All Episodes

December 17, 2024 89 mins
This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for Tuesday, December 17th.

Our guests today include:
- Dr. Bob McClure
- Howard Eisenman

Follow the show on Twitter @TMSPrestonScott. Check out Preston’s latest blog by going to wflafm.com/preston. 
Listen live to Preston from 6 – 9 a.m. ET and 5 – 8 a.m. CT!
WFLA Tallahassee Live stream: https://ihr.fm/3huZWYe
WFLA Panama City Live stream: https://ihr.fm/34oufeR Follow WFLA Tallahassee on Twitter @WFLAFM and WFLA Panama City @wflapanamacity and like us on Facebook at @wflafm and @WFLAPanamaCity.
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
How good is that? A Lolcome MANO. Good morning, Tuesday,
December the seventeenth, on The Morning Show with Preston Scott.
Great to be with you on Preston He's Ose Show.
Fifty two eighty nine, Day thirty four. That's right, thirty
four days left before the sun rises brighter in the east,

(00:32):
sets prettier in the west, at least we hope. Anyway.
Welcome friends, good morning, and thanks for joining us on
the radio program. We start with Micah five to two. Micah.
Micah is considered one of the minor prophets. I'm not
sure how he would feel about being called that, but

(00:52):
I'm just saying, but just think about this now, centuries
before the birth of Christ, Micah is prompted by the
Holy Spirit by God to write the following, But you,
o Bethlehem, Ephratah, who are too little to be among

(01:16):
the clans of Judah, from you shall come forth for
me one who is to be ruler in Israel, who's
coming forth is from old, from ancient days. You know,

(01:39):
if you consider the prophecies in the Old Testament about
the coming Messiah, there's a couple that you could argue.
Now you're in control of that you could announce yourself
as this, that or the other. But do you have
control of where you're born? Do you have control all

(02:00):
of the lineage in which you were born? There were
so many factors in the birth of Christ that he
had that there was just there's zero control of other
than God's control. These are the things that settled the score.

(02:23):
If Jesus fulfilled just eight or nine of the prophecies
spoken of him in the Old Testament, the odds of
it being fulfilled in one person one in ten to
the seventeenth power. That's adding seventeen zeros to the number
one in seventeen zeros, just saying, and that's just a

(02:46):
handful of the prophecies he fulfilled them all. Two might
drop eleven past the hour. Let's take a beak inside
the American Patriots Almanact. Next twelve pasted almost thirteen past

(03:09):
the hour. Now, sorry, we ran a little long there.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
It's okay, it's okay, it's all good. It's all good, man.

Speaker 1 (03:23):
I'll tell you what my hopes. That just kind of
cruising into the holiday season with some lighter stuff. Jeez,
we're learning a little bit more about what happened yesterday
at that Christian school in Wisconsin, and the chief might

(03:44):
have tipped something off inadvertently yesterday and Oppressor and I
picked it up and I found it for you. So
we're gonna share that later. But the big story is
what's gathering steam on, what's going on with the drones,
and so we're going to get to that at the
bottom of the hour as well. So some of you, well,

(04:08):
come on, it's didn't tell us now, No, I won't.
Seventeen seventy seven, December seventeenth, France, America's most valuable ally
during the Revolutionary War, recognizes our independence. It might have

(04:31):
been one of the few things in its nation's history
where it stood up strong and didn't wave a white flag.
There are variations of this joke, but one of the
ways you know a French gun when it's surrendered in battle,

(04:55):
as it's never been fired. Nineteen oh three, Kitty Hawk,
North Carolina, Orville and Wilbur make the world's first successful
motor powered airplane flights. Kitty Hawk. I have a my
wife got me and I have yet to bring it

(05:15):
in and put it on display. I have a Wilbur
and Orville bobble from the I think it's from the
Right Brothers Museum. Oh oh my gosh, yeah, big, big,

(05:36):
so that's coming. But let me also say this, if
you are an avid book reader, get the book by
David McCullough on the Right Brothers. It is special. What
a wonderful journey through their life and how they did

(06:00):
what they did. Let's see here. In nineteen oh six,
Oscar Strauss becomes the first Jewish Cabinet member as Teddy
Roosevelt's Secretary of Commerce and Labor, and in nineteen sixty three,
Linda Johnson signs the Clean Air Act, legislation designed to
help prevent air pollution. So there you go, sixteen past

(06:21):
the hour. We're back caught up. It's The Morning Show
with Preston Scott. The things we come across the research

(06:48):
staff of this program is just remarkable. This is from
I didn't know this even existed. It's a website called
The Daily Time Waster. It's Dailytimewater dot blogspot dot com.

(07:13):
And it's just random stuff, nothing in particular, just stuff,
just articles, interesting little tidbits.

Speaker 3 (07:24):
And this.

Speaker 1 (07:27):
Is cool. A role of I mean, thin silver foil
found in a third century grave in Frankfurt has become
the earliest archaeological evidence of Christianity north of the Alps.

(07:51):
There are references to Christianity and Gaul and Germany and
historical sources from the late second century, but the evidence
of Christians living north of the Alps before the find
here was dated to the fourth century earliest. It is
so fragile that they didn't dare to unroll it, and

(08:15):
so what they did. The Leibnese Center for Archaeology unrolled
it using X ray and CT technology. They were able
to scan it in high resolution, create a three D
model that could then be analyzed, and they could make

(08:36):
the inscription legible. It's entirely in Latin, which is really weird.
Apparently no reference in the inscription to any other faith
besides Christianity, which is also rare because up until the
fifth century, a mixture of different faith can always be

(08:57):
expected in any metal amulets or any different kinds of
things that would be found referencing religion, but not this.
So you're probably saying, okay, so what does it say.

(09:20):
They're not sure of this first part. Does it say
in the name of But it says of Saint Titus, Holy, Holy, Holy,
in the name of Jesus Christ, Son of God, the
Lord of the world, resists to the best of his ability.

(09:40):
All seizures set backs. The God grants well being admission.
This rescue device protects the person who surrenders to the
will of the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God.
Since before Jesus Christ, bend all needs the heavenly ones
and the earthly and subterranean, and every tongue confess. Well, now,

(10:04):
it's just I sent this. I sent this to my pastor.
He said, I love reading things that just show the
faith of Christ and Christians and the Word of God
through the ages. Jose's offering a chef's kiss, and so

(10:32):
that that's the whole point, is to just cause you
to step back and go, whoa. You know. That's the
thing one of the most important I think revelations for
all of us to make at some point in our life,
is that the Bible is a book of history, not

(10:55):
just a book of faith. The things die documented, they happened.
I've mentioned this podcast before, Haunted Cosmos, and it's a
couple of guys, probably a little reformed in their theology,
but a pastor and a member of his church who's

(11:18):
trained as an engineer but is now full time doing
this podcast. It's one of the most popular podcasts out there,
and it's all about God. But it's called Haunted Cosmos,
and they tackle the myths and the legends and the
things of present day of history, and they point out
that the things that are in the Bible are accepted

(11:42):
by almost every culture out there. They just they document
it in a different form, they refer to it in
a different way. And so it's just it's important to
remember that when we come across these little archaeological tidbits.
What I hope it does is it just boosts for

(12:04):
you that if you call yourself a Christian today, you
are literally among the billions that have been on this
earth that have given their life to Christ, that have
been convinced of the accuracy the veracity of scripture in

(12:28):
God's word and place their faith in him. Twenty seven
past the hour, O Christmas. Alrighty thirty six past the hour,

(12:54):
Let's get to the big stories in the press box
this morning. I'm Preston, He's Jose. If you're just joining
us for the very first time, thank you. When you're
listening on to Ustrial Radio iHeartRadio, we try to make
it worth your while to hang out for three hours.
You can listen to music anytime you want. You can
only listen to ME Live from six to nine Eastern,

(13:14):
five days Central. Of course, you can listen to the podcast,
so I guess you know you can listen at other times.
But because of the nature of the show and what
we do, I mean, look, the music's not going to change, right,
but the news will. So by listening live, you're getting
you know what's going on, and we have everybody's been

(13:37):
trying to sort out what's going on, and we still
don't know emphasis k and ow. We don't know what
the drones are all about. Right, Here's what's starting to
piece together. This came courtesy of one of the research
assistants the Next News Network on YouTube, and I just

(14:00):
it's kind of okay. And then I had the lead
research assistant of the program do some digging and they
found other stories that are out there, but they are
not in mainstream outlets in any way, shape or form.

Speaker 4 (14:16):
Yet.

Speaker 1 (14:18):
I say that because you need to take that with
you know, take that into consideration. I don't know if
what I'm about to share is accurate, but tell me
if it rings somewhat true in your heart, in your mind,
in your spirit. The Office of Global Access is underneath

(14:46):
the CIA. I've verified this, this part of the federal government,
and it has deployed these drones. They are surveyed balance assets.
And what has been documented by people that are in
various industries that know these things is that they are

(15:10):
following a very specific grid like pattern. They they're brightly
lit up. That causes many to think this is domestic,
because if it weren't, what do the Chinese care if
a couple of passenger planes run into these things? They

(15:31):
don't care. But they're being illuminated very brightly, very visible,
so that civilian aircraft and planes helicopters can see them
avoid them. And so the question becomes, what are they
doing in these grid patterns? And there's no easy way
to say this other than this is a theory. They're

(15:57):
looking for a dirty nuclear bomb that intelligence has allegedly
found there might be one in the United States somewhere.
They're looking for gamma rays linked to these types of devices.

(16:19):
Sources with high level clearance allegedly are saying that these
are sophisticated radiation detective detection platforms and they are desperately
searching for a dirty bomb that is planted somewhere that
they think could be detonated. The idea is that perhaps

(16:43):
Russia might be smuggling stuff into the country because of
our support of Ukraine. It could be Iranians, it could
be globalists that want to disrupt Trump's plans and distract.

(17:03):
John Ferguson, CEO of Saxon Aerospace, the only reason they
would be flying and flying that low is because they're
trying to smell something. He believes they're trying to find
radioactive material that may have entered the country. That's what
a dirty bomb is. A dirty bomb blows up radioactive material.
It's a different form of a nuclear bomb. It's very base,

(17:28):
it's very rough, but it's devastating. So that is a
theory that is gaining traction out in the in the internet.

(17:52):
How accurate is it, I don't know. But now consider
that allegedly there are searches in increasingly larger areas in
the Northeast, and I have been given photographs of some
drones in Florida, South Florida. I don't know. I'm just

(18:17):
that's something that is starting to percolate. So I'm making
you wear forty one passed the hour.

Speaker 4 (18:24):
Come it en joy.

Speaker 1 (18:46):
We've explained over the years, the founders of this nation
put the Second Amendment in place, the right for you
and I to bear arms. Socialists, leftists, democrats, illiberals want

(19:07):
to take your guns. Why because that ensures government control
of everything. The founders saw what happened in other countries
in Europe, and they realize the dangers that existed when

(19:31):
civilians did not have the ability to defend themselves. Now
you might not know this, but one of the safest
countries in all of Europe is Poland. And what's happening
in Poland right now is fascinating because it informs our

(19:57):
founders wisdom in place in the Second Amendment, as part
of our founding documents, as part of our constitution, the
right to keep. There's an assumption of having the right

(20:18):
to keep and bear arms. Despite being one of the
safest countries in Europe, Poland is observing what Russia has
been doing. There are some inside of Russia that believe
it's time for the old Soviet Union to come back.

(20:42):
Poland is a nation adjacent to and with a history
of understanding the dangers of that. You know what the
government's doing in Poland. They are training students in all
schools with firearm training. In fact, it started in twenty

(21:10):
twenty three and it's continuing, teaching content related to state defense,
acquiring shooting skills, preparing students to cope with threats caused
by hostilities. Students don't train with live ammunition. They train
with ballguns, air guns, replicas of small arms, virtual shooting

(21:33):
guns with lasers. The simulators that are out there, green
lights signal a successful hit, et cetera. This is in
eighteen thousand schools across Poland. They are prepping students, preparing them.

(21:56):
This is the second Amendment. And notice what Poland is recognizing.
Citizenry that's armed, citizenry that's trained helps keep a nation safe.

(22:19):
It's a fascinating little story just buried in the news
that shines light on not just current events, but all
the way back to the founding of this nation and
the genius of our founding fathers. Forty six past the hour,

(22:54):
all right, isn't it interesting how the news just it's
like a turnstile door, the revolving door. You're in that
news cycle for however long it takes you to go
through the door and then boop, you're spit out. Brian

(23:14):
Thompson's CEO United Healthcare shot and killed. Hello. Story's gone
because we got another shooting to talk about. We'll do
that next hour. You're probably wondering why wasn't that in
the big stories Because I wanted to take a little
more time with it. I mean, the possibility of a
dirty bomb being planted in the country somewhere is kind

(23:37):
of a big deal. These drones. Something's up, Something is up.
I don't understand why they're not just saying something is
it because they fear that that will trigger the detonation.
I don't know. I don't know, but I would I

(23:57):
defer two people knowing because you've got a surveillance network
of millions of people that could see things. But who knows. Anyway,
if you heard the story of Brianna Boston, she's been
placed under house arrest. She was granted a pre trial

(24:18):
release with bond. She's under GPS monitoring. She's in Lakeland, Florida.
She placed a phone call to Blue Cross Blue Shield
and she was angry over medical claims being denied, and
in the course of the phone call, she ended the

(24:41):
call with these words delay, deny, depose. They arrested her
for it. Now, in case you've forgotten or perhaps didn't know,
those three three words were engraved on three of the shellcasings,

(25:04):
the bullets, if you will, the shellcasings that contained the
bullets by the shooter who killed the CEO of United Healthcare. Delay, deny, depose.
Anyone who's ever watched the movie Rainmaker, brilliant movie. It's

(25:27):
an adaptation of John Grisham novel about the insurance industry
and healthcare in particular, knows that there's an element to
the disgrundled nature of where people are with healthcare that
delay delay, under any circumstances, the paying of acclaim delay, delay, delay,

(25:58):
because the mind set in the minds of many is
that if the company delays enough, people quit. They just stop,
They just give up. Now, I'm sure there's a more
articulate explanation of what deny and deposed means. But deny,
I'm guessing, is the perspective of the insurance company. Just

(26:19):
deny delay answering, then just deny depose, I guess refers
to a lawsuit. You're going to be deposed, So I've
never quite grasped the point of those three words. But
here's my question, how do you arrest somebody for a
threat for saying those three words? How is that a

(26:42):
threat because someone else put it on some bullets? But
those three words in and of themselves. But she's been
arrested for threatening violence Apparently. I'm going to be fascinated
to see what happens because she's very heartfelt in her
reds at over being angry over everything, but on the

(27:03):
merits of that being reason to arrest her for threats
of violence, I'm gonna be fascinated to see if this
actually stands up. Time for Hour number two The Morning
Show with Preston Scott Tomorrow. We will be one week

(27:28):
away from Christmas.

Speaker 4 (27:33):
Duh.

Speaker 1 (27:36):
Today we're one week away from Christmas Eve and my
annual pizza Christmas Eve Pizza. That's what I do. I've
done it since I was a kid. Place in Phoenix.
There still exists the guy. I don't know if he's
still running it, but the guy who owned and ran

(27:58):
Pizza Pharrohs in Phoenix moved out to I want to
say Cave Creek, which is north of Scottsdale and Pizza Farrows.
He was still there and when I when I visited
years ago, I went in and I said, you don't
remember me, but and he remembered my Christmas Eve pizza thing.

(28:23):
He said, you're that little guy. I said, yes, sir,
I'm him. I'm not little anymore. He's like, you look
like you've had some pizzas. So anyway, yeah, it's been
a thing since I was a kid, pizza on Christmas Eve.
So just something casual and kind of finger food esque,

(28:44):
but still, you know. Anyway, a little follow up, we
got a call I was talking about the woman in Lakeland,
ended a call with Blue Cross, Blue Shield saying delay
denied to pose, I've gotten clarification. Depose refers to depose
from power, to get rid of, but deposed can mean

(29:09):
a lot of things. Right, here's my point. And we
had a caller that just disagreed with me that it
is absolutely a threat of violence and so forth because
of its connection to and so it doesn't change though
those three words by themselves.

Speaker 5 (29:30):
Do not.

Speaker 1 (29:33):
Make up, in my opinion, a legally prosecutable threat. If
I say, you know, Joe Biden over the last four
years should have been removed from power that does not

(29:55):
construe a threat. I think it's a it's a reaction.
It's not a response. It's a reaction. What if the
guy had put on the bullets one two three? Do

(30:25):
now just saying those words, does that construe a threat?
Because over time the words one two three? I mean,
I just I watched a video this morning of a
guy in a wingsuit on top of a mountain jumping,
and before he jumped, he said one two three jumping

(30:52):
into a pool my grandbabies, Come on, buddy, go for it.
One two Right, we have to be careful. I think
it's an overreach. I do, and and and now if
there's other things involved in that case, fair enough, we'll see.

(31:14):
She certainly is regretful. I think they are going way
too far on this. But she's she's got the monitors
and all that stuff. All right. We've got a shooting
at a school, a Christian school in Madison, Wisconsin. The

(31:38):
shooters a fifteen year old girl. She killed herself, She
killed a student, she killed a teacher, She injured six others,
some seriously, and then killed herself. A couple of students
are in critical condition. Happened at ten fifty seven am

(32:02):
yesterday morning. That'd be just before noon our time. A
second grader called nine to one one. There's a lot
to talk about here. We'll do that next ten minutes
past the hour. It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott.

(32:31):
Now they're shooting at a private Christian school. Is interesting.
My immediate reaction when I knew no details was I
have a feeling this is going to mirror what happened

(32:57):
in Tennessee at the Christian school when a woman who
believed she was a man showed up at the school

(33:20):
where I guess she attended and killed people. You remember
how quickly that story disappeared. We now know we have
a female shooter. Do you realize how rare that is? No? Really,

(33:45):
that's we're not talking about the serial killer chicks out
there that you know, go seeking revenge on men that
abused them. And no, no, no, no, no, we're talking about
some and trying to commit a mass shooting. That's a female.
That is so rare. Okay, so we have now a

(34:07):
fifteen year old girl at a Christian school. Now listen
to something that the police chief said. Madison Police Chief
Sean Barnes, very articulate, had this to say at a

(34:31):
press briefing yesterday.

Speaker 5 (34:33):
I don't think that whatever happened today has anything to
do with how she or he or they may have
wanted to identify. And I wish people would kind of
leave their own personal biases out of this.

Speaker 1 (34:55):
Why would a guy, now, granted he's a police chief Madison.
Madison is an uber liberal city, home of the University
of Wisconsin, and I could be reading way too much
into this, but my immediate reaction was, wait, what, why

(35:20):
would you not just say the shooter? We have a
fifteen year old girl they've identified, they've named the shooter.
I'm not naming the shooter. We have a fifteen year
old girl, fifteen year old female. Where did the she

(35:41):
he they thing come from?

Speaker 6 (35:47):
What?

Speaker 1 (35:48):
And if you dig a little deeper, there are reports
circulating that there was in fact a manifesto, but that
she did not make the document public and so they're
having trouble getting it. Her father's cooperating. I'm heartbroken for
the family and family members of this girl. And again

(36:14):
we don't know, but it sure would seem again Christian school,
probably teaching. There are just males and females, and someone

(36:35):
didn't like it. Maybe we'll find out probably, you know,
there's a chance it could ruin tomorrow's show. To be
honest with you, because if this comes out, I'm gonna
talk about it. But there are some creepy similarities, and
I just want to point out how that story in

(36:57):
Nashville died. We've had some leaks of the manifesto. Police
have sat on it. They're not they're not touching it.
If this is a replication of that, First we get
back to publicizing that crap. We've got someone mirroring it. Second,

(37:23):
mental illness. It's a mental illness. And by the way,
this shooting is going to get a bunch of attention
until we find out more and then it's going to
go away. But did you know anything about the shooting
at a Christian school in northern California on December fourth?

(37:46):
Do you know about that? Did you know why? Because
apparently the perpetrators set up the fake visit to the
school to get in the school because he was upset
about the war in Gaza. Haven't heard much about that now,

(38:06):
have you, because it got buried and that part of
the story got buried even deeper. Seventeen minutes past the
hour we come back.

Speaker 4 (38:17):
Ah.

Speaker 1 (38:18):
The difference having a true commander in chief at a
press conference makes twenty two minutes past the hour. You
want to know why things are shifting pretty dramatically around

(38:39):
the world. Trump's election has sent a ripple through the world.
I had an exchange with a family member yesterday that
was pretty harsh in the sense that I sent this

(39:05):
person a book and it was Jerome Hudson's book Fifty
Things They Don't Want You to Know. And this family
members said, you know, after the introduction, I'm not reading it.
And I politely said, politely said, in essence, what a
year scared? And I said, look, knowledge is an important thing.

(39:34):
I read the opposing viewpoints all the time. I do
it because I want to know what they're thinking, why
they're thinking it, and how to argue against it. If
you don't agree with it, defeat it. If you don't
agree with the points made, there's fifty of them, prove it.

(39:56):
But don't be afraid of facts. John Adams once said,
facts are stubborn. I just don't want to discuss it anymore. Okay,
but you're welcome, because us deplorables just saved the nation

(40:19):
for now. I don't know what's gonna happen, but the
impact of having somebody that I'm not gonna I don't.
I still don't think Donald Trump's a great guy. He's
a far better person than he's made out to be.

(40:41):
But I this sounds weird. He's matured since his first presidency.
He has. But do you remember how Joe Biden wouldn't
hold a press conference because he can't form a thought?

(41:02):
What am I doing here? Contrast that with this against you?
That would you?

Speaker 3 (41:12):
I mean, it's a wonderful question, But how can I?
Am I gonna do preemptive strikes? Why would I say that?
Can you imagine if I said yes or no, you'd
say that was strange that he answered that question. Am
I going to do preemptive strikes or Iran? Is that
a serious question? How could I answer a question like that.

Speaker 4 (41:36):
In support of Israeli strikes.

Speaker 1 (41:38):
On your How could I tell you?

Speaker 2 (41:41):
How can I answer that?

Speaker 1 (41:45):
That? Is a president first? Is that a serious question?
It's not the press secretary walking off and storming off
in a little hissy fit. It's the president of the
United States number two holding the media accountable. Is that

(42:10):
a serious question? Are you asking me to tell you
what I think we ought to do militarily. What's important
about this is number one, we have a commander in chief.

(42:31):
Yes he's older, but he's got all faculties. Here's the
other thing, the media. Do you realize that the sports
media knows not to ask the coach his strategy for
an upcoming game. Now, I'm not asking you to do

(42:51):
good because I wouldn't tell you in sports they know better.
We're only talking about geo political things and the possibility
of a world war. And this clown's saying, do you
support preemptive strikes? Are you? Have you lost your ever
loving mind? Why would I tell you one way or

(43:13):
the other? Are you? Is that? At first he was kind, Oh,
that's a wonderful question, and then he was like, are
you serious. I'm just demonstrating the difference. He'll take questions
till the cows come home. Joe Biden's and his basement
eating ice cream.

Speaker 7 (43:35):
What a great way to end a segment, right right,
And this is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1 (43:55):
All right, those of you driving around in the capital city,
we have got some news. Could I say of a
collar who's off of a little traffic detail. Who's it
It's on you, alrighty.

Speaker 8 (44:10):
So on twenty seven south past Lake Jackson towards Iten. Uh,
it's backed up all the way going into town. So
if anybody's headed that way, UH, take a detour. I
heard the toll road is good.

Speaker 1 (44:25):
So if you're trying to get into town, take Orchard
Pond Parkway as opposed to just coming in twenty seven
because of something. So it's backed up from town out
of town if it's southbound. So yeah, okay, well there
you go. Take it for what it's worth. Comes from

(44:45):
a loyal listener, trustworthy source, I would say, I would
say that. May not believe it, but I would say it.
I'm just kidding. Big story in the press box, not
unlike the story at the top of the hour of

(45:05):
the shooting in Wisconsin, where we don't know there are
now multiple outlets, not mainstream outlets at all. I want
to stress that this is fringe stuff. People have sources, sources,
some names, some not named. That the drones are deployed

(45:32):
under the auspices of the CIA and the Office of
Global Access. Yes, it's a thing. They have radiation detection
devices and they're flying a grid like pattern. They are
brightly lit drones for a reason. They do not want

(45:54):
aircraft to run into them. They do not want there
to be any harm. And what they're trying to do
is detect either communications or gamma rays that are tied
to a dirty nuclear bomb. Is that based on intelligence

(46:19):
that they've intercepted, and the chatter has gotten to the
point where they're now frantically searching because it does appear
that there is a very organized pattern to these drones
floating around. Do they believe it's planted somewhere? Do they

(46:42):
believe it's in the hands of someone and they're trying
to detect I don't I don't have any of that.
What I know is Trump's taking office in thirty four days.
What I know is that Russia's angry at our involvement
with Ukraine. What I know is Iran hates us for

(47:06):
our support of Israel, whether Biden actually supports or not
we support Israel. What I know is China hates us.
What I know is we have a compromised military, We've
compromised borders, and we have a compromised commander in chief.

(47:28):
That I know. I know those things. I don't know
if this is accurate. But the question I asked an
hour ago is the same question I ask now. Does
it ring true to you as a possibility? The public

(47:50):
nature of the drones, the relentless nature of the whatever
they're doing, their patterns, they're flying, they're there, They're not
hiding the fact that the federal government is saying nothing
about this. It just it. There's a little ringing of

(48:14):
truth to me. But we'll see. Forty minutes past the hour.
By the way, with all this stuff going on with

(48:35):
these drones, how stupid do you have to be to
be one of the two men arrested in one being
searched for that were flying drones near Logan International Airport
in Boston. What idiots?

Speaker 4 (48:49):
No?

Speaker 1 (48:50):
Really, I mean, dude, talk about read the room. Jeremy
folkchic and Robert Duffy forty two and thirty two Duffy

(49:12):
forty two Fultschicic thirty two, both of Massachusetts flying drones
around Logan Airport or Logan International Airport. How stupid are you?
Two people? And the third got away on a small boat.
Apparently not for long. He's he's gonna be arrested, trust me,

(49:33):
he's His boys are gonna rad him out like yesterday's
news man.

Speaker 9 (49:38):
It's it's yes, sir, he was Biff, Biff was with us. Yeah,
I'll take you to him if you want, buy your
meal on the way.

Speaker 1 (49:51):
Yeah. You ever heard of something called methan ethie al
methan methaneth thee all and maybe I'm mispronouncing it. I'm
gonna be close no matter what. I'm close. Methaneth the all,

(50:12):
methanet the all. It's not the latest invention by the
climate change you know, global warming fanatics. It's an actual thing. Sorry,
I gotta catch in my throat here. It is a
compound produced by emissions of marine life. Shellfish smell a

(50:39):
little stinky. That's methanethy all. That's what that is. So
there's a new study. It has not been detected before
because it's extremely hard to measure. Additionally, much research has
been done on warmer oceans, while polar oceans are the

(50:59):
emission hots. Microscopic plankton living in the seas surfaces emit
a type of sulfur gas known as dimethyl sulfide. This
gas is the one responsible for the stinky smell and shellfish.
Once sulfur gas reaches the atmosphere, it oxidizes and produces
small particle particles called aerosols. These aerosols reflect solar radiation

(51:24):
back into space, lowering the heat on Earth. Researcher at
the University of East Anglia's Center for Ocean Atmospheric Studies,
doctor sher re Ward, this is the climactic event with
the greatest cooling capacity, but also least understood. We knew
methanethiol was coming out of the ocean, but we had

(51:44):
no idea how much and where. We also did not
know it was such an impact on the climate. What
this important little detail is telling everybody is it explains
why all of the climate models are wrong. It's why
the global warming and sea level rise warnings are wrong.

(52:06):
And do you remember us pointing out that the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration was trying to figure out why
in the middle of hurricane season the oceans were cooling,
the Atlantic was cooling. It was one to two degrees

(52:26):
cooler than it should have been. Just saying, just saying.
Forty six minutes after the hour, got a manly minute.
Last one of the year coming up next, our final show.

(52:48):
Guest of the year doctor Bob McClure joins us in
just a little bit. Lots of things to talk about
with the president of the James Madison Institute. This is fascinating.
This is from publication called World Sound Journalism, Grounded in
Facts and Biblical Truth. Here's the headline. US Bible sales

(53:13):
boom as gen Z turns to the physical word. This
is interesting. Bible sales are up twenty two percent. Book
sales are up one percent. Bible sales are up twenty
two percent. Consider how many Bibles have been sold over

(53:35):
the years, how many how many people have owned a Bible?
If not, I've probably bought thirty in my lifetime, different translations,
different different versions. But it's not just the Bible. Books

(53:59):
on on Christian living and Bible study books on specific
books of the Bible. Those sales are up as well.
Americans bought more than fourteen million Bibles in twenty twenty three.
There are more than thirteen million that have been sold
in just the first ten months of the year. And
consider how many Bibles get given at Christmas time. What's

(54:24):
interesting is inside a Pew research study, it finds that
young people who regularly read scripture have some of the
lowest levels of anxiety. Reading scripture lowers anxiety. Even though
young people are digital over eighty percent of Bible users

(54:49):
prefer to use an actual Bible in print, even if
they use digital tools for about everything else. I think
that's absolutely that is that is fascinating stuff. And and
I think it's very important that you think about the

(55:15):
importance of the Bible all right. Time for a manly
minute mail by birth man by choice. It's my final
tip of the year. It's a bit controversial, okay, so

(55:40):
just bear with me. If you have a little fella
and he's not three four, five, little bit older later
elementary middle school, have him be the last one opening
gifts on Christmas Day or Christmas Eve, the last one.

(56:04):
Teach your son to find joy in giving to others
and watching others receive gifts, not to just be when
do I get to open mind? No, no, no, no, no, no, no,
find joy in watching others be blessed. So and again,

(56:27):
I know it's controversial. I absolutely know it's controversial because oh,
you know, Christmas is for kids. I get that. That's
why I'm saying, as your son gets a little bit older,
have him wait till everybody else opens their gifts. Make

(56:49):
sure your son has a little skin in the game
they've used some allowance to buy something nice for their
mom or their sister or brother, that they've done some
extra choe, and that they find joy in giving to
others and seeing them open those gifts. Have them wait.

(57:13):
It will be one of the best lessons you ever
teach your son. There's your manly minute, final manly minute
of the year. As we spirit our way towards twenty
twenty five here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Again,
just a quick reminder, we are raising funds for Humble

(57:33):
House Ministries. It's Humblehouseministries dot org and this is it
today and tomorrow, final days of doing it now. Obviously
you can sign up and give any time you want,
but where it's our final opportunity to draw attention. They
help women recover from various addictions and they provide transition
housing in Tallahassee and Panama City, So those are our

(57:56):
two primary markets. You can go to the website Humble
House Ministries and pick one of the two or pick both.
And if you've had a good year with your business,
if you've personally professionally been blessed. I'm just saying a
little something passed along to others would be very very helpful.

(58:16):
Humblehousemanistries dot Org. Come back with our number three, Doctor
Bob McClure standing by kind of weird third hour already

(58:40):
volumes below your countertop there and so there you go.
It's probably just needs to be turned up a little bit.
Doctor Bob McClure is with me this morning here on
the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Good morning, sir, Thank you.
Having a few technical difficulties that I have on myself,
not you. A little rusty, a little rusty heading into
the hollow. Doctor McClure is going to be moving to

(59:02):
Wednesdays starting in January. We're going to have time with
doctor McClure monthly on Wednesdays. He's president of the James
Madison Institute. No shortage of things that we were just
kind of chatting up. What's in the news right now,
the news cycle. What are your thoughts on the President
elect grabbing so many nominees, so many key people, if

(59:23):
you include his chief of staff Floridians. Well, there's this huge, uh,
you know, movement from the Great sunshine the Free State
of Florida to Washington, d C. It's good for us
at the James Madison Institute. I think it's good for
the state for a number of reasons. I think it

(59:43):
showcases how great our state is. You know, I've been
saying for years that Florida is really the single most
important state in the country when it comes to policy
and politics. Why, well, it really began to show up
during COVID when the governor decided to keep our schools
and our economy open. Yeah, but you knew it before COVID.

(01:00:05):
We did. We did long before we did. So why
let's go before COVID. R Well, what is it about
Florida that it's gotten right, Well, if you want to
go where it starts, it really starts. I would argue
with Jeb Bush. Okay, fair enough. When Jeb came into
office in the mid to late nineties, he began this
conservative and I say movement conservative not Republican, because we're nonpartisan.

(01:00:28):
Republicans can be as bad as Democrats. Yeah, we've seen it.
This Movement Conservative nearly forty year effort to carry out
the principles preston that we believe in limiting the role
of government in our daily lives, giving people economic opportunity,

(01:00:51):
giving people the ability to choose their version of the
American dream, not the government's version, not Washington's version, but
their version, whatever that looks like. Started with Jeb and
what we began to see. And if you remember, Jeb
barely won okay, and then we had a series of

(01:01:12):
George w. Obama, Trump in his twenty sixteen, Rick Scott twice,
Ron DeSantis the first time. In every one of those races,
Florida was the one percent state. The winner won by
one percent or less. So going on were these very
close elections. Florida was a purple state. But concurrently you

(01:01:33):
had incredible policies, whether it was tax in the regulatory environment,
school choice, healthcare, whatever it is. These reaganesque principles were
going on concurrently. And guess what. As those policies took hold,
Florida became more and more red. It didn't matter what
It doesn't matter what color you are, it doesn't matter

(01:01:53):
what gender you are. We have every demographic here in
the state of Florida. We are the most diverse state
in the entire country. And we are deeper read today
than we were forty years ago. And it's because good
policy is good politics. And we say that in Florida
all the time. Now it doesn't matter. I mean, Donald

(01:02:15):
Trump won Miami Dad County seventy percent Hispanic. He won
Osciola County, huge Puerto Rican community. Remember the whole garbage comic. Yeah, ridiculous. Yes,
he won African Americans, he won every demographic here in
the state. And now you're gonna take a lot of
that brain trust and you're moving it to Washington, d C.

(01:02:37):
And they're serious. They're serious. This is not just clap
trap talk politician talk. They're serious. Now they're gonna be
bumps in the road, and they're gonna be mistakes made.
But these folks are serious about the promises that they
made during the election. We got a break coming in
just a second. But when you when you start talking
about good policy leads to good politics, it sounds like

(01:03:00):
a more articulate way of saying what I've said for
years that if you win hearts and minds, the elections
take care of themselves. Yes, yes, yes, And the reason
is because everybody in their heart wants what's best for
themselves and their children and their grandchildren, and the policies
that do that, that are articulated properly when they win elections.

(01:03:22):
Doctor Bob McClure, I'm going to brag on him here
as we go to break, so we can't say anything
because I've turned his mic off. He was the first
one that said, I think Trump's went in the popular
vote ten past the hour, living passed the hour. Now

(01:03:50):
the mic is on, doctor Bob mcclob. That's crazy of
the James battles, and he's the dude. No, it's true though.
You nailed it. You nailed the fact that you talked
about the multiple the thousands of data points you have
to pull together. And I just take it from our
years of knowing each other. You're just kind of a
nerd that way. You like that stuff, love it. And

(01:04:11):
so you felt like Donald Trump was going to win
the popular vote and that it was not necessarily going
to be close and it wasn't right. That was significant. Well,
thank you, I really appreciate that. I yes, it is
not one poll, five polls, it's not even poles. Sometimes
it's anecdotal. Sometimes it's qualitative, quantitative, whatever the list is.

(01:04:33):
But if you go to ten thousand feet and you
see what happened in the Bronx okay with that rally,
and you see Madison Square Garden, and you see what
he did in California, and they were making fun of
him because he's not going to win those states. That
wasn't the point. It wasn't the point. There were two
goals there by going to New York and going to California.

(01:04:53):
One was the Congress House, to save the House, which
he did, and two was to win the pop the vote. Yeah.
And so by doing those two things, he has a
mandate that had he won the electoral college and lost
the popular vote, the left would still be saying, well,
we actually won. You know, the electoral college is an archaic,

(01:05:16):
you know, founding that outdata outdata, yeah yeah, yeah yeah.
So so that's why he did it. And and so
now his mandate not only did he win over three
hundred electoral votes, his mandate with the popular vote has
completely put the left an utter and complete disarray. And

(01:05:37):
he's there. As I said previously, he's serious about doing this. Bob,
you have said ever since we've known each other, when
Salnwzo was with us. The James Madison Institute is laser
focused on Florida policy and insomuch as it may impact
the nation great. But now let's reverse the outflow. You've

(01:05:59):
got these people that are going to go to work
in Washington. Some of them are members of Congress, so
they effectively have been But you know what I mean,
what impact would this will this have having some of
these key people leaving the state. You know the thing
about Florida and you see, yes, our bread and butter
is always the state of Florida. But because we run
a think tank in Florida and it's not say Kansas

(01:06:21):
or you know, Wyoming or Iowa, we have the opportunity
to work in other states. Currently JMI is making Florida,
making the rest of the country more like Florida. We
call it exporting the Florida model, where we take all
the great policies here in Florida and we're working in
these other states. But that's not the question. You asked
the question. The answer is, and we've talked about this, Preston,

(01:06:46):
and you know this. We have such a deep bench
here in Florida. You look at let's take Jimmy Petronas
here in in North Florida. He's going to move into
that congressional seat. He's gonna obviously step down as CFO,
which is a very important position. We've got five, six, seven,
eight people that could fill that spot. Now I'm not

(01:07:07):
gonna name names, but we have so many people who
could fill that spot. House Speaker after House speaker after
House speaker has been tremendous. Now we get some birds
every once in a while, but generally speaking, they've been great.
The people who could be governor, there are a number
of people that could be governor, so quality qualified people right.

(01:07:28):
And for me, it's all about movement conservatism. It's not
about the Republican Party. There's plenty of Republicans in South Carolina,
but they can't get school choice because the South there
are no term limits and the Republicans there act like Democrats.
You could name thirty states where Republicans and Democrats are
the uniparty. The Mitch McConnell Republicans in DC and the

(01:07:49):
Nancy Pelosi that is the uniparty. I'm talking about movement conservatism,
and we've built such a deep bench since Jeb that
there are any number of people that could slide in there.
Not only that doctor McClure, but the Democrats made an
effort to change the balance of power, not to win it,
but to just move it. And they actually lost ground,

(01:08:12):
and they're gonna lose even more ground because a Democrat
just switched to the Republican Party in the state legislature.
You've got supermajorities in the House, in the Senate, and
you have a governor who everybody thought after his presidential
run was wounded and weak. And he puts all his
chips in the middle of the table on Amendments three
and four, the Weed Amendment, in the abortion amendment, whether
you agree with those or not, he said, here's where

(01:08:32):
I'm going to make my stand. And he won millions,
hundreds of millions of dollars, big corporations the trial bar
and he beat them. And so now you have a
governor who is stronger, as strong as he's at the
height of he was. He's become America's governor. You couple
that with our deep bench, with party registrations and Florida

(01:08:57):
and Donald Trump on Florida by one point five million votes. Yeah,
he went sixty two of sixty seven counties. So much
for the one percent, right, Yeah, More with doctor Bob
McClure seventeen past the hour, Doctor Bob McClure, president of

(01:09:24):
the James Madison Institute think tank Policy. Yeah, and boy,
the sessions already taking shape. Bills are being introduced by
what is with all that's been done in these last
few decades in Florida? Where is the ground still needing
to be hoed a little bit and plowed out? It's

(01:09:46):
in I would argue probably three specific places, and this
is really these are kind of the areas where Florida
could land in the ditch if they're not careful. One
is property insurance. Okay, they implemented these reforms two years
ago on property insurance, and the lead up to the
governor signing that bill, the trial bar filed nearly now

(01:10:09):
hold on to your seat, preston nearly three hundred thousand suits, okay,
knowing that the governor was going to sign these reforms,
those suits, those cases are washing through the system. And
while we as Floridians don't fully understand that our insurance
companies are coming back into the market, rates are holding

(01:10:31):
sety generally, and we're starting to see the effects two
years later of the reforms that were put in place.
What's going to happen is the trial bar is going
to go after not the law, They're going to go
after the insurance companies. Now, nobody loves their insurance company.
They're not warm and fuzzy, they don't help themselves. None
of that is. I'm not defending insurance companies. But the

(01:10:52):
trial bar is going to go after the insurance companies
and argue they don't play pay claims, they undercut, et cetera,
et cetera. So property insurance reform, the legislature needs to
hold the line on what they've done. They're just now
taking hold. Let me let me ask you a question
on that subject. We're peninsula. What is it your There's

(01:11:13):
not one spot in Florida that's not an hour and
a half away from a coastline. Right? Is there a fix?
Is there a solution to property insurance in a state
that's a peninsula. Yeah, you got to, I mean there
are several solutions. You got to charge market rates on
the coast, and right now, if you're on the coast,
you can be in citizens and the entire state of

(01:11:36):
Florida is paying your is paying the rate? Is your backstop?
Excuse me for what you pay for your property? Insurance,
So the people with the largest risk aren't paying for
the risk, right, Yeah, so you've got to allow the
market forces to take place fair enough. Yeah so, but
the reforms are working. So the second issue that Florida

(01:11:58):
is dealing with is how housing. Okay, Uh, there's a
and the left likes to talk about affordable housing. They
love it, but they can't define it, right, which is
code for mister developer, mister builder, build a bunch of
houses that are cheap and crappy and lose money on them.
And that's not what needs to happen. Okay. There's a

(01:12:19):
difference between building affordable housing and building housing that is
affordable fair and the building housing that is affordable deals
with permitting, wait times, bureaucracy, regulatory environment, and there are
a whole lot of things that the legislature can do
to make that better. JMI is going to be coming

(01:12:42):
out with a series of three different significant studies that
look at how to fix housing here in the state. Okay, Okay,
So that's the second thing. And then the third thing
is as we continue to implement school choice across the board.
You talk about good policy, is good poss school choice,

(01:13:02):
parental choice, across the board is critically important, but there
are some things that we still need some glitches, like
if you homeschool your kids and you need basketballs or
painting easels, should you have to come out of pocket
for those? Yes or no? So there are some glitches
when it comes to school choice that we need to fix.

(01:13:23):
So it's property insurance whole line, it's housing. Remove the
regulations and the trouble and drive that down to municipalities
in school choice. In the housing issue, should there be
an effort to sever the word affordable affordability from that
just housing, not affordable housing. Housing? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,

(01:13:47):
you know how the Yeah, the left always likes to
co opt the language, and so affordable housing. They also
love conflation, right, right. Illegal immigration is not immigration, right,
that's right. They're different things, of course they are. Housing
has been turned into a cudgel, yes, as affordable housing
without ever being defined. So you're addressing the issue of

(01:14:10):
housing in Florida, right, And if you build it's it's
a market. It's a market. Not to get too far
down in the weeds. So if you build housing that
people will want to buy, then people buy those homes
and then they continue the others continue to sell their
homes and move and either move up the chain, and
and and so it's it's building housing that is affordable.

(01:14:32):
And that's very different than what the left.

Speaker 4 (01:14:34):
Likes to say.

Speaker 1 (01:14:36):
Nice, I can't wait to flesh all this stuff out
in the coming year. It's gonna be fun. Bill gonna
beat We've got to Does the later start for the
legislature work to your benefit at JMI, Yeah, a little
more time to kind of throw seed. Yeah, because they
have all those committee weeks January to March. They're not

(01:14:56):
we're not constrained by the holidays, and so it's not
as much of a you know, goat rodeo. It's a
little more measured. You know, it's a little better. You know,
it's a little more measured in terms of committee weeks
and what we can do in the policies we can
kind of line up ahead of time that promote freedom
and economic opportunity and prosperity for all Floridians. Nice, Merry Christmas.

(01:15:19):
Merry Christmas. Let's say that around here. We do too,
We say it all the time. Good stuff. Thanks for
having me, doctor Bob McClure. James Madison Institute twenty eight
past the hour, ran a little long. I do that

(01:15:49):
with guests. I enjoy doctor Bob McClure, one of our
power guests here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott JMI.
Of course, to Madison Institute doing incredible work. Remember Humblehousemanistries
dot org raising funds today and tomorrow. So get on
the website, learn more and click to give, and we

(01:16:12):
would appreciate it very very much. They help women getting
through addictions as well as women in a circumstance that
requires transitional housing. And they do that in Panama City
and Tallahassee, and so at the very least you know
about it now and at the most maybe you can
donate and help. That would be wonderful. Big story in

(01:16:35):
the press box. Yes, there is the possibility that these
drones are connected to a search for a dirty bomb.
We don't know that. That is a story that is
floating around. That in my mind makes the most sense,
given the government is telling us nothing. But when you

(01:16:56):
add it all up, it makes sense. Here's another big
story today.

Speaker 5 (01:17:00):
I don't think that whatever happened today has anything to
do with how she or he or they may have
wanted to identify, and I wish people would kind of
leave their own personal biases out of this.

Speaker 1 (01:17:15):
That's police Chief Sean Barnes, Madison, Wisconsin, in response to
the shooting. But here's the problem, Chief, you just said,
he they about someone who's dead, a biological female shooter
fifteen years of age. And my question for you, ladies

(01:17:36):
and gentlemen, is this what promotes that level of rage?
What promotes that level of rage? We've seen it before.
Now we don't know if this was a young girl
struggling with gender identity. I don't know what there is

(01:17:57):
to struggle with. You're born a female or a male,
and you settle on in. But we now live in
a culture that affirms these types of dysphorious, these kinds
of mental challenges that young lady needed help, not affirmation.

(01:18:28):
The affirmation was, young lady, you are loved and you
are adored, and God made you a woman, a female,
and that doesn't mean you have to wear dresses and
pink and purple and polka dots, but you're a woman.

(01:18:49):
You're a female. Now again, this is one of those
When this story broke it was like, oh boy, this
just smells like Nashville. I think it was Covenant Christian School.
This is a Christian school. Forty minutes past the hour.
Those are your big stories in the press spots.

Speaker 7 (01:19:11):
It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott's on news radio
one hundred point seven w FLA.

Speaker 1 (01:19:20):
We shuffled things around, made sure that we had a
final visit with Howard Eisman for the year before we
take a break. Money talk with investment advisor Howard Eisman
with enhanced financial services, securities and advisory services offered through
NBC Securities Inc. Member Fender an SIPC. NBC Securities Inc.
Is a wholly owned subsidiary of RBC Bank USA, and

(01:19:41):
opinions expressed are not those of NBC Securities Inc. Nay
Nay or iHeartMedia. On appropriate matter, seek professional tax and
or legal advice, Howard. I have a feeling that the

(01:20:03):
November election has caused some people to be a little
bit more confident of the economic future of things in
this country.

Speaker 6 (01:20:13):
Correcto, Mundo, Preston Corecto Mundo. Yes, you know, we've really
had two very very strong years in the US stock market,
and so in November a survey was done of US
consumers and a record fifty six point four percent said
they fully expect the stock market to trade higher over

(01:20:36):
the next year. And if you go back thirty seven years,
all the way to nineteen eighty seven, Preston, this November's
number was only the fourth month in that entire period
that a majority of consumers said they expected a higher
prices in the market, and that's only again occurred a

(01:20:58):
few times in this period. The last time it occurred
was right after President Trump's tax cut bill back in
January twenty eighteen. So yeah, very optimistic right now as
far as market participants and consumers are concerned.

Speaker 1 (01:21:16):
You know, over the last year, we've talked a little
bit about gen zers and how younger people are viewing
the economy, viewing savings, viewing debt, and all of these things.
What is the mindset of young people today as it
relates to the future and their personal economy.

Speaker 6 (01:21:33):
You know, the gen zs, And just to define them,
we're talking about folks ages eighteen to twenty seven. A
survey was recently dead and they asked them, in order
to be considered financially successful, what kind of average annual
salary would you feel like you need to make? Just

(01:21:57):
under five hundred and eighty eight thousand for an annual
salary would make that generation feel financially successful, and they said, well,
what about your net worth nine and a half million?
So goodness.

Speaker 1 (01:22:13):
Talk about inflation.

Speaker 6 (01:22:14):
Yeah, yeah, they're either expecting extraordinarily high inflation or their
recent investment experiences have earned them very high returns and
so they have some inflated numbers. And just just to
put that into comparison, the Baby Boom generation ages sixty
to seventy eight year olds, they think you'd be financially

(01:22:38):
successful if you made one hundred thousand a year and
you had a net worth of a million dollars. Quite
a difference.

Speaker 1 (01:22:46):
That is a massive difference one from the other.

Speaker 6 (01:22:49):
Stunning to million, Yes, sir, stunning.

Speaker 1 (01:22:51):
We were talking about confidence just a second ago. And
one of the areas of our economy and even our
culture where I think we overlook is just the soul
of the earth people, the people that are farming, that
are providing so much for our country. How are farmers
feeling these days?

Speaker 6 (01:23:13):
Well, I'd say, like the rest of consumers, very optimistic.
Their sentiment on the farm has increased dramatically since May
of twenty and twenty one, and in this November, the
ag Economy Barometer, there is such a thing, Preston. It

(01:23:36):
surged thirty percent or thirty points higher from where it
was in October pre election to where it was after
the election. So as a result, only nine percent of
farmers expect an increase in environmental regulations, which they would

(01:23:57):
view as of course, you know, a headwind yep. And
so again a very very dramatic change from what their
expectations were just four or five years ago.

Speaker 1 (01:24:11):
Boy, what a stunning difference. And obviously that has to
do with who's coming in and taking over the administrative
direction or rather lead in our nation the view of
less regulatory action going on, and it shows up immediately
in the surveying. Crazy Howard. As always, thanks for the
intel for the year, and we look forward to next

(01:24:32):
year very much.

Speaker 6 (01:24:33):
So let me wish all of your listeners very merry
Christmas and happy New Year as well.

Speaker 1 (01:24:39):
Thank you, sir, be Well Howard, Thank you, San Howard
Eisman with us, I love the little financial nuggets we
get a couple times a month, just a little snapshot
of what's going on. And think about it now, farmers
immediately recognize less regulations come in our way in fact
and easing of regulation. Maybe we're going to have a

(01:24:59):
chance to me make some money. Now, we just have
to stop the takeover of the small farms. Forty seven past.

Speaker 4 (01:25:05):
The hour.

Speaker 1 (01:25:25):
Tomorrow on the program, it's our Christmas Show sort of.
I'm saving Marvin Goldstein for Christmas Day, just saying Christmas Day,
because that's how I rolled bringing out the big guns
for the fifth day of Preston. Twelve Days of Preston

(01:25:49):
starts Thursday. So you will not be without at all.
You will be hearing the best, most significant, important interview
use interesting interviews of the year that sort of detail
what happened each month of the year January February on.

(01:26:09):
So day one is January, day two is February, day
three is March, et cetera. And day five is Christmas Day,
and that happens to be May. So we only do
a few interviews, but we mostly it's just mostly Marvin
and me. By the way, do you notice what I
did there? Grammatically? So many people Me and Marvin, me
and jose me. No, you're never first, You're never first.

(01:26:33):
You're never first. The other person's always first. The only
thing that question is whether you say me or I.
And to determine which one you say, you take the
other subject out of the sentence, and would you say
I or would you say me? So at the start

(01:26:55):
of a sentence, you would never say me went to
the store. You say I went to the store, so
it would be Jose and I went to the store,
not Jose and ME went to the store. Now, at
the end of a sentence, it's usually the other way around,
but it's never you first, it's never me and fill

(01:27:17):
in the blank. Sorry, my wife's literacy skills are just
coming out of me. Today is National Say It Nowaday,
Today's National Maple Syrup Day. And today is right Brother's Day,

(01:27:39):
which we chronicled in our history segment. So there you go.

Speaker 7 (01:27:43):
Brought to you by Barono Heating and Air. It's the
Morning Show one on WFLA.

Speaker 1 (01:27:50):
Two big stories today, trying to figure out the drones.
One theory rolling around is the drones are searching for
a dirty nuclear bomb. That's one of the theories that's
floating around there. A dirty bomb, radioactive material that's encased

(01:28:12):
and blows up goes yeah. So I'm just that's one
theory that's floating around out there. It's coming from more sources,
no idea if there's legs to it. The federal government
is bringing this on themselves by saying nothing and not answering.
They know, they know what this is all about. Now.

(01:28:35):
Their problem is that if they come out, then they're
admitting that they've been lying all along. Oh well, and then,
of course the shooting at a school, a Christian school
in Wisconsin left three dead, two a student, another a teacher,
and then the perpetrator killed herself her self, a fifteen
year old girl. What cause a fifteen year old girl

(01:28:56):
to be that angry about that? Tomorrow on the program,
no guests, just you. You're my guest because I'm gonna
open up the phone line some I don't know when,
but I want to find out what your favorite Christmas
cookie is. I'll tell you all about mine now Tomorrow, hopefully,

(01:29:16):
aside from a couple of segments, it'll be a little lighter.
We look forward to joining you then. Humble House Ministries
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Dateline NBC
Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

The Bobby Bones Show

The Bobby Bones Show

Listen to 'The Bobby Bones Show' by downloading the daily full replay.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.