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (31:24):
The winning, the winning is actually happening, and and I know,
I know, I get it, I understand it. Sometimes it
feels like the entire world is uh a lot, a
lot lined up against you. But that's not really the case.
That's really not the case. There is so much stuff,
uh that that is that is out there that we
we need to you know, we need to think about
(31:44):
these sorts of things. Uh, when we when we look
at a number of these different sort of storylines, right,
I mean, when when you sit back and and you
think about, uh, where we are as a as a country,
there always going to amplify the worst possible stuff that
happens in the country. And that's something that's hugely important.
(32:08):
Think about where we are right now. Okay, imagine how
the election could have gone back in twenty twenty four,
but instead look at where we are now. Where we
are now, I believe is that we are able to
fix a lot of the problems that are happening right
(32:29):
here in Charlotte and around the country. Once upon a time,
we had millions and millions of people who were crashing
into the United States, and now we have worked to
repatriate many of those people. But the job is not
yet done. Now we're onto safety and security. The JD
Vance spending time here in conquered and the great thing
(32:54):
about that is he is here to push for safety
and security. That's the big deal, and that's important. And
they're looking at this because it is a it's a
now or never sort of approach. Right when you see
(33:15):
jd Vance speaking and you see the call for action
that must take place, well it's abundantly clear. Jd Vance
pointed exactly in the right direction. Roy Cooper for soft
on crime policies after the fatal stabbing in Charlotte. Vice
President jd Vance visited the Charlotte area on Wednesday today
(33:40):
to publicly discuss safety and security as North Carolina lawmakers
push forward with a variety of proposals on criminal law. Now,
it's interesting to me to think about all the resistance
that's been put up in places like California, in places
like Chicago, in places like Baltimore. Right people are not
(34:06):
feeling safe, People are feeling that this is a dangerous
sort of a situation. So what would you want somebody
to do. You would want them to come in and
reassure you that things are going to get better. Vice
President jad Vance visited earlier today, as I mentioned, and
he talked about the importance of not ever happening and
(34:29):
not ever seeing this happen again. With a twenty three
year old murder victim who was stabbed on a commuter train,
the footage of her getting stabbed to death was very
hard to watch, he said. He said that he hasn't
(34:53):
watched the full video of the stabbing, but he said
I had to actually cover my eyes for a part
of it because it was so gruesome that happened in public,
that didn't happen in somebody's apartment in some alley way,
that was with people who were traveling at the exact
(35:16):
same time in a contemporaneous way. Maybe all of us
should just stare at it to know the evil that
we are confronting, because what happened to her is really disgusting,
Jadvan said. A day before Vance's visit, North Carolina legislators
(35:36):
passed Arena's Law, in which it makes it easier for
judges to keep suspects in jail or put them in
a hospital if they have a history of criminal behavior
or mental illness. The Republican backbill also helped restart executions
(35:58):
in the state. Now, what is the answer here? Aren't
you sick and tired of seeing the body count go
up and up and up and up in Charlotte? Aren't
you sick and tired of that? Isn't it disgusting to
see a four year old boy murdered in a drive by?
(36:19):
What is this? Who is this? Why are we taking
a knee and molly coddling these people that want to
go out and murder innocent people? Wouldn't you love to
just lock them all up, all these people that are
committing crimes. Isn't that how you grew up? Did you
grow up seeing people flouting the law, not being held
(36:44):
to account. There was a period in time in this country,
because I remember it myself when people who committed crimes
went to jail and did the time. Now, cashless bail,
what's the upside for cashless bail? Make the case? Why
should we be Oh, it's great, cashless bail, no responsibility,
(37:09):
and I can go about my business murdering, raping and beaten.
You want that in your neighborhood. You live out there
in the nice neighborhoods, right, maybe you don't live in
Charlotte Charlotte. Maybe you live out there in the nice neighborhoods.
You understand that people can transit out of different locations
and come and say hello to you at your house
(37:29):
at three o'clock in the morning. Right, isn't it important
to lock up the felons, to lock up the people
who are trying to take people's lives and oftentimes are successful.
What would you do if you got out of out
of your bed because you heard a sound in the
house and somebody was staring at you with a gun
(37:52):
in their hand. How would you react? And then what
happens if you find out that that particular character was
arrested and had cashless bail. This is not how the
system is supposed to work. Yes, innocent till proven guilty,
but I'm sorry fourteen times fourteen times, and this guy
(38:16):
is talking to imaginary people and all this kind of stuff.
What are you doing? It's pathetic if you can't even
lock up a felon. What's the purpose of the justice department?
What's the purpose of justice in any way, shape or form.
There is no off ramp from Murderville. Hey, I got
(38:43):
cashless bail? Cashless bail is great. I understand. You can't
do mean things to people. You can't go out there
and you can't torture, you can't do any of that stuff,
and that should never happen. That's what happens in Putinville
and all that sort of stuff. But the fact of
the matter is young people have a right to be
(39:05):
able to walk down a sidewalk and not get murdered.
A four year old has the right to grow up
to be an adult. And those people who are defending it.
I heard that woman who was talking earlier today over
there in the he say, she sounded like Joe Biden
(39:26):
didn't even know what day it was, didn't know where
he was, didn't know what it was about. Ladies and gentlemen,
take a stand, make a stand and make sure that
this never happens again. The powers in our hands, and
the power needs to be applied, minister. He was talking
(40:07):
Lemon Sad nine nine three w BT Brent Waterbill show
it to be with you. So you may have heard
this storyline. There's there's a there's like a whole lot
of crime that's that's happening. But there was a vicious
attack earlier today in Dallas, Texas and FBI. The FBI
is saying that Dallas sniper who attacked ICE facility had
(40:29):
anti ice ideological motive.
Speaker 2 (40:32):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (40:32):
He wrote all over his his his bullets, you know this,
this this weirdo, another one of these weirdo's doing this
kind of stuff. And he had anti ice on the
bullet on the jacket.
Speaker 6 (40:44):
UH.
Speaker 1 (40:45):
FBI Director Cash Pattel reported that the man who shot
at an ICE facility in Dallas on Wednesday morning had
an ideological motive. At least one of the bullets loaded
in the clip had anti ice marked on the Shellcasing
Director Patel said the man fired several rounds at the
(41:09):
Dallas Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility there Wednesday morning. Patel
said that the man killed one person and wounded several others.
He then took his own life, like the coward and
garbage human that he is, by the way, that's my commentary.
He then took his own life as agents approached the
(41:31):
rooftop location. So this is another sniper. This is another sniper.
This is another sniper who wrote stuff on their bullets.
I wonder what his identity is. We'll find out, no
doubt about that. While the investigation is still going on.
An initial review of the evidence shows an ideological move
(41:51):
behind this attack. One of the unspent shellcasings recovered was ingrained,
was engraved with the phrase anti eyes. More updates will
be forthcoming. So that happened today. Now you know what
(42:13):
happened last night. I'm not talking about I'm not talking
about the K word. Forget him, he's a loser. I'm
not talking about mister K. Mister K can go away.
Mister K can go away. That's it, period, full stop.
But there's a guy called Stephen Colbert. Do you know
(42:37):
Stephen Colbert. Stephen Colbert is a famous, famous man, his
very famous. He's famous for saying the F word on
television repeatedly. Yes, he does it all the time. So
who do you think was his guest last night? Guess
anybody you want to try to guess? Get who was
(42:59):
who was Colbert Bert's guest last night? You're gonna see
the connection in a second. Little bitty tough guy, Gavin
any twosome newsom. What is Gavin's stock in trade? With
(43:21):
the speeches he gives? Who does he hate more than
anybody else in the whole world? He hates Ice. He
passed a law telling Ice that they're not allowed to
wear a mask when they're doing raids. Gavin Newsom last
night said, we will not have another election in twenty
(43:45):
twenty eight unless we wake up. Could that have been
a triggering moment in Dallas with an unstable whack job?
Could he have set this off? All he does is
go after Ice agents. All he does is target Ice agents.
Newsom said, Look, it's not complicated. Divorce is not an option.
(44:06):
I mean, at the end of the day, we've got
to figure out a way to live together and dance
together across our differences. He's so full of bunk. And
then there's something to look success. These clues. They were
successful in the last election. People need to understand what
motivates them, what motivates them, what motivates them. Gavin Newsom
(44:31):
went super deep. He went super deep, and I'm just
telling you, I think this guy may have been the
trigger for this attack that took place in Dallas. Because
all these people out in California do is talk about
the evils of ice, the evils of ice. They never
say a single word about the evils of what happens
(44:52):
if Ice does not get deport does not deport people
out of the country. People who are being murdered, people
who being raped, people who are being killed. This is
the problem. And Gavin knew some things. He can flag
this all the way, all the way to twenty twenty eight.
I'm telling you right now, it's not gonna work. It
(45:14):
is absolutely not going to work because because as he
put it, the Democratic Party we have a lot of
work to do to make up for our failures in
the past. Tell me about your successes, Gavin, do you
have any That answer is definitively none. He has nothing
(45:38):
to show but burning one hundred billion dollars on the
rail project to nowhere. Just remember that. And that's two
doors down from Vice President Harris. Yeah, I get it.
(46:03):
You have gas always under its am always coming and
last and bring it up the bass knowing a big
get your shotgun blast to kick in the ass. So
pair aide News Talk eleven ten now and I'm three WBT.
All right, Let's let's look at a couple of storylines
(46:23):
here that are that are that are kind of interesting, uh,
that that are happening in real time. All these stories
are happening in real time, which is important. So there's
a piece that was posted over at zero Hedge a
narco tyranny and danger in public spaces, and they set
(46:46):
this up. I'm not gonna read the entire thing. It's
a very long piece, but it's an interesting piece, and
they they talk about all that happened with uh Arena
and the murder in that case. And one of the
things that they point out in this piece that that
is particularly interesting is this people are not They're they're
(47:14):
they're not going to put up with this sort of
behavior for a long time. So they're what they're what
they're saying in this piece is there is plenty of
evidence that the response to crime from municipal governments run
by progressives is inadequate and outright delusional. So they're saying
(47:36):
Charlotte and other blue cities are not ready to actually
protect people who might otherwise want to come into the
communities here, all right, So here's what they say. There
is plenty of evidence that the response to crime from
municipal governments run by progressives is inadequate and often outright delusional.
(48:02):
Commenting on the Charlotte killing and coilette, Juca Civiolian writes
that identity politics plays a large role in how progressives
respond to these kinds of incidents. People are murdered every
day in America, but not every murder is treated as newsworthy.
(48:27):
Some are amplified into morality plays about systemic racism, while
others are dismissed as isolated tragedies, and this discrepancy generally
follows an identitarian script dictated by the view of social justice.
(48:52):
When George Floyd died under the knee of a white
officer in twenty twenty, his face appeared on murals from
Berlin to Nairobi. Breonna Taylor Michael Brown also became household
names following their deaths at the hands of American law enforcement,
but Tony Tempa and Daniel Shaver, both of whom were
(49:14):
white victims of lethal police force, remain largely unknown in
the public imagination. The difference is not the brutality of
the incidents, but the racial frame through which they look
what they're reporting on. The Zarutzka murder also fits a
(49:37):
depressingly familiar pattern of preventable urban violence, particularly after the
death of George Floyd and the ensuing Black Lives Matter protests.
The fiery but mostly peaceful riots that engulfed American cities
in the summer of twenty twenty left an extremely destructive
(49:58):
political legacy, demoralized police departments, slashed budgets, the election of
prosecutors who deemphasized basic law enforcement, and a broader climate
of impunity. The results soon became apparent a historic spike
in crime, including homicide, shoplifting, and menacing behavior on public transportation.
(50:25):
Even as crime rates have begun to decline from their
twenty twenty to twenty twenty one peak. Low level disorder
persists often drug use, fair evasion, and pervasive senses that
the authorities have lost control of public spaces. That is
(50:45):
the most important sentence in this piece, that there is
a pervasive sense that authorities have lost control of public spaces.
You can't go to a park, you can't go eat
outside in front of a restaurant, You can't do any
of those things. In many of the cities that are
(51:05):
run by progressives. They don't care. The Charlotte video captured
that climate in miniature. As kat Rosenfeld had argued, quote,
we have fallen for the misguided idea that compassion and
permissiveness are one and the same. In practice, the taboo
(51:31):
against insisting on law and order and decency has meant
abandoning shared spaces, trains, platforms, sidewalks to the most disturbed
and dangerous people among us. Just go back the Daniel
(51:52):
Penny saga. Meanwhile, meanwhile, they learned a cruel lesson. If
you intervene, you may be punished. So safest course is
to do nothing and watch people murder people on subways.
Isn't that sad? Isn't that disgusting? These progressives they never
(52:16):
want to They never call in on the shows. They
never want to, you know, talk about their vision for
Charlotte twenty twenty eight or any of that kind of stuff. Right,
they never do that. Why don't they ever call in
and say, you know what we want. We want more
crime in the streets, we want more rampaging, we want
more crazy stuff like that. Why why do these people
never call out? Why why do they not lay out
(52:39):
the plan? Look, it's not a it's not a racial factor.
It's it's a factor of progressivism. And the most dangerous
progressives in the world are people like sorrows, white people
who who who think that this is a sort of
a new kind of way to order the business in cities.
(53:00):
It's this is not about people who are people of color, uh,
that they are, that they are the victims in many
of these cases. Look at the kid that got shot
and and and and was killed at age four. That's
not right, that's terrible. People need to go to jail.
It's not at all anything. It's actually progressives who want
(53:22):
to experiment with uh, safety and security not being safety
and security. That's a really scary thing. You go to
any college, you go to any university, and you're gonna
find people these these these progressive white women who go
to these classes and and they're they're the folks that
(53:42):
are mostly egging this stuff on. And you know who
pays the price the worst? Who pays the price the
worst communities of color, communities where people are are not safe.
There was this stupidity with with a Lahanmiorcis and Joe
Biden and Vice President Harris right or President of Vice
(54:04):
Harris who lost, by the way, one point seven billion
dollars in the campaign. But here here's the thing. Here's
the thing that's so dangerous, all right. The thing that
is so dangerous is these progressives don't live in the
communities that are being thrashed. That's what's so sad. Rosenfield's
(54:28):
shared spaces really are government owned places like parks, public
transportation such as trains, subways, and buses, and are created
when governments attempt to impose progressive non enforcement policies on
private businesses such as retail stores. When it comes to shoplifting,
(54:50):
they the white liberal progressive woman, the white liberal progressive
man with the man bun on his head. He doesn't
know what his identity is from day to day. They
are the people that are making people of color, people
in communities unsafe because they allow the predators to go
(55:11):
around and hammer them. This is terrible. Large scale shoplifting
deteriorates the quality of life in a community as widespread
retail theft is not a victimless crime, despite what the
progressives might claim. Likewise, when a random encounter in an
(55:33):
urban government space like a commuter train can turn deadly,
the ramifications are enormous for society. That's what happened to Arena,
And you want to know who was able to handle
that situation. When you go back to nineteen ninety two
nineteen ninety three New York City, Rudy Giuliani and Michael Bloomberg,
(55:57):
and they understood the importance of making sure that people
were safe, whether in public or in private spaces. But
here and now, to Carlos Brown, they may as well,
They may as well, just what are they gonna do,
because unfortunately, this is a person who has committed a
(56:20):
heinous crime, and he's been flagged down, flagged down, flagged
down numbers of times, and it'll just happen again, because
that's what the progressives want. They live in their high rises,
they live in their fancy neighborhoods, They live behind closed
(56:41):
doors and locked entrances and all of that stuff. For them,
it's an experiment. For people who have to live under
that experiment, it is quite literally murder. They should be
forced to live in the neighborhoods in which they want
to to control. They should be forced to live in
(57:02):
those neighborhoods and see the wages of sin. The wages
of sin is death. News Talk eleven, ten ninety nine,
(57:29):
three WBT Brett whatever. That song is called Wake Up
by Rage against the Machine. All right, let's take a call, Mike.
Welcome to the program. What's on your mind?
Speaker 2 (57:39):
Mike, Hey Brett, good afternoon. I hope you're doing well.
Speaker 1 (57:42):
Yes, Sam, I hope you are as well.
Speaker 2 (57:45):
Thank you very much. Yeah, I was really intrigued by
the discussion you've had this afternoon and especially in that
last quarter hour about I guess the racial component that's
often involved in these crimes and even in the Arena
Zaruska crime, you know, And I'm just wondering. It got
(58:06):
me thinking. I posted something on my social media about
ten days ago, and it was kind of a hypothetical question,
and I've got some interesting responses. I wanted to pass
it by you and see what you thought about it, because, frankly,
I'm not sure how I think about it, but the
hypothetical sort of runs like this, Let's assume that everything
(58:27):
in this hypothetical sthetical is absolutely identical to the actual
event that we've all seen in horror are horrified by.
I know, it was the same trains involved at the
same time, on the same route, and the same people
on the train, and the exact same locations that we've
all seen in the videos. And it's sick and deranged
(58:47):
killer with fourteen prior convictions that are seated right behind
you know, the victim in the same way. The only
difference in this hypothetical question is that the victim, instead
of being a beautiful and bright twenty three old woman
who had escaped to America from the violence in her
(59:09):
country of Ukraine with gorgeous porcelain white skin, was instead
a beautiful and bright twenty three year old woman who
would escape to America from the violence in her country
of Uganda or say South Sudan or Ethiopia or Haiti,
and had gorgeous mahogany black skin. Again, everything else is
(59:34):
the same, but we changed that. Would we still be
talking about it? Would we have talked about it in
the first place? Would a congressional committee be coming to
town for that? Would the North Point General Assembly have
a law with this Ugandian refugees name on it? Yeah?
I get it, I don't I don't know the answer.
(59:57):
I'd like to think so, but I don't know. How
do you feel?
Speaker 1 (59:59):
Why wouldn't it.
Speaker 2 (01:00:04):
Right? You know?
Speaker 1 (01:00:05):
Why wouldn't it?
Speaker 2 (01:00:06):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:00:06):
No, why wouldn't it.
Speaker 2 (01:00:07):
I guess what I'm asking is.
Speaker 1 (01:00:09):
Is, well, well, you you, Mike, you all you see
is race. I see a human being being murdered, and
I think that that's I think that's the I think
that's the prob right, I think that's the well, No,
I know, I don't want to be right because the
fact of the matter is I don't want to see
another young twenty three year old murdered. That's the problem, Mike, Mike,
(01:00:29):
that's the problem. This is why we can't have a conversation.
You try to fill a buster and you try to
frame everything through the lens of race. The reality is
a twenty three year old lost her life on the
train and people saw it, and you don't seem to
really you know what. I'm sorry, I gotta go, man, gosh, Mike,
(01:00:53):
why wouldn't it Why wouldn't it matter? Because Mike, you're
one of those progressives who make us less news Talk
(01:01:17):
eleven ten out of ninety three WBT, Brett Winterbow Show,
Good to be with You. The thing that's percolating over
at this is literally CNN sources say Trump administration close
to deciding on charging James Comy for perjury. Boy, they
got right off that shooting in Dallas pretty quickly. I'm
(01:01:38):
looking at other places. So I'm looking at the WBT
station here, right. That's the Arena's law. Like she she's
she's being noted the FBI anti ice written on a
bullet where this guy killed you know, people and then
he killed himself. He was a sniper. But CNN is
(01:02:01):
all about the Trump administration close to deciding on charging
James Comy. Well, priorities, that's priorities right there, right, they
got the priorities. Man, they are they are living in
a bubble. Chris is up first this hour. Chris, Welcome
to the program.
Speaker 7 (01:02:18):
Hey buddy, hello, man, wait it is right now with Trump.
You gotta do what you gotta do, bro, uh.
Speaker 8 (01:02:23):
Huh, you know.
Speaker 7 (01:02:25):
But let me get to mister Mike ahead.
Speaker 1 (01:02:29):
I know this guy.
Speaker 8 (01:02:31):
That's the thing.
Speaker 9 (01:02:32):
Boys, I've heard I hear him on calendar and if
I remember correctly, and I'm gonna google this to find out, Yeah,
he used. This guy that just called you, that made.
Speaker 7 (01:02:43):
This racial used to be.
Speaker 9 (01:02:46):
A lawyer for the Democratic Party here in Meca Burk County.
Speaker 1 (01:02:50):
Yes that is true, Yes, that is true.
Speaker 7 (01:02:51):
Yes, I'm gonna look you up, Mike, because let me
tell you this, brother, if that was a beautiful aged
lady or a beautiful black lady or a beautiful Hispanic lady,
it doesn't matter.
Speaker 9 (01:03:07):
That was murder, right, you everything.
Speaker 7 (01:03:11):
You do, Mike, you want to twist it into some
unintelligible BS word salad for Race. You're not reading the room, Mike.
You don't have power except you're a Meckleburg county, which
hopefully that'll change. This is just your little fight on
(01:03:32):
me here, buddy. So let me tell you this, and
I'm gonna say it drong aloud. I'm gonna look you up, Mike, no,
and I will see you.
Speaker 2 (01:03:42):
No no, no, no no no no no no no
no no no.
Speaker 1 (01:03:44):
We don't need that look you. I can I can
attest that we we've we've made the point. We we
we want people to to talk and have conversations. This
is what this is why we have this. This is
the conversation place where we come to have conversations. This
isn't anything else other than that. Let's go to Paul next. Paul,
(01:04:05):
welcome to the program. What's on your mind?
Speaker 10 (01:04:08):
Oh hey, thanks so much for taking my call.
Speaker 2 (01:04:10):
Brett.
Speaker 10 (01:04:10):
I echoed much of what that gentleman just said, except
until the very end. Yes, sir, but I just wish
that we could keep all this stuff away from Race
because this was a horrific murder.
Speaker 2 (01:04:22):
Yep, you know.
Speaker 10 (01:04:26):
People of all different races were on board that train
who perpetrated and watched what happened, and largely nobody did
anything at the time of the murder. So can't we
all just grieve for a beautiful young lady, no matter
what race she is, and try to all come together
and try to get above this and try to improve security.
(01:04:49):
Charlotte was on Fox News this morning with the Fox
Morning Show edwhen Peacock was on, and this was just
a really really, it's a horrible look for Charlotte. It's
a horrible look for humanity, and can't we all just
come together and get beyond all of this? And I
guess that's all I really wanted to say. You're right, all,
(01:05:10):
but let's just all be Christian and try to rise
above it all.
Speaker 1 (01:05:13):
Amen, great stuff. I appreciate that, Paul very much. I
appreciate that that that position that you're talking about. Yes,
I agree with you, and we should all we should
all be working together, right. I don't want to see people.
I don't want to see people suffering. There's a very
famous case, a very famous case that happened many, many
(01:05:37):
years ago, and it was a woman by the name
of Kitty Genovese. Kitty Genovese was basically the impetus for
the nine to one one system. Kitty Genoviz's murder became
(01:05:59):
a symbol of the bystander effect, but her family and
her other loved ones are still trying to publicly correct
the inaccurate details of her death in the decades since.
This is from a number of years ago. In March
of nineteen sixty four, a twenty eight year old Kitty
that was her name was raped and stabbed to death
in two separate attacks while she was returning home in
(01:06:22):
New York City's Borough of Queens. An early report by
The New York Times claimed that as many as thirty
eight witnesses saw Kitty being attacked three times, and no
one tried to help her or called the police at
their local police precincts, as nine to one one did
(01:06:43):
not exist at the time. However, it was later revealed
that there were far fewer witnesses than initially reported, and
several tried to help Kitty. Unfortunately, she died in route
to the hostel spital. Three years later. Kitty's slaying and
(01:07:04):
its aftermath inspired the creation of the nine to one
to one emergency calling system, according to PBS's Independent Lens.
Back in nineteen sixty eight, while Kitty's murder became front
page news, her brother Bill Genevies, told People magazine that
he and his family members avoided finding out how the
(01:07:27):
tragic event unfolded. When Winston Moseley was convicted of first
degree murder and sentenced to death in July of nineteen
sixty four, Kitty's family couldn't bear to go to the trial.
Bill said in the twenty sixteen documentary called The Witness.
It wasn't until their mother died in nineteen ninety two
(01:07:48):
that he began to research his late sister and learn
more about the death of his sister. But at the
end of this storyline was the creation of nine to
one one. But before that, there were many people at
(01:08:08):
about three point fifteen in the morning when she was
when she was attacked and killed, and nobody, nobody, nobody
did anything to help her. She was stabbed a total
of fourteen times, fourteen times, And the fact of the
(01:08:29):
matter is nobody rendered aid, nobody really tried to help
her in that regard. As the story goes, imagine that,
imagine that, you know, don't forget there is also another
(01:08:59):
case that happened in March in which a Navy veteran,
who his sister said was homeless at the time, was
hurt when another passenger on the bus hit him several times.
On Cat's video, this is something that has been I
(01:09:19):
have heard mentioned on the station, but the reality of
this is is my god. People are being assaulted on
public transportation. James Mark Godfrey, sixty four years of age,
suffered a broken neck and spinal injury in a March
sixth attack on the Cat's bus, according to the Charlotte
Mecklenburg Police Department. In fact, the AFFI David is part
(01:09:44):
of the courts record. And you now have a man
who served this country honorably as a veteran, and he
has to depend on others to eat, to sleep and
to survive. They have got to do something about the safety,
said Ms Adams in a phone interview about KATS, which
(01:10:09):
runs the light rail and the bus system in Charlotte.
It is devastating. We have to raise our voices for
this man as well, because this is a person who
got assaulted in this particular way. This is despicable. Why
are we not why are we not doing a thing
(01:10:30):
about this as well. Godfrey, a Navy veteran who his
sister said was homeless at the time, was hurt when
another passenger on the bus hit him several times. Cat's
video surveillance footage shows Godfrey mister Godfrey appears to talk
(01:10:51):
to the suspect, then argue with him and point at
him before attempting to grab a book bag next to
the suspect, the lease affidavit said. The document states that
the suspect hit Godfrey in the head and face with
his knee, knocking Godfrey to the ground unconscious. He continues
(01:11:15):
kicking and stomping on the victim as he lays on
the ground. The affidavit states, why are we not getting
justice for this man? Why is this not happening there?
There is plenty of outrage to go around here. Why
are we not doing this? These people need to be
(01:11:36):
held to account. It's the progressives, I'm telling you. And
it sounds like a broken record, but dang it, it's
it's wrong. I'm gonna I'm gonna tangentially make a point here,
and I think it's an important thing for us to
think about. All right, you you you have seen over
(01:11:57):
the course I'll say, let's let's starting an in the
late nineties, Okay, the late nineteen nineties. What we saw
happen in the late nineteen nineties was the slow, very
slow movement towards trying to create males as predators, and
(01:12:20):
no doubt about it, we watched what happened into the
early two thousands and then with the me too movement
and everything like that. Every male is somebody that's a
dangerous person. It's an awful person. All that sort of stuff. Well,
the forge of masculinity is not brutality. It's not vulgarity.
(01:12:42):
It's not the cat collar on the corner or the
tyrant at the table. True masculinity is refinement under pressure.
It is strength, it's held in check. It is the
man who opens the door, not because a woman is weak,
but because he is strong. We are blessed people, but
(01:13:03):
in our blessing we've grown soft, course hollow, all of that.
Our culture mocks virtue and crowns vice. That's the problem
that we have. We glorify the grotesque and we forget
the gentle. We forget the names of the murdered Lake
(01:13:25):
and Riley Arena. Their stories fade while their killers walk free.
It cannot stand. It must be up to us as
men to return to the forge, not to be cruel,
but to become carved, sharpened, tempered. We need gentle men,
(01:13:47):
not brutes stalking people on public transport. And unfortunately, those
progressive ladies that I talked about who are responsible for
many of the ills when it comes to tolerating people
who want to commit crimes because they have some sort
(01:14:11):
of a weird sort of take in that regard. Fact
of the matter is, it is abundantly clear to me
that we are supposed to be the protectors. We are
supposed to be for millennia. We are supposed to be
the protectors. And what did you get? You got told
in the last fifteen to twenty years. Oh you're hyper,
(01:14:34):
Oh you've got add Oh you've got this, Oh you
need riddle, and oh you need drugs. Let's medicate you this,
Let's give you all these drugs. Let's keep you out
of your mind. Let's do everything we possibly can except
for the right thing. Except for the right thing. Predators
(01:14:56):
are real. They're out there, they're watching. They'll steal your
your daughters, they'll violate your wives. And our response must
be swift deportation for those who are not supposed to
be in the country, permanent lock up for the violent,
(01:15:16):
no more second chances for those who desecrate innocence. We
must defend the week, not exploit them. We must treat
every woman, every lady, every grandmother is sacred, not because
she demands it, but because we're commanded to. We are
(01:15:38):
supposed to be the protectors. And it's really exciting for
me to welcome this next guest to the program, Danny Lindeman,
with the great folks over at Craft Body Scan. And
(01:16:02):
I've been so excited to uh get a chance to
meet with you, to talk with you, Denny, because I
I went and had a scan done and it was incredible,
It was transformative, and it's uh it gave me a
whole new look at how you all are able to
save lives. And I want to welcome you to WBT.
(01:16:24):
It's good to have you here.
Speaker 11 (01:16:25):
This is great to be down here. I'm excited that
this is my first time to be down at the
station personally, to be able to meet you and.
Speaker 1 (01:16:30):
That is that is fantastic. So let's let's I have
a couple of questions for you. Okay, we get some
stuff that we can take a look at, and it's
it's basically this. Uh, let's start with the basics. What
exactly is a body scan? For the uninitiated, what what
what does that body scan do? Is it scary? Give
(01:16:50):
me the give me the lowdown on it.
Speaker 11 (01:16:52):
This is actually a great question. A lot of people
ask us, like a body scan is that ultrasound?
Speaker 8 (01:16:56):
Is that X ray?
Speaker 11 (01:16:57):
What exactly is that? And so for us, what a
body scan is is using the latest technology. These are
CT machines. These are very expensive machines that can very
quickly without any needles, without the claustrophobic tube, very open space,
can take pictures of whatever it is we're doing a
study of to see if you have a tumor, a lesion,
a mass, something that you need to know about.
Speaker 1 (01:17:19):
Why should somebody go and get a scan like this,
especially if they're feeling fine, if they're feeling good, everything's okay, Oh,
give us give us the thought on that.
Speaker 11 (01:17:31):
Well, for most listeners, you know, the only time you
go to the doctor is if you're physical or if
you're feeling ill. But you know, when it comes to cancer,
cancer comes in stages one, two, three, four. We all
know that, and the challenge is is if somebody is
unlucky and they have cancer, they really want to find
it at stage one. But there are usually no symptoms
at stage one. So most of the patients that come
(01:17:52):
and see us, what they're doing is getting that preventive
scan hoping everything is okay. But if they did have
a tumor somewhere in the lungs or the body that's growing,
want to know about that right away so they can
get that treated. So the outcome is much better.
Speaker 1 (01:18:04):
And in terms of the technology that that that's used, right,
you're obviously non invasive, you're not moving into somebody's body.
How how how much can you actually see inside somebody?
Speaker 11 (01:18:18):
This I've I've had a chance to look at so
many of these images. It is absolutely incredible the detail
we can see, soft tissues, bones, anything and everything inside
the body. And it's really a tool that should be
used more. But unfortunately insurance does not cover preventive scans,
and so it's just a choice that people make. Say,
it only takes about five minutes to hop on this
(01:18:39):
machine and afterwards, board certified radiologist is going to look
at those images and determine if there's a problem.
Speaker 1 (01:18:45):
And that's one of the most important parts, right you
have an expert looking at this, somebody who's who's certified,
and then at that stage of the game, you could
you could obviously meet up with your doctor, get the
results and have that have that looked at. That's the
that's a whole idea.
Speaker 11 (01:19:00):
You come down, you get the scan, about a week later,
you're going to get the report, and then you take
that report to your doctor and they'll know what to
do to get you treated if you have a problem.
Speaker 1 (01:19:09):
Is there any sort of a time period where you
should be getting scanned? Are different parts of the body
they need to be scanned more often or not? How
does that work?
Speaker 11 (01:19:19):
Well, that's a great question to get down a lot.
As you get older, obviously the risk factors for disease
is like cancer and heart disease go up. But in reality,
what the only downside to doing a scan is usually
the cost. And so the whole idea of doing you know,
this wonderful price for people to come and get the scan,
is to eliminate that. So now it just becomes a choice.
(01:19:40):
You know, do you want to know if you have
a problem?
Speaker 1 (01:19:44):
One of the things. Of course, absolutely, I want to
know what exactly is happening and how that is happening
at that At that stage, people talk about the silent killers.
What are the silent killers? Sounds like a rock band
from someplace on the West coast, But what are the
silent kists?
Speaker 11 (01:20:02):
Well, it's just like you said a few seconds ago,
why go to the doctor if you feel fine? You know,
you know, other than your physical But when you think
of heart disease, heart disease kills one out of three Americans,
and it's largely because they didn't know they had a problem.
They went and did their physical and everything is so fine,
but they didn't know that they had a blockage in
their heart that was slowly closing up. And so the
whole idea of getting that preventive scan is, you know,
(01:20:23):
especially the heart partition of the scan is if there
was a blockage, they may have passed their stress test,
they may feel fine, they may even have low cholesterol.
But if they have a blockage, the CT machine's going
to take a picture of that, and these either a
blockage that there isn't and if there is, they can
go get intervention before the heart attack. Because Once somebody
has a heart attack, there's damage done. But if you
can go seek intervention before that happens, you're going to
(01:20:45):
be good.
Speaker 1 (01:20:46):
So a lot of people are nervous about coming in,
seeing the results, all that sort of stuff, right, But
the reality is you are non invasive. I cannot you know.
I think people think about call lenoscophes. They feel about
this that the other thing. They don't want to get probed,
they don't want to have to have a special diet.
This is none of that at all.
Speaker 11 (01:21:07):
This is the easiest doctor's appointment you've ever done in
your whole life. There are no needles. I think a
lot of times people remember if they had to get
an MRI for like a shoulder or a knee or
a hip or something like that. They remember being in
that tube. It was kind of clautrophobic and loud sounds.
Speaker 2 (01:21:22):
This is not that.
Speaker 11 (01:21:23):
This is a CT machine. It's a great big donut,
your feet going first, and you're literally in there for
less than five minutes, so it's very very quick, and
it effectively takes pictures of your insights.
Speaker 1 (01:21:33):
One of the things being somebody in radio and knowing
a whole lot of entertainers and radio people. They may
not take very good care of their of their you know, bodies.
Maybe they've had a rough time back in the back
in the old days, smoking, drinking, party and all that
sort of those things. I understand that, Like you can
actually see the results of damage that's been done and
(01:21:58):
damage it maybe has not been done. To give somebody
a good idea.
Speaker 11 (01:22:01):
Well, I mean those are for people out there. If
you drink your smoke, you don't eat well, you have
a bad diet. I mean obviously in the back of
your mind you have a little anxiety, you know, have
these things cause damage to my body.
Speaker 1 (01:22:13):
But it's not just.
Speaker 2 (01:22:14):
People like that.
Speaker 11 (01:22:15):
I've had very healthy people, you know. I had a
gentleman come in who was like, well, I'm just doing
this for my wife because she has heart disease in
her family. And he talked about how he bikes, you know,
fifty miles a month in competitive biking. He ended up
having a very high CALSIM score, and two weeks after
his exam with US, he ended up having two stints
put in. He had a ninety nine percent blockage in
the window maker.
Speaker 1 (01:22:35):
Wow, that's that's incredible. It's absolutely amazing. One thinks back
to Jim Fix way back in the old days. Guy
was running marathons constantly and then suddenly he was he
was dead. I mean, we don't want to see that
happen anybody, any of our listeners, we've.
Speaker 11 (01:22:52):
All heard those stories. But the whole idea is it
only takes a couple of minutes. And I can't tell
you how good it feels for the people that get
that result and there's nothing there. You know, when they
get those results and they're cousim scorees low, there's no tumors.
It really they really feel good about their health. And
for those people that do have a finding that they
need to do something, they're a little anxiety there. But
imagine how good they feel knowing that this is something
(01:23:14):
that they found out. They go to their doctor and
the doctor says something like, hey, good job getting that scan.
We're going to get that fixed. You're going to be fine.
Speaker 2 (01:23:22):
Now.
Speaker 1 (01:23:22):
In terms of the bottom line, because obviously people are
wondering how much does this cost? What is it relative
to another sort of test with a doctor? Can can
you break that down a little bit? Sure?
Speaker 11 (01:23:34):
I mean, our normal price to get a scan over
one thousand dollars but our Charlotte clinic's been open for
a little over a year and we're still trying to
get the word out. You know, who is Craft body Scan?
Speaker 2 (01:23:44):
What can we do?
Speaker 11 (01:23:45):
And so for a limited time, we've decided to lower
the cost to one hundred and forty nine dollars for
two people. Because the idea behind that is somebody coming
in and learning what we can do and how it works.
They're going to give a testimonial to their friends and
family and really tell people, hey, you need to get
down to Craft and get your scan. So that's the
reason why we're doing this.
Speaker 1 (01:24:03):
I mean that, Look, you can't go out to dinner
for that in Charlotte, not not anymore, not any place great. Right,
So you're saying one hundred and forty nine dollars and
it's a couple's body scan is correct, So it's like
a date.
Speaker 11 (01:24:15):
You know, you bring your husband, bring your wife down,
you come get your scans. You're going to go in
the machine five minutes apart, and then about five to
ten days later you're gonna get that report and then
you can sit down on the couch and look at
each other and see who's got the cleanest heart.
Speaker 1 (01:24:26):
Oh that's great. You know what, we had our scans,
and I'm telling you that was one of the things
where we're like, okay, well we're both pretty good. Yours
were great, kind of happy about it. What's the number
one thing that you tell listeners who might still be
on the fence about this, don't wait.
Speaker 11 (01:24:43):
You know, I hear this all the time. I don't
want to know. Your family wants you to know. You know,
if you're listening to this and you're like, I'm healthy,
I don't want to know. Keep in mind, you got
you got kids, you got parents, you got family. Those
people want you to know. And so it's not always
about just you. It's the people that need you and
need you in their li lives. And so if you've
been listening to this and haven't done it, don't wait,
(01:25:04):
just come down, get your scan and just make sure
you're okay.
Speaker 1 (01:25:07):
That's great, it's wonderful. Finally, how can our listeners schedule
an appointment with you?
Speaker 6 (01:25:13):
Guys?
Speaker 11 (01:25:13):
So this is super easy. You can go to our
website craftbodyscan dot com. There's a portal there that you
can sign up, or you can just google our craft
body Scan. The number will be there. We have a
call center. They can answer any question that you might have.
But like the easiest thing is just get on the phone,
call us or get on that website craftbodyscan dot com
and you can schedule your.
Speaker 1 (01:25:33):
Appointment craftbodyscan dot com. The facility is beautiful, the service
is amazing, and I am so happy to have gotten
to spend some time with you today, Denny. Thanks so
much for being for me.
Speaker 11 (01:25:44):
Thank you for inviting me down.
Speaker 1 (01:25:45):
It's my pleasure. Hey, fall us here Charlotte and it's
time for WVTS Octoberfest twenty twenty five. I've joined us
every Saturday and Sunday in October at six pm on
(01:26:05):
the WBT Facebook Live feed for fun, interactive conversation with
the WBT airteam from everything that's happening in Charlotte to well,
whatever's on your mind. It's all fair game. Get your
questions ready, grab a piney, your favorite beverage, and join
us Every Saturday and Sunday in October. It's wbt's Talktoberfest
(01:26:29):
twenty twenty five. Visit WBT dot com for details. Looking
forward to that. Can't wait, It's awesome. Let's go out
and talk to Laura. Welcome to the show. Laura.
Speaker 6 (01:26:43):
Hey, Brett, Hello, can you hear me? Hey there. I
just wanted to say that your commercial for Craft body
Scan saved my life.
Speaker 1 (01:26:52):
Wow.
Speaker 6 (01:26:52):
That and of course divine intervention. But I had gone
to Craft body Scan last summer and they found a
lung cancer in its infancy and literally if I had waited,
you know, six more months, it would not have been good.
It was fast growing, and I had afectomy in December.
(01:27:18):
The thing was, I had another doctor missed this completely,
and so it was really Craft body Scan and their
promotion that saved my life. And I'm so grateful.
Speaker 1 (01:27:29):
I'm so happy. I'm so happy it worked for you,
and I'm so happy that you're here and that you
caught it at the right time. That is so great.
That is great to hear that, Laura. It's amazing.
Speaker 6 (01:27:41):
Thanks Brett. No symptoms either, and I'm pretty young and
very healthy. So I just encourage everybody it is worth
one hundred and forty nine dollars to go in there
and learn from the technicians and get the test. It
could save your life.
Speaker 1 (01:27:59):
You absolutely right, and I've done it, and it's incredible.
It's it's you don't. It's nothing invasive.
Speaker 8 (01:28:06):
You're not.
Speaker 1 (01:28:06):
They don't put you under anything like that. It's very
quick and you get the results. So thank you so
much for calling Laura and keep us up to date
on things. Okay, I will.
Speaker 6 (01:28:16):
I've been wanting to tell you this for a while,
so today wasn't my opportunity.
Speaker 1 (01:28:20):
That's awesome so much. Hey, don't be a stranger, call
back anytime, all right. I really enjoyed the conversation. Thank
you so much. Yeah, God, bless you. I'm so happy
about that. It's amazing. Perry. Welcome to the program, Perry.
Speaker 9 (01:28:34):
Hey, goodness day brother.
Speaker 1 (01:28:35):
Hey.
Speaker 8 (01:28:36):
I also want to talk about the situation on the trade. Sure,
I think you really got two parts of that. You
have to protect and the response. Right, But to protect
there are several pieces of that. I'm almost wondering now
if to stay slash, the federal government needs to ta
you know, restrictions that say, hey you need to put
(01:28:59):
some security or some own this train, or you don't
get funds, and that needs to be part of your funding. Yeah,
to to supos some wady to protect somebody, because if
it's just the average Joe and you have somebody that
looks really rough with a knife. That might be real intimidating.
I know I would probably try to jump in there
and do something. Sure, but your average person might.
Speaker 1 (01:29:21):
Not true true, and and and you know what, God forbid,
something happens. Uh, guess what happens next? You know, you
knocked the guy out or something. Now you're gonna get
you know, you're gonna be liable for something. And we
need the professionals handling all this sort of stuff.
Speaker 8 (01:29:37):
Well, in in South Carolina, we have the in your
shoes law allows us to protect the person if we uh,
if we see or something, you know, imminent danger. You
can't step in and protect them when you're and you're
protected somewhat.
Speaker 1 (01:29:52):
Yeah, that's a good point, but I'm sorry, go ahead,
no no, I said, that's a good point, yes sir.
Speaker 8 (01:29:57):
Yeah. And the other part is is, I guess I
know there needs to be mercy in law. I know that, sure,
But if you have a person that is arrested and
arrested and arrested and you say, well, part of the
problem is mental issue, right, Well, while you have them
in your facility, you know, instead of taking the next
(01:30:20):
step of just releasing them, Sure, why don't you go
ahead and do something about it and say, look, in
order for you to rejoin our society, you know you
have to take stef A, B and C.
Speaker 1 (01:30:34):
That's great.
Speaker 8 (01:30:34):
It has to be evaluated. You have to do something
about the person. And it's not being mean to the person.
It's not being racial. No, it's being kind and understanding
there's a problem. You're trying to help them.
Speaker 1 (01:30:47):
Absolutely right, great, Perry, you are a problem solver and
I appreciate you being here today, my friend. Thank you
so much for calling.
Speaker 8 (01:30:55):
Yes, sir, you have a good one man you too.
Speaker 1 (01:30:57):
Buddy, I appreciate it. What a great job, a great day.
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