Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:26):
I wanted to take my time. He's on in here
cause just a moment of oh nada. It's all right, kiddos.
I'm looking at one of the great Christmas sweaters in
(00:47):
the history of Christmas sweaters. Oh sweet God. Oh we're
back friends. Uh. Five more shows in the year before
the Twelve Days of Presston began. No, you don't. It's
actually got a pouch in front of it. All right,
I might have to post that on on X. We
(01:09):
might have to. We might have to put that sweater
on there. Yeah. Jose Is is standing by in Studio
one A. I'm here in Studio one B. I'm Preston.
Welcome friends, back to the live edition of The Morning
Show with Preston Scott Show fifty two eighty six, thirty
nine days. Friends, we are now thirty nine days away
(01:32):
from freedom, well sort of right there. There's there's lots
to still deal with and then there're those those drones.
But anyway, good to be back with you. I'll tell
you about my reason for being gone tomorrow on the show.
(01:54):
Is too much today, a lot of guests, a lot
of things to talk about. But as always, we start
with scripture Galatians four verses four and five say this,
but when the fullness of time had come, God sent
forth his son, born of woman, born under the law,
to redeem those who were under the law, so that
(02:14):
we might receive adoption as sons. You know, an, there's
an interesting little idea on adoption that I heard years ago.
In many regards, adoption is a remarkable process where a
(02:42):
son or daughter is chosen. Just think about that for
a second. Our kids, they are our blood. But when families,
(03:06):
for whatever the reason, maybe they cannot have biological children,
or maybe they just feel as though they're being tapped
on the shoulder to love children who do not have
a mother and father. There are people that are called
that way. They just are. And now think about it.
(03:30):
You're choosing, I'm going to love you. I'm going to
raise you as my son or my daughter, my family.
I'm choosing you. Think of these words again, so that
(03:51):
we might receive adoption. God has made it possible and
has chosen you. The difference here is that you have
(04:18):
to be willing to allow that adoption. You have to
receive it. It's up to you. So if you've never
considered that and you're staring at a Christmas, still trying
(04:40):
to figure out what's the big deal. Well, friends, that's
a good place to start. Allowing the adoption ten past
the hour Thursday, December twelfth, couple days in the week,
(05:01):
will do the shows together then next Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday.
Cannot wait. Good to be back with you. This morning
on the Morning Show with Preston Scott Humble House. We're
(05:37):
getting some very powerful notes from Humble House from some
of you that are choosing to support them and your
reason forgiving, and it's really heartwarming. I have no idea
how much has been raised. I'll hopefully get some kind
of number on Friday, but it ends on Wednesday. Our
(06:00):
efforts and now, obviously you can support Humblehouseministries dot org
every month any time you want. Part of this plan
was to just let you know it's out there if
you have not heard, we're Our Spirit of Christmas project
this year is for Humblehouseministries dot org. They have a
(06:20):
home for women that are fighting addictions for recovery and
the success rate is incredible. I've seen it. They have
a home in Tallahassee, they have one in panelas City
and they also offer transitional housing for women and their
children if needed. And again that's a need, it's a
(06:44):
dramatic need. And so if you can help, boy, I'd
love to see you do it. Join me in that effort.
My wife and I have given to both locations and
challenge you to do the same. And you can just
go to Humble House minutes dot org and click either
Panama City or Tallahassee or you can do both. And
(07:05):
like I said, you can do a one time gift,
whatever you can. You can do monthly if you want
to join and become a partner. And if you want
to put a note, you know, dedication on Panama City
or comment in the wa in the Tallahassee area, just
put WFLA in there and they'll know that it's as
a result of what we're doing here that you became
aware of their program. And I'll make this plea again.
(07:29):
We're at the end of the tax here. Come on.
That's it's a reality. And for many of your businesses
and for you personally, you've had a really good year.
Your business is prospered. And I'm just gonna tell you
what you probably know, or maybe you haven't thought of
it this way. You're you're blessing you're prospering. That's that's
(07:51):
God's favor, and so it's an opportunity for you to
pass on and share what God's blessed you with. And
so I'm just saying, and maybe you can spare a
grand or maybe twenty five hundred or five thousand or
even ten. You might have a big business and it's
nothing for you to send that money on to help others. Boy,
(08:15):
ten bucks makes a difference to these folks. So I
would greatly appreciate you, just perfelly, considering the opportunity to give.
And so there you go. It's December twelfth here on
the program. Seventeen eighty seven, Pennsylvania becomes the second state
to ratify the Constitution. Eighteen oh eight, the first Bible
(08:35):
Society in the United States is organized in Philadelphia. They
still needed eighteen thirty one. Alexis dit Dukville crosses the
Tennessee River en route from Louisville to Memphis. During his
journey through America, he wanted to see America. He wanted
(08:56):
to do experience what America was all about. Tolkville impactful,
influential in this country. Joseph Rainey of South Carolina sworn
in as the first black member of the US House
in eighteen seventy and in nineteen twenty five, the world's
first motel, the Motel Inn, opens in San Luis Obispo, California.
(09:24):
So there you go, this date in history. All right,
let me tell you about the show. We got Steve Stewart.
Of course, I'm focusing on just a handful of stories
today because quite frankly, boy, a lot happened while I
was out. Now Grant might have touched on some of
(09:45):
this Monday, I'll be honest with you, didn't hear much
of the show Monday, just a little bit. But yeah,
we're gonna catch up on some stuff. So stick around
sixteen past the hour it is us. Doctor had More
(10:17):
scheduled to join us in the third hour, final installment
of a Little More History for the Year. Doctor David
Hearts will join us next hour final installment of Optimum
Health Naturally for the year, and Steve Stewart will join
us with our final kind of a look at what
were the big stories of the year in Florida's capital city.
(10:42):
And so it will be our final visit with Steve
for the year. We are back next Monday. We're here
today and tomorrow back Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday next week, and
so a lot to get done and talked about, which
course means tomorrow is our fire episode of What's the
(11:02):
Beef for the year. I'm just saying, get it out
of your system tomorrow or you're gonna be holding onto
it for a long time. Okay, I think let's see.
(11:24):
I think like the tenth of January is our next
What's the Beef? So yeah, you definitely wanta wanna get
that taken care of. How have you been seeing the
stories of NFL players homes being robbed? Here's what's happening,
(11:46):
and if you will, it's the price of a certain
level of notoriety. You might have seen Pat mahomes and
I want to say, Travis Kelce they got their homes
burglarized to the extent we're talking about like they think
(12:08):
it was an organized cartel kind of thing, very targeted,
organized plan. They think internationals. But NFL players are being targeted.
Why because when they're out of town, you see them
(12:28):
on TV. They know they're not there. And so the
latest was Joe Burrow of the Cincinnati Bengals. Now Joe
went a little different route. He had a little security. Unfortunately,
his security was a swimsuit model from Sports Illustrated little
(12:57):
girl named Olivia Ponton. He hired her. They know each other.
He hired her to house sit and to guard his residence.
So when she showed up, she found out it had
already been robbed burglarized if you will, technically that would
(13:18):
be burglarized. So what did she do? Be in the
swimsuit model that she is, she got right on the
phone and called her mom. She called her mom. Her
mom called nine one one, and so the look no
(13:44):
one was hurt, stuff was taken. Some of the comments
on social media are priceless. Who needs ring security cameras
when you can have a SI model protect your home.
(14:05):
She is a IMG model and influencer. Oh my, she
did eventually call nine one one, Her mom called nine
one one. I'm just if you're at that level of stardom. First,
(14:28):
I'm trying to understand how you're not in a gated community.
And I'm not talking about the gated community where it's
just an automated thing that anyone can push a button
and get in, or anyone can claim they're delivering a
pizza and can get in I'm talking about a real
gated community where there are armed guards at gates type
(14:49):
community and barring that, how is it that you don't
have like a former Navy seal at your home? You
know what I'm saying. Anyway, feel bad, it's a problem.
See what happens to address it. Twenty six past the hour.
(15:13):
The big stories in the press box are massive. Stay
with us, look at me on time. Thirty five past
the hour. Whoo Spike in the football speaking of Boston
(15:39):
College quarterback has apparently committed to come to Florida State.
He made our life miserable when he played for BC.
Is it Thomas Castellanos. He's only got a year of eligibility.
I would have preferred us to go after the kid
from Duke, but maybe we're not going to. We couldn't
get him. He's got two years left. But gust Malzon
(16:04):
knows him. Yeah, he's he can run and throw. He's
a short guy. He's a little fellow. But that's what
they said about Jordan Travis too, right. But anyway, there boy,
talk about a transformation. Mike Norvell said, this is going
(16:26):
to happen quick. He wasn't kidd. He's got a completely
different coaching staff, and uh, it's going to be interesting
to watch this unfold. We'll see what happens. I'm sure
sometime in the new year, after the smoke clears a
little bit, we'll get Irisha Fell back on him. Haven't
give us our thoughts the big stories in the press box.
We're gonna take a little time here and spread across
(16:49):
a couple of segments so we know who the killer
is of the CEO of United Healthcare, Brian tom He
will be unnamed on this program. We will not use
this name. However, I will use a couple of names.
But before I get to that, I am just I'm
(17:11):
not sure I'm understanding how he's being charged with second
degree murder. He committed a crime that is worthy of
of capital punishment. Now I don't know if New York
allows it, they probably don't, But how is that not
first degree murder? It was one hundred percent premeditated allegedly. Now,
(17:41):
I mean, the evidence is overwhelming, This case is over
You might say to yourself, why do they plead not
guilty when there is so much evidence? Well, I'll tell
you why. And this is what defense attorneys have told
me directly. You plead not guilty to get the best
(18:01):
possible outcome for your client, because the not guilty establishes
the other end of the spectrum, so that now the
negotiation begins for sentencing. But I cannot, in my mind
understand second degree. This is as clear cut a case
(18:26):
of premeditated, planned out first degree murder as I've ever seen.
And again I'm going to remind you I did serve
as a grand juror on capital murder cases for six months.
I heard evidence in cases for six months, multiple cases,
(18:46):
one after another after another after another. I had to
see the video, evidence, the photos, all of that stuff.
One name I want to use is I want to
use the name of professor at the University of Pennsylvania.
She posts under the name the Soviet She's professor Julia Alexeyeva,
(19:19):
self described socialist anti fascist. For those of you that
want to know, an anti fascist is somebody who hates
people that oppose socialism at the people on the left
consider you and I to be fascist because we oppose them.
You're a fascist because you opposed them. She posted, She's
(19:43):
never been more proud to be a professor at the
University of Pennsylvania than to learn that one of their
former students assassinated. This guy never been more proud, she replos.
Replaced the E in Pennsylvania with the number three, which
(20:03):
is an interesting post. Another name I want you to
keep in mind is the name Anthony Zenkis. He's a
senior lecturer at social work at Columbia University. He seemed
(20:25):
to not be very upset. Taylor Lorenz, former Washington Post reporter,
said that it brought her joy. The assassination Elizabeth Warren,
US Senator, seems to be suggesting that the shooting and
the killing was justified. So Focahontas herself is shaming the
(20:56):
not just the people of Massachusetts, but the United States.
It she should be censured for these comments. What I
wanted to point out to you is, regardless of whatever
his manifesto says, he has one there are stories floating
(21:19):
around that he's sexually impotent because of a surgery that
went bad on his back. I don't know, I don't know,
but he certainly has a flashing anger now, doesn't he
He's not getting the reaction he thought he would get.
He's a very arrogant young man. But what I want
to point out to you parents. Is this is what
(21:39):
can happen at many colleges and universities across this country.
They are in doctrination centers. There's no doubt in my mind.
Keep in mind, this kid's wealth through his family came
largely through the healthcare industry. He had no problem accepting
the private education, had no problem excepting going to an
(22:02):
Ivy League school. He wanted to be a unibomber. He
wanted to be Trust me, I think we're going to
find out he planned on killing other people. Forty one
minutes past the hour. There's more to come. Daniel Penny acquitted,
(22:44):
not guilty, not guilty. I feel badly for Jordan Neely,
and I feel real badly that his father, his family's
hurting over his loss, as you would expect, But I'm
(23:04):
also I'm puzzled. Where were the interventions for their son,
who clearly had mental illness and was living on the streets.
The families all upset. I get upset that your son died,
(23:27):
But where was the anger and upset and where was
the motivation to help him? And then the reaction of
the typical noise that you hear when these kinds of
verdicts come down from the alleged BLM groups. It's just
so predictable, and it's so nauseating, and it's so hateful,
(23:51):
and it's so divisive, and it's just it's ugly. It
really is. Jerry said, he's not responsible. Daniel Penny is
not responsible for the death of this man. This man
was responsible for what happened to him and what I
really loved. I picked out the comments here in a
(24:15):
pretty lengthy story by NBC News of Dante Mills, the
lawyer representing the family, and the family, by the way,
has filed a lawsuit of civil suit against Daniel Penny.
So it's never going to end, it's going to keep
going on. He had a muffin in his pocket. Jordan
wanted someone to acknowledge him on the train, but instead
(24:37):
he was choked to death. What an obscene comment that is.
Jordan Neely went on that train, that subway and threatened everybody,
stating that someone was going to die today. He just
wanted someone to acknowledge him. No, sir, your client's family member,
(25:08):
your clients needed to acknowledge him. The people on board
that subway who testified were scared to death. One man
did something about it. Unfortunately, because of a lot of
things that were going on in that guy's life, his
(25:31):
physical body, his medical condition, the drugs he was on.
It ended poorly for him. But my goodness, we're still
not done with the big stories. More to come here
in the Morning Show with Preston Scott Christmas, Christmas, Christmas.
(26:00):
Thanks for listening. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
All right, before we push into some more big stories.
That's how many big stories there are. Quick reminder, Humblehouseministries
(26:21):
dot org we could use your gift to help out
in Panama City and in Tallahassee, two separate homes helping
women overcome addictions, helping women with transitional housing. They do
an incredible work and I'm asking you to step up
and help them. We've got five seven more days if
(26:42):
you include the weekend to raise funds for them as
we try to raise awareness as well. That's Humblehouseministries dot org.
Click to donate and pick either Panama City or Tallahassee
or both, and we would appreciate it very much. Joe
Biden's out there touting that Donald Trump is going to
(27:04):
inherit the strongest economy in the world, Jose's laughing out loud.
Layoffs in the United States surged last month, nearly sixty
thousand job cuts announced economic pressures on manufacturing automotive technology sectors.
(27:30):
In fact, it's the fourth worst November since two thousand
and eight. Two thousand and nine, that was the financial crisis,
the near depression that hit this country. Yeah, that's what
marks one of the strongest economies in the world right there.
(27:53):
Of course, depending on what part of the world you're
comparing it to, I suppose there could be some accuracy
to the statement. It's embarrassing. The Trump factor is already
taking hold. I told you going in though, he was
(28:16):
coming back to a house that had been squatted in
for four years and has been destroyed. And I warned
you on the front end that recovery from this is
not going to be easy. And I'm not sure that
the American people have the stomach for what's going to
have to happen to fix it. So Trump and his advisors,
(28:40):
his team, the members of the House and the Senate,
they better buckle up and be smart about how they
do what they do to fix this. I don't know
if you've ever watched any of the Home renovation shows.
But when you've got the interior walls that are rotted out,
termites of destroyed, it 're in this case squatters. What
(29:04):
you have to do is you build a temporary wall.
You build temporary walls, and then you knock out everything else.
You hold the roof up with the temporary walls. It
supports all the weight, all the structure, everything of the house.
You knock out all the crap, all the walls that
are rotted and destroyed, and then you start rebuilding, so
(29:33):
the temporary walls have to go up. But I'm a
little alarmed by what I'm seeing going on around us
right now. For example, did you see that there are
three hundred and twenty three vials of deadly virus samples
that have suddenly gone missing in Australia at a lab.
(30:02):
We're talking about infectious viruses from the Queensland Public Health
Virology Laboratory. They went missing in August of twenty twenty
three and we're just learning about it. And then, have
(30:24):
you been paying attention to the drone story in New Jersey?
The size of a truck these things and no one
knows where they're coming from. Let me tell you something.
If I'm the US government, I'm shooting it down. If
(30:46):
I'm Philadelphia, Philadelphia, New Jersey's governor, I'm having it shot down.
Then we'll find out who owns it, won't we because
they'll scream very loudly. There you go, that's what you do.
Time for the second hour and Steve Stewart parting is
(31:21):
such sweet sorrow. It's our final visit of the year
with Steve Stewart of Tallassi Reports. Of course he's the
executive editor. It's Tallassi Reports dot com. That is the website.
And Stephen, Merry Christmas, Merry Christmas to you, Happy holidays,
all those good things you get, all right, Yes, well
it's every day something new. So last night, before we
(31:44):
get to just and maybe the final segment, we'll just
kind of take a quick little swipe at what the
biggest stories were for the year for the community. But boy,
last night the City Commission meeting, there was a packed house.
Huh And I was there.
Speaker 2 (31:57):
Yeah, yeah, you know, it's again this is You've got
such a diverse group and there's no Republicans. That is
still a very diverse group on the City Commission. Sure,
a lot of diverse issues. You never know what's going
to happen to these meetings. I showed up to sit
in the corner by myself, you know, and sort of
watch the meeting. And I get there and it's just
packed number of issues.
Speaker 1 (32:19):
You know.
Speaker 2 (32:19):
The Cystem's Police Review Board is going to be repealed,
and they had what they do is they announced that
they're going to have a public hearing in the next meeting,
and so it gives you two bites of the apples.
So the next meeting you'll be able to actually have
a public hearing where more people will probably.
Speaker 1 (32:31):
Be there to speak out.
Speaker 2 (32:33):
And the Police Review Board has a i would say
a sword history here, you know, past. Yes, and it's
something that I supported when I ran for office, you know.
And the point being this is that there's there's no
there's no problem with having critical overview of things that
happened and actually working in tandem with law enforcement. Right
public safety the number one priority of local government. But
(32:55):
never in my wildest imagination that I think that if
you had a board that it would go off the
rails so fast and so consistently. And that's what happened,
you know, after the Summer of Social Justice Citizens Police
Board was put in place. Every city commissioner had one appointment,
and the progressives appointed people who wanted to defund the police.
And it just didn't work. I mean, it was antagonistic.
(33:17):
You had people calling police officers mergers.
Speaker 1 (33:19):
You didn't have anything coming of it that enhanced public safety.
It did not. They were they weren't working with law enforcement.
Speaker 2 (33:25):
And listen, you can work with anybody and be critical
and ask tough questions. But when you start calling, you know,
when you're there to you know, defund the police and
to go after them at every turn, you know, it
just doesn't work. And so finally they suspended the CPRB.
Then the state of Florida got into the act because
(33:46):
they saw this as an entry point for these left
wing extreme people to get into, you know, into sort
of mess up operations at local governments, and so they
passed a law and basically it's going to result in
the repeal of these ordinances that support that put in
place citizens police Review Boards, and it's already happened in
(34:07):
Tampa and Miami.
Speaker 1 (34:08):
They're they're done, Steve, And didn't that opinion to repeal
the existing board come from city staff and the city attorney? Oh?
Speaker 2 (34:19):
Yes, they explained last night the rationale and then they
gave the examples. There was even some court decisions in Miami.
But yeah, it's gonna happen. And the thing is, it's like, look,
you had your opportunity, we had citizens Police Review Board,
and like a child, you couldn't handle the responsibility.
Speaker 1 (34:37):
Yeah, and it continues last night. And this just irks
me to no end.
Speaker 2 (34:41):
Is the president of the Tallase Community Action Community, which
has become a you know, authority, void an authority or
a voice on all things police, a voice not an authority.
Speaker 1 (34:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (34:54):
Well they're quoted in the you know, they get quoted
in mainstream media. And I was there to watch because
you know, when you watch a press conference and then
you go read what is written about it, if you're
actually there, you know what sleft.
Speaker 1 (35:07):
So I was there, and she got up and.
Speaker 2 (35:10):
Called TPD officers murderers and said they planted evidence in
the Kylie Calvin Riley case, which is all.
Speaker 1 (35:16):
The union needs to sue them.
Speaker 2 (35:17):
But anyway, and so you read the you read the
article on the mainstream media this morning and it just
says the president of you know, TEAKAG said she disagreed
with the move to cancel. The CPRB did not that's
not what she says, that's not what she's Well, she
did say that, but she said other things that really
reflect on what her view is. But they don't they
don't report that, and so we'll get it out there.
(35:39):
But it's uh so anyway, the vote was for one,
which surprised me. Now Commission Mattelowe voted to move to
the public hearing. He he made it clear he was
against repealing the ordinance, so it was sort of a
technical vote.
Speaker 1 (35:53):
Okay, interesting, Yes, so the final vote will likely be
three two. Oh, definitely Okay. Were to come with Steve
Stewart about the meeting last night on the Morning Shaw
with Preston Scott Begar. Steve Stewart of Tellasson Reports was
(36:18):
a con vetitor last night at the City Commission meeting,
not just the Police Review Board under a vote. There
was also a preliminary vote dealing with zoning.
Speaker 2 (36:27):
Yeah, there's obviously a lot of zoning issues as people
try to you know, there's more growth in the northeast.
Speaker 1 (36:33):
And actually the east where people want to.
Speaker 2 (36:35):
Live, and so we see things happening all over the
place of get Veldadairy extension which has taken form. And
there's an area between Vealddarry and Kerry Forest which was
owned by the Lutheran Church and there's amount of land
there the Lutheran Church wants to sell some of it
for commercial development to help.
Speaker 1 (36:52):
Their church fund building exactly.
Speaker 2 (36:56):
And so again that area was deemed protect it because
with Canopy Road forty fifty years ago, when Thomasville Road
was two lanes, it's amazing I remember that.
Speaker 1 (37:06):
You probably remember it too, do too.
Speaker 2 (37:07):
Yeah, So anyway, it's not now the six lane road,
and there's some residents there that are upset that it's
going to have an impact on that area. And so,
you know, we've talked about this property rights. They really
it's the commission voted three to two. Again as you
have the progressives who look for any moment you or
(37:28):
any any situation to divide the community. Instead of saying, look,
you know this is you know these this group has
property rights to sell the property they own and this
you know, unless you want to buy it and you
can bid, you can bid. And instead of doing that,
they vote against it and tell them that the city
commissions corrupt and the developers that are developing are corrupt.
(37:48):
And the truth is, if they've city voted against it,
they'd be sued. State would overturn it because of property rights,
and this stuff happens, you know, it happens because when
you bry property, you don't get you don't get the
guarantee that there's nothing going to happen around you. Now,
what the local government is required to do is to
mitigate and regulate what a development looks like, and they
(38:09):
can put in buffers and require certain certain things. So anyway,
that was the vote three two. There'll be another hearing
on that also.
Speaker 1 (38:16):
Okay, so but an interesting debate. But that's a simple
property rights issue. And if you want to keep a
buffer zone around your lot at wherever you live, you
buy it.
Speaker 3 (38:27):
No.
Speaker 1 (38:27):
And it's the same when you look at the entrance
of Clarna States.
Speaker 2 (38:29):
We talked about that there's two acres on each side
that is owned by the homeowner association. So if that
was going to be developed, it would have to be
sold by the members of the homewn association, and if
they sold it, then there would be violence.
Speaker 1 (38:43):
Right by the people that voted them in.
Speaker 2 (38:45):
We go back to the Circle K and Canopy development,
where there was an issue. Guess how they result that
the city decided that this was a bad situation and
they're going to try to buy the land. So, I mean,
that's our process, it's the way it operates. And so anyway,
Children's Service Council. Yes, there's a big story developing here.
One thing that I am going to promise your listeners
(39:05):
from from now on and we've covered it some. This
is a maturing bureaucracy that is now matured, okay, and
we will be covering the siltan services.
Speaker 1 (39:14):
It's amazing how many millions of dollars now out of
the public coffers will do to mature or something exactly.
Speaker 2 (39:19):
And this is you know, I get the question, well
who do they report to? Well, this is a separate entity.
They're separate from the city and the county. They're a
it's a ten member governing council. DeSantis appoints five and
the other five come from unelected people that can levy
tax right. And so now they've they've been operating. They've
got an executive director who's been there since twenty twenty one.
(39:41):
She signed initial contract and now it's up for renewal
two year contracts. She's making one hundred and twenty eight
thousand dollars a year.
Speaker 1 (39:48):
I watched the meeting.
Speaker 2 (39:49):
Executive Committee, which was three of the council members, did
a performance evaluation review.
Speaker 1 (39:54):
The performance evaluation.
Speaker 2 (39:55):
Which is she got meets or exceeds expectations on all
her five categories, but it is lower than it was
last year. And so they discussed that. But she's asking
for a pay raise and a car allowance of about
three hundred dollars a month, and so the Executive Committee,
after a discussion decided, who is she traveling? Well, that
was a discussion. They're gonna she's gonna follow policy. They're
(40:17):
gonna recommend that she follow policy and just get recovered.
Speaker 1 (40:20):
Mileage that she that is related to her job.
Speaker 2 (40:23):
And then she obviously you can if you go to
conferences or whatever that are relevant, you can expense that.
So anyway, the car allowance got kicked out pretty early.
The pay raise was a little more contentious among the
three executive committee members. The chair, Darryl Jones wanted to
give her a raise. The Treasurer Paul Mitchell, and the
vice chair mister Watts, I don't remember his first name,
(40:43):
were against it. They recommended no pay raise and the
reason why she's making one hundred and twenty eight thousand dollars,
but they're treating the position as a senior management position
like state government. She gets a forty thousand dollars donation
to her retirement benefit retirement account every year as part
of her package, and she has the highest level of
(41:04):
health insurance, which again costs taxpayers forty thousand dollars. So
mister Mitchell noted that the package is over two hundred
thousand dollars, which is is a lot, and so they
recommended to the full Council not to chain to you know,
contract just as the current salary. They will vote, I
think December nineteenth they'll have a meeting and then move
forward with that. But yeah, this is a lot of
(41:26):
money slushing around and it's time to figure out exactly
where it's all going.
Speaker 1 (41:30):
It would be lovely to know what it's all doing.
Speaker 2 (41:33):
Well, you know again, part of the thing that I
don't like is the is the accountability is that hey,
we spent this much money and on this nonprofit who
said that they you know, allowed thirty more kids to attend.
I mean that that type of accountability is not what
I'm looking for I'm looking more for moving needle. You know, yes,
what independence that problem is being solved. What independent statistics
(41:57):
do we see, like, for example, the city of Town,
I see they spent more money on law enforcement. So
we're looking at the crimes every day and we actually
are seeing them going down. Now you could argue it's
not completely because of that, but I.
Speaker 1 (42:08):
Mean there's some correlation, some correlation, all right, More to
come with Steve Stewart seventeen past the Hour, twenty two,
(42:28):
almost twenty three minutes now past the hour, just a
few minutes left in our season here on the Morning
Show with Steve Stewart. I just had your mic turned
down because I was setting up the and I know
how I can interrupted you. Well, I know how you go. Now,
I just I tend to just say, go, is there.
(42:50):
I'm going to put this in a little bit of
a different context, a little different framing. Is there a
bigger story for the year than that moderate slash traditional
liberal Democrats held the progressives at bay in city Hall?
Speaker 2 (43:09):
So when you look at the biggest story last year,
I would say, no, I look at what we've covered.
We cover local governments, so that's that's what you want
to look at and that is the one that dominated
the headlines, and it was up and down on where
it was headed. If you look at the business world,
I mean, Amazon was sort of last year, but it's.
Speaker 1 (43:26):
Still having an impact.
Speaker 2 (43:27):
But yeah, but I would say from that perspective, it's
it's huge because it has not you know, from the
national implications of looking at some of these other cities
were the progressives have taken over. You know, the traditional
Democrats had to fight this. And you know what was
interesting at the end is to see some of the
(43:48):
mainstream media finally open their eyes because you know what
happened at the end when when Curtis Richardson was able
to defeat dot Mon Johnson, which was more than defeating
dot M and Johnson, I mean, and it was basically
Northeast tile has He that did it. The progressive movement,
you could tell, was all in thinking that they were
going to control local government. And again you say, well,
(44:10):
what were they going to control, Well, it's a billion
dollar organization controlled by three people, you know, and you've
got an electric utility, which is from a progressive standpoint,
controls a lot of things that can be done to
promote their ideology, and so that that is the biggest story.
But I think I think along with that is is
that I think the media finally saw that the progressive
(44:33):
immunion community progressive movement here is not honest with the voters,
and they started to report on that, and I think
that's something that they're going to that I think they
are concerned about now.
Speaker 1 (44:44):
As you saw Commission.
Speaker 2 (44:45):
Mallow called Talis a Democrat, a right wing operation, you know,
deleted his accounts on x formerly known as Twitter and
moved to Blue Sky. So you know, it's going to
be interesting to see where this goes. But it's important
the devoters because I understand this, voters are interested in
national stories, state stories, but it's important that the voters
(45:07):
continue to understand what was at stake locally because it
really can impact you.
Speaker 1 (45:14):
Well, let me let me then ask this as a
follow up. If that's story a right, the biggest what's
a bigger story that crime is down in the community
as a result of a little bit more funding and
not so much anti police rhetoric, or that the mainstream
(45:35):
legacy media outlets electronic and print in this town still
aren't really doing their job. Because even though you mentioned
this awareness of the progressive wing. You just cited this
morning a lack of coverage of what was specifically said
at a commission meeting, right, And I think that is
the issue on crime.
Speaker 2 (45:56):
And what happens is as we do the numbers and
look at them is you start seeing comments on our
stories that people who are getting the national narrative in
one year and they've got to take the time because
we're we're being some of people are criticizing our stats
and saying, you know, crime's not down in Tallahassee, and
this is where you get to the nuance where you've
really got to look at it.
Speaker 1 (46:15):
You're right, shootings are still an issue. Yeah, okay, and
they but they're usually black on black crime where the
victim knows the perpetrator, domestic violence, drug deal's gone bad,
the nuts and bolts crime that with that affect major
quality of your quality of life is down. Now, can
we spend more time trying to look at the nuances
(46:35):
of that and where it happens across town. Yeah, and
we'll try to do that, But that is another you know,
it's a perfect example. I think this next.
Speaker 2 (46:42):
Year is we're going to try We're going to see
where the media goes with this, because you're right, they're
not reporting you would be You would be challenged to
find a report that shows that that violent crime is
down compared to twenty twenty three and twenty twenty two
in the city Taalacy. I don't think you would find
it other than talents reports. Thanks for what you do,
Thank you enjoyed it. Look forward to a very another
(47:03):
great year.
Speaker 1 (47:03):
It'll be a robust one. Robust I like that. Yeah,
twenty five past twenty seven past the hour. As we
move on here in the Morning Show with Preston Scott,
(47:29):
all right, we're not going very deep. We'll go a
little deeper next hour as we did in the first hour,
but just to reset the big stories in the press box.
What the heck's going on over the sky's in New Jersey?
How is it possible they don't know the origin of
drones that are allegedly the size of a truck. This
(47:52):
is a this is significantly dangerous. This is a problem.
Shoot one down and you'll hear from somebody, trust me,
not just take it down. It's it. Send a helicopter,
(48:16):
Sheriff's department follow it. It's going to land. Somewhere can't
stay up indefinitely. Daniel Penny was found not guilty all
of the typical voices screaming and whining. As a result,
(48:36):
I'm wondering where has the family been that's so upset
right now over the death of Jordan Neely and the
acquittal of Daniel Penny. Where were they while their son,
their nephew was on the streets dealing with a host
of mental health issues. And I'm not suggesting they could
have stopped it. I'm merely pointing out, where have you been?
(49:05):
You didn't seem to care a whole lot about him, then,
doesn't seem to be any evidence of your efforts to
try to help him. And if there had been a
bunch of efforts and they failed, well it he was
mentally unstable and a danger to himself and others, and
that's what put him in that spot. He threatened. He
(49:28):
wasn't seeking to be heard, as his family's attorney said,
he threatened people saying someone's going to die. Socialist University
of Pennsylvania professor has gone silent on social media, hiding
a bunch of her accounts because she an avowed socialist.
(49:49):
By the way, said she had never been so proud
then to learn that a graduate of her school was
responsible for the murder of the CEO of United Healthcare.
I've opined that I believe that he was planning to
kill others, which is evidenced by the amount of evidence
(50:13):
they found. I mean, he still had the gun, he
still had the suppressor, he had multiple fake IDs had
he had cash, foreign cash, he had eight thousand dollars.
He was planning to do this again, There's no doubt
in my mind, second degree murder. Are you kidding me?
(50:34):
He was triggered by something largely his indoctrination at an
ivy League school. There I said it. And oh, by
the way, the popularization of another serial killer, which is
a screed and a long standing rant I'll get into
(50:54):
at some point. Deadly virus samples went missing from from
a lab. In fact, three hundred and twenty three vials
of multiple infectious viruses disappeared from a lab in Australia
in twenty twenty three, and we're just learning about it.
(51:14):
That's a little problematic, don't you think, I mean, isn't
that just a little alarming? How about you let us
know that, Oh, I don't know a day later, not
like a year and three months later, just saying you know,
it's just me. You know, it's accountability and all that.
(51:38):
Forty minutes past the hour, come back with some optimum health, naturally,
little optimum health, naturally joining me. Doctor David Heart's good morning, sir,
how are you hello? Huh uh. He's got a call
(52:03):
back in something went wrong when he got put on hold.
He got disconnected. So we're going to try it again
here and take two. Doctor David Harts.
Speaker 3 (52:15):
Hello, sir, Hey, good morning. We lost her for a second.
Speaker 1 (52:20):
Yeah, so you sent me a note yesterday and I
replied with the word ouch.
Speaker 3 (52:28):
Well yeah, there's a lot of studies. Just another one
came out just recently. It got my attention back on this,
which when you work in functional medsine, stuff that's on
your attention all the time. But United States as of
nineteen even twenty nineteen actually decreased in this overall life
expectancy compared to the rest of the world. And we
(52:51):
did that for a couple of years, and since then
it's gone up very little. Course COVID hasn't helped it.
But and when we look at ourselves compared to the
rest of the world. Of course, this is getting a
lot of recently with RFK and so forth. But I
know I've been screaming this for Bobby thirty five forty years,
that we're not We're really behind the rest of the
world tremendously. We're actually forty eighth on the world list
(53:14):
for overall health even though we spend twice as much
per person than major you know, industrial countries throughout the
world on our healthcare. And this is just really unbelievably ridiculous,
and we got to do something different. I mean, there's
almost one hundred and thirty three million Americans that are
living with at least one chronic disease. And what I
(53:37):
think everybody's going to realize is that this affects, you know,
our quality of life tremendously as far especially how we
end up spending our last years. What's happening is more
and more people are living there last years with hoses
and tubes coming out of them, rather than enjoying full
life in America. And it's because of a number of
(53:58):
different reasons. I think it's one reason is that we're
trying to rely upon a healthcare system that's very chronic
air orient and we're just not looking at chronic disease.
And I'm really very excited to see this is actually
getting more traction lately. And I've been screaming this for
both parties for years and years to get on this,
(54:18):
and it's so important because the answer is not really
creating more drugs, which they're this fine. It's not the
problems that we don't have enough availability of drugs. It's
how we're doing our healthcare. We're not going after trying
to find out what produces wellness. We're not trying to
establish healthy people. We're waiting for people to get very
sick and then we're using procedures that are much more
(54:41):
economically advantageous to treat sick people instead of trying to
maintain a healthy population. And it's not working in America
at all. And if we don't change this, it's projected
right now that we're going to get by two thousand
and thirty five, we're going to be almost like eightieth
in the world. It's not going to get better, it's
(55:02):
going to get worse. And so I'm really excited about
seeing some changes. It has to happen in the healthcare
system itself, but it has to also happen in our
individual lives. We've got to start taking control of our
own health and start doing stuff and using technologies and
things that actually help us get healthy, because the system
(55:25):
the way it is right now, really is not set
up to do that. It's set up to wait for
you to get sick and they and try to save
you at that point, which I do a really good
job with crisis care. I'm not arguing with that. They
really do a great job there, and it's just not
trying to find out underlying causes of disease. And that's
guess why, Preston, We've been doing this for so many years,
is trying to get that information out.
Speaker 1 (55:44):
Yeah, I was just going to say you could trace
the extreme cost, doctor Hartz, I am guessing to the
fact that to summarize sort of what you've been sharing,
we are in reactive mode versus proactive mode. Proactive is
always less ex expensive, less intrusive, less problematic than reactive.
Speaker 3 (56:05):
That's exactly right. It's just it's it's less profitable. So
you have to have something that kind of you have
to educate the population and to be able to do
this themselves, because there really is not an economic engine
for it to motivate it, and so but it's really
really really important.
Speaker 1 (56:23):
Well you know what you say that, But I've got
to believe that there's a there's there's industries out there
that for people that are health conscious are probably doing
pretty well for those that are focused on that, and
so it can be profitable for the business, you know,
community to invest in things that are more proactive to
(56:44):
help people. And I feel like we're seeing some of that.
Speaker 3 (56:47):
Well, I think you're right when it comes down to
the individual consumer. I'm just talking about the medical system.
Speaker 1 (56:52):
Oh yeah, that's you're right driving it there.
Speaker 3 (56:54):
But there is a lot and that's what's happening is
people are coming up and just taking control of itself
and that there's a whole industre that's developed around that.
Speaker 1 (57:01):
You're right, Doctor Hearts. As always, thank you so very much.
Look forward to our visits starting in January. Thank you,
sir for your time this year.
Speaker 3 (57:10):
You're welcome and Merry Christmas.
Speaker 1 (57:11):
Merry Christmas to you sir and your family. Thank you,
Doctor David Harts with us and again our final segment
of the year with doctor Herts. He'll be back with
us beginning in January for more optimum health. Naturally here
on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Oh, by the way,
(57:57):
what other thing happened while we were gone. Basher Asad
got run out of Syria. Now he has taken refuge
in Russia. Of course, my wife and I were discussing
(58:17):
this on our roadie, and I'm just thinking to myself,
so what does a deposed dictator do for a living?
I mean, does he apply for any jobs open at
the Kremlin? What does Vladimir Putin do with a despot who,
(58:43):
by the way, is a mass murderer. Yeah, he'll fit
right in with Russia. But what do you do with
the guy? What do you do with his family, his aides?
You know it? Syria is a classic example for anybody
out there saying, well, there's hope, you know, Israel's out
(59:05):
there hoping for something better to happen in Syria. Don't
hold your breath. The people that deposed Asad are probably
not looking to hold free and open elections. They want
they want a caliphate, they want a old school Islamic nation,
(59:32):
that's my guess. Now, you know, we'll see right now,
it's kind of like the in feeding that we've watched
here locally in Tallahassee of the Democrat party. You know
you've got, you've got, islamis taken on islamis just like, yeah,
Democrats feeding on Democrats here. I mean, they're just feeding
on each other right now. And so it'll be interesting
(59:54):
to see what happens. They were wanting to release all
these political prisoners that they felt were being held in
these underground cells, yes, underground cells, and they went down
to freedom. They're all gone. There's potentially thousands of missing
people now, more than likely. Consider Basher Assad killed five
(01:00:18):
hundred thousand of his own people, a lot of children.
He gassed them, chemical warfare on his own people. They
changed the constitution for the guy to take control. He
was thirty four, he was supposed to be forty, so
they changed the constitution. Yeah, sure, you're you're you're what
(01:00:41):
is it? Hamza Assad was that his dad can't remember
all of a sudden. But but Basher's like, I mean,
he's he's he's not well, he's sick, and I mean
the head. So now the guys who deposed him are
(01:01:04):
looking around for all their family members and friends and
political dissidents, and they're gone. They don't know. They probably
were killed immediately. That's why there's nobody in those underground cells. Anyway,
It'll be interesting to see what happens in Syria. Just
just keep your eyes on that, all right. Humblehouse Ministries
(01:01:24):
dot org raising funds Tallahassee, Panama City, two different locations
and support either or both. Just go to Humblehouseministries dot
org and click donate to either of the locations or
again both and do the best you can and make
a dedication WFLA or in the comments WFLA, and that
(01:01:45):
way they can note that it's part of our effort
to try to help them out. All right, Humblehouseministries dot org,
do the best you can. We're in our final seven
days of raising funds for them, all right, when we
come back. Scheduled to join us, Doctor Ed Moore, a
little more history on the Morning Show with Preston Scott.
(01:02:17):
All right, here we go, second hour of the Morning
Show with Preston Scott. Scheduled, Doctor Ed, you noticed this morning?
Did you notice? I said scheduled Because I after eight
thousand some odd interviews and fifty two hundred plus shows,
(01:02:38):
you just get a feeling sometimes and I just I
had a feeling that it might have slipped his schedule.
And so that's okay. We're hopefully Ed's doing fine and well,
but just forgot and so well, we will move along.
I'm curious now this story in New Jersey about these drones.
(01:03:15):
You've got state senators, now, you've got US senators saying
what's going on up there? And nobody seems to know
or at least nobody is saying anything about it. Why Now,
(01:03:38):
what's starting to come out is these drones are too large,
it's too well organized. And I'll be honest with you,
I don't believe anybody that says you can't shoot them down.
I don't believe that. I don't belie that's accurate. First
(01:04:02):
of all, drones, in case you didn't know, especially drones
that size, those are supposedly regulated by the FAA. You
can't just fly them over anything. The Department of Defense
(01:04:28):
surely has the ability to monitor these things. So, with
the fun taken out of my question, what is going
on here? These aren't UFOs. These are drones. They're flying
(01:04:49):
in very specific places, and no one is owning up
to owning them having them flying them. That in and
of itself. Is that's not just a red flag, that's
multiple red flags with flashing lights and beacons and the
(01:05:13):
current remember Trump's not in office. There just seems to
be a lot of stuff happening here right now that
is not just weird, but it just reeks of something else,
(01:05:41):
and I don't know what that is now. Obviously I
had this time set aside for ed I have not
been satisfied with the amount of time I've had to
talk about this story today. So I'm welcome. I'm more
than glad to take the time back, which we've done.
(01:06:04):
But these drones are We're we're talking near an Arsenal
Military Base, Picatinny Arsenal Military Base, Trump National Golf Club.
They're flying along certain areas. They're supposedly very sophisticated. A
(01:06:26):
guy who's an expert in China said this, This smells
of Chinese involvement. What do you think would happen if
a unknown drone showed up in China in say Oh,
I don't know, Beijing. You think it'd last for more
(01:06:46):
than three minutes? No, I I am open, I have
I have a stack. There was something that's said to me,
So I've clipped a few things together here that I'm
happy to get in front of you. But if you
have a thought on this drone thing, you're welcome to
(01:07:07):
call me. Eight five zero two zero five WFLA. I'm
not interested in Well, you know, Preston, they're there. They
could be UFOs. No, I don't. I don't know. Check that.
Say that for George Norri. Okay, I'm not going there.
(01:07:29):
These are not UFOs. These are drones. They are unidentified,
but they're not of alien or demonic, spiritual whatever origin
these are. These are not These are drones. They're big ones.
(01:07:52):
If you have a thought on that, you're welcome to
call me. But I would shoot one down and dare
somebody to complain about it? Seriously? Okay, let's see who
gets upset that their technology didn't come back to them,
(01:08:13):
And in the meantime you'll have a lot of information
on what the technology is and its origination. Eleven past
the hour back with more. So, what do you think's
going on up there in the skies in the northeast? Bill,
(01:08:34):
thanks for calling into the morning show. You're on the air, Goodbay.
Speaker 4 (01:08:37):
How are you doing today, Preston?
Speaker 1 (01:08:39):
Awesome? What do you think?
Speaker 4 (01:08:41):
Well, first of all you. It is a federal crime
to shoot down any drone with small, big or otherwise.
Even if a hobby drone, it's considered an aircraft. It's monitored,
it's controlled by the FAA, and it's a felony to
shoot one down. It'd be like if you shot down
a piper cub in their eyes. So if you're going
to do it, make sure you don't get caught.
Speaker 1 (01:09:02):
No, I'm not talking about us shooting one down. I'm
talking about the federal government or the state government. This
is probably out of the league of the state of
New Jersey. I'm talking about that our government. Since they
claim to say they don't know anything about it, they
need to shoot one down.
Speaker 4 (01:09:17):
Well, they're just wrong. I mean, we're they're they're not
being honest. They obviously know something about it. It's controlled
by the FAA. But an individual had a single drone
doing that, they would know it in a heartbeat. They're
just not telling us the truth basically.
Speaker 1 (01:09:32):
So what is your thought on what this is all about? Then?
Is this just about stirring up some fear. What's the
point of this?
Speaker 4 (01:09:41):
Yeah, it could be a number of things, could be
stirring up fear. Could be just testing to see what
the population. They've done that before. I think COVID was
part of that testing the population. I don't know if
it's surveillance because they already have all the stuff they need.
You know, it's nothing they can't get with satellites or
anything else. So it's a real good question, Bill.
Speaker 1 (01:10:01):
Thank you appreciate the phone call. Let's see what stand
has for us.
Speaker 5 (01:10:05):
Good morning, morning, good morning. This is staying if such
a drone people here, and you are to use drones
for agricultural purposes, but we know where they are who
we don't invite them on drop places and let me
know what they're doing there. Unidentified unmanneddrones need to be
shot down and the consequences be what they may. If
(01:10:27):
they won't to admit to what they are, shoot them down.
Speaker 1 (01:10:31):
If if you saw one of these over your property,
would you take it down?
Speaker 5 (01:10:36):
Yes, especially if if it had already been in the
news that nobody could would admit to what they are.
Now that now that you know, it's a heightened the
sense of awareness that somebody it seems like they're there
for the various purposes. If they won't tell you what
they're there for if I think some one got lost
and just happened to be over our place. I checked
into it first, but today I chewed it down first.
Speaker 1 (01:10:59):
Yeah. The thing you have to be careful of is
based on the descriptions of these things, stand the size.
We're hearing them about that that's a whole other concern
when they come flying out of the sky after being
shot down by whether it's you know, a citizen just
saying I've had enough or state government saying the same.
I gotta believe there's a way that you can trace
(01:11:20):
and and know more about these things. I agree with
what Bill was saying at the beginning. They know something
and they're just not telling us, and that in and
of itself is alarming. Anthony, what do you.
Speaker 6 (01:11:30):
Think I'll consider that that Chinese balloon flew across almost
the entire country. Yeah, and they're like, oh, well, we.
Speaker 7 (01:11:42):
Can't shoot it down because somebody might get hurt. Now,
that's the excuse they'll use in Jersey. Why because they
had a lot more people than the Jersey The excuse,
the excuse when it was in Montana was just you know,
garbage as an excuse. But that's what it is. They
know what the government knows who it is, because the day.
Speaker 6 (01:12:02):
It's all regulated, they know it's not.
Speaker 7 (01:12:05):
They know it doesn't belong to anyone in the US.
Speaker 1 (01:12:09):
Anthony, thank you, buddy. Be well out there. Let's get
one more call in before the break. Benton, thanks for
being patient with me.
Speaker 4 (01:12:15):
Go ahead, war depressed. Then I've got a theory here.
Speaker 7 (01:12:19):
Maybe it's Elon Musk.
Speaker 4 (01:12:21):
Maybe Trump gave them the link in the NOD to
do a little bit of R and D over.
Speaker 3 (01:12:27):
Over New Jersey.
Speaker 1 (01:12:30):
Okay, so you think Musk knows I think.
Speaker 3 (01:12:34):
It could be his technology.
Speaker 1 (01:12:36):
Okay, all right, thank you very much. They okay, Benton,
thanks very much. I appreciate it. Hey, nothing's off the
table to me. I don't have a clue. I'm just
I was just sitting there literally as we were talking,
they were showing people that, I mean, this is not
even in question. It's been it's being videotaped by people's
(01:12:57):
phones by the thousands. I'll still take some calls eight
five zero two zero five WFLA seventeen past the hour.
If not, I've got other things to talk about this.
Tomorrow on the radio program, we will have what's the beef,
(01:13:22):
final chance to get it off your chest. For the year,
we'll have the best and worst, some good news, talk
a little more about our friends at Humble House, remember
raising funds for them. Final few days of that. Our
final show of the year live is on Wednesday Thursday.
Next week we begin the twelve days of Preston look
(01:13:45):
back at the year twenty twenty four in order, and
our final show on January third. Exclusive interviews you have
never heard that I have done with Justin Haskins, Peter Schweitzer,
(01:14:08):
the great one, Mike Levin and Glenn Beck. Had a
great visit with Glenn and Mark and Peter and Justin
of course, And so the December show will be a
fun one because of content you have not heard. So
it'll be kind of our little gift to you before
(01:14:28):
we come back live on on Monday, January sixth. But
the big stories in the press box today, catching up
on a few things to a certain extent, How in
the world did it take a year and three months
to find out that three hundred and twenty three vials
(01:14:49):
of infectious viruses have gone missing from a lab in Australia?
How is that even remotely possible? And I'm gonna ask that.
By the way, did I read write that Obama has
(01:15:16):
written a pardon out for Anthony Fauci and for Adam Schiff.
You don't give pardons to people that are have never
been charged with anything unless they're guilty of something. Boy, oh, boy,
(01:15:47):
Adam Schiff. What was that about? Oh? Yeah, Russia, Russia, Russia,
the smoking gun that he claimed he had one big story?
How in the world do these viruses just turn up
(01:16:10):
missing and we don't know for a year and three months?
And oh, by the way, what are we doing with
these viruses? Anyway?
Speaker 3 (01:16:25):
Now?
Speaker 1 (01:16:25):
I mean, at this point, what are we doing with them?
What is the point of having smallpox? What is the point?
And I'm sure someone's gonna get me an answer, But
(01:16:48):
three hundred and twenty three fALS of multiple infectious viruses,
what could possibly go wrong? We just got through talking
about another big story, A bunch of drones flying around
in places and we don't know their origin. That's a lie.
(01:17:11):
That is a one hundred percent lie. And isn't it
interesting the timing Biden's pardoning and commuting sentences of thousands
of people think the I think the count the last
count is something like fifteen hundred or something like that.
(01:17:38):
I mean, it's it's insane. The we're not talking just
Hunter fifteen hundred jail sentences, pardons for thirty nine others.
Largest day of clemency in history, Sentences commuted for inmates
(01:18:04):
placed on home confinement during the COVID nineteen pandemic who've
successfully reintegrated into their families and communities, convicted of nonviolent crimes. Okay,
all right, I guess I have more questions about the
(01:18:25):
faucies of the world than these kind of people. And
what about those January sixth prisoners? Trump said they're out
day one with exceptions. See thank you for that. There
are some that need to be kept. There are some,
not many, very few. And personally, I'd love to have
(01:18:46):
a conversation with ray Epps among others, wouldn't you? Forty
one minutes pass the hour? More big stories next? By
(01:19:08):
the way, on the twelve days of Preston. The fifth
of the twelve days is on Christmas Day. I'm just saying,
we're not going to spend the whole morning talking about
the stories of the month of May. If you catch
my drift, wink wink, It's Christmas Day for Pete's sake.
(01:19:30):
I've got something big for that show. You can listen
on Christmas Sunday. Think about it now before the kiddos
get up, even as the kids get up. It's a
show for everybody on Christmas Day. Daniel Penny was found
not guilty in the chokehold death of Jordan Neely. I've
(01:19:52):
just been asking where was the family all these years
when Jordan Neely was living on the streets suffering any
number of until health crises. They certainly want to benefit
financially from his death, filing now a civil lawsuit against
Daniel Penny. Really, this is just this is interesting. Do
(01:20:20):
you know the story of Jordan Williams. I had a
listener send me this note and I had to look
up the story. Pat wrote in he said, wonder if
you heard about Jordan Williams who stabbed a man on
a subway and killed him because the man had slapped
his girlfriend, punched her in the face, and was bullying
(01:20:42):
other passengers. Charges against him were dropped the DA did
not want to prosecute him. Curious on your thoughts as
to why this happened when Penny was almost railroaded for
pretty much the same thing well, it's because Jordan Williams
is black. Now, I'm gonna be honest with you, he
(01:21:04):
shouldn't have been charged. You can act in defense. Now,
this is Florida Castle doctrine. You can defend the life
of yourself, a loved one, or a stranger if you
feel like their life is in jeopardy. And so they
(01:21:28):
looked at the case and decided there were no charges needed.
Good decision. Jordan Williams doesn't fit the narrative they want
to inflame black versus white. That's why black on black
crimes are not talked about in Chicago and Baltimore and
(01:21:48):
fill in the blank. It doesn't fit the narrative. And
the overwhelming cause of death outside of abortion for black
people is black on black that's why. But that that
(01:22:09):
ought to be talked about, but it's only discussed in
places like this, which is just sad. But it's the truth.
So we heard the whining and complaining in the aftermath.
Jordan Neely's death is sad. Jordan Neely threatened someone to
(01:22:34):
die that day and was being belligerent and dangerous, and
the threat was held at bay. He eventually passed away.
One coroner said it was Daniel Penny that did it,
and honestly, if he did, I'm you know, I'm sad
the guy died, but I'm okay with how that happened.
(01:22:54):
If that was the case. Another medical examiner said, no,
not at all, that where the choke hold was placed
was not a choke hold that leads to death. He
had other conditions that led to his death, like drugs
in his system, like sickle cell trade, like mental health disorders.
He was schizophrenic. That's a mental health condition that causes
(01:23:14):
tremendous problems to the body. And then we talked about
the socialist University of Pennsylvania professor. That's another big story today,
hiding her social media after celebrating the assassination, saying she's
never been prouder than to know that a graduate of
University of Pennsylvania murdered this CEO. And she's just among
(01:23:38):
the many out there, including folcahannas Elizabeth Warren, the fake
Indian Warrior princess herself. Forty seven passed the hour back
with more of the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Fifty
(01:24:12):
two past the hour tomorrow on the program Besides What's
the Beef Share, a little bit about my most recent adventure.
My wife and I had a member of the family
get married over the last weekend, and so we were
in attendance. We were in Texas, and there are stories
(01:24:40):
to tell. So yeah, we'll share a little bit of
that tomorrow as well as get caught up on some
more things. We have until Wednesday next week. Now, of course,
you can give any time to Humble House Ministries, but
our part of the fundraising drive where we're trying to
(01:25:01):
help them out. There's a big banquet tonight here in Tallahassee.
There's another one, I believe next week in Panama City.
You can go to the website to learn more about that.
But we really are are hoping that you'll step up
and help. And I'm speaking especially because I know that
(01:25:21):
many of you man given ten bucks right now, and
the economy we're in is a stretch. I get it.
And if you can pry the ten dollars away, just
know it's gonna make a difference when you take. You know,
there's an old song that's sung in churches little as
much when God is in it. When you take just
(01:25:42):
a little bit and put it in the hands of God,
it just it and in the case of the multiplication factor.
You know, God's into addition and multiplications, Satan's into subtraction
and division. That's kind of the math of the world,
the spiritual world. And so I'm just challenging you to
(01:26:03):
do what you can to help them out, all right.
Humblehouseministries dot org brought to you by Barono Heating and Air.
It's the Morning Show one on WFLAH. Where did the
Time Go Crazy? Big Stories? This morning on the program
(01:26:24):
Socialist University of Pennsylvania, professor makes a celebratory post about
the assassination of the CEO of United Healthcare. And I
don't know how this person has a job. See to
me that kind of there is no protection of the
consequences of exercising your First Amendment speech. If I trash
(01:26:48):
my bosses, I can expect to get fired if I
make a statement that is just in this case, I'm
I couldn't be prouder that one of our graduates I'm paraphrasing,
assassinated the CEO of United Healthcare. Excuse me, but that's
(01:27:11):
what we've got today in doctrination centers. Honestly, I don't
care about the little Cretan. I don't. I'm going to
name the people that support him. Taylor Lorenz, former Washington
Post reporter. What an embarrassment, Elizabeth Warren, What an embarrassment.
By the way, stuff happens at a McDonald's, right, Donald
(01:27:34):
Trump serves a few fries. This guy shows up and
thinks he can just I'm telling you now, he was
going to carry out other assassinations. That was his plan,
we'll find out. Talked about Daniel Penny and the whining
in the aftermath of his acquittal, which was rightful. Talked
(01:27:55):
about what's going on over the skies of Jersey, what's
up with that? Took some calls deadly virus samples go missing. Man,
busy show, and we're going to do another one tomorrow