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May 19, 2023 89 mins
This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for Fri. May, 19, 2023.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
(00:05):
Come on, wake up, let'sgo. It's Friday. The Morning Show
with Preston Scott made the nineteenth showthirty three. That's grant. I'm presting
great to be with you day fortynine americaeld Ostige. We'll get to this
day in history and mere moments.Our verse today comes from Zephaniah three seventeen.
The Lord, your God is withyou, the mighty warrior who saves.

(00:30):
He will take great delight in you. In his love. He will
no longer rebuke you, but willrejoice over you with singing. When you
stand justified before God by your faithand his son, he rejoices over you.

(00:58):
Be in uraged. Ten minutes afterthe hour. It's Friday. It
will be a little bit of adifferent Friday, but it is Friday.
None the last thing. This isthe Morning Show with Preston Scott. I

(01:19):
want a rooster growing so bad Ican produce something after the show. Yeah,
I could throw some roosters up asI just random anyway, Good morning.
I'm such a child, I swear. Let's see not a lot for
May nineteenth. It is just afew entries here. Seventeen forty nine.

(01:49):
King George the Second grants the OhioCompany a large expansive land to promote settlement
of the Ohio River Valley. Doyou know we're Ohio Io came from in
terms of the name, I justI think it's a Native American word,
but I don't know what it meantkind of like well, I was just

(02:12):
curious, Like I mean, Englandwas using it. It was on maps.
I'm just curious where the determination wasmade to call that area Ohio.
I don't interesting A twenty eight,eighteen twenty eight, President John Quincy Adams
signs the Protective Tariff, considered unfairin the South, which labels it the

(02:35):
Tariff of abominations and taxes. Callhim anything you want. They they've yeah,
eighteen sixty four Confederate attack against Unionforces and several days of horrific fighting
at the Battle of Spotsylvania court Housein Virginia. And in nineteen twenty one,

(02:55):
listen to this, Congress places quotason the number of immigrants entering the
United States. But year nineteen twentyone, it would seem to me that
we need to be going back toa system of quotas. Oh yeah,
I would agree. You just youcannot throw the doors open. I mean

(03:23):
again, we talked yesterday about budgetingand how the federal government needs to live
the way that we do. Youcan't borrow beyond your ability to repay at
I mean, so you know,think of the same thing as it relates
to immigration. You can't throw openthe doors to your home to everyone,

(03:46):
right, you can't. You can't. There's no place for them to all
to sleep, there's nowhere, there'sno way for you to feed them all.
There's no way to manage it.And those that are your own in
your own home, uh, paythe price for the door being flung open.
They're like, what the heck youkeep taking but you can't even take

(04:08):
care of me? Yeah, andI've been here. Yeah, I'm like
your son. Yeah yeah, Mom, I'm your son. We're literally your
children and we can't even Yeah,we're getting burnt toast. You're getting filets.
Man. That's not fair. It'snot right. I'm just staying Mom,
I shut up, it's ma'am anyway. Yeah. So that that's it.

(04:35):
That's it. That's slim pickings fortoday. Well, I mean,
if you want to do something noteworthy, you know, good positive today,
it'd be a good day today,it'd be a really good day. No,
what's the beef. We are makinggreat progress, um, aren't you?

(05:00):
Engineer Charlie Wooton made terrific progress yesterday. And there's a heartbeat on the
phones. But we can't take callsbecause we don't know that the line is
ringing, if that makes sense.We've got three of our six lines working.
We only use four on air.We have a studio line that we

(05:23):
use for studio purposes, guests andso forth. That one's not working yet.
One of the rotators is still bleeding, but but we've slowed down the
blood. We've got a tourniquet onlinefour. But anyway, we're gonna proceed
with something different today next hour inthe program affordable housing. What is it?

(05:56):
I've gotten some email already. Alot of people have a lot of
opinions. Some it's pretty simple.We'll talk about that next hour. Grant
thought it would be a worthwhile conversationin light of what's happening in Montana.
Scepterfuge is happening in Montana. That'swhat's happening. It's called the Yimbi movement.

(06:20):
I don't know what yimby is,Huh. Huh, you will you
will? Where have I heard thatbefore? Is that from Star Wars?
Yeah, that's that's that's Yoda.You will, you will, I'm not

(06:43):
afraid or something like that. I'vebeen trying to talk and then I realized,
why can't I talk? Man?You figured out what I did?
Never mind? Um darned Mike wasunblood? Who who did that? And
this google? Who did that?Someone on the staff did that as a

(07:05):
prank to you? M Yeah,So we will. We'll talk about affordable
housing, what you know what thedefinition is. Obviously we're not taking calls.
We're just gonna discuss it. Andif you don't know about yimbi and
what's going on in Montana, Grantwill break that down because he's a student
of all of that. I lovethese kinds of articles like the one I

(07:30):
sent you. Like it just it'skind of up my wheelhouse of ye is
these obscure kind of policy things behinda greater movement and just Montana, no
less Ian, I just Big SkyCountry. Those kinds of articles I find
very fascinating. Well, if there'sa place that you never would think that
conservatives would get hoodwinked, it wouldbe Montana. But then again, they

(07:51):
did vote for Liz Cheney. That'strue Montana, right, she was Montana,
Wyoming, Wyoming. But I meanthey have grizzly bears. I know
there. How can they be fulled? They have grizzly bears? Um?
Anyway, that's that's coming up nexthour. Also have a story that's not

(08:16):
quite a Florida man story, butit's not quite an animal story. It's
actually right in the middle. It'sit's an unbelievable convergence. Is it like
the jackalope? It's like a mixtureof two. It's it's it's a story
involving a part of wildlife that likelymight only happen in Florida. It's just

(08:46):
it's not quite an animal story,but it's not quite a Florida man story
either, but it's close to both. Boy, yeah, and then um
and if you didn't see what happenedin the PGA yesterday, the Professional Golf
Association their major that the PGA Roundone, which yesterday, and what happened

(09:09):
to a kid named Tom Kim AndTom's as American as you and I.
He's a delightful young man with agreat golf game. But he had an
encounter with a creek and mud thatwas just epic. And I don't know

(09:31):
what's funnier his reaction to it orwhat actually happened. They're both breathtakingly funny.
I just I was. I wasrolling in bad laughing so hard at
what was happening yesterday. And thenin the third hour on the program today,
instead of taking calls what's the beef, it's sort of kind of gonna

(09:52):
be a feel good Friday. We'regonna talk about the best budget beaches,
places where you can take a littleroadie. Maybe this summer got some animal
stories, good news, dad joke, b headlines and so forth. I
don't know if you saw this governaround to Santez has sent some help to
Texas. Did you see what wesent? It was like a large amount

(10:13):
of personnel, right, one hundredand one Florida Highway Patrol troopers, two
hundred FDLI officers in teams of fortytwenty Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission officers,
eight hundred Florida National Guard soldiers,twenty emergency management personnel including radio techs,

(10:37):
logistic experts, mechanics planners. Fiveavailable fixed wing aircraft with monitoring equipment
and downlink capabilities with two aviation crewteams, two mobile command vehicles, two
command teams, seventeen available unmanned aerialvehicles and support teams aka A drones.

(11:01):
Ten vessels, including airboat, shallowdraft vessels, in mid range vessels.
Crap. I didn't realize we weresending them the entire fleet. We're not.
That's the thing. I know,It's just a portion. Oh my
goodness, gracious, come on Florida. Yeah, I am a big fan
of the states looking at the federalgovernment and saying, fine, if you're

(11:24):
not gonna do anything, we will. I'm a big fan of that.
See that's how an articulate person sayssomething me. I'm a big fan of
the States saying to the federal government, same message. You can just feel

(11:52):
it, can't you. We havean epic SoundBite from Congressman Matt Gates coming
up in just a few minutes,and some you gotta be Kidney headlines,
including resolutions for impeachment on The MorningShow with Preston Scott and This is the
Morning Show with Preston Scott thirty five, almost thirty six minutes after the hour,

(12:20):
get right to the big stories inthe press box this morning on the
radio program Grant Allen over there.It's like a bobblehead right this second jam
into the tunes. Huh, allright. Marjorie Taylor Green, US congresswoman
from Georgia, has introduced articles ofimpeachment against Joe Biden. It's a lofty

(12:45):
aim, but yeah, I mean, she said, it is with the
highest amount of solemnity that I announcedmy intention to introduce articles of impeachment today
on the head of this America atlast executive branch that has been working since

(13:07):
January twenty twenty one to systematically destroythis country. President of the United States,
Joseph Robinette Biden failed to secure theborder, has deliberately compromised our national
security by refusing to enforce immigration lawsand secure our border. And she goes

(13:28):
on from there. Is she wrong? Nope? Is it gonna matter?
Nope. Supreme Court rules in favorof Twitter and Google and Facebook and liability
case over user posted content. Thisall came about due to ISIS Videos and

(13:58):
Chief's Justice John Roberts said that despiteany algorithm YouTube may use to push users
to view videos, the company isstill not responsible for the content of the
videos or the text that is transmitted. Now here's the thing. That's fine.
It was a unanimous ruling. Imean it was nine. Oh.
Here's the thing though, If that'sthe case, then when they engage in

(14:24):
censoring, they're acting as a publisherand it all changes. And that's where,
in my opinion, this falls backon Congress. Congress has to strip
them of their protection. And theirprotection in statute is that they are falling
under Section two thirty of the FederalCommunications Decency Act of nineteen ninety six.

(14:50):
But they're in fact acting as aneditor and a publisher, and so you
can't have it both ways. Ifthey're not going to be liabel for the
stuff that's published, than they can'tbe censoring things, right, I mean
that stands to reason. But see, the protection that they're now receiving creates
the opening to then fight the protectionsthey're getting because of Section two thirty.

(15:20):
FBI visiting the home of a prolife activist mother, it's meant to intimidate
this is what the FBI is engagingin. And what was fascinating is I
watched a back and forth between FBISpecial Agent Marcus Allen and Democrat representative from

(15:48):
California, Linda Sanchez. She thoughtshe did some great sleuthing and was besmirching
Agent Allen for a Twitter her pagethat wasn't his. So she's made the
fool of but she attacked his integrityon and on and then sent Congressman Matt

(16:08):
Gates was just not having any ofit. We just hear, astonishingly heard
a Democrat on this committee question yourallegiance to the United States. How many
tours in a rock did you do? I did two tours in Iraq,
sir? And for how many decadeshave you held a security clearance? For
two decades, sir? Ever beencalled into question before? No, sir,

(16:33):
And you also received the Employee ofthe Year award for the Charlotte Field
Office. Is at right? Thatis correct? Did you receive any medals
during your service for the Marine Corpsin the United States Navy? I did,
sir. As a member of theMarine Corps. I received to a
Navy Commendation Medal and a Navy AchievementMedal. Seems to me your allegiance to
the United States has pretty well establishedover multiple decades wearing the uniform fighting for

(16:56):
our country, and I am proudthat you continue to fight for our country
as a whistleblower here making a disclosureto the United States Congress. There are
a lot of whistleblowers coming forward.It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott on
News Radio one hundred point seven wufLA. This is a game of Connect

(17:33):
the dots. Watch this well,listen to this three stories and watch how
we go from one to the otherto the other and how they flow.
All right, this is kind ofa listener's guide to Oh look, it's
you guys. American Airlines passenger pleadsguilty to assaulting flight at tendant over menu

(18:02):
choices. Boy, apparently the menuoptions for Robert Kraizat seated in first class
flying from Barbados to Miami. It'snot what he was expecting. They were

(18:26):
apparently only vegan options. What andhe wasn't having any of it. There
were only vegan options on an Americanflight first class? No less. My
guess is they're using meat substitutes orbugs. There's that I'm telling you.

(18:49):
I know, I know, checkyour ingredient labels at the store. Ants,
crickets, you eat the bugs.Yeah, there was a story that
lead research assistant sent me, Ijust was too grossed out to do it.
Is that what you're referring to?I don't know exactly, but stories

(19:11):
are all over the internet of likecrickets and different kinds of bugs already being
infused in major food products. Well, apparently he got to shoving the flight
attendants around, mister shoving stuff.And but I mean, I would say
to you that if you're gonna paythe money to fly first class and you're

(19:34):
worried about vegan options being the onlything you're being given, yeah, find
out out ahead of time and thenpack your own lunch. At least you'll
have plenty of room to enjoy it, true, you know, Or you
know, grab something at one ofthe restaurants in the airport before you get
on board. Yeah, that's whatI would do. Grab one of those
prepackaged little sandwiches or something like that, or just you know, I mean,

(19:56):
go to a restaurant, get anice little meal, and just order
something that that you don't have tohave hot hot, that you can eat
cooled down or that is cold.Yeah, okay, so we go,
all right. Airline passenger assaulting aflight attendant over food. Now, Sam

(20:18):
Brenton, Oh, the magical oneman, one of the I think he's
so mentally deranged and ill. Thatsaid, he is now arrested again.
He was arrested as a fugitive fromjustice. He's the guy that is the

(20:41):
dude that wears the mustache and theridiculous red lipstick, that dresses totally like
a woman. He was also thenuke guy. Yeah, worked for the
Biden administration, was a very highprofile hire, but was let go because
he allegedly has been stealing luggage foryears at airports. Ye see where we're

(21:03):
going here, okay, airline airports. Ye. Well, a little backstory
here. He was once photographed wearinga designer dress and the designer it was
a one off and it was stolen. It was reported missing in twenty eighteen,
and she saw it and said,that's my dress, Oh my gosh.

(21:26):
And so it was a one off. Yeah, wow, yeah,
yeah, yep, yep, yep. So so now we've got this guy.
So he's he gets handcuffed. Iwonder if he asked if they had
color matched handcuffs for his dress orwhatever. I don't know. And then
in Wyoming, you've got three KappaKappa Gamma sorority sisters from the University of

(21:48):
Wyoming that are filing a lawsuit becauseof a transgender member of the sorority that's
being forced on him. How farare we going to let this go?
Honest and truly, this needs tobe back to the public square of shame.

(22:11):
Seriously, it just does. Butdid you see what we did there?
Airline airport cross dresser to sorority sister. Huh, we're pros. It's
The Morning Show with Preston Scott.I can't believe the first hour is already

(22:41):
next hour, what and who?What is affordable housing? I'll share an
email response that I thought was prettysuccinct, and whose responsibility is it?
We'll talk about a a story inMontana that caught the eye of producer Grant

(23:07):
Allen, and I thought it wouldmake an interesting springboard for discussion on what
exactly is affordable housing and how isit being used to in essence scam conservatives.
Yeah, it's a tactic by theleft that was kind of exposed if

(23:30):
you will, perhaps maybe not,maybe it's a tactic of others, And
you'll learn what yimbi means. Yimbjust like it sounds with a why and

(23:51):
the why just saying it kind ofsounds like a Mario character. Thank you
this story will. My sweet wifecannot stand that I am intrigued by cold
cases and crimes being solved, butI am. If I would be allowed

(24:14):
to, I would absolutely volunteer tobe an investigator for a law enforcement agency
on cold cases because that that fitshow my brain works in finding the clues
and looking at all the different possibilities, and so I'm fascinated by cases getting

(24:37):
solved and how they do it.In this case, we've had Thomas Colbert
on the program before he has He'sa He's got a group of people that

(24:57):
are retired FBI agents, profilers,some active profilers, researchers. It's a
team and they're called case breakers.They have attempted to find dB Cooper solve
that riddle, the infamous Skyjacker.They've also tried to solve the Zodiac killer

(25:23):
crimes. Who was the Zodiac Killer. Time will not allow me to go
into depth and detail on that case, other than that case haunted me as
a child because it was happening whenI was a child. These murders were
taking place in the late sixties andseventies and beyond and they never ever caught

(25:48):
the person. Why were there somany of those in the sixties and seventies,
And it feels like it that's notreally a thing anymore, like a
major or crime that grips the nation. Sure, because we have so many
of them. Gabby Petito was onethat did, but that seems few and
far between nowadays. Well, thisguy was a serial killer, and I

(26:12):
believe you have to find out whoit was in this case, not for
namesake, but for the sake often siblings who lost loved ones. But
they believe they've identified an Air Forceveteran named Gary Francis Posti or post Poste.

(26:37):
They believe that there is a partialDNA sample, and they have someone
that has leaked information that there isa partial match on DNA that they're very
little DNA on these cases. Andso I'll probably talk more about this next
week. I have endeavored I'll tryto get Thomas on the show because I
think this is a fascinating case,and I think a lot of you are

(27:00):
fascinated because you're my age, Sothat'll be something we'll be paying attention to.
But there's there may be a break, But the FBI is saying no,
there isn't. Of course, thenwe go it's the second hour.

(27:40):
They want to show with Breston Scott. I happen to be breast and that's
grand Allen. And as we embarkon the second hour, we remind you
know what's to be Friday. Today. We cannot take calls. The phone
lines are breathing, but we cannotsee them as they ring. We've tested
it this morning and so we're gonnahold off and more works to be done.

(28:07):
Our chief engineer, Charlie Wooten hasdone a great job and we appreciate
it, but we have I hadto get a different clip for all the
material that I have for today's show. Grant sent me this note back the
end of April. If we're notcareful, this kind of thing could be

(28:29):
happening, not just in Tallassee,writes, which is obviously facing a severe
affordable housing shortage. Widespread reforms couldcause dense housing units being put up,
therefore ruining our existing communities. It'sa tactic that is used by leftist to
get conservatives on board potential good conversationfor the show, and he linked to
an article called how Yimbi's one Montana. And here's the subheadline before I turned

(28:53):
Grant loose to what provoked his thoughtson this. A wave of legislation designed
to reform local zoning rules and boosthousing is sweeping this gop led state thanks
to an unusual left right coalition ofsupporters. So, for those who don't

(29:14):
know, jimby is an acronym whyI am b Why. It's an acronym
for a movement called Yes in MyBackyard, which is a movement primarily,
as Preston mentioned from the article,I've got it up here too, it's
kind of this weird left right thing. It's people on the progressive left want

(29:37):
more affordable housing, and the wayin which that they've convinced conservatives to get
on board is so here's this isa quote from the article. Kendall Cotton,
CEO of the Frontier Institute, said, we were able to go to
mostly Republicans and talk about free markets, the importance of property rights. They
were able to go to the folkson the left and talk about climate and

(29:59):
so impacts. So their tactic toget people on board this YIMBI movement basically
um free up the regulatory framework toallow dense housing units to be built up,
like in in Helena, Montana.Um, there's just this this build
up of what was once you knowkind of um what was Montana was primarily

(30:23):
known for, UM, big skycountry ranch, lands of space, lots
of space, and they're taking thatfarmland, that ranch, family ranches and
they're basically putting up dense housing units. And so they actually cited, UM,
Gainesville. When Gainesville became the firstcity in Florida to end single family

(30:48):
only, single family only zoning locally, state leaders threatened legal action. Um,
so it's it's already kind of reachedFlorida. Well at least the effort
did the effort, Yeah, theyrepealed it because the state was going to
take action to fight it. Yes. And I bring this up because anyone

(31:10):
that's followed the City and County Commissionlocally for any length of time knows that
affordable housing is a huge, hugeissue and so this is timely for us
here locally, and not just us. It's a big thing across the country.
Those two words affordable housing are arealmost cliche like words at this point.

(31:33):
They are used and tossed about inevery community across the country. And
as Grant said, yes, Tallahassee'sactively engaging in these discussions, and there
apparently is certainly a crunch. Butwe're not alone. And this is going
to be an issue because this ispart of a left agenda, and so

(31:59):
they they just play the long game. Remember, they they just keep plugging
away, plugging away, plugging away. And as is always mentioned, when
there's compromise between the left and theright, it's always benefits the left.
It doesn't ever benefit the right.Ever, it always erodes the right.

(32:21):
What makes this interesting is that argumentthat they're using to get people on the
right on board. It's your landproperty rights. But is it that simple.
We're gonna talk about it affordable housing. We're gonna ask the two big
questions, the what and the who. Next. Welcome to the Morning Show

(32:43):
with Dreston Scott. Inside this articlethat is a Bloomberg article, it points

(33:06):
out that Montana could actually leap frogCalifornia. It took California decades to get
where they are on this general issue, and it took litigation and court fights.
Montana could be doing all of thiswithin a legislative session. Snapshot April

(33:32):
twentieth, the legislature pass Senate Billthree twenty three, which requires any city
with a population of more than fivethousand to permit duplex housing in area zone
for single family homes. There's theproblem mixing crashes the value of single family

(33:58):
homes. Now, if you're worriedabout your subdivision, not to worry.
Your subdivision is within covenants and restrictions, and there's there's a whole litany of
legal protections in there. And Iknow for many of you you hate hoa's,
and to that, I would say, then don't move into one.

(34:21):
If you move into an HOA thathas covenants and restrictions, abide by them.
No one made you move there.I don't mind covenants and restrictions because
they protect the value of my home. That said, we're not talking about

(34:45):
some guy owning three hundred acres outin the wilderness and he wants to put
a shed in the back part ofit. That's not what we're talking about.
We're talking about the dismantling of zoningthat people make decisions based on that
zoning on what they're going to do. For example, we've got the issue

(35:09):
of businesses that are worried about azoning change here locally to allow in essence
a housing village to be put upfor veterans. Now, the idea of
helping veterans with housing is noble.Changing the zoning is not. There's all

(35:30):
kinds of land. But this iswhere this collision comes in. So let's
ask this question first. What isaffordable housing? I had an email that

(35:50):
I'm paraphrasing, and the writer basicallysaid, why are we thinking hard about
this? Affordable housing is whatever someonecan afford. What's affordable housing to me

(36:12):
might not be affordable housing to you. Yeah. I think that's a really
good point. And what's affordable housingto you might not be affordable housing to
the person over there. I mean, let's let's use extremes affordable housing to
me, it's very different than affordablehousing to Elon Musk. To Elon Musk,

(36:39):
a twenty million dollar mansion, it'snothing, it's it's it's a twenty
thousand dollars shed for me, probably, if if even that might even be
a stretch. So when we talktalk about affordable housing as it relates to

(37:01):
the housing crunch in a community,Okay, well what does that mean?
We know part of this answer.Practically speaking, where do people making fifteen
to twenty dollars an hour. Findhousing. We'll talk about that next,

(37:25):
and then whose responsibility is it toprovide that housing? So affordable housing is

(37:47):
welcome to the Morning to Show withPreston Scott. By the way, acting
prest in that screen, affordable housingis defined by whatever the person seeking housing
can afford. I think any meaningfuldiscussion on the subject has to start with

(38:08):
this simple duh, right, doesn'tit? And then within that an understanding
that there are people that are notmaking enough money to buy a home,

(38:36):
to buy a condominium, to buya townhouse. Oh man, And that
is a massive can of worms anyway, just the current state of you know,
say young couple renting having to payexorbitant amounts for monthly rent, sometimes

(38:58):
between twelve hundred and fifteen hund ora month, when you know, um
with expenses with that being rent,it takes years to save up for a
down payment. And our entire fiateconomic system for the last few generations or
so hasn't helped people really try toand we've tried to artificially fix things like

(39:28):
minimum wage, and that's not workedwell. And the housing bubble happened because
we gave loans to people that couldn'tafford them. That didn't qualify they just
they just didn't. Without getting intoall of that, let's circle back to
Okay, what's the core issue.Remember that as a culture, as a

(39:55):
society, we loved to treat symptomssubtle problem Number one. We have accepted
that entry level jobs should be providinga quote living wage, and I will

(40:15):
define a living wage as a wagethat allows someone to buy or own their
own home, their own dwelling,if not a home, a condominium,
a townhouse, a part of aduplex, whatever the case might be.
That's a huge problem. That semanticalmistake has caused a generation to come into

(40:40):
their first job thinking they should beearning enough to buy a house. Sorry,
and so they make a series oftrickle down decisions based on that unrealistic
expectation of what that job should providethem. The truth of the matter is
we've got a generation that's now olderthat should have been living at home instead

(41:05):
of trying to find a way tolive on their own so early. And
the unfortunate reality is we had aculture that was like, all right,
you're eighteen, get out of myhouse kind of thing, when like a
generational view of it would be likestay at the home, just work for

(41:25):
a little bit expense free, youknow. Like I'm actually a big fan
of people that like because I tookadvantage of this, I moved back in
with my parents for a few monthsto be able to afford a down payment
on a home, and it wasa huge blessing. So we have like
these two dynamics going But you werethinking, if I remember correctly, because

(41:46):
we've talked about this, yeah,you were thinking of renting. I was.
I was thinking, and then Ihad this opportunity that made a lot
of sense, and I was like, this makes so much. So we
have two things going on at thesame time. We've got um a expectation
that you should be able to immediatelybuy a home, and I'd love for

(42:07):
people to be able to do that. But then at the same time,
a culture that like kicks people tothe curb like immediately as soon as they
get out of the home, andit's like where's the It's like this weird
conundrum. Well, but and nowwe got thirty year olds forty year olds
living at home and that's all.And then there's and and you talk about
another issue, should you be payingyour parents are you really helping? Well,

(42:31):
it depends on the lifestyle that thatperson's leading, depends on the relationship
to the family. But I mean, are they saving money for a down
payment or are they just living lifeand living off mom and dad. You're
not helping them. But let's let'slet's let's go back to this fundamental issue.
Whose job is it to solve affordablehousing? I don't believe it's the

(42:53):
government's job at all, not atall. This gets back to a generation
is going to have to suffer tofix certain problems. Let me give you
one example of a different of differenttrajectory. Kids says, I don't want

(43:14):
to I don't know what I wantto do. Cool, Go be an
apprentice for a plumber. Go bean apprentice for a tradesman. Let's just
use plumber for a second. Youbecome an apprentice, you go, it's
not bad. I kinda I kindof like what I'm doing. You stay

(43:34):
on that trajectory. Within a fewyears, you're making six figures. You
literally can make better than a hundredthousand dollars a year as a as a
plumbing technician, working a little overtime, taking a weekend job now and then
an emergency call. It's there aredifferent ways, but going into a minimum

(44:00):
wage's job where you're supposed to belearning how to work and expecting to find
housing, it's unrealistic. And soyou have to then assess your skills and
what you're going to do with them. It's The Morning Show with prest It's
Scott right in a way, umtype type working on a blog in the

(44:42):
brakes here. UM, I'm gonnaput some just just one or two clips
of the whistleblower testimony and some Qand A efforts by Democrats to discredit which
are shameful. I mean, it'sjust it's incredible what is happening to these

(45:06):
agents, and for the FBI toclaim no retaliatory action has been taken,
it is an outright, bold facedlie. You know, it makes everything

(45:27):
that's happened makes perfect sense. Andcan I tell you when I was tipped
off, when I knew it wascoming now, I could not have predicted
what has happened in the specifics ofthe breakdown inside the FBI leadership again,

(45:53):
rank and file agents, patriots,most all of them, patriots, leadership
corrupted to their very soul. Youknow what I knew when Barack Obama left

(46:15):
office and he said he would notleave Washington d C. I predicted it,
I said it here, talked aboutit with friends. Donald Trump aided
by not firing everybody before taking over. He should have fired everybody. That

(46:50):
was the achilles heel of being anoutsider. He needed some help to guide
him through the land minds that arelaid bureaucratically in becoming president of the United
States. He understood he needed thehelp of some bureaucrats because they knew how

(47:13):
to officially do this and officially dothat. Paid a price. Articles of
impeachment have been drawn up against JoeBiden by Representative Marjorie Taylor Green out of
Georgia. It will continue to justget her laughed at. But you know

(47:37):
what, I appreciate that she didit because she will be on the record
and history will, one day,I hope, point out that she was
right more than Morning Show with PrestonScott. It's the Morning Show with Preston

(48:02):
Scott's so many things to talk aboutrelated to that subject, but it all

(48:23):
traces back to that. I mean, it just does. I mean,
Obama is not going to go backto Chicago and get killed there. He's
a half black man. Who yousee what happens to Chicago blacks, black

(48:45):
on black crime, that's who's gettingshot and killed. So why in the
world would he move back there?But he had no shortage of options.
Barack Obama and his wife Michelle arevery, very, very wealthy people.
But he stayed in Washington, didn'tHe? And Donald Trump spent four years

(49:07):
dodging Russian collusion nonsense spearheaded by themainstream media, aided and embedded by the
mainstream media and Congress like Adam Schiff, who should be expelled from Congress,

(49:31):
and all the while it was HillaryClinton that had connections to Russia. What
remember the rule they are what theyaccuse others. Hillary Clinton floats this whole
Russian collusion crap. She's the oneguilty of it. Anyway, I must

(49:52):
pause blogs coming out. I'm gonnaput some testimony up. Democrats embarrassing themselves
in front of patriots who are justbrilliant in answering their questions and remaining steadfast,
and while they're being attacked and havingtheir credibility attacked, their patriotism attacked.

(50:17):
But I said that earlier in theprogram, I mentioned, you know,
we don't have phones today, knowwhat's to be Friday. We just
cannot take calls. We've got phonelines breathing, but we can't see when
they're ringing. And so if you'vecalled the program this morning, we apologize.
We got hit by lightning two daysago. Our chief engineer has done

(50:42):
an incredible yeoman's work getting us first, not missing any shows, recording all
our segments, podcasting, didn't missa beat. But that said, we
can't see the lines yet when theyring in, and so as a result,
we're just not able to take calls. So well, it'll all get

(51:02):
worked out and fixed. But Isaid earlier in the program, I had
a story that occupied this really weirdspace, kind of a Florida man story
but not quite. Kind of ananimal story but not quite. So I'm

(51:27):
gonna get to that next. Ido have animal stories next hour. I
also have in the next segment theincredible what happened to Tom Kim PGA golfer
during the PGA Championship yesterday in theopening round. I've got a little audio
to play. Poor kid man,it was, but I watched it happen
live and it was so funny.I cried. It was just hilarity.

(51:54):
So we'll get to that more nextcoming up to forty six minutes after the
Back with More Morning Show with PrestonScott. Good stuff here. Not quite

(52:31):
Florida Man, but you'll understand whyit could have made that. Not quite
an animal story, but you'll understandwhy it could have made that too.
Video from a semi truck dash camshowed cars suddenly slowing down on US Route
three thirty one in Walton County.They came upon a pickup truck stopped in

(53:00):
the left lane of a two laneroadway. One car swerved into the right
lane, right in front of thesemi, which was unable to break in
time. The semi truck struck multiplevehicles, including the pickup truck that was
stopped. Why was it stopped becausea turtle was crossing the road? See

(53:31):
what I mean? Florida man stoppingin on a busy US two lane highway
but US byway for a turtle.Did he at least get out and help
him help the turtle? Along?Oh his car, his truck got hit.
His or her truck got hit amongthe many that got hit by the

(53:52):
semi because the semi ain't stopping officialssay while the driver did not have ill
intentions, trying to avoid or stopfor an animal on a busy roadway can
cause life threatening injuries. Yet thankSheriff's Office said, we don't advise causing
road obstructions because of a reptilian obstruction. Here's the amazing part. No injuries

(54:22):
and the turtles survived wild. Butnow do you see why this could have
been either Florida man stopping for aturtle on a busy road We're not talking
about your neighborhood now where there's notraffic, right, We're talking about a

(54:44):
US We don't do that just anyway. Yeah, and then and then animal
stories, the turtle lifts, Imean it's just brilliant turtles looking around like
what's all this about? And thenwe get to Tom Kim. Tom Kim

(55:08):
is um a professional golfer and uh, yesterday was the opening round of the
PGA. He went searching for anarrant t shot on the par four sixth
hole. He was told across thecreek and was somewhere in the weeds in

(55:28):
the hazard that's right around the creekitself. So he goes in to fish
it out. I mean, look, it's it's it's a major and every
single shot matters, and so hewent fishing for it and promptly disappeared.

(55:49):
Listen to what it happens. No, oh no, it's all gone wrong.
Oh no, covered in mud pastit passed his waist. They're going
to commercial break here. Maybe justtake a back, go into the creek
and wash it off. Yeah,someone helped Tom. He's going listen.

(56:22):
Yeah, he ends up covered literallyfrom the chest down in thick, dark
mud. For his part, hesaid, as soon as it went in,
it was kind of sketch, butI mean it's a major championship.
I'm fighting for every stroke I have, he said. And then it got

(56:43):
dark. He said. Once myfoot got in, I was like,
uh, there's no looking back.I went full in and it got to
my shirt and everything. There wasone point where I was just sunk in.
Oh my gosh. I was steadyfor a minute, but I couldn't
get my foot out. So hecalled his caddie. His caddie said,

(57:05):
well, if I go in andsink, both of us aren't getting out,
and so he ended up crawling out. He was so covered with so
much mud. He ends up goinginto the creek to wash off all the
mundy. He then finishes the holeand they describe him him ass playing with
knickers because he's got his pants rolledup to his knees at that point.

(57:30):
It was just hilarious. Amazingly,he only made five, he only bogied
the hole. That's impressive, itreally is. And he is a good
guys. He's as American as applepie and an articulate, bright, really

(57:53):
good player. But he's just aHe's a funny kid and a good guy.
And that was just one of thefunniest things I've ever seen in my
life. All Right, Feel GoodFriday continues next on The Morning Show with
Preston Scott. Well, this doesn'thappen very often. It feels a little

(58:31):
weird Friday. On the Morning Showwith Preston Scott. We are not doing
What's the Beef today because we can'tsee the phone lines as they ring into
us, and so sorry. Wewe will endeavor to have that back operational

(58:59):
for you next Friday. But ourteam has been working long, long hours
just to keep our show on theair, and we appreciate their hard work
and are grateful to be with you. But this is just a little different
in the words of Emperor Palpatine.It feels a natural. This is supposed

(59:21):
to be feel good Friday time nowand you bring up the evil Emperor from
the Dark Side of the Forest.Sorry, that was the first thing that
popped in my head. Oh,we'll have to talk about okay. I'm
always fascinated by the response that Iget to those short little segments we do

(59:42):
on Thursday's program about travel. Ialways hear from people that have been to
the actual locations we've talked about.And oh, by the way, I
watched a television show that my DVRrecorded about the desert of Maine, really,
which was one of our first segmentswhen we did the on the Road

(01:00:04):
Again feature. And so if youif you've never listened to Thursday's program,
about fifteen minutes ago, I wouldhave talked about an idea on where you
could take a little road trip withyour family, or if you just travel
with your spouse, just a placeto stop, someplace to go, something
different, a little offbeat. Butwhat occurred to me was as I was

(01:00:30):
looking at the reality of the waythis show might unfold, and I saw
this particular story. You people loveto travel, and you're interested in that
stuff. You're interested in food,grilling. We've talked about grilling, and
we get unbelievable response when we openup the phones to talk about your grilling
exploits. And so what what fascinatedme about this is it is a list

(01:00:54):
of the most affordable beach towns fortwenty twenty three, not necessarily to visit
in vacation, but to live.The list is shocking to me. I
would actually imagine a lot of townsthat are pretty close to us here along

(01:01:15):
the Forgotten Coast, because well it'sgot the name Forgotten Coast. It's not
as traveled as say the Emerald Coastto the west of us. Well,
we'll see, all right, here'swhat's interesting. It's from realtor dot com,
which is the site of real estatelistings, and it uses the federal

(01:01:43):
government's locations of beaches as kind ofits hub. And then so it's it's
pulling from where there are beaches andwhere people live that is in proximity.
Neither North Carolina or South Carolina wereon the list of top ten. That's
interesting to me. But I wouldask you, I know it counts from

(01:02:10):
a literal standpoint, but are thebeaches on the East Coast remotely nearly as
nice as the beaches of the GulfCoast. I would submit. Now the
sand is totally different. Yeah,the water is totally different. I was

(01:02:36):
gonna say, why do I feellike the Atlantic is colder because it generally
is? The Gulf is generally warmerbecause it's consolidated, smaller space, absolutely
more current, warmable. Ye,warmer Southern makes sense. But as I
go through this list, one statethat made the cut shocked me, and

(01:03:01):
I'll tell you what that is.Next, we'll go through the top ten
cities on the beach most affordable.It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott.

(01:03:23):
Animal stories coming up in just alittle bit hidden for forty years, an
unbelievable find good news segment, gota dad jokes, some headlines from the
Bee. Kind of a feel goodFriday, making the best You know what

(01:03:44):
we're doing. We are making lemonadeout of limits. That's what we're doing
around here. Darning Wright Most affordablebeach towns from ten to one, Okay,
one being most affordable. Okay.It's based on pricing per square foot

(01:04:13):
and at least fifty properties within amile of the water, within the past
year being available for sale, sothat you're comparing apples to apples here.
Number ten Shirley, New York.I've never heard of Shirley exactly. Long
Island hour and a half drive eastof Manhattan. The town is a short

(01:04:36):
drive to the outer beach at SmithPoint. The median home price one mile
from the beach is four hundred andfourteen thousand dollars. Yeah, for Long
Island on the beach, I definitelywould have expected higher. Not quite the
Hamptons, but it gets you outon the beaches of Long Island. Yeah.

(01:04:57):
Number nine Crescent City, California.I don't know Crescent City either.
It's near the border of Oregon,so it's well north Cold Beach, twenty
miles south of the Oregon border.Population of just over six thousand people.
What a quaint little community that mightbe, but it's California. Median price

(01:05:19):
within one mile of the beach threeand twenty nine thousand. North Beach,
Maryland comes in at number eight onthe Chesapeake Bay, thirty miles southeast of
Washington, DC. So great placeto live if you're working the Beltway right.
Median price three eighty four has aboardwalk shopping and activities, No Kidny.

(01:05:45):
Number seven Navarre, Navarre, Florida. There you go, twenty miles
east of Pensacola. Median home pricewithin one mile of the beach of four
forty two five. Now you're probablythinking, well, to wait a minute,
how that? Well, I guessit's based on square footage. Remember
cost per square foot, So theprice might be a little higher, but
you're likely going to be getting moresquare footage. Atlantic City, New Jersey,

(01:06:10):
comes in at number six. Wedon't need to say much about Atlantic
City other than the median price ofa home within one mile of the beach
one eighty five. I'm surprised it'sNew Jersey. It's still it's a high
tax state. But California somehow beatthat. Go figure. Corpus Christi,
Texas ranks number five. I've heardnot great things about the Texas beach.

(01:06:32):
Yeah, yeah, you know,Galveston looks like a cute, quaint town
because it's a throwback to the nineteentwenties. But I'm kind of with you.
Median price two eighty nine. Numberfour Grand Isle, Louisiana. Median
price. It's two hours south ofNew Orleans. Think about that, two
hours south I know of New Orleans. You are swimming three o nine five

(01:06:59):
New London can Etiquette is at twofifty seven, known for some of the
best beaches in this state of Connecticut. Number two Newport News, Virginia.
It's a cool name for a town, Newport News. I mean that's a
that I have to give them credit. Median price two hundred thousand and town.

(01:07:23):
Fishing, boating, and Civil Warreenactments are big in in Newport News
and at number one Realty dot COM'srealtor dot COM's most Affordable beach town in
twenty eighteen, as well as twentytwenty three Gulfport, Mississippi. I believe
that. Yeah, it m it'smedium prices two twenty four nine. How

(01:07:49):
about that? And so those areyour you know, if you're looking for
that, If that's your thing,that's your jam. Here you go.
I like visiting the beach. I'mnot sure I'd want to live on the
beach, but I don't know.In the wild or in our homes,

(01:08:11):
we love them. Critters large andsmall. Time for another edition of Animal
Stories on the Morning Show with PrestonScott. Okay, okay, now we've
got to fade the bed down forthis story in a moment, and then
we'll bring it back up because thissound bed is just too good. It's
just too funny. This is hilariousOklahoma earlier this month, Eni, Oklahoma.

(01:08:43):
You know where Eni it is?Yeah, I haven't been there,
but I think I know where itis. Yeah, kind of north central
concerned citizens called police because they heardsomeone in distress. And so we'll pick
up the video with the officers nowhearing the distress call of someone yelling help

(01:09:09):
and they're running. You can hearthe help dog barking. It's a goat.

(01:09:39):
That's a goat than I'm saying outsidehere. I don't know if it's
an animal or but sure, we'rewalking over. That's a that's a goats

(01:10:03):
are awesome. And they're screams becausethey scream. Yeah, they absolutely scream,
some of them screaming faint. Yeah. Those are the that's those are
the funniest videos. Oh my goodness, gracious, but these cops are running
hands on pistols. I mean,they're like, oh, what's going on?

(01:10:23):
And then you just they just startlaughing. It's a goat and as
you hear it in the background,it's beautiful believes in Florida. Treasure Island
Beach responded to a call of analligator on the beach. It was a

(01:10:45):
worry that. I mean, itwas good size alligator on the beach.
I learned. I did a tripon a boat and we were we were
going to Dog Island. I blewmy mind. I'm looking underneath. The
water was crystal clear, and Ithought I saw an alligator. I'm like,
wait a minute, this is aGulf of Mexico. It was an

(01:11:08):
alligator. Wow, they can handlebrackish water. And it was near the
Appalachicola River and the Carabell River,sorry, the Carabell River, and yeah,
swimming out there. So anyway,the police officer starts to poke at

(01:11:29):
the tail of the alligator. Itwas a sand sculpture. It looked that
real. Really yes, Oh mygosh, the video is epic. Hey
that thing's not moving. Facebook postfrom the police department said, we love
the talented people creating works of artin the sand, but with it being

(01:11:51):
turtle nesting season, remember to flattenedsandcastle sculptures before you leave. The sea
turtles will thank you. Is itthe sea turtles? Well, thank you?
Are we just wanting to have policepoke at a tale of what they
think as an alligator when it's reallya sand sculpture. I don't know.
That's hilarious. And while we're onthe subject of goats, Chatham Township,

(01:12:15):
New Jersey searching for a peeping goatthat has been seen throughout the township.
We know who the rightful owner ofthe goat is. It is not Creekside
Farms. If he happens to showup at your door, do not apprehend
him, I guess because he's hornedand dangerous. Call Chatham Township Police department

(01:12:36):
for assistance. And so there's allthese photos of this goat at at various
homes, just staring inside the houses. Some of the responses to the post,
though, were brilliant. Officially onthe lamb, huh if the farm's

(01:12:56):
not the owner can't say I turnthis kid in. I hope the cop
on the bleat locates him. Howabout this is a bad situation. Another
post. His name has got tobe scapegoat. Didn't you mean alleged peeping

(01:13:17):
goat? Animal stories On the MorningShow with Preston Scott The Morning Show with
Preston Scott, this story just blowsme away. I follow auctions, and

(01:13:58):
I've talked about the fact that I, you know, anything that's auction related
just tends to make my radar becauseI'm just interested in stuff and interested in
the price of things and the collectibilityof things. And I'm always amazed when
I see those stories of a rarecar found in a barn somewhere that someone

(01:14:21):
had put away, put the coveron. It. Might go out and
start it every now and then,but largely it was just put away and
left and then somebody stumbles upon it. It might be the guys on that
History Channel show, Um, what'sit called? Okay, all of a

(01:14:41):
sudden, it's gone, I've gonebrain dead Pickers American Pickers. Yeah,
American Pickers is at it? Ithink so. I haven't watched it in
years. Yeah, And you knowthey'll stumble upon, Hey, what's this
and then they pull the thing offand they're incredib Well, Frank, Frank's
not on the show anymore. Really, yeah no, but this is this

(01:15:05):
is next level. Guy was aprofessional car dealer in the Netherlands. His
name Ad Pullman. He's now eightytwo, suffers from dementia, has no
living relatives. No descendants. That'ssad, and his medical condition is such

(01:15:29):
right now where he needs help.Thankfully, people that have known and loved
him for years are going to helphim. One guy in particular, knew
that he had an automobile collection.You're thinking, what ten fifteen, twenty

(01:15:54):
cars. I mean, that's impressivealone, isn't it. I mean,
show of hands, how many ofyou own twenty cars? Not have owned?
Owned? Right now? Twenty carsexactly. My man ad owns two

(01:16:15):
hundred and thirty rare classics, andhe has kept them hidden. No one
had seen them until his friend thatowns an auction house and knew of the
collection uncovered them. All neighbors weren'tallowed to see them. They were kept
in a church, an old church, and two warehouses. Wow, and

(01:16:42):
the collection's going up for auction topay for his final years of life.
In this collection, Alpha Romeo's,Lancia's, Maserati's Ferraris, the French brand
Fasil, Vega, BMW's Mercedes,Jaguars, Aston Martin's Rolled Royce, Oh

(01:17:09):
my gosh, Chevrolet's Cadillacs and Fordsand more. When he bought the cars,
they were all in original condition andunrestored. My guess is he would
grab cars that people would bring inon trade. That's my guess. I
don't know, and he can't tellthe story because he's got dementia. They're

(01:17:33):
going to chronicle all of the carsand put them in a book as just
kind of a witness to the historythat this man collected. It's called the
best kept secret car collection in Europe. It is unlikely anyone will ever see

(01:17:53):
a collection of this caliber and conditionagain in their lifetime. Among the most
prized Alanchia A really a B twentyfour Spider America nineteen fifty five. The
bidding will start at one hundred thousandeuros, which is a little better than
probably one hundred and six thousand US. It's expected to bring almost a million

(01:18:14):
dollars, maybe more. They onlymade one hundred and eighty one left hand
drive fifty nine right hand drive models, so it's rare. He's got an
Alpha Romeo Zagato two twenty six hundreds Z nineteen sixty seven, a six
cylinder. I mean, you justgo through the list in the pictures of

(01:18:36):
these cars and it's staggering. I'mthinking to myself, forty years and hidden,
how do you hide a collection oftwo hundred and thirty cars? The
Morning Show with Preston Scott on NewsRadio one hundred point seven WFLA forty one

(01:19:06):
minutes past eight am in the Easterntime zone, forty one past seven in
the Central I'm for good news.Fascinating story of history here. Honi Sabo

(01:19:27):
was born in nineteen twenty three inRomania. She remembers a happy childhood.
She says, before the Holocaust,my parents and sisters and brothers, we
had a very happy life. Asa young adult, she moved to Budapest

(01:19:49):
to work as a seamtress and returnedto her family in nineteen forty four,
when the Nazis occupied Hungry, shewas forced into a ghetto before being deported
to Auschwitz and Birkenhow then bergen Belsen, then to the Lipstat concentration camp.

(01:20:15):
She said, bad things happened whenwe arrived in Auschwitz. I was only
twenty one, and I lost somany people from my life. Can you
imagine you're probably thinking I thought thiswas a good news segment. Bear with
me. She married her husband,also a Holocaust survival survivor. They had

(01:20:39):
two children. She said, mychildren are God's blessing to me. They
have helped me make a good lifeand to be happy. In nineteen sixty
seven, she and her family immigratedto the United States. She was reunited
with three uncles and aunt and onegrandmother. She learned to speak English,

(01:21:03):
her fifth language, landed a jobas a hospital payroll manager in Brooklyn,
New York. She now has fivegrandchildren twelve great grandchildren, and many of

(01:21:27):
came as she celebrated her one hundredthbirthday. What did she do? She
was at Tropicana Field and throughout thefirst pitch when the Rays hosted the Yankees,

(01:21:56):
she said, I loved seeing somany people cheering for us. Go
Tampa Bay, Win, Win Win. Thank you for honoring me, Thank
you for honoring the Florida Holocaust Museum. She said, I waited one hundred
years to do this, and thefirst pitch took place on her actual birthday.

(01:22:21):
And oh, by the way,she stood to do it one hundred
years old, tossing the first pitch, a Holocaust survivor who has carved an
amazing life in this country. AndI just think, what a wonderful bow

(01:22:49):
on the gift of her life tobe recognized like that in front of twenty
five thousand people went nuts. Ofcourse, that's good stuff. I hope

(01:23:10):
we never forget. I hope wealways honor and remember. Come back with
a dad joke. Keep your armfor the weekend, and we've got some
headlines from the Babylon b talk aboutMonday's show and more still to come on
The Morning Show with Preston Scott Monday. On the Morning Show with Preston Scott,

(01:23:45):
Drome Hudson joins us. Alumnus ofThe Morning Show, former intern on
this program has gone on to anincredible career. He's the entertainment editor Breitbart
dot Com. He's written two books, a third coming out, the Fifty
Things Books, and he will joinus for his monthly visit coming up Monday

(01:24:06):
on the program. So there yougo. Time for dad joke. This
is our contribution for you. Dad'sout there to share a little laugh.
You can use them. Two moms. I'm just saying you can. I'm
not a misogynist. I'm just I'mjust a messenger to the guy who invented

(01:24:34):
zero. Thanks for nothing. That'sone of the best ever. Dive for
some headlines from the Babbylon be yourtrusted source for satire Paul most Democrats in

(01:24:57):
favor of welcoming immigrants into somebody else'sneighborhood. Biden heads to beach house to
recuperate after grueling five hour work week. Father's starting to worry Church could interfere
with kids travelball schedule. Oh.San Francisco announce his plan to release monkeys

(01:25:20):
onto the streets to fling away allthe pooh, that's so good. Biden
awarded honorary doctorate for work as honoraryPresident. May Orcas assures that droid army
deploying onto planet is not an invasion. Media admits they lied about that Russia

(01:25:42):
collusion thing, but are totally tellingthe truth about everything else. Dad punishes
misbehaving son by giving him sports illustratedswimsuit issue. Oh my gosh. Kid
playing battleship discovers unstoppable strategy of notputting ships on the board. Elon Musk

(01:26:09):
apologizes to Magneto for comparing him toGeorge Sorrows Pete Puttage. It takes parental
leave again after adopting a highway.Oh my gosh. Se An buys extra
large excavator to help bury Durham report. Female scientists still unable to make sense
of strange lever that make car lightsblink. Indiana Jones change his name to

(01:26:32):
land Stolen from Indigenous People's Jones andto win back old customer base. Bud
Light adds mullets to cans brought toyou by Baronet Heating and Air. It's
the Morning Show one on WFLA.The picture of a bud Light can with

(01:26:57):
a bullet is oh, jolly geewhiz. I love what I do,
all right, look at the radioprogram. One hundred and eighty seconds or
less, the FBI whistleblower testimony unfoldedand it was remarkable. I have the

(01:27:27):
three plus hours posting on my blogpage tonight, as well as an excerpt
that is worthy of your attention anda write up. It's on the blog
page at WFLAFM dot com. Slashpreston the bottom line is that the whistleblowers
are giving facts about not just theFBI's targeting of parents that speak at school

(01:27:51):
boards, Catholic churches pro lifers,but they're giving specifics about retaliation that's happened
to them in their families. MarjorieTaylor Green, representative from Georgia, announces
impeachment articles against the resident of theUnited States. Preme Court rules in favor

(01:28:12):
of Twitter, Google, Facebook anda liability case over user posted content.
The question I ask, if they'renot going to be held responsible, then
why are they being allowed to censorand suppress information that might have saved lives
during COVID. Oh, by theway, talk today about affordable housing.

(01:28:38):
Grant gave you the definition of anacronym called yimbi. What's it mean?
I guess you might want to listento the podcast and take a listen on
the subject of affordable housing. Whatis affordable housing and whose responsibility is it
to provide it? Shared? Themost affordable beach towns of twenty twenty three,

(01:28:59):
at least from a realist perspective.If you're interested in finding some beach
proximity might be a way to putit shared. Some animal stories, some
good news. An automobile collection that'sincredible, two hundred and thirty cars collected
over forty years. Monday, we'lldo it all over again. I hope

(01:29:20):
you have a wonderful weekend. Thanksso much for listening. Have a great day.
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