Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Hey, good morning, five past the hour, Tuesday, December third,
on the Morning Show with Preston Scott Show fifty two
to eighty three. In just forty eight days left until
the angels begin singing once again. Birds will once again
(00:29):
sing from the branches, baby deer frolicking in the open
fields with bunny friends because the Biden regime will be gone.
And here's hoping that Trump learned from the first time
in the White House and fires everybody and revokes everyone's
(00:55):
security clearance that ever worked for Barack Obama or Joe Biden.
But it's one of the same anyway, Hey, friends, welcome,
thanks for waking up and sharing your time with us.
Got to share something here in a second, but first
let's do what's most important. John six thirty five. Jesus
said to them, I am the bread of life. Whoever
(01:19):
comes to me shall not hunger, and whoever believes in
me shall never thirst. The disciples that were hanging with
him for three years, when he said stuff like that,
he was like, they were, basically, Huh, what does he
mean by that? I don't understand any of it. What
(01:45):
is he He's not suggesting we're cannibal thy No, he
was speaking deep, profound but simple truths. It's amazing how
something can be utterly simple but yet remarkably profound. And
(02:06):
that is John six thirty five. When was the last
time you hung out with God for a while, had
a little talk, opened up his word, Read what he's written,
(02:29):
learned about his son, what Jesus did for you? When
was the last time? Because we feed ourselves, we hydrate
ourselves every multiple times a day, and yet we don't
feed our spirit, and we wonder why we are where
we are. Anyway, there's your verse for the day. US
(03:02):
congress Woman Cat Camick in the third hour got some
amazing audio for you to hear. Bill Maher sitting down
with Jane Fonda. Oh m g oh, I can't believe
(03:29):
how utterly foolish Jane Fonda is. She is she she
doesn't think California is a liberal state. What she says
to Bill, what what are you talking about? Bill? Maher's like,
you're kidding right, No, She's clueless. This is the bubble
(03:55):
that these people live in. Anyway, that's coming up. We've
got a little more on the flag Planting shared a
little exchange with a listener. I want to I want
to dig into just a little bit because I thought
it was enlightening. Talk a little bit more about this pardon.
There's some interesting things that have been pointed out in
(04:16):
that letter. I have the letter. I have the pardon
printed out. I have it. It's nothing I'm framing, mind you.
But yeah, and a lot more so stick around. It's
going to be busy, a lot of topics. Nothing overtly
(04:38):
heavy today I would I would say, you know, it's
the news, but you know, sometimes it's just like oh
and today not so much, but interesting thought provoking things
to talk about. So stick around. It is December the third.
More on that date next in our history segment. Here
in the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 2 (05:06):
Ride him at Preston at iHeartRadio dot com. Yes he
knows how to read. Well, actually, his producer reads him.
He doesn't know how to read.
Speaker 1 (05:15):
Welcome to the Morning Show with Preston Scott Levin. Past
the hour, work backwards here, that's just something different. I'm
(05:37):
wearing my my ugly Christmas sweater, by the way, and
it's spectacular, navy was sand in, the reindeers all over it, snowflakes.
I just put it on and smiled this morning, which
was necessary because when I got here, I had a
snowstorm inside of my own. It's just one of those mornings.
(06:02):
And then I saw I came across a video and
it broke my heart, and I sat here and wept
for about five minutes. And yeah, I'm not going to that.
I'm just I'm not talking about that anyway. Pioneer ten
obtains the first close up images of Jupiter in nineteen
(06:23):
seventy three. Could you imagine, I mean, if man ever
figures out a way to safely and quickly get to
the other parts of the galaxy, you imagine the first
people that get a human eye view of Jupiter. That
(06:47):
planet is full of mystery. I mean, we kind of
know what we're getting in Mars, but Jupiter, Saturn Man craziness.
Nineteen forty seven street car named Desire by Tennessee Williams
opens on Broadway. Eighteen twenty eight, Andrew Jackson elected the
(07:08):
seventh US President. Go back a little further eighteen eighteen,
Illinois becomes the first state or should we just call
it what we really should call it? Illinois? What's that
sound that's Illinois? In eighteen five, I marked my name
(07:36):
and the day of the month in the year on
a large pine. Captain William Clark December third, eighteen oh
five by land U States in eighteen oh four and
eighteen oh five. So we're William Clark in his journal.
After nearly nineteen months of trekking across the West, Captains
Clark and Meriwether Lewis, along with a band of about
(07:59):
thirty explorers, had finally reached the Pacific. The Pioneers that
and there's there's that's another book by David McCullough that
I have not read. I have in my library, but
(08:20):
I have not read. My sons gave it to me
a few years back. And you just explorers like this
that said, we're going that way until we stop, till
we run into something. And there was the Pacific Ocean.
Could you imagine seeing that for the first time? Anyway,
(08:47):
amazing and as incredible as our history segments are, I
have to tell you, they are dwarfed by this news.
Deep breath, everybody, it's mccribb day today. Now. I know
(09:10):
that some McDonald's outlets started serving mcgribbs last week. They
jumped the gun a little bit. I don't blame them.
It's a happening, it's a thing, it's a cultural phenomenon.
And I know that for some of you it is
as distasteful of food item as you could possibly consume.
(09:36):
And that is absolutely wonderful news because that leaves more
for us. But what I wanted to tell you is,
not only is today the day the mcgrib comes back nationwide.
Do you remember the sauce, the mcgrib barbecue sauce. It
(09:56):
went up for sale last week. It sold out in hours.
It's gone. Proceeds though, went to the Ronald McDonald House charities,
So that's brilliant. It really is raising money for a
tremendous cause. And so you may not be able to
(10:22):
get the barbecue sauce, and honestly, I'm okay with that.
I wouldn't want it at home. I want it only
for those special moments when I get my hands around
a McRib. That's what I want to taste that sauce.
I don't want it any other time. I don't want.
Speaker 3 (10:43):
To mix it up with some ribs or chicken.
Speaker 1 (10:46):
No, no, no no, it belongs on a McRib. And
my hearty thanks go to a listener that brought me
a Hot Wheels Limited addition eighty nine car, the Bill
Elliott McDonald's car that had McRib all over it still
(11:10):
in the box, never opened, it would seem, and I
have it here in my collection thanks to a listener
that brought it to me. Honestly, I don't know if
I can keep doing the show. I'm so overjoyed with
the news. I may go get in line at McDonald's
(11:32):
and wait for ten thirty. No, I'm just kidding, eighteen
minutes past, all right. I debated on holding onto this
(12:11):
for a road segment, but I decided Nah, I just
I thought this was really cool, and it's a reason
to go visit North Dakota's bad lands first of all,
North Dakota and South Dakota. South Dakota of course, the
home of Mount Rushmore. It's a different kind of beauty.
(12:34):
It just it's hard if you've never been to the plains,
you've never seen these wide open hills and farmland areas
of America. It's just a different kind of wow, and
(12:55):
I think it brings the rest of the country context.
You know, it's easy to make fun of places like
North Dakota because you just you know, Fargo and everything
associated with the northern parts of the United States and
the snow, and there's nothing much there. And the Theodore
(13:16):
Roosevelt Presidential Library is going to open in North Dakota,
and this thing is going to be massive, and it
fits if you don't know the backstory about Teddy Roosevelt.
First of all, yeah, he was a bit of a socialist.
Yes he was a Republican, but he was a progressive
(13:37):
kind of He was a socialist, he really was. It
doesn't erase the incredible qualities that he brought to the table,
you know, legendary Roughrider, the Spanish American War. And when
I say this library is going to be massive, they
(13:58):
were able to buy from the US government land that
was owned by the government adjacent to the only national
park named for a person, because Theodore Roosevelt was the
guy that pioneered the park system. And so the Theodore
(14:21):
Roosevelt National Park is in North Dakota, and this is
overlooking it. It sits on ninety acres and it's basically
on a cliff overlooking it sounds a little bit like
a massive version of the Reagan Library in California, which
I've been fortunate enough to visit. The Ronald Reagan Library
(14:44):
is spectacular, and it overlooks a valley that is it's
just beautiful. It sits on a little mountain peak. And
this is going to be bigger, grander, It's going to
have a lot of technology. The backstory, though, about why
(15:04):
North Dakota was important to Roosevelt comes here comes from this.
He moved there in eighteen eighty four, in his early twenties.
When his wife and his mother died on the same day.
He was heartbroken and he wanted to just get away,
(15:25):
and so he went to North Dakota. It's where he
found comfort in solitude. It's where he embraced the beauty
of the wilderness and the bad lands. Contrary to what
you might think. You know, you think planes and hills,
it's almost desert like this particular part of North Dakota.
(15:51):
It's very unique, very cool. But I wanted to put
it on your map because even though, like I said,
this could be a road trip idea, it would probably
get a little old by the time this story, you know,
if I rolled around to next year with it. The
library is expected to open July fourth, twenty twenty six,
(16:15):
which is the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the declaration,
so that's pretty cool. And oh, by the way, Theodore Roosevelt,
the fifth great great grandson, is alive and well and
supporting this project, so that's kind of cool. I would
expect him to be there. Twenty seven past the hour
(16:37):
back with the big stories of the press box. This
basket Christmas tree, Oh Christmas tree, how it reminds me
(17:08):
of I know those aren't the words, but God of me.
Morning Tuesday on the Morning Show tat Camick. In a
little while, about an hour and a half. We've got
mainly minute just before that, let's get to the big
stories in the press box. Chad Cronister talked briefly about
(17:29):
it yesterday. Hillsborough County Sheriff excited to be nominated to
be the head of DEA, but this is a nomination
that is not going to go as smoothly as others.
He supports red flag laws, which are stupid because it's
(17:58):
a guilt before innocence type of thing. Then Governor now
Senator Rick Scott signed it into law in Florida and
it was a mistake. He doesn't think so. And that's
okay in the sense that we can agree to disagree.
He's just wrong. It's all right, you know, it happens, right.
(18:23):
But Chad Cronister also is the guy who had a
pastor arrested for having services during COVID and I mean
when And I'm gonna get to another story about COVID
here in a second. But that decision was just foolish.
(18:56):
Pastor of a large church, Rodney Howard Brown, kind of
a high profile guy. He has been in law enforcement
for thirty two years. But the arrest of Pastor Brown,
you know, made a lot of news. And he wasn't
(19:20):
following the science because the science was clear on that.
I won't beat that up. The charges against Howard Brown
were dropped. The state Attorney Andrew Warren said enforcing social
(19:42):
distancing was about problem to solve, much more than a
person to punish, and he decided to drop the charges.
And now Warren is no, you know anyway picnic but
get let me get to COVID here. Another big story
(20:04):
in the press box. O'Keefe media James O'Keefe undercover and
official for the National Institutes of Health, Rajah Cholin, Chief
of Health Data Standards Branch, National Library of Medicine, Inside
the National Institutes of Health. I probably shouldn't be saying
(20:24):
this out loud. Went on to say that the COVID,
everything from the vaccines to the policies were completely made up.
He said, the six foot distancing completely made up. Well,
(20:46):
now we know this. He's not saying anything. We don't know.
What he's doing is confirming what we know. The National
Institutes of Health earlier in the year is admitted to
funding gain a function research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology,
(21:07):
which contradicts statements by doctor Anthony Fauci. You know, there
are those out there that believe Fauci's just too old
to be prosecuted. Let the old guy live out his life,
and no, no, no, no, you don't do that. He
needs to be held accountable for the deaths of hundreds
of thousands with these vaccines that were not tested properly,
(21:31):
and for lying, lying about the research that was being done,
lying about the masking policies, the mandates, all of it.
He needs. He needs to be held accountable criminally. Then
the last big story, FSU has apparently hired. It's not official,
but apparently the contract was signed Tony White. I don't
(21:54):
know how they got him out of Nebraska. Now, the
dude's a star. He's been great wherever he's coached. He's
a younger guy, and I don't know how we got him.
So we got Gus Malzon's official and now Tony White.
Big ten schools are happy he's leaving Nebraska because their
(22:17):
defense was dominant. This is good news for FSU fans.
Forty one minutes past the on A little melancholy there,
(22:46):
which fits the news. This is not I hate talking
about this, but it is important to talk about this.
To paraphrase, apparently, Donald Trump has posted on social media
(23:06):
basically a warning to jumas you better have all the
hostages released by inauguration day. Consider that you're deadline because
if not, I think the quote is, there will be
hell to pay. Now this comes upon, you know, a
(23:31):
follow up on the news rather that an American Israeli
omer Neutra. He'd been fighting in the Israeli Army platoon
commander in the Armored Corps, twenty one year old. They
(23:52):
have confirmed Israeli defense forces that he was killed in
battle on October seventh, and his body has been held
hot stage in Gaza since. Now to help some of
you put this in perspective. There are in war, there
(24:25):
are rules, there are conventions, there are things that you do,
and one of them is you return the bodies of
the dead. But as I've told you, this isn't a war.
This is the prosecution and the tracking down an extermination
(24:45):
of terrorists. And they reveal it by these actions. And
I've said from the beginning, the reason why Hamas continues
to change change the terms of negotiation is they don't
have anything they're really bargaining with, if you will, it's
(25:07):
it's the bluff at a card table. They don't really
have the cards to lay down, and so they're just
delaying the game. They're delaying having to reveal they're they're
just kind of playing this little game of raising the
(25:27):
stakes and throwing in another chip and another chip, and
and well, are you gonna show your cards? Oh, here's
another you call you know, yeah, we call here we go, okay,
so show your cards. No, here's another chick. It's it's
it's like this ridiculous game of seven cards stud that
never ever ends. They don't have hostages, is my contention.
(25:49):
They're if they're not all dead, they're almost all dead.
And they know what happens when they show up with nothing,
When the when the boxes that are supposed to carry
bodies have no bodies in them. They're just weighted. They
(26:11):
just think they're delaying and creating. No, no, no, they
I guess they haven't learned from history. The Israelis have
an incredibly long memory and they have a remarkable reach.
And Trump gets in office. When he gets in office,
(26:36):
this game is over. And here's what's important about it.
Everybody else in the world is going to notice. And
this is why we don't put cowards, and we don't
put feeble people in the office of president. We don't
(26:56):
put phonies in the office of president. Like everything about
Donald Trump, I don't have to. He's going to be
a great president and we're going to be safer for
at least four years because of it. Forty seven pass.
Speaker 2 (27:14):
M a D Radio Network, Make a Difference Radio Network,
And this is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (27:39):
Hello, ruminators. Remember we're raising funds for Humble House Ministries.
Humblehouseministries dot Org is the website. Please click to donate
to either Tallahassee or Panama City and make a note
however you can. It's in the dedication in Panama City
and the comments in Tallahassee just Mark WFLA, so they know,
(28:01):
but raising awareness. It is a women's recovery program at
also transitional housing for women and their children. And whatever
you can give would be awesome, whether it's five ten,
twenty fifty, one hundred thousand, twenty five hundred, five thousand,
ten thousand, whatever you can give, it would make a
(28:22):
huge difference. And that is our project this year and
our operation Spirit of Christmas. So anything you can do again,
it's Humble Houseministries dot org. Humblehouseministries dot org speaking of giving. Now,
here's something else you can give to if you want. Unbelievably,
(28:45):
one of our listeners sent this to my attention. He
used to work in the still does kind of sort
of in the in the news world. But it's a
an op ed a. It's a note from the publisher,
Julie Anderson of the Orlando Sentinel editor in chief, Sorry,
editor in chief, are you ready? Orlando Sentinel. As editor
(29:10):
in chief, for the past six years, I've focused our
newsroom on the most vital responsibility of a free press,
holding the powerful accountable to the people they govern. The
local free press is essential to a healthy democracy. It's
as true now as it is as it was in
seventeen ninety one the First Amendment was ratified. And then
(29:32):
she goes on to write about two stories that The
Orlando Sentinel covered with deep, hard hitting, in depth reporting. Now,
let me be the first to say that if you're
trying to appeal to people for the value of what
you're doing, you might want to point out a few
more than two stories. I mean, if that's all you got,
(30:00):
You're a newspaper that's supposed to be breaking news and
writing of things that are important year round, and you
list two examples out of three hundred and sixty five
days of reporting. Huh or however many years? I mean,
she's noting six years of her work and she lists
(30:23):
two stories. I mean that's almost that's two thousand plus
days of work and you got two stories. And she
goes on to ask readers to make a donation to
keep them afloat. You can make a tax deductible contribution
(30:46):
to the Orlando Sentinel Community News Fund. Look, I don't
want anyone to lose their job except those that deserve
to lose their job. But this strikes me as very
very funny. They have authored their own demise the news media,
especially the print news media.
Speaker 3 (31:07):
Oh Christmas, tree.
Speaker 1 (31:10):
Back, Next Hour five, Pass the Hour Ruminators. Welcome to
the Tuesday edition of the Morning Show. I'm Preston, He's Jose.
It is show fifty two to eighty three, just forty
eight days until we are free of the regime. So
(31:34):
we're very excited and looking forward to that. More on
that in just a moment. Just a little commentary based
on the Fox News story about Giving Tuesday, today's Giving Tuesday.
Don't you think they had to repackage that and make
that the week the Tuesday of Thanksgiving Week. Stay with
(31:58):
the Giving Tuesday if you like, But if it were
in if it were me, I would start a national
campaign to change that. First of all, I love the
concept you're playing to the tax code a little bit,
getting businesses to think about giving to knock down their
(32:22):
exposure and their tax bill. But think about it, if
you were promoting giving to a cause, wouldn't you want
to make the message before you buy gifts for yourself
and your family, think about others first and beat the
Black Friday Christmas rush. Because it occurs to me that
(32:46):
you've got Black Friday, you've got Cyber Monday, and then
you're hoping for leftovers if you're in the giving season.
And I think the better way to approach it is
to make the Giving season precede and be the week
of Thanksgiving, but just ahead of Thanksgiving, playoff Thanksgiving. And
I know that sounds manipulative, it's not really. It is
(33:07):
it is to me a wiser way to promote thinking
of others first. I mean, it's a biblical command to
consider others more important than yourself. And what a wonderful
way to usher in the Christmas season and Thanksgiving and
(33:29):
the commercial you know, purchasing of gifts, which I am.
I'm not against. I embrace it. I always have. I've
loved Christmas because as I as I grew as a Christian,
I came to equate the tangible giving of a gift
as my way of saying that I love you and
(33:49):
I appreciate you. And here's a tangible something that as
you use it, as you spend it, as you wear it,
as you whatever the case might be, that you you
are reminded of the fact that I thought of you
and I love you, and that it's based on the
idea that God so loved the world that he gave
(34:12):
and so that's the connection for me. Some people just
give because they get a joy out of giving, and
there's no Christian connection to it. It doesn't represent anything,
but there's something in their heart that they're just they
love to give, and I'm that's awesome. See, I believe
that's a God given thing, whether it's recognized that way
or not. But anyway, it's totally off the topic here
(34:36):
that I was going to talk about, but I'll merge
it together with the next segment because they actually do
go together. I just I'll go ahead and use that
to say, I know that you're going to give gifts
to friends and family, and I think that's awesome. I'm
just asking you to pry out a little bit of
(34:57):
something for Humble House Ministries and you may never ever,
you likely will never ever meet anybody affiliated with Humble
House Ministries. And the opportunity to give to people that
you don't even know, it's it's right in there with
what we did with Orphan Shade. We just wrote a
(35:17):
letter to the two girls we pray for. Two of
the girls in one of the homes the very first home.
My wife and I've supported Orphan Shade for a while,
long before we jumped in, and by we meaning you
and I all of us, and and built home number three.
We supported with Jay and Stacey were doing over there
(35:40):
and and love it. And so we got to write
a note. My wife penned a note to the two
girls and telling them about our family and asking them
questions about them. And what a joy that we kind
of sort of will get an opportunity to interact, even
if it's via a letter with those people. But generally
(36:01):
we give, and we don't know where it's going. We
give to give, not to get. We give to give
to consider others. And so just while while I make
the case for moving Giving Tuesday to prior to Thanksgiving,
which I'll do again next year, let's let's do what
(36:24):
we can and dig deep for Humble House Ministries. Go
to the website Humblehouseministries dot org. Come and enjoy It's.
Speaker 2 (36:32):
The Morning Show with Preston Scott on news radio one
hundred point seven WUFLA.
Speaker 1 (36:45):
And of course a listener of the program sends me
pictures of the bad Lands in North Dakota. They were
there in twenty twenty two, went to the Sturgis Bike
rally and then drove the area in North Dakota, South Dakota,
Montana on Wyoming on their bikes. Cool, well done, you
all right, here we go. I was called to this
(37:09):
by a one of the writers at not the b
At the bottom of the pardon letter that Joe Biden wrote,
is this done at the city of Washington, this first
day of December, in the year of Our Lord two
thousand and twenty four and of the Independence of the
(37:31):
United States, the two hundred and forty ninth year of
our Lord. It's interesting to see that on a document
it goes back to Thomas Jefferson. He signed apparently the
first one in eighteen oh one, and that exact language
(37:53):
other than the years, was in there Year of our Lord.
Interesting year of our Lord? Was it a Jefferson We've
been told all these years was a secularist humanist? How
(38:18):
about that year of our Lord? What Lord are we
talking about? Oh, that's right, the splitting of time BCAD
that was based on Jesus. Huh. Well, year of our Lord. Okay, anyway,
let's get to the pardon for just a second. Here.
I just wanted to point this out. It was in
(38:41):
twenty fourteen that Hunter Biden was appointed to Barisma. Barsma
is an energy company that Hunter Biden has zero expertise in.
I mean, if you wanted to a point and do
a board dealing with hookers and drugs, awesome expert And
(39:05):
I accept that he's gone past that. I'm happy for him.
If he's put all those addictions in the rearview mirror,
that's awesome. But here are the facts. He was using
these relationships to give them access to his father as
vice president. Joe Biden was allowed to be the special connection,
(39:29):
if you will, to China and Ukraine. Well he was
Vice President. Obama said, yeah, go ahead, Joe, yep. That fine. Well,
isn't it interesting that the two countries that Joe Biden
was mostly responsible for interactions with were two countries where
his son Hunter gets appointed to boards that he has
no expertise or knowledge of the businesses those boards are
(39:51):
involved in. Barisma was the name of one of them. Well,
there was a special prosecutor that started to investigate Barisma
corruption inside the company. We're gonna be a little late here,
Ise and Joe Biden after leaving the White House in
twenty eighteen on television at the Council of Foreign Relations
(40:19):
made this remarkable admission.
Speaker 4 (40:21):
I remember going over convincing our team or brothers to
convincing that we should be providing for loan guarantees. And
I went over.
Speaker 1 (40:31):
Now he's saying, I convinced our nation that we needed
to provide loan guarantees to Ukraine. Why did he convince them? Well,
because his son was involved in corruption and he needed
a hammer, he needed a leverage, a lever to hold
against the prosecutor.
Speaker 4 (40:51):
I guess the twelve thirteenth time to Kiev, and I
was supposed to announce that there was another billion dollar
loan guarantee, and I had gotten a commitment from Porshenko
and from Yachtsnyuk that they would take action against the
state prosecutor, and they didn't. So they said they were
walking out to press compt I said no, I said,
(41:13):
I'm not going to go or we're not going to
give you the billion dollars.
Speaker 1 (41:18):
Under who's authority is he doing that? Pushenka was Zelenski's predecessor.
Speaker 4 (41:25):
By the way, They said, you have no authority, you're
not the president. The president said, I said.
Speaker 1 (41:29):
Call him.
Speaker 4 (41:31):
I said, I'm telling you're not getting a billion dollars.
Speaker 1 (41:34):
Okay, why I.
Speaker 4 (41:36):
Said, you're not getting the billion, and I'm gonna be
leaving here. I think it was what six hours? I
look at Sai, I'm leaving the six hours. If the
prosecutor's not fired, you're not getting the money.
Speaker 1 (41:45):
Now, imagine if that were reversed. Imagine if a foreign
leader said, if you don't get rid of the attorney
general or the state attorney of this state or that state,
you're not getting anything from me. I'm gone. He's meddling
in foreign affairs.
Speaker 4 (42:02):
Oh, son of them got fired, and they put in
place someone who was solid solid.
Speaker 1 (42:09):
In other words, they buried the investigation. They fired the
guy that was investigating, and it worked. And he's on
television admitting to it seventeen minutes past the hour. You
can't make it up. All right, here's another story that
(42:35):
makes you go. And this one I've been holding on
to just to provide a little time and space. Forwarded
to me. Right or Wrong is a note from the
Independent Funeral Directors of Florida. It was forwarded and inside
(43:02):
it's called The Independent Weekly of the Independent Funeral Directors
of Florida families serving families, and there's a note about this.
There's a note about that, and then in the back
twenty twenty four in Balmer blood clot Survey, if you're
(43:29):
currently actively performing embalmings, we need your help. The results
of last year's survey showed a large number of embalmers
all over the country are still seeing unusual whitish colored
fibrous structures clots in a significant percentage of corpses as
they perform their embalmings. These are not to be confused
(43:50):
with the typical yellowish chicken fat clots that are smaller,
much easier to tear in which embalmers have been observing
for many years. And balmers also continued to see evidence
of microclotting in a significant percentage of corpses in twenty
twenty three. Scientists are studying the problem, but they need
more data and that's where you come in. If you're
(44:13):
currently performing in balmings, please take a couple of minutes
fill out the short survey in the link below. As usual,
you can feel comfortable taking this survey as with our
previous surveys, Listen now the words COVID or COVID vaccine
are never mentioned. As usual, our focus is on what
you saw, when you saw it, and how much you saw.
(44:36):
Your identity, your answers will be kept anonymous. Your computer's
IP address will not be captured. Thank you for your participation.
First of all, thank you, No, I mean this sincerely.
There's nothing dubious in this. I am grateful to the
Independent Funeral Directors of Florida for doing this. Here's the point.
(45:02):
Has anybody heard anybody talking about the continued problem of
blood clots. See, we've been talking about this since the
vaccine roll out and people started having adverse reactions to it.
(45:26):
And then we started seeing the words suddenly died next
to young people that were healthy, next to people in
their thirties with active lifestyles, not sedentary, morbidly obese. We're
talking healthy people just died. I have emails and have
(45:50):
had emails from listeners that had a loved one get
the shot and die within a few weeks, die within
a few months, no previous issues, nothing, And we've seen stories.
This is to some of you, you're like, well, I've
told you about this, Preston. I send you stories about
(46:12):
morticians and corners finding these clots. Yes, I know. I'm
merely pointing out scientists are asking funeral directors to send
us what you're seeing. Federal government Anthony Fauci. More importantly,
(46:38):
Pfizer and Maderna and other vaccine makers have not acknowledged
these problems. But I just thought it was interesting that
within Look, I got this newsletter to me last month.
(46:59):
So here we are and they're still seeing this stuff,
which says, what about the vaccines? Just say, if you've
had one, this is not again to rain on your parade.
It's to beg you to see an alternative care doctor
(47:20):
or a physician that was not a vax only physician
and get something to help you fight any side effects
from this stuff. Twenty seven past the hour. We're just
here to help and maybe save your life.
Speaker 2 (47:39):
It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Speaker 1 (47:50):
Thirty six past the hour. Half hour from now. US
congress Women Kat Camp likely calling in at the last
split second scheduled to join us. We'll have a manly
minute in less than a half hour, But first, the
big stories in the press box and no particular orders.
Saw this from the lead research assistant sent this to
(48:11):
me this morning. Kamala Harris still asking for donations. Now,
let's let's listen. Here's what they're writing. With Trump nominating
MAGA loyalists left and right, there's nothing more important than
making sure we can fight back and hold him accountable.
That's why we need you to step up today. Yes, today. Now,
(48:33):
this is from the Harris campaign three weeks, four weeks
after the election. Our records show that you haven't pitched
in to support our Harris Fight Fund program. Yet. We
know the election didn't turn out as we hope, but
we're not backing down. So hold on a second. Now,
(48:56):
they're pitching this as if they're out there and championing
the causes of the left, when in fact, it would
occur to me they're asking you to help them get
out of debt. They spent one point five billion dollars
(49:17):
on her campaign and they left it twenty million in debt.
They were sending money out left and right so fast. Golly,
it almost looks like the Pentagon under Biden, or government
spending in general under President's Democrat and Republican. But they're
(49:45):
couching this as we got to keep fighting the Donald.
Now they're using that because they're in debt and they
got to pay their debts with the email should say
is we're twenty million in the hole. Can you help
us out and lend us five? Can you help a
(50:06):
brother down on his luck? Can you help a sister
that needs a buck? Chad Cronister, Sheriff of Hillsborough County,
might not be the right choice for the head of DEEA.
He's going to face a fight. He's going to be
one of the nominees that not everybody on the right
(50:30):
side of the aisle is going to support a red
flag laws be his positions. The things that he did
during COVID, he was wrong. He was just wrong. Speaking
of COVID, National Institute of Health official Rajah Cholin on
tape with a Keith Media group, OMG, I love it.
(50:54):
I probably shouldn't be saying this out loud, he says
to an undercover reporter. Pfizer Madern are just getting a
bunch of money from it. From all these vaccine mandates.
For other vaccines like measles, whatever, you have to go
through several rounds of approval, but these were accelerated, like
the six foot rule. Remember that wasn't based on any
(51:16):
real evidence it did anything. It was completely made up.
Oh my goodness, this is somebody inside the National Institute
of Health that is likely sitting across from a young
lady spilling his guts. And then LASTLYFSU expected to hire
(51:41):
apparently did hire. It's not official, but we're hearing from
our friends at war chant dot com. The contract was
signed late yesterday. Tony White, who was at Arizona State
then Syracuse. At Syracuse, he was very good, top twenty
five defense at Syracuse. I mean, no offense, Come on, Syracuse.
(52:04):
I know they're hack of a lot better season fs
you had, but that could be said about well one
hundred and twenty programs this year. But anyway, Tony White
has been at Nebraska, where he's been like a top
fifteen defensive coordinator, and I know that he made life
(52:27):
miserable for Ohio State. The defensive side of the ball
for Nebraska was brilliant all season. They were I mean,
they had a stinker here there, but everyone does. But
I mean most everyone has a bad day, but their teams.
His teams on defense have been exceptional everywhere he's coached,
and somehow Norvel got him. So Gus Malzon will take
(52:49):
over the offense. He'll be running the offense under coach
in Orvel, Tony White taking over the defense under coach
in Orvel. And here's the good thing for FSU fan.
Both these guys are gonna come with some players. I
bet some recruits. Al Zone's got like a twenty year
track record and apparently a few recruits that might be
(53:12):
coming with him. He just checked in on him. You
know what I'm saying. Forty one minutes after the hour
back with more then that music sound like we ought
to be making a Christmas.
Speaker 3 (53:29):
Movie decorating the tree.
Speaker 1 (53:39):
That's decorating the tree music, right, Yeah. I want to
share a little bit of interaction with a listener of
the program who took issue with my talking about the
planning of the flag and the bad sportsmanship. And so
this listener sent me a video clip of FSU players
(53:59):
holding the alligator head and walking around after beating Florida.
And that's happened for decades. Those faux little alligator heads,
or maybe they're real alligator heads that you see them
at you know, souvenirs stores and all that stuff, and
they have little ones and big ones and they're you know,
like anyway, And he asked the question difference and I
(54:22):
wrote back apples, meat oranges, and he wrote back fruit salad.
The question was, what's the difference. It seems you resort
to snark. Was it snark to say apples, meat oranges?
It seems you resort to snark when you can't articulate
a point of view. The answer is no difference. In fact,
(54:43):
perating a gatorhead around the field could be considered the
threat of violence all in your dreams. Your difference is
a blind allegiances you understandably, I suppose because your station
is an FSU affiliate, I replied, sadly. Predictably, you resorted
(55:06):
to the snark. It is a statement of fact. Apples
are not oranges. Anyone who knows anything about the history
of FSU UF knows the gatorhead has been a thing
for decades. By the way, have you ever ever seen
a Florida player or coach come running after an FSU
player with it? No why, because they don't care. It
(55:32):
doesn't matter if you f players want to walk around
with some replica of a seminal nation spear or after
a win out debt. I doubt anyone would really care
place your school flag in the middle of your opponent's
field is classless, and the players on the other side
do not like it. It's one thing to beat a team,
which Florida did not much of a team, but nonetheless
(55:54):
I would say the same thing if FSU did it.
Just like I've called out FSU at various times over
the year, You've either chosen to ignore that reality or
forgotten regardless, though carrying around a ridiculous gaitorhead is not
the same. Don't believe me. Watch what happens if FSU
ever goes low and plants a flag at the swamp.
(56:15):
You'll see the difference in the player's reaction. And if
it ever happens, I will be on the air the
following Monday describing the bad form shown by FSU players
and doing so. There is no blind allegiance, Bud. That
is insulting. I took the time to reply because you
apparently needed me to articulate my view. I hope you
(56:37):
feel better soon, But hold on, there's more to this
that I did not write. Here's the issue, and there
are some that don't seem to understand this. But because
I know this and do understand it, I feel a
need to educate some of you who may not. I
(57:00):
don't mean that in a negative way. You just don't know.
You remember when the NFL and college football started to
flag and then fine in the pros a player that
gave the throat cut symbol. Why because it was affiliated
(57:22):
with gang stuff. And just the other day in the
NFL a couple weeks ago, someone was fined for acting
like they pulled out a six shooter and were firing shots.
They were fined for that. Why because they felt it
was mimicking gang behavior. It was mimicking violence. It crossed
(57:44):
the line. In the same way, when a player stands
over another player and glares at them or literally straddles
them and just stares down at them, you'll see a flag,
or in basketball you'll see a foul called or technical.
Why because in certain cultures in our country, that's called dissing,
(58:09):
and it leads to gunplay. It leads to real guns
being brought out on basketball courts, on pickup football fields.
It leads to fans in the stands pulling guns. See,
that's why this matters. This flag planting crap is distasteful
(58:30):
because it leads to this stuff filtering down to high
school games, in middle school games. Because they see it
on TV, and so I'm right and you're wrong. There's
a big difference between planning a flag on your opponent's
fifty yard line and walking around with some trophy. And
(58:52):
if you're not aware, there are trophies for rivalry games
across the country that are given back and forth. Whatever Florida,
Florida State does it their way, every other school does
it their way. Minnesota, Iowa, Minnesota, Michigan, Michigan, Ohio State.
I mean, they all have different things that they do,
but there's a bigger issue here, and as always I
do my best to look beyond the simple and go
(59:15):
to the bigger story. Forty eight minutes after the hour,
mainly minute coming up next, running a little late, make
(59:36):
this real quick, not to be Lebron's media company, Lebron James,
lost twenty eight million dollars last year. Investors including Serena
Williams and others are putting more money in this, according
to Bloomberg, spring Hill creating all kinds of content. The
(59:58):
question being asked in the the story here is why
are people investing millions into a project that doesn't do
anything but lose money year after year? What are they
receiving in return for their investment other than being associated
with Lebron James. It's an interesting question. I don't have
the answer for it. Most people don't give money to
(01:00:20):
things that don't return and invest on their investment unless
it's a charitable gift. And last time I checked, spring
Hill Company is not that anyway. It's just a little
story out there that was in Bloomberg that not to
be picked up. That that was interesting time for many
(01:00:41):
minutes by birth man Bye. These are ideals, virtues, skills
to teach your son. And I recognize there's single moms
out there and you're like, well, I don't know, you know,
(01:01:02):
well you can. You can still teach them these things.
Maybe you've got your dad, their grandfather. Maybe you've got
a brother an uncle that can speak into their life,
a trusted male friend. Trusted here it is learn from
my planting the flag thing in sports. Teach your son
(01:01:23):
to be a sportsman, to shake hands in victory, to
shake hands in defeat, to be gracious in defeat, to
credit the other team, to not make excuses publicly use
it as fuel to get better if you have a
bad day. But teach your son the art of being
(01:01:47):
a gentleman while competing. He'll stand out and he'll be
a leader immediately among his peers. When we come back,
it's the third hour of the Morning Show with Preston's Gye.
Remember raising funds for Humble House Ministries Humblehouseministries dot org.
Donate to Panama City or Tallahassee. We'll be back with
(01:02:09):
US Congresswoman Kat Cammick. We're gilling you with the news
of the day, whether you like it or not, one
(01:02:31):
of ruminators. Welcome to Tuesday, December third, on the Morning Show,
Day fifty two to eighty three, and we've done a
little reversal. Instead of counting the number of days we've
been held hostage by the Biden regime, we are now
counting them down. It's forty eight days, friends, that's the number.
Forty eight days until the new presidential administration takes over
(01:02:55):
in Washington, DC on January twentieth, and we are excited
about that. We are excited as well. She's number three
in terms of the district representing here, Florida's third Congression district,
but number one in our hearts. US Congresswoman Cat Camick The.
Speaker 5 (01:03:10):
Morning, Good morning, how are you doing I'm terrific.
Speaker 1 (01:03:14):
Tell me about Thanksgiving at the Camick household. What's that like?
How does that unfold?
Speaker 5 (01:03:22):
It's funny because my husband is the ultimate introvert and
so he kind of has to have days leading up
to Thanksgiving with the big family gathering where he can
recharge his social battery, as he calls it. And for me,
it's all about the mac and cheese. Okay, it's all
(01:03:43):
about the smoke turkey. I despise stuffing. I don't understand it.
Speaker 1 (01:03:48):
I really don't, even on the side, not necessarily stuffing
in the bird, but even on the side, even.
Speaker 5 (01:03:55):
On the side, my husband's a huge fan of it.
I don't understand it. I don't know what that's about.
But in our family, we do three turkeys, and it's
our uncle John. He does them. One is baked, one
is deep fried, and one is smoked. And I have
to tell you, the smoke turkey is hands down the
(01:04:17):
way to go. Hands down.
Speaker 1 (01:04:19):
What's it smoked with? Is it a special wood that
he smokes it with?
Speaker 5 (01:04:24):
You know, I actually don't know what kind of what
he smokes it with. But this year he did a
little differently. He took the spine and basically craft it
to lay it flat so he could do a brine
on both sides for I think twelve or twenty four
hours each side. And it was incredible. Yeah, yeah, it was.
(01:04:45):
It was It was better. And normally the deep friedeway
is the way to go, but this year it.
Speaker 1 (01:04:49):
Was a smoke turkey Okay, yeah, yack.
Speaker 5 (01:04:53):
And then for us, see, I'm not I'm I don't.
I'm not a very good cook, so I baked. I
love baking, and so this year I did a pumpkin
cheesecake homemade, even the crust was homemade, and that was
a big hit. And then we do apple dump cake,
(01:05:13):
and we affectionately call the final dessert crack salad. It's
this homemade whipped cream with crushed pineapple. And then I
toss pretzels with brown sugar, butter and salt and roast
them in the oven to make them really christy. And
then I use a hammer and I smash them into
bits and then I sprinkle it on top of the
(01:05:34):
whip cream.
Speaker 1 (01:05:35):
Oh cat, come on.
Speaker 5 (01:05:38):
No, I know there's a reason why its name cracks out.
Speaker 1 (01:05:46):
Well, people hear that all the time. You know, if
you want to swap recipes, I mean, we can do that,
but I'm what's interesting to me about Thanksgiving is it
is the holiday that is the least commercialized and the
purest of all of them, even though obviously as a Christian,
(01:06:09):
I still try to focus on the whole you know,
you can't spell Christmas without christ kind of thing. But
Thanksgiving is just so uncluttered. It's lovely, it is.
Speaker 5 (01:06:19):
And part of my Thanksgiving tradition growing up is football,
you know, so there you always got to watch the
football games, you got to have it on the background.
And it's just a good time for everyone to come together.
And that's not to say that, and when I say that,
people totally understand it. Family can be hard sometimes and yeah,
(01:06:41):
so you can imagine some of the dynamics, but it's
it's always a good time. And this year I had
to laugh a little bit because we have a family
member who is, let's say, of the left persuasion the
left as you oh yeah, yeah yeah, And so I
(01:07:01):
felt a little I don't want to say I felt done.
But when I walked in, everyone kind of came up
to me and they were like trump, trup drump like rabbit,
and I looked over and bless her heart. She was
fit that fo she was in flying then joined.
Speaker 1 (01:07:19):
Me this morning. US congress Woman Cat Camick. We will
segue to other things, but I it's December, people, come on.
We got the rest of the year to chew and
grind on the rest. It's ten past the hour here
in the Morning Show with Preston Scott. It's the Morning
(01:07:40):
Show with Preston Scott. Twelve passed the hour. US congress
Woman Cat Camick, Florida's third congressional district with us newly
re elected, Kat, I want to dig a little deeper
into without prying that that whole family dynamic, because you know,
(01:08:03):
we talked about a ton of stories here that I mean,
you've got all the psychologists out there saying not all
some saying, you know, if you if you have Trump
supporters in your family, just don't associate with them during
the holidays, just don't have them over, don't spend time
with them, et cetera. So in a situation like that,
(01:08:23):
how do you handle it? Because what I know of you,
you're a generous, kind soul and you were already saying
bless your heart. So what does that whole afternoon evening
look like with your family when you've got somebody there
that doesn't align with your views.
Speaker 5 (01:08:41):
So and I did not realize we were doing a
deep dive this morning. But if there's one thing, and
my husband and friends will attest to this, if there's
one thing that really really bothers me that you know,
make me go and see red right out the gate,
it is one somebody who's a jerk or cruel to
(01:09:04):
animals and to a bully. And I've always thought that
the tactics of the left were very much in line
with bullying. And if they can't bully you into submission,
they shame you into submission. And so I've always been
very sensitive, which I wasn't bullied as a kid. So
people always asking You're like, were you bullied? I'm like, no,
(01:09:25):
I just I have this this thing that I cannot
stand when someone feels like they're being bullied. And so
knowing that it could get out of hand very quickly,
all the you know, talk of how we effectively destroyed
the Democrats in this election, you know, I could see
I could see her getting very quiet and a little uncomfortable.
(01:09:45):
And I never want someone to feel uncomfortable. And I
never I never want to prove the left and those
who who call us all the names. I don't ever
want to be the thing that they they claim us
to be, and so I'm always trying to find common
ground with people. And so in that sort of dynamic,
you know, you have to relish the moment a little bit.
And I would pull my I'd pull my cousins, and
(01:10:08):
you know, the uncles and aunts are the side. I'd
be like, yes, it's very exciting, it's super awesome, super cool,
you know, and then we're talking. But I don't ever
want someone, particularly family, to feel isolated, and so I
ended up pulling her aside. One thing about me is
I'm a rabid reader of books, all kinds of books.
And I gave myself a challenge over the Thanksgiving break
(01:10:30):
to read a series that is completely out of my wheelhouse.
And I knew she was a fan of it, and
so I just kind of started talking to her about it.
She got so excited. I could see the light in
her eyes as I started talking to her about it.
And it's a good reminder in a broader sense that
we have so much more in common with our friends,
(01:10:51):
our family, our neighbors who maybe don't agree with us politically,
and we need to continue to remind them of that,
because this is the moment when they're down right, they've
completely lost top to bottom, and instead of kicking them
while they're down, I think it's a good moment to
actually bring them into the fold. And one of the
things that I did segue into talking with her about
(01:11:12):
was some of the work that we're doing legislatively. She's
looking to buy a house, and you know, it was
talking about how difficult it is, and I said, well,
you know, President Trump is actually you know, working on
this issue and that issue, and we have a build
it would allow you know, first time home buyers to
get into a home quicker and easier. And and I
could see that that was a bridge. Yeah, it's just
(01:11:34):
it's just a good reminder that we have to speak
to each other as humans and as neighbors and love
one another. And we'd stay down here in the South,
We're going to love each other through it rather than,
you know, just kind of rub it in their face.
Believe me, we have so much to rub in people's faces,
but it would better serve us not to do that.
And particularly the Thanksgiving function, I wasn't going to do that.
Speaker 1 (01:11:59):
Yeah, I had to borrow from my father's broadcasting career.
He would talk about those that would spike the football
and perform after scoring touchdowns. And Dad would always say,
act like you've been in the end zone before, and
so that I think is good wisdom for life. Back
with Kat Camick. Next, one more segment to go. We're
going to talk about the nominations that Donald Trump has
(01:12:20):
made and just get her thoughts on some of the nominees.
Next on The Morning Show with Preston Scott. Twenty one
minutes past the hour. US Congressman Kat Cammick with US
(01:12:44):
Florida's third congressional District, our guest, our final visit for
the year before we ramp things up in the new year.
And are you excited? Kat? Are you apprehensive when we
last talked. I mean, it's a little bit of the
business as usual with the committee stuff, but a big
picture broadly. Are you excited about what's coming January twentieth
and moving forward?
Speaker 5 (01:13:05):
My gosh, yes, I mean I know that so many
people are ready to turn the page. I know Democrats
that are ready to turn the page, and that's being
reflected in the house cleaning that the Democrats are doing
right now. There's a great article this morning in Punchbowl,
which for folks, if you guys don't read Punchable, I
highly recommend it kind of gives you an idea of
(01:13:27):
what the hell is happening in Washington on most days.
It has a liberal plant to it, but it's good information.
When you think about January, it is it's us preparing
to mark nearly two hundred and fifty years of American exceptionalism,
and it is our once in a lifetime, not generation,
(01:13:50):
but I feel once in a lifetime opportunity to give
the American people a chance at another two hundred and
fifty years, we have the chance to do such incredible
structural reforms and write the ship that if we mess
this up, I don't think any of us would ever
(01:14:11):
have We would never be able to lay our head
down at night knowing that we blew the opportunity we
have a before us. So I am very very excited.
I'm the eternal optimist, so I'm always looking for the
hopeful side of it. Of Course, the realist in me
also saying, you know, well, you've seen this happen before.
Where the swamp creatures get their way. But we actually
(01:14:33):
have a team and we have we have the players
in place to be able to make transform transformative change
that will survive beyond my lifetime.
Speaker 1 (01:14:43):
Certainly, if I were to ask you of the nominees
of the major offices, we don't need to go into
the weeds, but the big offices in the cabinet for
Donald Trump as president, who excites you the very most,
and without saying who excites you the who do you
anticipate to have the most difficulty getting confirmed?
Speaker 5 (01:15:07):
Excuse me? I still have this cred thing that has
been going around for months. So my apologies. I and
maybe it's just because he's on he's top of mind.
I was talking to him last night. Cash to tel
Cash as FBI director is going to be a hammer.
He is going to be ruthless. And I mean that
(01:15:27):
in a good way.
Speaker 1 (01:15:28):
Yep.
Speaker 5 (01:15:29):
When you have the FBI Washington DC Office giving directives
to rank and file agents to sit in parking lots
at PTA meetings and write parents' license plates down, or
you're having them go into churches, Catholic churches because they
(01:15:49):
think that the Catholic Church has become radicalized. When you
have the FBI giving directives like that to weaponize the
agency against the people that they are sworn to protect,
you know, you have a very big problem. And I
know Cash he is a no nonsense BS kind of guy.
He will get in there and he with no regard
(01:16:11):
to himself and his reputation or anything like that. He
doesn't care. He knows what he has to get in
there and do. And so I think that is going
to be critically important. And knowing some of the agents
that have been retaliated against that came forward to us
on the Weaponization Committee as whistle blowers who have been
denied any sort of justice or coming forward and are
(01:16:36):
still being retaliated against today, that brings me great joy.
I think Pam Bondi will do a great job. Someone
who I'm really really excited about is doctor j. Bodicharia
and he has been tapped to lead NIH. And I
know you said, Majors, and I'm going to consider this
a major one because when you think about what the
(01:16:58):
NIH has done, not just in terms of how much
money that they have wasted, a ridiculous experiments like does
cocaine make you know Japanese quail frisky? Like come on,
give me a break. So that is that is not
an experiment that taxpayers need to fund, yep. But in
terms of the dangers of what NIH has funded in
(01:17:21):
the past, and we know that to be true. The
COVID report just came out, I think yesterday, and the
devastation that it caused, the funding that was responsible for
that that is critical. But you also have to realize
that we're living in a time where NIH has now
(01:17:41):
forced universities and researchers and scientists to produce results that
they don't have to prove are replicable, they just have
to be peer reviewed. And then you get into the
peer review stuff and you realize how political it is,
and these scientists have to pay to get their their
ernals published, and it leads to bad science, and we're
(01:18:04):
spending billions of dollars of taxpayer money on chasing down
these these studies that aren't actually real, some of them
have actually been proven to be falsified. And then those
studies then become the adopted public policy that CDC takes
and says, this is what we're going to do. Well,
that's not healthcare, that's not public health, that's politics, and
(01:18:29):
it's really a system that has to be broke. If
we're going to get back to a place where the
relationship for your personal health care is between you and
your doctor, not insurance company. If we're going to change
the culture from preventative men from maintenance to preventative medicine
and actually change it to healthcare instead of perpetuating sick care,
it starts with Nih and doctor Bodicharia. He is someone
(01:18:52):
who I've known for several years now. I've met with
him several times, and he is a common sense, out
of back science driven question the science hatriot. He really
believes in it. And I'm just I'm so grateful that
President Trump is taking a chance on him, because this
(01:19:13):
is going to be the cornerstone in the moment where
we look back fifty years from now and we have
all these cures and all these things, and it's because
this man was willing to set aside a very prestigious
career and do something for his country. And so I
think he's one of the ones that I'm most excited about.
Speaker 1 (01:19:30):
And maybe we'll learn the truth about what happened during COVID,
and that would be mind numbing in and of itself.
Kat we got to leave it there. Merry Christmas to
you and your family. Nothing but the best as we
moved to the new year, and I look forward to
our visit come January.
Speaker 5 (01:19:43):
Absolutely, Mary, Christmas, everybody.
Speaker 1 (01:19:46):
Kat Camick, us, congresswoman from Florida's third congressional district and
our guest on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Quite
(01:20:14):
a little long there with Kat Cammick because I just
enjoy talking with her. So yeah, oh well, so sue me.
Big stories in the press box this morning. Didn't get
a chance to talk about the Florida nominees other than
she mentioned Pam Bondi. Yeah, there's one of the big
(01:20:41):
stories is Chad Cronister. I'm not sure he's the right
guy for de e A. He you know, he had
a pastor arrested in Tampa because of COVID violations and
it just now and he's a red flaglaw guy. Now,
granted de A is not in those worlds, but there's
(01:21:05):
and I have great confidence in Pam Bondi, and I
have great confidence in Cash Patel. But there are a
lot of questions, and thankfully we're not alone. There are
a lot of people in the Senate that that are
are concerned and certainly people in the house. So we'll
(01:21:28):
we'll have to we'll have to see where this goes
with that nominee. Uh. You may not get everybody, but yeah,
so that that nominee is a little problematic. O'Keefe media group. Uh,
James O'Keefe has done it again. This time he got
an official for n I H. And and you know
(01:21:50):
she was just talking about the doctor whose name at
a at at Shaberry or I couldn't remember how she anyway,
you know what I'm talking about. She has high degree
of confidence in him cleaning up an AIH. I'm not
sure that it shouldn't just be shut down the National
(01:22:13):
Institutes of Health. You talk about an organization that if
you keep it has to be skeletonized and enemed to
the core. You got to bleed, you got to bleed
it dry, and you got to start over and staff
it with scientists and not people that are inside playing
(01:22:40):
the game. And you've got to hold the pharmaceutical companies accountable,
and you've got to be I've said this from the
very beginning, and I've had this discussion with a handful
of medical professionals over the years on this show, including
doctor Martin carry. He agreed with me when I said,
(01:23:03):
the medical community of the United States has to come
clean about COVID and admit they were wrong before I
will ever extend trust. There will be individual trust given
to individual doctors, but broadly as a group, I do
not trust the medical profession anymore, not the traditional medical profession,
(01:23:25):
because they were dishonest about COVID, and they've not admitted
that they were wrong, and they were wrong, and you
and I, many of us were right, and we're still right,
and they still haven't admitted that they were wrong. And
so yeah, those are Kamala Harris still raising money three
weeks after, but not telling everybody why. She says it's
(01:23:48):
to keep fighting for the values of the left. No, no, no,
it's to pay herself out of get herself out of debt.
She's just not being honest. And FSU football hiring Tony
White from Nebraska the defensive coordinator. Great Higher, absolutely great Higher.
Forty one minutes after the hour, we're going to get
caught up here. Got some sound you must hear next.
(01:24:16):
And one of the things that I talked with Kat
off air about was that there is an awakening of
a lot of Democrats, a lot of Democrats are realizing
how misled they've been by their party. Now not a majority,
(01:24:36):
but certainly a sizeable percentage of Democrats, and Joe Biden's
punk pardon of Hunter is just tossing gasoline on the fire.
I mean, you've got people that they're barely observers of
(01:24:56):
the political world going whoa, whoa, whoa to that that
one because they remember Joe saying I'm not interfering, I'm
not gonna pardon, I'm not gonna pardon. Of course he
was gonna pardon. It's his son. But it's the length,
it's the type, it's the breadth of the pardon. Psycho. Really,
(01:25:20):
there's an opportunity to move Democrats, not to become Republicans,
I honestly don't care, but to move them from being
Democrats to moving them to the middle because the parties
as of right now, the party's lost. I'm just gonna
say it, it is lost. As an example, here is
(01:25:47):
an old school Democrat with a good dose of liberal leaning,
Bill Maher talking with the uber a liberal left in
Jane Fonda. Listen to what this conversation ended up being,
(01:26:10):
Because there's a little squirming that goes on here as Bill,
who's a very bright guy, breaks some news to Jane.
Speaker 6 (01:26:19):
They just think the far left has gone so nutty
on so many issues.
Speaker 7 (01:26:25):
That's what they're being told.
Speaker 2 (01:26:26):
That's what they by people like.
Speaker 6 (01:26:28):
You, because it's true. You think the far left does
nothing crazy.
Speaker 7 (01:26:33):
Oh I'm sure they do.
Speaker 6 (01:26:34):
Oh well then, but who is the far left?
Speaker 7 (01:26:37):
What do you mean when you say far left?
Speaker 6 (01:26:38):
I mean I could give you a million example. Well,
Gilly one, okay, the NAACP.
Speaker 1 (01:26:44):
You think a could I finish my tent?
Speaker 6 (01:26:47):
Yes, you asked me for an example. NAACP last year
issued a travel advisory. You know, that's like we used
to the State Department does to go to I'm sure
when you went to Vietnam they were advising you not to.
Speaker 1 (01:27:00):
There's a war on I know.
Speaker 6 (01:27:03):
But you know a travel advisory today, we have them
for very dangerous countries. Yeah, don't go to North Korea,
don't go to Iran. You know where they issued a
travel advisory for black people not to go Florida. Every
day there's stories like that where that just makes people
roll their eyes and go, are you people nuts? Even
(01:27:25):
if they don't matter that much. I don't think one
person listened to this and thought I can't go to Florida.
But they just they just suggest something to the average person,
which I completely understand, which is, wow, do you people
ever find anything that's ridiculous? Do you really think men
(01:27:46):
can get pregnant? You know that kind of stuff? And
I understand that a trans woman can get pregnant. That's
different than a man getting pregnant. And the way they
sort of like insist on blurring that line is if
that's some of reasonable social cause as opposed to just
being for having full rights, respect and protection for trans people,
(01:28:09):
we get that.
Speaker 7 (01:28:10):
So I've never heard about men getting pregnant. I've never
heard about this argument. It's it must be some part
of what you call the far left that is so
minuscule that I who am, no, Jane, what's not minuscule?
Speaker 6 (01:28:23):
And I'm sorry you can't throw this back on us.
It's I assume it's because you are locked into media
that just never never wants anyone in their audience to
know anything sketchy about the Blue Team.
Speaker 1 (01:28:40):
Bill Maher a very candid, sober appraisal to a wing
nut Jane Fonda forty seven minutes after the hour, You're
welcome and the way we started with a bang Tomorrow
(01:29:12):
the program. Jad Johnson tellent training group tomorrow on the program,
what holiday movie do you play first every year? And
is it your favorite? And if not, what's your favorite
holiday movie? Not going to get into a debate over
Diehard because it's not a Christmas movie. It's a movie
(01:29:35):
set at Christmas. But we are going to take calls
tomorrow morning just because I don't have many shows left
to take a bunch of calls. It's a short week.
Thursday's my last show this week. Monday, Grant will be
in for me, and then I'll be back on Thursday, Friday,
(01:29:56):
and then Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday the next week, and then
it's the twelve days of Preston. And by the way,
I'm going to go ahead and just say this, don't
miss any of the shows, but do not miss the
December show, which is the twelfth day of Preston. On
January third, I will be airing interviews never heard on
(01:30:20):
the program that I am conducting with special guests Justin Haskins,
Peter Schweitzer, Mark Levin, and Glenn Beck. Just saying special
(01:30:45):
interviews each one spending about a half hour with me
Mary Christmas. That'll be the twelfth show on the twelve
days of Preston Cannot wait. Humble House Ministries. We're raising money.
Go to humble he Houseministries dot org. Click to give
Mark in the notes.
Speaker 2 (01:31:03):
WFLA brought to you by Barno Heating and Air. It's
the morning show one on WFLA.
Speaker 1 (01:31:13):
Look back at the radio program in one hundred and
eighty seconds or less. I am dressed in my Christmas sweater,
covered in Santa Claus and reindeer and a snowflake here there.
But that kind of makes sense with my personality. Santa Claus,
a side of reindeer, and a few snowflakes here and there.
You know what I'm saying. Big stories in the press
(01:31:35):
box today. Chad Cronister, the sheriff Hillsburg County. I'm not
sure he's going to make it through confirmation. There's gonna
be some blowback because of some actions he took, well
Sheriff and some positions he's taken. Well Sheriff. James O'Keefe
O'Keeffe Media Group once again, this time an official with
(01:31:56):
the National Institute of Health, admitting that most of what
happened during COVID was based on nothing. No science was
a lie made up. Ouch. Let me let me, let
me channel my inner Austin powers Ouch. Cabbibo baby m
(01:32:17):
Kamala Harra is still raising money three weeks after the loss.
Four weeks now, isn't it interesting she's raising money to
keep fighting when she spent one point five billion dollars,
left herself twenty million in debt, and she's out raising
money to keep the fight going on. How about girlfriend,
you're raising the money to pay the bill. FSU expected
(01:32:41):
to name officially, perhaps today, Tony White, the defensive coordinator
at Nebraska, as their new defensive coordinator. I guess he
sees something in a two and ten team worth coming
to Tallahassee for four. I should say, well, I'll just
say this. Welcome the guests. Gus smeles On, Welcome to
Tony White. Tomorrow we'll do it all again. Thanks for listening, friends,
(01:33:03):
have an awesome day.